[8] The marriage sealed her father and husband's alliance against the Navarrese Company (a group of mercenaries who had settled in the Peloponnese in the 1370s).
[10] He actually disinherited Bartolomea, because he distributed his properties between his younger daughter, Francesca, his illegitimate son, Antonio, and the church of Saint Mary (the Parthenon) of Athens.
[12] They could not prevent Francesca from taking possession of Corinth, although Theodore I launched an attack against the town in October.
[11] After the Turks withdrew from the Morea, Bartolomea laid an ambush to her sister between the Isthmus of Corinth and Megara, but she could not capture Francesca.
[14] Francesca's husband, Carlo I Tocco, thought that he would be unable to keep Corinth and sold her claim to the town to Theodore I in 1396.
[17] A large sum of money that Bartolomea had deposited at a Venetian bank was given to her brother-in-law, Manuel II Palaiologos in the same year.