Accellino Gentile was a slaveholder and merchant from Genoa who was active in the eastern Mediterranean during the first half of the fifteenth century.
Accellino Vivaldi was a slaveholder and citizen of Genoa who was active in the second half of the fifteenth century and the early sixteenth century. The sources indicate that Accellino died in 1508.
Accia was a town in Corsia, located in the interior region of Haute-Corse, which was destroyed and from which only some ruins remain. The Diocese of Accia was a Roman Catholic bishopric located there in the late medieval era.
The region of Achaea became the Principality of Achaea in 1205, following the Fourth Crusade. It was conquered by the Byzantine Empire in 1430 and became part of the Despotate of the Morea, until it fell to the Ottoman Empire in 1460.
This register contains contracts related to merchants in Pisa enacted between the eleventh and the eighteenth centuries, in Pisa as well as in other Mediterranean locales.
The slaveholder and blacksmith named Battista Barissone sells an enslaved Tatar woman named Maddalena, who is approximately 26 years of age, to a man from Pisa named Giovanni Maiolino, for 85 Genoese lire. Giovanni is represented in the transaction by a man from Florence named Ardingo Riccio.
The slaveholder from Catalonia named Juan de Villamare manumits an enslaved baptized Muslim from Alexandria named Giovanni Francesco with the condition that the formerly enslaved Giovanni Francesco serve Giovanni de Villamare for a term of three years. Giovanni explicitly renounces the right of patronage.