- Antonio Ballester
Antonio Ballester (died 1387) was the
Archbishop of Athens from27 March 1370 , when appointed byPope Urban VI , until his death. He was a Catalan, aFranciscan , and a bachelor of theology. He is the only well-known archbishop of Athens from the fourteenth century. During his stay in Athens, he lived in an annex of theErechtheum .Ballester was elected to his archbishopric with the support of the
Republic of Venice and he had influence himself in Italy. Ballester supportedPeter IV of Aragon againstMary of Sicily in 1381. He also supported theCrown of Aragon over and against theNavarrese Company . In November 1379 Sibilia, queen of Peter IV, tried to procure those relics of the Virgin which were kept at Athens from Ballester and since they were absent theParthenon in 1395, it seems likely that she succeeded.On his death,
John I of Aragon requestedAntipope Clement VII to appoint one Antonio de Blasis to the vacant see. While some modern historians have doubted that Ballester was in fact dead when John requested the appointment of de Blasis, it has now been proven that he was. It was sometimes held that Ballester had in fact been captured byNerio I Acciajuoli and later crownedMartin of Aragon in 1399, but this is false and arose from a confusion of the two Antonios.ources
*Setton, Kenneth M. "Catalan Domination of Athens 1311–1380". Revised edition. London: Variorum, 1975.
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