fbpx
Wikipedia

Mladen II Šubić of Bribir

Mladen II Šubić of Bribir (Croatian: Mladen II Šubić Bribirski, Hungarian: bribiri Subics Mladen; c.1270 – c.1341), a Croatian leader and member of the Šubić noble family, was a Ban of Croatia and Lord of all of Bosnia.[1] After succeeding his father Paul, he further consolidated the Šubić domain, and brought Stephen Kotromanić to administer Bosnia under his overlordship. His subsequent rule marked the weakening of the Šubić and ended with a mutiny of Dalmatian cities and Croatian nobility in 1322. This further led to Mladen's defeat at the Battle of Bliska and subsequent imprisonment by king Charles I of Hungary, whom the Šubićs had previously initiated and guided to take the throne. Mladen continued to develop the state and court institutions, and his de facto rule led to the further development of the chivalric culture in Croatia.[2]

Mladen II Šubić of Bribir
Depiction of Mladen from a manuscript
Ban of Croatia
Reign1312–1322
PredecessorPaul I Šubić of Bribir
SuccessorJohn Babonić
Lord of all of Bosnia
Reign1312–1322
PredecessorPaul I Šubić of Bribir
SuccessorStephen II Kotromanić
Ban of Bosnia
Reign1304–1322
PredecessorMladen I Šubić of Bribir
SuccessorStephen II Kotromanić
Bornc. 1270
Kingdom of Croatia
Diedc. 1340
Hungary
SpouseHelen
IssueElizabeta
Katarina
HouseHouse of Šubić
FatherPaul I Šubić of Bribir
ReligionCatholic

Background

 
Coins issued by Paul I Šubić of Bribir. It reads: DVX PAVL – BAN –MLADEN.

Mladen II was christened as Ivan, in honour of John the Baptist, the patron saint of the Šubićs'.[3]

Following a dynastic fracture in the monarchy of Hungary and Croatia, Mladen's father Paul emerged as a powerful oligarch who asserted sovereign rule over all of Croatia and Dalmatia, whose territories he distributed among his family members. He ruled from his seat in the fortified town of Bribir, where he erected, along with his castle, the three-aisled basilica of St. Mary inside the Franciscan convent.[4]

After the extinction of the Árpád dynasty, Paul had the Angevins brought to the throne, although their power over the land held by the Šubić family was merely nominal throughout the entirety of their administration. Paul took extensive campaigns and significantly expanded his dominion eastward, over Bosnia and Hum, and also warred successfully against the Republic of Venice, taking the Dalmatian capital Zadar. He was the most powerful Croatian noble at the end of the 13th century and beginning of the 14th century. He also issued his own coin.[5]

Biography

Early years

Mladen II Šubić was an eldest son of Paul I Šubić of Bribir, who was the most powerful Croatian noble at the end of the 13th century and beginning of the 14th century, and his first wife whose name is not known. In regard to the date of his birth, there are no records available, but he is assumed to have been born around the year 1270. Mladen II had three brothers: George II Šubić, Gregory III Šubić and Paul II Šubić.

After the death of his uncle, the Bosnian Ban Mladen I Šubić in 1304, his father Paul I Šubić himself had to lead an army to crush the resistance in Šubić's Bosnia, after which in 1305 he took the title of "Lord of the all Bosnia" (totius Bosniae dominus), and passed the title of ban to Mladen. Upon the taking of the city of Zadar from the Venetians, he was elected Duke of Zadar by the commune and also assumed the title "Prince of Dalmatia". His troops also participated in the subsequent battle against the Venetian Republic, who attempted to take the city back. He ruled over Bosnia under his father, but after Paul's death in 1312, the situation in Bosnia and Croatia became more complicated.

Reign

 
Coat of Arms of the Šubić noble family

He succeeded his father as Ban of Croatia in the aftermath of his death on 1 May 1312 and inherited a strongly-founded dominion encompassing all of Croatia, Bosnia, Zahumlje and the Dalmatian cities. His wife Helen, was a relative of the Anjou royal house, and Mladen already made marriage contracts of their children to the counts of Gorizia, which could serve as valuable allies in the war against the Republic of Venice.[6]

Mladen greatly weakened the Venetian attempts to take Zadar, by buying off the leader of their mercenaries, which greatly reduced their potential on land. However, in September 1313, he allowed the return of Zadar to Venice, under the condition of granting the city considerable autonomy. He relinquished the title Duke of Zadar, but was granted citizenship of Zadar under Venetian patronage by 1314. In doing this, he kept a strong and stable relations with the city and made status quo with Venice.[6]

His rule was met with mutiny for the first time in spring of 1315 when the Captain and Potestat of the city of Trogir, Matthew of Zori, expelled members of the Andreis family in an internal struggle within the city. Although this was not an act directed against Mladen's rule, the expelled received his support and as a result, he answered with hostility. Mladen requested from the commune "to send him a blank piece of paper, on which he will write whatever he wants from the city" and forty hostages, which was rejected by the city council. Fearing Mladen's wrath, they also decided to destroy the monastery outside the city walls, to prevent it from being used as a military base against the city. Despite the incident, it did not escalate, and Mladen allowed Matej to keep his position. However, he imposed a large fine on the city. Matej Zori made contacts with the members of Mladen's court in order to secure better status. In 1317, Matej Zori was eventually ousted from his position and was driven into exile by certain outer elements, with the help of the city of Šibenik, an act which was supported by Mladen. He imposed further sanctions of the city and Matej's supporters in 1318.[6]

Apart from Trogir, he also faced problems with the Croatian nobility. He inherited a dispute from his father regarding Jablanac, with the noble Frederick III (Frankopan) of Krk, although this did not pose any significant threat. A larger threat emerged from a rebellion of counts Nelipić and Kurjaković in the winter of 1316–1317, probably in connection with his conflicts against the Slavonian Babonić nobles. Howerer, it was concluded shortly thereafter, and the mutineers did not seem to have fallen in his disfavor.[6]

Following the death of Stephen Dragutin, he occupied the northern territories of today's Bosnia and Hercegovina, Usora and Soli. This act prompted a retaliation of the neighboring Raška, which attacked Šubić's territories from Ston.[7] In 1318, he joined the crusade of Phillip of Taranto, titular Latin Emperor and cousin of his wife, against the King of Rascia, Milutin. Mladen invaded Raška from his territories in Zahumlje and was initially successful, but had to withdraw in the subsequent years. In the aftermath, his younger brother George II (who was the prince of Omiš) was given as a hostage to the opposing side as part of the peace negotiations, and was subsequently transferred to the city of Dubrovnik for safe keeping.[6]

Mladen's rule was unpopular with Bosnia's nobility, specifically among the supporters of the former Bosnian ban Stephen Kotromanić. As a result, he placed Kotromanić under his patronage and arranged a marriage between him and one of the daughters of Meinhard of Ortenburg. He also took a tolerant stance towards Bosnia's krstjani (members of the Bosnian Church), which brought him into conflict with the Pope.[6] Later, in order to restore and quiet situation in Bosnia, he appointed Stephen in 1322 as the Bosnian Ban.

Last years and fall

 
The dominion of Mladen in 1312, following Paul I's death

Another mutiny emerged within the city of Šibenik in 1319, the most loyal city towards the Šubić family. The causes of it are not known, but it is known that the commune requested mediation by Venice. The rebellion was taken very seriously by Mladen, as it offered an opportunity for Venice to meddle in Mladen's affair directly, although it was already crushed before they could act diplomatically. He imprisoned the leaders of the rebellion Koza of Ilija, under the accusations of conspiring against his life. Mladen's fall began with the second rebellion of Šibenik in 1321/1322, which was soon joined by Trogir. Mladen first attacked and pillaged Šibenik's surroundings, which was followed by laying siege to the city itself. He ordered Koza's brothers to be brought before the city and executed in clear sight. This act only deepened the conflict and provoked other members of the Croatian nobility to mutiny, including his younger brother Paul II, who was at the time Duke of Trogir.[6] The rebellion of the cities received support from Venice and in March 1322, Šibenik accepted Venetian rule, who in turn sent a fleet to defend it from Mladen's attempts at retribution. Paul II and the city of Trogir made an alliance with the goal of deposing Mladen and replacing him with Paul. Despite this, Trogir also accepted Venice's supremacy, declaring that its loyalty belongs to Charles I of Hungary, its natural master.[6] This forced Mladen to convene an assembly of the Croatian nobility in order to gain support and tone down the tensions with the Dalmatian cities. The attempt was unsuccessful, as the assembly ended with even more animosity of the rest of the nobility towards him.

The conflict gave pretext to king Charles, who eliminated the oligarchic powers in Hungary by then, in restoring royal power in Croatia, since he disputed Mladen's rule over these lands. The king named a new Ban of Croatia John Babonić and then departed together with him to face Mladen. The first battle took place in the vicinity of Šibenik, in which Mladen's troops were defeated, forcing him to withdraw to the south. The armies of Trogir, Šibenik and Venice, the pillaged the city of Skradin. The second and final battle occurred in Blizna near Klis Fortress. Mladen's army consisted of his own troops, those of his brother George II's, as well as Vlachs and those from lesser nobility of the Poljica region. The opposing army were royal troops under John Babonić in coalition with the Croatian nobility (including Paul II Šubić) and the militia of Trogir and Šibenik. The battle resulted in the victory for the coalition, forcing Mladen further south into Klis Fortress.[6]

 
Knin Castle, medieval remnants

In the Klis Fortress, Mladen received news of the king's arrival in Knin, which prompted him to send his younger brother George II as a diplomat with intent to negotiate. Charles I received George very diligently and gave his assurance for Mladen to arrive personally to Knin. Despite the king's previous promises, when Mladen arrived, he was imprisoned and taken alongside the king to Hungary, where he lived in captivity under unknown circumstances. It is possible that his daughter Catherine was also taken. He is assumed to have died around the year 1341.[6]

As a result, the king gave Stephen II Kotromanić Bosnia and Dalmatia from Cetina to Dubrovnik. Mladen's former court member and conspirator, Ivan Nelipić, used the opportunity to seize Knin from the royal forces. After Mladen II's defeat, the Šubić family not only lost Bosnia, but also lands in Croatia, and lost forever its previous influence. Mladen II was succeeded by his brother George and subsequently his nephew Mladen III Šubić as heads of the Šubić family, who continued to rule over Klis, Skradin and Omiš until 1348.

Legacy and assessment

Historians give various reasons for Mladen's failure in relation to the career of his father, namely his violent tendencies and vanity, although those were not unusual traits for a ruler. At the same time, he was praised by his contemporaries for his chivalrous and intellectual virtues. Even the very negative description of chronicler Miha Madijev admits that he read the Holy Scripture often. He seems to have inspired his personal physician, William of Varignan (later also a professor of medicine), to write scientific tractates.

In the eyes of the Dalmatian cities and some of his other subjects, he was remembered as a tyrant. His power as an arbiter became a burden for the Dalmatian cities, whose aristocracy and citizens required more space for self-governing, which was impossible to do with the domination of Mladen's court members. Croatian nobility was also unhappy, since they wanted a larger share of the rule for themselves. Mladen's political and military failures only encouraged their appetites.

His fate caused sympathies in national tradition, and in 19th century two places in the Knin Castle were thought to be the places of his temporary captivity.

Titles

In the document of 10 April 1318, Mladen II Šubić is called "Ban of Croatia and Bosnia and general lord of Hum country".[8][9]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 February 2020.
  2. ^ "Bribirski, Mladin II. | Hrvatska enciklopedija".
  3. ^ Škegro 2002, p. 135.
  4. ^ "Portal Hrvatskoga kulturnog vijeća".
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-04-20. Retrieved 2018-02-19.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Šubići Bribirski do Gubitka Nasljedne Banske Časti (1322.) | PDF".
  7. ^ Stanoje Stanojević, „Istorija srpskoga naroda“ (treće izdanje, reprint izdanja iz 1926) Beograd. 1989. ISBN 978-86-83639-01-4.
  8. ^ banom Hrvata i Bosne i općim gospodarem Humske zemlje, in Fine, John Van Antwerp (1994). The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. Michigan: The University of Michigan Press. p. 258. ISBN 0-472-08260-4.
  9. ^ cit: Generalis dominus totius territorii Chelmensis. Bruchstücke aus der Geschichte der nordwestlichen Balkanländer, Ein Beitrag zur Biographie des Mladen Šubić Banus von Bosnien, Dr. Ludwik von Thallóczy k.u.k. Regierungsrath und Archivsdirector, Druck von Adolf Holzhausen k.u.k. Hof- und Universitäts-Buchdrucker, Wien 1895.

References

  • Karbić, Damir (2004). "Šubići Bribirski do gubitka nasljedne banske časti (1322.)" [The Šubići of Bribir until the Loss of the Hereditary Position of the Croatian Ban (1322)]. Historical Contributions (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts. 22: 1–26.
  • Klaić, Vjekoslav (1897). Bribirski knezovi od plemena Šubić do god. 1347 [Counts of Bribir: from the Tribe of the Šubić until the Year 1347] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Naklada "Matice hrvatske".
  • Škegro, Ante (2002). Na rubu opstanka: Duvanjska biskupija od utemeljenja do uključenja u Bosanski apostolski vikarijat [On the edge of survival: the Diocese of Duvno from its foundation till inclusion in the Vicarate of Bosnia] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Dom i svijet. ISBN 9536491850.
Regnal titles
Preceded by Ban of Bosnia
1304–1322
Succeeded by
Preceded by Ban of Croatia
1312–1322
Succeeded by
John Babonić
Preceded by Lord of all of Bosnia
1312–1322
Succeeded by
Stephen II Kotromanić

mladen, Šubić, bribir, croatian, mladen, Šubić, bribirski, hungarian, bribiri, subics, mladen, 1270, 1341, croatian, leader, member, Šubić, noble, family, croatia, lord, bosnia, after, succeeding, father, paul, further, consolidated, Šubić, domain, brought, st. Mladen II Subic of Bribir Croatian Mladen II Subic Bribirski Hungarian bribiri Subics Mladen c 1270 c 1341 a Croatian leader and member of the Subic noble family was a Ban of Croatia and Lord of all of Bosnia 1 After succeeding his father Paul he further consolidated the Subic domain and brought Stephen Kotromanic to administer Bosnia under his overlordship His subsequent rule marked the weakening of the Subic and ended with a mutiny of Dalmatian cities and Croatian nobility in 1322 This further led to Mladen s defeat at the Battle of Bliska and subsequent imprisonment by king Charles I of Hungary whom the Subics had previously initiated and guided to take the throne Mladen continued to develop the state and court institutions and his de facto rule led to the further development of the chivalric culture in Croatia 2 Mladen II Subic of BribirDepiction of Mladen from a manuscriptBan of CroatiaReign1312 1322PredecessorPaul I Subic of BribirSuccessorJohn BabonicLord of all of BosniaReign1312 1322PredecessorPaul I Subic of BribirSuccessorStephen II KotromanicBan of BosniaReign1304 1322PredecessorMladen I Subic of BribirSuccessorStephen II KotromanicBornc 1270Kingdom of CroatiaDiedc 1340HungarySpouseHelenIssueElizabetaKatarinaHouseHouse of SubicFatherPaul I Subic of BribirReligionCatholic Contents 1 Background 2 Biography 2 1 Early years 2 2 Reign 2 3 Last years and fall 3 Legacy and assessment 4 Titles 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 ReferencesBackground Edit Coins issued by Paul I Subic of Bribir It reads DVX PAVL BAN MLADEN Mladen II was christened as Ivan in honour of John the Baptist the patron saint of the Subics 3 Following a dynastic fracture in the monarchy of Hungary and Croatia Mladen s father Paul emerged as a powerful oligarch who asserted sovereign rule over all of Croatia and Dalmatia whose territories he distributed among his family members He ruled from his seat in the fortified town of Bribir where he erected along with his castle the three aisled basilica of St Mary inside the Franciscan convent 4 After the extinction of the Arpad dynasty Paul had the Angevins brought to the throne although their power over the land held by the Subic family was merely nominal throughout the entirety of their administration Paul took extensive campaigns and significantly expanded his dominion eastward over Bosnia and Hum and also warred successfully against the Republic of Venice taking the Dalmatian capital Zadar He was the most powerful Croatian noble at the end of the 13th century and beginning of the 14th century He also issued his own coin 5 Biography EditEarly years Edit Mladen II Subic was an eldest son of Paul I Subic of Bribir who was the most powerful Croatian noble at the end of the 13th century and beginning of the 14th century and his first wife whose name is not known In regard to the date of his birth there are no records available but he is assumed to have been born around the year 1270 Mladen II had three brothers George II Subic Gregory III Subic and Paul II Subic After the death of his uncle the Bosnian Ban Mladen I Subic in 1304 his father Paul I Subic himself had to lead an army to crush the resistance in Subic s Bosnia after which in 1305 he took the title of Lord of the all Bosnia totius Bosniae dominus and passed the title of ban to Mladen Upon the taking of the city of Zadar from the Venetians he was elected Duke of Zadar by the commune and also assumed the title Prince of Dalmatia His troops also participated in the subsequent battle against the Venetian Republic who attempted to take the city back He ruled over Bosnia under his father but after Paul s death in 1312 the situation in Bosnia and Croatia became more complicated Reign Edit Coat of Arms of the Subic noble family He succeeded his father as Ban of Croatia in the aftermath of his death on 1 May 1312 and inherited a strongly founded dominion encompassing all of Croatia Bosnia Zahumlje and the Dalmatian cities His wife Helen was a relative of the Anjou royal house and Mladen already made marriage contracts of their children to the counts of Gorizia which could serve as valuable allies in the war against the Republic of Venice 6 Mladen greatly weakened the Venetian attempts to take Zadar by buying off the leader of their mercenaries which greatly reduced their potential on land However in September 1313 he allowed the return of Zadar to Venice under the condition of granting the city considerable autonomy He relinquished the title Duke of Zadar but was granted citizenship of Zadar under Venetian patronage by 1314 In doing this he kept a strong and stable relations with the city and made status quo with Venice 6 His rule was met with mutiny for the first time in spring of 1315 when the Captain and Potestat of the city of Trogir Matthew of Zori expelled members of the Andreis family in an internal struggle within the city Although this was not an act directed against Mladen s rule the expelled received his support and as a result he answered with hostility Mladen requested from the commune to send him a blank piece of paper on which he will write whatever he wants from the city and forty hostages which was rejected by the city council Fearing Mladen s wrath they also decided to destroy the monastery outside the city walls to prevent it from being used as a military base against the city Despite the incident it did not escalate and Mladen allowed Matej to keep his position However he imposed a large fine on the city Matej Zori made contacts with the members of Mladen s court in order to secure better status In 1317 Matej Zori was eventually ousted from his position and was driven into exile by certain outer elements with the help of the city of Sibenik an act which was supported by Mladen He imposed further sanctions of the city and Matej s supporters in 1318 6 Apart from Trogir he also faced problems with the Croatian nobility He inherited a dispute from his father regarding Jablanac with the noble Frederick III Frankopan of Krk although this did not pose any significant threat A larger threat emerged from a rebellion of counts Nelipic and Kurjakovic in the winter of 1316 1317 probably in connection with his conflicts against the Slavonian Babonic nobles Howerer it was concluded shortly thereafter and the mutineers did not seem to have fallen in his disfavor 6 Following the death of Stephen Dragutin he occupied the northern territories of today s Bosnia and Hercegovina Usora and Soli This act prompted a retaliation of the neighboring Raska which attacked Subic s territories from Ston 7 In 1318 he joined the crusade of Phillip of Taranto titular Latin Emperor and cousin of his wife against the King of Rascia Milutin Mladen invaded Raska from his territories in Zahumlje and was initially successful but had to withdraw in the subsequent years In the aftermath his younger brother George II who was the prince of Omis was given as a hostage to the opposing side as part of the peace negotiations and was subsequently transferred to the city of Dubrovnik for safe keeping 6 Mladen s rule was unpopular with Bosnia s nobility specifically among the supporters of the former Bosnian ban Stephen Kotromanic As a result he placed Kotromanic under his patronage and arranged a marriage between him and one of the daughters of Meinhard of Ortenburg He also took a tolerant stance towards Bosnia s krstjani members of the Bosnian Church which brought him into conflict with the Pope 6 Later in order to restore and quiet situation in Bosnia he appointed Stephen in 1322 as the Bosnian Ban Last years and fall Edit The dominion of Mladen in 1312 following Paul I s death Another mutiny emerged within the city of Sibenik in 1319 the most loyal city towards the Subic family The causes of it are not known but it is known that the commune requested mediation by Venice The rebellion was taken very seriously by Mladen as it offered an opportunity for Venice to meddle in Mladen s affair directly although it was already crushed before they could act diplomatically He imprisoned the leaders of the rebellion Koza of Ilija under the accusations of conspiring against his life Mladen s fall began with the second rebellion of Sibenik in 1321 1322 which was soon joined by Trogir Mladen first attacked and pillaged Sibenik s surroundings which was followed by laying siege to the city itself He ordered Koza s brothers to be brought before the city and executed in clear sight This act only deepened the conflict and provoked other members of the Croatian nobility to mutiny including his younger brother Paul II who was at the time Duke of Trogir 6 The rebellion of the cities received support from Venice and in March 1322 Sibenik accepted Venetian rule who in turn sent a fleet to defend it from Mladen s attempts at retribution Paul II and the city of Trogir made an alliance with the goal of deposing Mladen and replacing him with Paul Despite this Trogir also accepted Venice s supremacy declaring that its loyalty belongs to Charles I of Hungary its natural master 6 This forced Mladen to convene an assembly of the Croatian nobility in order to gain support and tone down the tensions with the Dalmatian cities The attempt was unsuccessful as the assembly ended with even more animosity of the rest of the nobility towards him The conflict gave pretext to king Charles who eliminated the oligarchic powers in Hungary by then in restoring royal power in Croatia since he disputed Mladen s rule over these lands The king named a new Ban of Croatia John Babonic and then departed together with him to face Mladen The first battle took place in the vicinity of Sibenik in which Mladen s troops were defeated forcing him to withdraw to the south The armies of Trogir Sibenik and Venice the pillaged the city of Skradin The second and final battle occurred in Blizna near Klis Fortress Mladen s army consisted of his own troops those of his brother George II s as well as Vlachs and those from lesser nobility of the Poljica region The opposing army were royal troops under John Babonic in coalition with the Croatian nobility including Paul II Subic and the militia of Trogir and Sibenik The battle resulted in the victory for the coalition forcing Mladen further south into Klis Fortress 6 Knin Castle medieval remnants In the Klis Fortress Mladen received news of the king s arrival in Knin which prompted him to send his younger brother George II as a diplomat with intent to negotiate Charles I received George very diligently and gave his assurance for Mladen to arrive personally to Knin Despite the king s previous promises when Mladen arrived he was imprisoned and taken alongside the king to Hungary where he lived in captivity under unknown circumstances It is possible that his daughter Catherine was also taken He is assumed to have died around the year 1341 6 As a result the king gave Stephen II Kotromanic Bosnia and Dalmatia from Cetina to Dubrovnik Mladen s former court member and conspirator Ivan Nelipic used the opportunity to seize Knin from the royal forces After Mladen II s defeat the Subic family not only lost Bosnia but also lands in Croatia and lost forever its previous influence Mladen II was succeeded by his brother George and subsequently his nephew Mladen III Subic as heads of the Subic family who continued to rule over Klis Skradin and Omis until 1348 Legacy and assessment EditHistorians give various reasons for Mladen s failure in relation to the career of his father namely his violent tendencies and vanity although those were not unusual traits for a ruler At the same time he was praised by his contemporaries for his chivalrous and intellectual virtues Even the very negative description of chronicler Miha Madijev admits that he read the Holy Scripture often He seems to have inspired his personal physician William of Varignan later also a professor of medicine to write scientific tractates In the eyes of the Dalmatian cities and some of his other subjects he was remembered as a tyrant His power as an arbiter became a burden for the Dalmatian cities whose aristocracy and citizens required more space for self governing which was impossible to do with the domination of Mladen s court members Croatian nobility was also unhappy since they wanted a larger share of the rule for themselves Mladen s political and military failures only encouraged their appetites His fate caused sympathies in national tradition and in 19th century two places in the Knin Castle were thought to be the places of his temporary captivity Titles EditIn the document of 10 April 1318 Mladen II Subic is called Ban of Croatia and Bosnia and general lord of Hum country 8 9 See also EditHouse of Subic Stephen II Ban of Bosnia List of rulers of Croatia List of rulers of BosniaFootnotes Edit Grbovi vlastele Bosne i Hercegovine Archived from the original on 12 February 2020 Bribirski Mladin II Hrvatska enciklopedija Skegro 2002 p 135 Portal Hrvatskoga kulturnog vijeca Croatian dictionary Archived from the original on 2009 04 20 Retrieved 2018 02 19 a b c d e f g h i j Subici Bribirski do Gubitka Nasljedne Banske Casti 1322 PDF Stanoje Stanojevic Istorija srpskoga naroda trece izdanje reprint izdanja iz 1926 Beograd 1989 ISBN 978 86 83639 01 4 banom Hrvata i Bosne i opcim gospodarem Humske zemlje in Fine John Van Antwerp 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Michigan The University of Michigan Press p 258 ISBN 0 472 08260 4 cit Generalis dominus totius territorii Chelmensis Bruchstucke aus der Geschichte der nordwestlichen Balkanlander Ein Beitrag zur Biographie des Mladen Subic Banus von Bosnien Dr Ludwik von Thalloczy k u k Regierungsrath und Archivsdirector Druck von Adolf Holzhausen k u k Hof und Universitats Buchdrucker Wien 1895 References EditKarbic Damir 2004 Subici Bribirski do gubitka nasljedne banske casti 1322 The Subici of Bribir until the Loss of the Hereditary Position of the Croatian Ban 1322 Historical Contributions in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 22 1 26 Klaic Vjekoslav 1897 Bribirski knezovi od plemena Subic do god 1347 Counts of Bribir from the Tribe of the Subic until the Year 1347 in Croatian Zagreb Naklada Matice hrvatske Skegro Ante 2002 Na rubu opstanka Duvanjska biskupija od utemeljenja do ukljucenja u Bosanski apostolski vikarijat On the edge of survival the Diocese of Duvno from its foundation till inclusion in the Vicarate of Bosnia in Croatian Zagreb Dom i svijet ISBN 9536491850 Regnal titlesPreceded byMladen I Subic Ban of Bosnia1304 1322 Succeeded byStephen II KotromanicPreceded byPaul I Subic Ban of Croatia1312 1322 Succeeded byJohn BabonicPreceded byPaul I Subic Lord of all of Bosnia1312 1322 Succeeded byStephen II Kotromanic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mladen II Subic of Bribir amp oldid 1131347990, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.