[1] On the other hand, Skylitzes later mentions that Gavril Radomir himself also took a beautiful captive, named Irene, from Larissa as his wife.
According to the editors of the Prosopographie der mittelbyzantinischen Zeit, this may have been a source of confusion for a later copyist, and Agatha's real origin was not Larissa, but Dyrrhachium.
998, when her father surrendered Dyrrhachium to the Byzantine emperor Basil II.
[1] Only two of Samuel's and Agatha's children are definitely known by name: Gavril Radomir and Miroslava.
Two further, unnamed, daughters are mentioned in 1018, while Samuel is also recorded as having had a bastard son.