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Nikola IV Zrinski

Nikola IV Zrinski or Miklós IV Zrínyi (Hungarian: Zrínyi Miklós, Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈzriːɲi ˈmikloːʃ]; 1507/1508 – 7 September 1566), also commonly known as Nikola Šubić Zrinski (Croatian pronunciation: [nǐkɔla ʃûbitɕ zrîːɲskiː][1]),[nb 1] was a Croatian-Hungarian nobleman and general, Ban of Croatia from 1542 until 1556, royal master of the treasury from 1557 until 1566, and a descendant of the Croatian noble families Zrinski and Kurjaković. During his lifetime the Zrinski family became the most powerful noble family in the Kingdom of Croatia.

Nikola IV Zrinski
Miklós IV Zrínyi
A 16th-century engraving by Matthias Zündt
Ban (Viceroy) of Croatia
In office
24 December 1542 – 27 December 1556
Preceded byPetar Keglević
Succeeded byPéter Erdődy
Personal details
Borncirca 1508
Zrin, Kingdom of Croatia
Died(1566-09-07)7 September 1566 (circa 58)
Szigetvár, Kingdom of Hungary
Resting placePauline monastery in Sveta Jelena, Croatia
Spouse(s)Katarina Frankopan
Eva Rosenberg
ChildrenIvan II, Jelena, Katarina, Juraj IV, Doroteja, Uršula, Barbara, Margareta, Magdalena, Ana, Kristofor, Nikola V, Ivan III
Parent(s)Nikola III Zrinski
Jelena Karlović
Signature
Military service
Battles/warsSiege of Vienna (1529)
Siege of Pest (1542)
Battle of Babócsa (1556)
Battle of Moslavina (1562)
Siege of Szigetvár (1566)

Zrinski became well known across Europe for his involvement in the siege of Szigetvár (1566), where he heroically died stopping Ottoman Empire's Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent's advance towards Vienna. The importance of the battle was considered so great that the French clergyman and statesman Cardinal Richelieu described it as "the battle that saved civilization".[5] Zrinski came to be considered a role model of a faithful and sacrificial warrior, Christian hero as well as a national hero in both Croatia and Hungary, and is often portrayed in artworks.

Early life

Nikola was a Croat.[6][7][8] He was born as one of the six children of Nikola III of the Zrinski family from the noble tribe of Šubić, and of Jelena Karlović, sister of future Croatian Ban Ivan Karlović of the Kurjaković family from the noble tribe of Gusić.[4] His birthplace is unknown, but it is generally considered to have been Zrin Castle. The same is about his birth date, for which different primary sources give dates ranging between 1507, 1508 and 1518, but according to them and other evidence it is considered to have been in 1507 or 1508,[9] with 1508 most often cited in scholarship.[10]

Activities

Zrinski already distinguished himself in the early twenties during the siege of Vienna in 1529,[4][9] for which was awarded with a horse and golden chain.[11] After the death of his father Nikola III in 1534, Nikola IV with older brother Ivan I inherited estates in Pounje, and they simultaneously started to fortify them as well as make contacts with the Ottomans, to whom they paid a yearly tribute like their father.[9] However, between 1537 and 1540 they started fighting against Gazi Husrev-beg's forces for the control of fort Dubica.[12]

 
Fortress Kostajnica where Zrinski murdered Johann Katzianer, engraved by Gaspar Bouttats, 1686.

In January 1539, Zrinski murdered the Imperial Army commander Johann Katzianer at Fortress Kostajnica because Katzianer had deserted the King Ferdinand I Habsburg, had started to conspire in favor of throne contestant John Zápolya, and had cooperated with the Ottomans.[4][9][12] During the following year, the estates of the Zrinski brothers were again attacked by the Ottomans. By June 1540, they fought the combined forces of Husrev-beg, Murat-beg Tardić and Mehmed-beg Jahjapašić, and because of a lack of sufficient help from the Austrian military, the fortress Kostajnica was temporarily lost to the Turks. Zrin Castle and Gvozdansko Castle managed to hold up, but the mining sites and others were devastated.[12] They successfully repelled the attack however, and from that moment on the Zrinski family continuously fought against the Ottomans.[4][9]

In 1541, together with his older brother Ivan I, Nikola received large possessions of the Vrana Priory in Croatia and Hungary by Ferdinand I, but with the death of his brother in the same year, he also became the only successor to the estates of the Zrinski family.[4][13] In 1542, according to Antun Vramec, he saved the Imperial Army forces from defeat at the siege of Pest by intervening with 400 Croats, for which service he was appointed Ban of Croatia, a position which held until 1556.[4] During this period he frequently went to Gvozdansko Castle in order to inspect the silver mines and the mint, like in other forts in the Pounje and Pokuplje basins.[4] As compensation for him fighting against the Ottomans, he was granted the whole area of Međimurje (Muraköz) on 12 March 1546 by King Ferdinand I, hence the center of the Zrinski family has moved from Zrin Castle to the city of Čakovec, where he significantly rearranged the existing Čakovec Castle.[4][9][14] In 1549 he was given the right to collect tax from the subjects by himself, and in 1561 the right to freely settle serfs on his estates.[9]

In 1556, Zrinski won a series of victories over the Ottomans, culminating in the battle of Babócsa, and thus preventing the fall of Szigetvár.[9][14] However, since he was unsatisfied with the amount of resources for defense, he voluntary withdrew from his position as Ban of Croatia.[9][15] In the next year, 1557, he was titled Master of the treasury, a royal office position which he held until death, becoming once again one of the fifteen most influential persons in the Kingdom of Hungary.[4] Additionally, he served as a captain of Croatian light cavalry (1550–1560), captain of Szigetvár and commander of the Transdanubian border from 1561 and 1563 respectively and until his death.[4][9]

In 1563, on the coronation of Emperor Maximilian as king of Hungary, Zrinski attended the ceremony at the head of 3000 Croatian and Magyar mounted noblemen, in the hope of obtaining the highest dignity of Palatine, vacant by the death of Tamás Nádasdy.[9][16] Some historians like Géza Pálffy consider he did manage to obtain it.[9] In the next year, he hastened southwards to defend the frontier, and defeated the Ottomans at Szeged. In 1565, Zrinski brought a copy of the Holy Crown of Hungary to Vienna for the funeral ceremony of Ferdinand I.[9]

Death

 
Zrinski's letter with signature, 23 April 1566.[17]

In the spring of 1566, Zrinski was located in Szigetvár, a strategic fortress for the defense of the shortest route to Vienna, when the Ottoman sultan Suleiman the Magnificent went with a large army for a second attempt to conquer Vienna, but first decided to capture Szigetvár. Zrinski was informed by the new king, Maximilian II, that he could either remain or leave it to another captain, but in an April, 23rd letter, Zrinski wrote that it was his will to remain because many thousands of people depend on the fortress's survival, and he started to strategically prepare to confront the Sultan.[9][17] Suleiman's forces reached Belgrade on 27 June after a forty-nine-day march. Learning of Zrinski's success in an attack upon a Turkish forces at Siklós in July, destroying several detachments,[8] Suleiman decided to postpone his attack on Eger and instead attack Zrinski's fortress at Szigetvár to eliminate him as a threat.[18][19]

 
Zrínyi's Charge on the Turks from the Fortress of Szigetvár, by Simon Hollósy, 1896.

For over a month from 5 August to 7 September,[8] with a small force of roughly 2,300–2,500 soldiers, mostly Croats,[10] Zrinski heroically defended the small fortress of Szigetvár against the whole Ottoman army of over 100,000 soldiers and 300 cannons, led by Suleiman in person. They did so without reinforcements which were promised by the Hungarian–Croatian King,[17] and against Suleiman's offer of Croatian land to Zrinski.[8] The siege of Szigetvár ended with every remaining member of the garrison in a desperate and suicidal charge from the fortress led by Zrinski on 7 September 1566.[17][20] Suleiman also died, but from natural causes, one day before the Ottomans won the siege.[21] As Ottoman forces had suffered heavy casualties during the siege of Szigetvár, the army only managed to additionally capture the nearby fort Babócsa before Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha withdrew the army and ended the Ottoman conquest.[9]

According to historical sources, Zrinski decided to be dressed in a hat and nice suit rather than a helmet and armour during his final charge, and chose to have his father's sabre in hand, so that he it could be said that he had "bared all that I was judged by God's judgment",[16] and offered one hundred gold coins as a reward for the Ottoman soldier who cut off his head. He was shot by a Janissary with a musket in the head and chest, while by other accounts it was first by a musket in the chest and then an arrow to the head.[9][22] It is considered that his head was sent by Mehmed Pasha to Budin Pasha Sokullu Mustafa,[9][23] or to new Sultan Selim II,[24] but eventually, the head was buried by son Juraj IV Zrinski, Boldizsár Batthyány and Ferenc Tahy in September 1566 at the Pauline monastery in Sveta Jelena, Šenkovec, Croatia.[9][23] It is uncertain what happened to his body, it could have been burned or buried near the battlefield, but according to most sources it is considered to have been buried by former Muslim captive Mustafa Vilić from Banja Luka because he had been well treated by Zrinski.[9][25][26]

 
The tombstone of Zrinski in Čakovec, Croatia.

In Međimurje County Museum in Čakovec are preserved remains of the tombstone of a member of the Zrinski family, which most probably belonged to Nikola IV, and under which his head was likely buried.[9][25] Preserved in Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna are the sabre, helmet, and possibly the silk robe with decorative gold thread which were created and worn by Zrinski during the 1563 coronation of Maximilian II. They were initially collected by Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria at Ambras Castle in the 16th century.[16]

Marriage

Zrinski married twice, first in 1543 with Katarina Frankopan (d. 1561) and then Eva Rosenberg (1537–1591) in 1564.[9][27] Due to his marriage to Katarina Frankopan, a sister of Count Stjepan Frankopan of Ozalj (d. 1577), her vast estates, including Ozalj and part of littoral cities like Bakar, became at his disposal in 1550 due to the inheritance contract.[4][13] With his marriage to Eva Rosenberg, a sister of William of Rosenberg the Burgrave of Bohemia, he managed to connect with one of the most notable Czech noble families and, according to Géza Pálffy, to the highest elite of the Kingdom of Hungary.[9] His marriages and his service during his lifetime managed to elevate the Zrinski family to become the most powerful noble family in the Kingdom of Croatia.[13]

Children

With Katarina and Eva, Zrinski had thirteen children, Ivan I, Jelena, Katarina, Juraj IV, Doroteja, Uršula, Barbara, Margareta, Magdalena, Ana, Kristofor, Nikola V, and Ivan II, of whom most notably was his successor Juraj IV Zrinski.[4] One of the younger sons married a lady from the noble Czech Kolowrat family.[12] According to Dóra Bobory "it is possible to detect an increasingly conscious marriage policy within the Zrinski family, where all the daughters of Miklos married well, and where father himself chose his spouses wisely". Most notably, Doroteja became the wife of Boldizsár Batthyány in 1566, Katarina wife of Imre Forgách in 1576, while some other two daughters married into Thurzó family,[12] specifically Katarina was previously (1562) married to Ferenc Thurzó being the mother of future Palatine of Hungary, György Thurzó.[28] For some of them, Uršula, Katarina, and Doroteja is known that were educated at Güssing.[15]

Legacy

 
Zrinski's statue at the Feldherrenhalle, Museum of Military History, Vienna, Austria, 1865.

Zrinski's heroic act at the siege of Szigetvár made him a well known European Christian hero, a defender and savior of Christendom, and "a model of a faithful and sacrificial warrior in the service of his ruler". He was also compared to Leonidas I. His cult of heroism was especially preserved among the Croats, Hungarians, and Slovaks. In Croatia, it also represented a symbol of Croatian identity, directed against Ottoman, Austrian and Hungarian political influence.[9][29][30] Similarly, he gained some popularity during the Polish struggle for independence in second half of the 19th century and early 20th century.[31] According to historians like Ágnes R. Várkonyi and Alojzije Jembrih, Zrinski had an "exceptional military talent, was a successful businessman, politician with a concept, and an endlessly passionate person".[22]

He was remembered in a first-hand report Podsjedanje i osvojenje Sigeta (1568) by Zrinski's scribe and chamberlain Franjo Črnko,[32] which was immediately translated in Latin by Samuel Budina and published in the same year titled Historia Sigethi, totius Sclavoniae fortissimi propugnaculi..., with the second edition (1587) edited by Petrus Albinus.[22] It was also translated into German, Italian, Spanish and other languages.[33] Other works include a historical epic Vazetje Sigeta grada (1584) by Brne Karnarutić,[32] and most prominently Hungarian epic poem The Siege of Sziget (1651) by his great-grandson Nikola VII Zrinski and its partial Croatian variation Adrianskoga mora Sirena (1660) by great-grandson Petar Zrinski.[10][34] In the epic poem, the elder Zrinski is the main hero and has assured Zrinski's place in Hungarian culture as it remains in print today and is considered one of the landmarks of Hungarian literature.[35] Compared to the Hungarian poem, which is an exception in Hungarian literature, the Croatian variation fits the Croatian literature tradition.[36] Vladislav Menčetić's Trublja slovinska (1665) is the first Ragusan literature work that introduces the idea of antemurale Christianitatis for Croatian territories and celebrates Zrinski as a hero.[37] Pavao Ritter Vitezović also wrote a related epic poem Odiljenje sigetsko (1684).[38]

In the 18th century, his heroic act inspired school dramas in Jesuit Gymnasiums, including Andreas Friz's Nicolai Zriny ad Szigethum victoria (1738).[22][39][40] The German author Theodor Körner wrote a tragedy, Zriny: Ein Trauerspiel (1812),[41] after which August von Adelburg Abramović wrote the libretto for his opera Zrinyi (1868).[42] The Croatian composer Ivan Zajc created an opera titled Nikola Šubić Zrinski (1876), as a patriotic work which is still performed regularly today. It includes an aria "U boj, u boj",[9] which is regularly performed at the Japanese Kwansei Gakuin University since the World War I.[43]

Since the 16th century, Zrinski featured in many engravings and paintings, of him as a portrait or during the siege mostly as leading the charge, like by Matthias Zündt, Miklós Barabás, Viktor Madarász, Mikoláš Aleš, Bela Čikoš Sesija and Oton Iveković among others.[44] In 1914, the Czech painter Alphonse Mucha dedicated to Zrinski the painting titled Defense of Sziget against the Turks by Nicholas Zrinsky: The Shield of Christendom from his The Slav Epic cycle.

By the imperial resolution of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria on 28 February 1863, Zrinski was included in the list of "Austria's most famous warlords and field commanders worthy of eternal emulation", in whose honor and memory was built a life-size statue of Carrara marble at the Museum of Military History, Vienna, in 1865 by sculptor Nikolaus Vay (1828-1886).[45] There also exist several sculptures and busts of Zrinski in Zagreb, Čakovec and Šenkovec in Croatia, Budapest and Szigetvár in Hungary, and Heldenberg in Austria among others. Parks in Zagreb (see Nikola Šubić Zrinski Square), Koprivnica and Križevci among others are named after him.[9]

In 1866 was held a solemn commemoration of the 300th anniversary of Zrinski's death in Croatia.[22] In commemoration of the 450th anniversary of the siege of Szigetvár (1566), the year 2016 was declared a memorial year of Nikola Zrinski and the siege of Szigetvár in Croatia and Hungary. On that occasion were held various cultural and artistic events,[22] published many papers and books as well as organized scientific conferences in Zagreb, Čakovec, Vienna, and Pécs.[46]

The Order of Nikola Šubić Zrinski is the ninth-ranked honour order given by the Republic of Croatia, awarded since 1995 to Croatian or foreign citizens for acts of heroism.[47]

Gallery

Annotations

  1. ^ There never existed a historical person with a name of Nikola Šubić Zrinski neither did his family members call themselves as "Šubić Zrinski".[2][3] In the historical sources, he is simply known as Nikola Zrinski i.e. Miklós Zrínyi which in the English language translates as Nikola of Zrin. In Croatia besides the real name he is also known as Nikola Šubić Zrinski, which is a 19th-century variation popularized by the same-titled opera,[2] while in Croatia and Hungary as Nikola Zrinski Sigetski and Miklós Zrínyi Szigetvári (in English language Nicholas of Zrin of Szigetvár).[4]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Pravopisna komisija (1960). Pravopis srpskohrvatskoga književnog jezika. Zagreb: Matica srpska, Matica hrvatska.
  2. ^ a b Mirnik, Ivan (2004), "Luc Orešković. Les Frangipani. Un exemple de la réputation des lignages au XVIIe siècle en Europe. Cahiers Croates. Hors-serie 1, 2003. Izdanje: Almae matris croaticae alumni (A.M.C.A.). Odgovoran za publikaciju: Vlatko Marić. Mali oktav, str. 151, 33 sl., 1 genealoška shema, 7 shematskih prikaza međusobnih odnosa, tablice s opisima grbova na 7 str. ISSN nedostaje (Review article)", Historical Contributions (in Croatian), Croatian Institute of History, 27 (27): 173 – via Hrčak - Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske
  3. ^ Inoslav Bešker (7 September 2018). "450. Godišnjica bitke kod Sigeta: Sparta je imala svog Leonidu, a mi svoga Zrinskoga" [450. Anniversary of the Battle of Siget: Sparta had its Leonid, and we had our Zrinski] (in Croatian). Jutarnji list. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Zrinski, Nikola IV", Croatian Encyclopedia (in Croatian), Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža, 1999–2009, retrieved 19 April 2014
  5. ^ Timothy Hughes Rare & Early Newspapers, Item 548456. Retrieved 1 December 2009.
  6. ^ Victor-L. Tapie (1972). The Rise and Fall of the Habsburg Monarchy. p. 62. One of the richest lords of the region, Nicholas Zrinsky, a Croat whose name took the form of Zrinyi in Hungarian...
  7. ^ Lendvai, Paul (2014). "Zrinyi or Zrinski? One Hero for Two Nations". The Hungarians: A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat. Princeton University Press. pp. 126–136. ISBN 978-1-4008-5152-2. ...there is no doubt that his mother-tongue was Croat. On the other hand, Croatia at that time had already been an integral part of Hungary for 400 years, albeit under a special administration. As a member of the high nobility, Zrinyi therefore belonged to the natio Hungarica, the political nation of Hungary which, however, was not an ethnic but a juridico-political category. Zrinyi/Zrinski fell as a Croat nobleman in the fight against the Turks for Emperor Ferdinand, who was at the same time crowned King of Royal Hungary. He died as a Croat for Hungary. At that time his ethnic affiliation had nothing to do with language, as it would in modern Hungary.
  8. ^ a b c d Tucker, Spencer C. (2009). A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. ABC-CLIO. pp. 881–882. ISBN 978-1-85109-672-5.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Hrvoje Petrić (2017). "Nikola IV. Šubić Zrinski: O 450. obljetnici njegove pogibije i proglašenju 2016. "Godinom Nikole Šubića Zrinskog"" [Nikola IV. Šubić Zrinski: About 450th anniversary of his death and proclaiming of 2016 the year of Nikola Šubić Zrinski]. Hrvatska revija (in Croatian). Zagreb: Matica hrvatska (3): 29–33. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
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  14. ^ a b Ferdo Šišić: Povijest Hrvata - Pregled povijesti hrvatskog naroda 1526-1918 - drugi dio, pg. 295
  15. ^ a b Dóra Bobory (2009). The Sword and the Crucible. Count Boldizsár Batthyány and Natural Philosophy in Sixteenth-Century Hungary. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 14, 23, 35, 88 145. ISBN 978-1-4438-1093-7.
  16. ^ a b c Kovács S., Tibor; Négyesi, Lajos; Padányi, József (2017), "Sablja Sigetskog Nikole IV. Zrinskog" [Sabre of Nikola IV. Zrinski of Siget], Podravina: Scientific Multidisciplinary Research Journal (in Croatian), Zagreb: Meridijani, 16 (32): 43–58 – via Hrčak - Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske
  17. ^ a b c d Szilágyi Sándor, ed. (1897). "VII. Chapter: A szigeti hadjárat". A magyar nemzet története: Magyarország három részre oszlásának története (1526–1608) IV: Az ország végleges felosztása 1548-1568. Hungarian Electronic Library (in Hungarian). Budapest: Athenaeum Irodalmi és Nyomdai Rt.
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  23. ^ a b Walton, Jeremy F. (2019). "Sanitizing Szigetvár: On the post-imperial fashioning of nationalist memory". History and Anthropology. Routledge. 30 (4): 434–447. doi:10.1080/02757206.2019.1612388.
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  31. ^ Leszek Małczak (2017). "Nikola Šubić Zrinski u poljskoj kulturi". In Stjepan Blažetin (ed.). XIII. Međunarodni kroatistički znanstveni skup, zbornik radova. ISBN 978-963-89731-3-9.
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  40. ^ Pintér, Márta Zsuzsanna [in Hungarian] (2009). "Zrinius ad Sigethum. Théorie dramatique et pratique du théâtre dans l'oeuvre d'Andreas Friz S.J.". In Wilhelm Kühlmann, Gábor Tüskés (ed.). Militia et Litterae: Die beiden Niklaus Zrìnyi und Europa. Walter de Gruyter. pp. 242–257. ISBN 978-3-484-36641-1.
  41. ^ Rines, George Edwin, ed. (1920). "Zrinyi, Niklas" . Encyclopedia Americana.
  42. ^ Jagoda Martinčević (15 August 2016). "Nikolu Šubića Zrinskog nije napisao Zajc, nego stanoviti August Abramović Adelburg..." (in Croatian). Jutarnji list. Retrieved 27 May 2019.
  43. ^ Shiba, Nobuhiro (2008). "Jedan odlomak iz povijesti suradnje Japana i Hrvatske: Hrvatska pjesma "U boj" i japanski muški zbor" [An episode from the history of cooperation between Japan and Croatia: Croatian song “U boj” and Japanese male choirs]. Povijest U Nastavi (in Croatian). Zagreb: Društvo za hrvatsku povjesnicu. VI (12 (2)): 167–176 – via Hrčak - Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske.
  44. ^ Fatović-Ferenčić, Stella; Ferber-Bogdan, Jasenka (2003). "Tragom slike Nikole Šubića Zrinskog: kronologija kraljevske dvorske ljekarne K Zrinjskomu" [Tracing the Painting of Nikola Šubić Zrinski: the Chronology of Royal Pharmacy K Zrinjskomu]. Medicus (in Croatian). Zagreb: Pliva Hrvatska. 12 (1): 143–150 – via Hrčak - Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske.
  45. ^ Johann Christoph Allmayer-Beck [in German] (1981). Das Heeresgeschichtliche Museum Wien. Das Museum und seine Repräsentationsräume. Salzburg: Kiesel Verlag. p. 30. ISBN 3-7023-0113-5.
  46. ^ Varga, Szabolcs (2018). "Nikola Zrinski Sigetski – Nikola Šubić Zrinski. Revidiranje zajedničke hrvatsko-mađarske povijesti u 21. stoljeću" [Szigetvári Zrínyi Miklós – Nikola Šubić Zrinski. Revising Common Croatian and Hungarian History in the Twenty First Century]. Zbornik Odsjeka za Povijesne Znanosti Zavoda za Povijesne i Društvene Znanosti Hrvatske Akademije Znanosti i Umjetnosti (in Croatian). Zagreb. 36: 81–92. doi:10.21857/mzvkptz7r9 – via Hrčak - Portal znanstvenih časopisa Republike Hrvatske.
  47. ^ Zakon o odlikovanjima i priznanjima Republike Hrvatske 2007-06-11 at the Wayback Machine, Narodne novine 20/95 ("Law on Decorations"); accessed 1 September 2016. (in Croatian)

Sources

  • Treaty of peace with Germany: Hearings before the Committee on Foreign Relations... ...signed at Versailles on June 28, 1919, and submitted to the Senate on July 10, 1919 - "the Slavs rescued them from a strangle-hold, namely, Nicholas Zrinsky and John Sobieski. one a Croatian and the other a Pole."
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainBain, Robert Nisbet (1911). "Zrinyi, Miklós, Count (elder)". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). p. 1045.
  • Reynolds, Francis J., ed. (1921). "Zrinyi, Count Niklas" . Collier's New Encyclopedia. New York: P. F. Collier & Son Company.
Further reading
  • Josip Bratulić, Vladimir Lončarević, Božidar Petrač, Nikola Šubić Zrinski u hrvatskom stihu (in Croatian, 2016), Croatian Writers' Association, Zagreb, pages 756, ISBN 978-953-278-235-6
  • Szabolcs Varga, Leónidasz a végvidéken. Zrínyi Miklós (1508–1566) (in Hungarian, 2016), Kronosz, Pécs–Budapest, 2016, pages 280, ISBN 978-615-549-783-4

External links

Nikola IV Zrinski
Born: 1507–1508 Died: 7 September 1566
Political offices
Preceded by Ban of Croatia
1542–1556
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Gábor Perényi
Master of the treasury
1557–1566
Succeeded by

nikola, zrinski, this, article, about, nikola, member, nikola, zrinski, family, lived, 17th, century, miklós, zrínyi, opera, nikola, Šubić, zrinski, opera, miklós, zrínyi, hungarian, zrínyi, miklós, hungarian, pronunciation, ˈzriːɲi, ˈmikloːʃ, 1507, 1508, sept. This article is about Nikola IV For the member Nikola VII of the Zrinski family who lived in the 17th century see Miklos Zrinyi For the opera see Nikola Subic Zrinski opera Nikola IV Zrinski or Miklos IV Zrinyi Hungarian Zrinyi Miklos Hungarian pronunciation ˈzriːɲi ˈmikloːʃ 1507 1508 7 September 1566 also commonly known as Nikola Subic Zrinski Croatian pronunciation nǐkɔla ʃubitɕ zriːɲskiː 1 nb 1 was a Croatian Hungarian nobleman and general Ban of Croatia from 1542 until 1556 royal master of the treasury from 1557 until 1566 and a descendant of the Croatian noble families Zrinski and Kurjakovic During his lifetime the Zrinski family became the most powerful noble family in the Kingdom of Croatia Nikola IV ZrinskiMiklos IV ZrinyiA 16th century engraving by Matthias ZundtBan Viceroy of CroatiaIn office 24 December 1542 27 December 1556Preceded byPetar KeglevicSucceeded byPeter ErdodyPersonal detailsBorncirca 1508Zrin Kingdom of CroatiaDied 1566 09 07 7 September 1566 circa 58 Szigetvar Kingdom of HungaryResting placePauline monastery in Sveta Jelena CroatiaSpouse s Katarina FrankopanEva RosenbergChildrenIvan II Jelena Katarina Juraj IV Doroteja Ursula Barbara Margareta Magdalena Ana Kristofor Nikola V Ivan IIIParent s Nikola III ZrinskiJelena KarlovicSignatureMilitary serviceBattles warsSiege of Vienna 1529 Siege of Pest 1542 Battle of Babocsa 1556 Battle of Moslavina 1562 Siege of Szigetvar 1566 Zrinski became well known across Europe for his involvement in the siege of Szigetvar 1566 where he heroically died stopping Ottoman Empire s Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent s advance towards Vienna The importance of the battle was considered so great that the French clergyman and statesman Cardinal Richelieu described it as the battle that saved civilization 5 Zrinski came to be considered a role model of a faithful and sacrificial warrior Christian hero as well as a national hero in both Croatia and Hungary and is often portrayed in artworks Contents 1 Early life 2 Activities 3 Death 4 Marriage 4 1 Children 5 Legacy 6 Gallery 7 Annotations 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Sources 9 External linksEarly life EditNikola was a Croat 6 7 8 He was born as one of the six children of Nikola III of the Zrinski family from the noble tribe of Subic and of Jelena Karlovic sister of future Croatian Ban Ivan Karlovic of the Kurjakovic family from the noble tribe of Gusic 4 His birthplace is unknown but it is generally considered to have been Zrin Castle The same is about his birth date for which different primary sources give dates ranging between 1507 1508 and 1518 but according to them and other evidence it is considered to have been in 1507 or 1508 9 with 1508 most often cited in scholarship 10 Activities EditZrinski already distinguished himself in the early twenties during the siege of Vienna in 1529 4 9 for which was awarded with a horse and golden chain 11 After the death of his father Nikola III in 1534 Nikola IV with older brother Ivan I inherited estates in Pounje and they simultaneously started to fortify them as well as make contacts with the Ottomans to whom they paid a yearly tribute like their father 9 However between 1537 and 1540 they started fighting against Gazi Husrev beg s forces for the control of fort Dubica 12 Fortress Kostajnica where Zrinski murdered Johann Katzianer engraved by Gaspar Bouttats 1686 In January 1539 Zrinski murdered the Imperial Army commander Johann Katzianer at Fortress Kostajnica because Katzianer had deserted the King Ferdinand I Habsburg had started to conspire in favor of throne contestant John Zapolya and had cooperated with the Ottomans 4 9 12 During the following year the estates of the Zrinski brothers were again attacked by the Ottomans By June 1540 they fought the combined forces of Husrev beg Murat beg Tardic and Mehmed beg Jahjapasic and because of a lack of sufficient help from the Austrian military the fortress Kostajnica was temporarily lost to the Turks Zrin Castle and Gvozdansko Castle managed to hold up but the mining sites and others were devastated 12 They successfully repelled the attack however and from that moment on the Zrinski family continuously fought against the Ottomans 4 9 In 1541 together with his older brother Ivan I Nikola received large possessions of the Vrana Priory in Croatia and Hungary by Ferdinand I but with the death of his brother in the same year he also became the only successor to the estates of the Zrinski family 4 13 In 1542 according to Antun Vramec he saved the Imperial Army forces from defeat at the siege of Pest by intervening with 400 Croats for which service he was appointed Ban of Croatia a position which held until 1556 4 During this period he frequently went to Gvozdansko Castle in order to inspect the silver mines and the mint like in other forts in the Pounje and Pokuplje basins 4 As compensation for him fighting against the Ottomans he was granted the whole area of Međimurje Murakoz on 12 March 1546 by King Ferdinand I hence the center of the Zrinski family has moved from Zrin Castle to the city of Cakovec where he significantly rearranged the existing Cakovec Castle 4 9 14 In 1549 he was given the right to collect tax from the subjects by himself and in 1561 the right to freely settle serfs on his estates 9 In 1556 Zrinski won a series of victories over the Ottomans culminating in the battle of Babocsa and thus preventing the fall of Szigetvar 9 14 However since he was unsatisfied with the amount of resources for defense he voluntary withdrew from his position as Ban of Croatia 9 15 In the next year 1557 he was titled Master of the treasury a royal office position which he held until death becoming once again one of the fifteen most influential persons in the Kingdom of Hungary 4 Additionally he served as a captain of Croatian light cavalry 1550 1560 captain of Szigetvar and commander of the Transdanubian border from 1561 and 1563 respectively and until his death 4 9 In 1563 on the coronation of Emperor Maximilian as king of Hungary Zrinski attended the ceremony at the head of 3000 Croatian and Magyar mounted noblemen in the hope of obtaining the highest dignity of Palatine vacant by the death of Tamas Nadasdy 9 16 Some historians like Geza Palffy consider he did manage to obtain it 9 In the next year he hastened southwards to defend the frontier and defeated the Ottomans at Szeged In 1565 Zrinski brought a copy of the Holy Crown of Hungary to Vienna for the funeral ceremony of Ferdinand I 9 Death EditMain article Siege of Szigetvar Zrinski s letter with signature 23 April 1566 17 In the spring of 1566 Zrinski was located in Szigetvar a strategic fortress for the defense of the shortest route to Vienna when the Ottoman sultan Suleiman the Magnificent went with a large army for a second attempt to conquer Vienna but first decided to capture Szigetvar Zrinski was informed by the new king Maximilian II that he could either remain or leave it to another captain but in an April 23rd letter Zrinski wrote that it was his will to remain because many thousands of people depend on the fortress s survival and he started to strategically prepare to confront the Sultan 9 17 Suleiman s forces reached Belgrade on 27 June after a forty nine day march Learning of Zrinski s success in an attack upon a Turkish forces at Siklos in July destroying several detachments 8 Suleiman decided to postpone his attack on Eger and instead attack Zrinski s fortress at Szigetvar to eliminate him as a threat 18 19 Zrinyi s Charge on the Turks from the Fortress of Szigetvar by Simon Hollosy 1896 For over a month from 5 August to 7 September 8 with a small force of roughly 2 300 2 500 soldiers mostly Croats 10 Zrinski heroically defended the small fortress of Szigetvar against the whole Ottoman army of over 100 000 soldiers and 300 cannons led by Suleiman in person They did so without reinforcements which were promised by the Hungarian Croatian King 17 and against Suleiman s offer of Croatian land to Zrinski 8 The siege of Szigetvar ended with every remaining member of the garrison in a desperate and suicidal charge from the fortress led by Zrinski on 7 September 1566 17 20 Suleiman also died but from natural causes one day before the Ottomans won the siege 21 As Ottoman forces had suffered heavy casualties during the siege of Szigetvar the army only managed to additionally capture the nearby fort Babocsa before Grand Vizier Sokollu Mehmed Pasha withdrew the army and ended the Ottoman conquest 9 According to historical sources Zrinski decided to be dressed in a hat and nice suit rather than a helmet and armour during his final charge and chose to have his father s sabre in hand so that he it could be said that he had bared all that I was judged by God s judgment 16 and offered one hundred gold coins as a reward for the Ottoman soldier who cut off his head He was shot by a Janissary with a musket in the head and chest while by other accounts it was first by a musket in the chest and then an arrow to the head 9 22 It is considered that his head was sent by Mehmed Pasha to Budin Pasha Sokullu Mustafa 9 23 or to new Sultan Selim II 24 but eventually the head was buried by son Juraj IV Zrinski Boldizsar Batthyany and Ferenc Tahy in September 1566 at the Pauline monastery in Sveta Jelena Senkovec Croatia 9 23 It is uncertain what happened to his body it could have been burned or buried near the battlefield but according to most sources it is considered to have been buried by former Muslim captive Mustafa Vilic from Banja Luka because he had been well treated by Zrinski 9 25 26 The tombstone of Zrinski in Cakovec Croatia In Međimurje County Museum in Cakovec are preserved remains of the tombstone of a member of the Zrinski family which most probably belonged to Nikola IV and under which his head was likely buried 9 25 Preserved in Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna are the sabre helmet and possibly the silk robe with decorative gold thread which were created and worn by Zrinski during the 1563 coronation of Maximilian II They were initially collected by Ferdinand II Archduke of Austria at Ambras Castle in the 16th century 16 Marriage EditZrinski married twice first in 1543 with Katarina Frankopan d 1561 and then Eva Rosenberg 1537 1591 in 1564 9 27 Due to his marriage to Katarina Frankopan a sister of Count Stjepan Frankopan of Ozalj d 1577 her vast estates including Ozalj and part of littoral cities like Bakar became at his disposal in 1550 due to the inheritance contract 4 13 With his marriage to Eva Rosenberg a sister of William of Rosenberg the Burgrave of Bohemia he managed to connect with one of the most notable Czech noble families and according to Geza Palffy to the highest elite of the Kingdom of Hungary 9 His marriages and his service during his lifetime managed to elevate the Zrinski family to become the most powerful noble family in the Kingdom of Croatia 13 Children Edit With Katarina and Eva Zrinski had thirteen children Ivan I Jelena Katarina Juraj IV Doroteja Ursula Barbara Margareta Magdalena Ana Kristofor Nikola V and Ivan II of whom most notably was his successor Juraj IV Zrinski 4 One of the younger sons married a lady from the noble Czech Kolowrat family 12 According to Dora Bobory it is possible to detect an increasingly conscious marriage policy within the Zrinski family where all the daughters of Miklos married well and where father himself chose his spouses wisely Most notably Doroteja became the wife of Boldizsar Batthyany in 1566 Katarina wife of Imre Forgach in 1576 while some other two daughters married into Thurzo family 12 specifically Katarina was previously 1562 married to Ferenc Thurzo being the mother of future Palatine of Hungary Gyorgy Thurzo 28 For some of them Ursula Katarina and Doroteja is known that were educated at Gussing 15 Legacy Edit Zrinski s statue at the Feldherrenhalle Museum of Military History Vienna Austria 1865 Zrinski s heroic act at the siege of Szigetvar made him a well known European Christian hero a defender and savior of Christendom and a model of a faithful and sacrificial warrior in the service of his ruler He was also compared to Leonidas I His cult of heroism was especially preserved among the Croats Hungarians and Slovaks In Croatia it also represented a symbol of Croatian identity directed against Ottoman Austrian and Hungarian political influence 9 29 30 Similarly he gained some popularity during the Polish struggle for independence in second half of the 19th century and early 20th century 31 According to historians like Agnes R Varkonyi and Alojzije Jembrih Zrinski had an exceptional military talent was a successful businessman politician with a concept and an endlessly passionate person 22 He was remembered in a first hand report Podsjedanje i osvojenje Sigeta 1568 by Zrinski s scribe and chamberlain Franjo Crnko 32 which was immediately translated in Latin by Samuel Budina and published in the same year titled Historia Sigethi totius Sclavoniae fortissimi propugnaculi with the second edition 1587 edited by Petrus Albinus 22 It was also translated into German Italian Spanish and other languages 33 Other works include a historical epic Vazetje Sigeta grada 1584 by Brne Karnarutic 32 and most prominently Hungarian epic poem The Siege of Sziget 1651 by his great grandson Nikola VII Zrinski and its partial Croatian variation Adrianskoga mora Sirena 1660 by great grandson Petar Zrinski 10 34 In the epic poem the elder Zrinski is the main hero and has assured Zrinski s place in Hungarian culture as it remains in print today and is considered one of the landmarks of Hungarian literature 35 Compared to the Hungarian poem which is an exception in Hungarian literature the Croatian variation fits the Croatian literature tradition 36 Vladislav Mencetic s Trublja slovinska 1665 is the first Ragusan literature work that introduces the idea of antemurale Christianitatis for Croatian territories and celebrates Zrinski as a hero 37 Pavao Ritter Vitezovic also wrote a related epic poem Odiljenje sigetsko 1684 38 In the 18th century his heroic act inspired school dramas in Jesuit Gymnasiums including Andreas Friz s Nicolai Zriny ad Szigethum victoria 1738 22 39 40 The German author Theodor Korner wrote a tragedy Zriny Ein Trauerspiel 1812 41 after which August von Adelburg Abramovic wrote the libretto for his opera Zrinyi 1868 42 The Croatian composer Ivan Zajc created an opera titled Nikola Subic Zrinski 1876 as a patriotic work which is still performed regularly today It includes an aria U boj u boj 9 which is regularly performed at the Japanese Kwansei Gakuin University since the World War I 43 Since the 16th century Zrinski featured in many engravings and paintings of him as a portrait or during the siege mostly as leading the charge like by Matthias Zundt Miklos Barabas Viktor Madarasz Mikolas Ales Bela Cikos Sesija and Oton Ivekovic among others 44 In 1914 the Czech painter Alphonse Mucha dedicated to Zrinski the painting titled Defense of Sziget against the Turks by Nicholas Zrinsky The Shield of Christendom from his The Slav Epic cycle By the imperial resolution of Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria on 28 February 1863 Zrinski was included in the list of Austria s most famous warlords and field commanders worthy of eternal emulation in whose honor and memory was built a life size statue of Carrara marble at the Museum of Military History Vienna in 1865 by sculptor Nikolaus Vay 1828 1886 45 There also exist several sculptures and busts of Zrinski in Zagreb Cakovec and Senkovec in Croatia Budapest and Szigetvar in Hungary and Heldenberg in Austria among others Parks in Zagreb see Nikola Subic Zrinski Square Koprivnica and Krizevci among others are named after him 9 In 1866 was held a solemn commemoration of the 300th anniversary of Zrinski s death in Croatia 22 In commemoration of the 450th anniversary of the siege of Szigetvar 1566 the year 2016 was declared a memorial year of Nikola Zrinski and the siege of Szigetvar in Croatia and Hungary On that occasion were held various cultural and artistic events 22 published many papers and books as well as organized scientific conferences in Zagreb Cakovec Vienna and Pecs 46 The Order of Nikola Subic Zrinski is the ninth ranked honour order given by the Republic of Croatia awarded since 1995 to Croatian or foreign citizens for acts of heroism 47 Gallery Edit Sabre and helmet of Zrinski at an exhibition in Međimurje County Museum on the 450th anniversary of the siege of Szigetvar 2016 An engraving by Jenichen Boldizsar 1566 The apotheosis of Miklos Zrinyi unknown author 16th century A funeral portrait unknown author 17th century or earlier A portrait at East Slovak Museum 18th century A portrait by Miklos Barabas 1842 An old portrait of Nikola Subic Zrinski by unknown author A portrait by Viktor Madarasz 1858 A portrait by Julije Huhn 1866 A portrait by Mikolas Ales 1878 A portrait by Oton Ivekovic 19th century A portrait by J F Mucke 19th century A portrait in Wiener Bilder 1907 Defense of Sziget against the Turks by Nicholas Zrinsky 1914 by Alphonse Mucha The Slav Epic A sculpture of Zrinski in Cakovec A sculpture of Zrinski at Kodaly korond in Budapest A modern sculpture of Zrinski in Szigetvar A bust of Zrinski at Hungarian Turkish Friendship Park in Szigetvar A bust of Zrinski in Szigetvar A bust of Zrinski in Heldenberg Memorial A bust of Zrinski for the 450th anniversary of the siege of Szigetvar at Senkovec 2016 A plaque in honor to Zrinski for the 450th anniversary of the siege of Szigetvar at Cakovec 2016Annotations Edit There never existed a historical person with a name of Nikola Subic Zrinski neither did his family members call themselves as Subic Zrinski 2 3 In the historical sources he is simply known as Nikola Zrinski i e Miklos Zrinyi which in the English language translates as Nikola of Zrin In Croatia besides the real name he is also known as Nikola Subic Zrinski which is a 19th century variation popularized by the same titled opera 2 while in Croatia and Hungary as Nikola Zrinski Sigetski and Miklos Zrinyi Szigetvari in English language Nicholas of Zrin of Szigetvar 4 References EditNotes Edit Pravopisna komisija 1960 Pravopis srpskohrvatskoga knjizevnog jezika Zagreb Matica srpska Matica hrvatska a b Mirnik Ivan 2004 Luc Oreskovic Les Frangipani Un exemple de la reputation des lignages au XVIIe siecle en Europe Cahiers Croates Hors serie 1 2003 Izdanje Almae matris croaticae alumni A M C A Odgovoran za publikaciju Vlatko Maric Mali oktav str 151 33 sl 1 genealoska shema 7 shematskih prikaza međusobnih odnosa tablice s opisima grbova na 7 str ISSN nedostaje Review article Historical Contributions in Croatian Croatian Institute of History 27 27 173 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Inoslav Besker 7 September 2018 450 Godisnjica bitke kod Sigeta Sparta je imala svog Leonidu a mi svoga Zrinskoga 450 Anniversary of the Battle of Siget Sparta had its Leonid and we had our Zrinski in Croatian Jutarnji list Retrieved 3 July 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Zrinski Nikola IV Croatian Encyclopedia in Croatian Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleza 1999 2009 retrieved 19 April 2014 Timothy Hughes Rare amp Early Newspapers Item 548456 Retrieved 1 December 2009 Victor L Tapie 1972 The Rise and Fall of the Habsburg Monarchy p 62 One of the richest lords of the region Nicholas Zrinsky a Croat whose name took the form of Zrinyi in Hungarian Lendvai Paul 2014 Zrinyi or Zrinski One Hero for Two Nations The Hungarians A Thousand Years of Victory in Defeat Princeton University Press pp 126 136 ISBN 978 1 4008 5152 2 there is no doubt that his mother tongue was Croat On the other hand Croatia at that time had already been an integral part of Hungary for 400 years albeit under a special administration As a member of the high nobility Zrinyi therefore belonged to the natio Hungarica the political nation of Hungary which however was not an ethnic but a juridico political category Zrinyi Zrinski fell as a Croat nobleman in the fight against the Turks for Emperor Ferdinand who was at the same time crowned King of Royal Hungary He died as a Croat for Hungary At that time his ethnic affiliation had nothing to do with language as it would in modern Hungary a b c d Tucker Spencer C 2009 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO pp 881 882 ISBN 978 1 85109 672 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Hrvoje Petric 2017 Nikola IV Subic Zrinski O 450 obljetnici njegove pogibije i proglasenju 2016 Godinom Nikole Subica Zrinskog Nikola IV Subic Zrinski About 450th anniversary of his death and proclaiming of 2016 the year of Nikola Subic Zrinski Hrvatska revija in Croatian Zagreb Matica hrvatska 3 29 33 Retrieved 27 May 2019 a b c Zrinski Nikola Enciklopedija Leksikografskog zavoda Vol 6 Zagreb Miroslav Krleza Institute of Lexicography 1969 p 744 Lieber Francis 1836 Zrinyi Encyclopaedia Americana Vol 13 Desilver Thomas p 345 a b c d e Tracy James D 2016 Balkan Wars Habsburg Croatia Ottoman Bosnia and Venetian Dalmatia 1499 1617 Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 102 103 120 122 125 127 253 ISBN 978 1 4422 1360 9 a b c Zrinski Croatian Encyclopedia in Croatian Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleza 1999 2009 retrieved 27 May 2019 a b Ferdo Sisic Povijest Hrvata Pregled povijesti hrvatskog naroda 1526 1918 drugi dio pg 295 a b Dora Bobory 2009 The Sword and the Crucible Count Boldizsar Batthyany and Natural Philosophy in Sixteenth Century Hungary Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 14 23 35 88 145 ISBN 978 1 4438 1093 7 a b c Kovacs S Tibor Negyesi Lajos Padanyi Jozsef 2017 Sablja Sigetskog Nikole IV Zrinskog Sabre of Nikola IV Zrinski of Siget Podravina Scientific Multidisciplinary Research Journal in Croatian Zagreb Meridijani 16 32 43 58 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske a b c d Szilagyi Sandor ed 1897 VII Chapter A szigeti hadjarat A magyar nemzet tortenete Magyarorszag harom reszre oszlasanak tortenete 1526 1608 IV Az orszag vegleges felosztasa 1548 1568 Hungarian Electronic Library in Hungarian Budapest Athenaeum Irodalmi es Nyomdai Rt Shelton Edward 1867 The book of battles or Daring deeds by land and sea London Houlston and Wright pp 82 83 Setton Kenneth Meyer 1984 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 The Sixteenth Century Vol IV Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society pp 845 846 ISBN 0 87169 162 0 Count Miklos Zrinyi 1508 1566 Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition Gilman D C Peck H T Colby F M eds 1905 Zrinyi Miklos New International Encyclopedia 1st ed New York Dodd Mead a b c d e f Pernjak Dejan 2016 Franjo Crnko Nikola Zrinski branitelj Sigeta grada ur Alojz Jembrih Hrvatsko knjizevno drustvo sv Jeronima Zagreb 2016 144 str Kroatologija Casopis za Hrvatsku Kulturu in Croatian Zagreb University of Zagreb Center for Croatian Studies 7 2 226 229 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske a b Walton Jeremy F 2019 Sanitizing Szigetvar On the post imperial fashioning of nationalist memory History and Anthropology Routledge 30 4 434 447 doi 10 1080 02757206 2019 1612388 Sakaoglu Necdet 2001 Bu Mulkun Sultanlari 36 Osmanli Padisahi Oglak Yayincilik ve Reklamcilik p 141 ISBN 978 975 329 299 3 a b Korunek Marijana 2014 Pavlinski samostan u Senkovcu i grofovi Zrinski Pauline monastery in Senkovec and Counts Zrinski Croatica Christiana Periodica in Croatian Zagreb The Catholic Faculty of Theology 38 73 51 70 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Book 1867 E Shelton and C Jones ed The book of battles Daring deeds by land and sea London Houlston and Wright pp 82 83 Mirnik Ivan A 1992 Srebra Nikole Zrinskog Gvozdanski rudnici i kovnica novca Nicholas of Zrin s silver The Gvozdansko mines and mint Zagreb Drustvo povjesnicara umjetnosti Hrvatske DPUH p 13 Lengyel Tunde 2015 The Chances for a Provincial Cultural Centre The Case of Gyorgy Thurzo Palatine of Hungary 1567 1616 In Gabor Almasi Szymon Brzezinski Ildiko Horn eds A Divided Hungary in Europe Exchanges Networks and Representations 1541 1699 Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 111 ISBN 978 1 4438 7297 3 Troch Pieter 2015 Nationalism and Yugoslavia Education Yugoslavism and the Balkans before World War II I B Tauris pp 83 84 93 99 200 ISBN 978 0 85773 768 7 Heuser Beatrice 2017 Defeat as Moral Victory The Historical Experience In Andrew R Hom Cian O Driscoll Kurt Mills eds Moral Victories The Ethics of Winning Wars OUP Oxford p 56 ISBN 978 0 19 252197 2 Leszek Malczak 2017 Nikola Subic Zrinski u poljskoj kulturi In Stjepan Blazetin ed XIII Međunarodni kroatisticki znanstveni skup zbornik radova ISBN 978 963 89731 3 9 a b Thomas David Chesworth John A 2015 Christian Muslim Relations A Bibliographical History Volume 7 Central and Eastern Europe Asia Africa and South America 1500 1600 BRILL pp 93 430 493 ISBN 978 90 04 29848 4 Kidric France 2013 Budina Samuel med 1540 in 1550 po 1571 Slovenska biografija Slovenska akademija znanosti in umetnosti Znanstvenoraziskovalni center SAZU Josip Voncina ed 1976 Pet stoljeca hrvatske knjizevnosti knjiga 17 Izabrana djela Zrinski Frankopan Vitezovic Zagreb Matica hrvatska Zora pp 7 24 Miklos Zrinyi Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Retrieved 28 September 2016 Ivana Sabljak 2007 U povodu 660 godina od biljezenja imena plemicke obitelji Zrinski Dva brata i jedna Sirena Vijenac in Croatian Zagreb Matica hrvatska 349 Retrieved 27 May 2019 Thomas David Chesworth John A 2017 Christian Muslim Relations A Bibliographical History Volume 10 Ottoman and Safavid Empires 1600 1700 BRILL pp 340 342 ISBN 978 90 04 34604 8 Kolumbic Nikica 1970 Vitezovicev lirski dozivljaj sigetske tragedije Senjski Zbornik Prilozi Za Geografiju Etnologiju Gospodarstvo Povijest I Kulturu in Croatian Senj Gradski muzej Senj i Senjsko muzejsko drustvo 4 1 281 299 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Bratulic Josip 1996 Trnava i Pozun Bratislava i hrvatska tiskana knjiga XVII i XVIII stoljeca Croatica casopis za Hrvatski Jezik Knjizevnost i Kulturu in Croatian Zagreb Department of Croatian language and literature at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences 26 42 43 44 83 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Pinter Marta Zsuzsanna in Hungarian 2009 Zrinius ad Sigethum Theorie dramatique et pratique du theatre dans l oeuvre d Andreas Friz S J In Wilhelm Kuhlmann Gabor Tuskes ed Militia et Litterae Die beiden Niklaus Zrinyi und Europa Walter de Gruyter pp 242 257 ISBN 978 3 484 36641 1 Rines George Edwin ed 1920 Zrinyi Niklas Encyclopedia Americana Jagoda Martincevic 15 August 2016 Nikolu Subica Zrinskog nije napisao Zajc nego stanoviti August Abramovic Adelburg in Croatian Jutarnji list Retrieved 27 May 2019 Shiba Nobuhiro 2008 Jedan odlomak iz povijesti suradnje Japana i Hrvatske Hrvatska pjesma U boj i japanski muski zbor An episode from the history of cooperation between Japan and Croatia Croatian song U boj and Japanese male choirs Povijest U Nastavi in Croatian Zagreb Drustvo za hrvatsku povjesnicu VI 12 2 167 176 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Fatovic Ferencic Stella Ferber Bogdan Jasenka 2003 Tragom slike Nikole Subica Zrinskog kronologija kraljevske dvorske ljekarne K Zrinjskomu Tracing the Painting of Nikola Subic Zrinski the Chronology of Royal Pharmacy K Zrinjskomu Medicus in Croatian Zagreb Pliva Hrvatska 12 1 143 150 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Johann Christoph Allmayer Beck in German 1981 Das Heeresgeschichtliche Museum Wien Das Museum und seine Reprasentationsraume Salzburg Kiesel Verlag p 30 ISBN 3 7023 0113 5 Varga Szabolcs 2018 Nikola Zrinski Sigetski Nikola Subic Zrinski Revidiranje zajednicke hrvatsko mađarske povijesti u 21 stoljecu Szigetvari Zrinyi Miklos Nikola Subic Zrinski Revising Common Croatian and Hungarian History in the Twenty First Century Zbornik Odsjeka za Povijesne Znanosti Zavoda za Povijesne i Drustvene Znanosti Hrvatske Akademije Znanosti i Umjetnosti in Croatian Zagreb 36 81 92 doi 10 21857 mzvkptz7r9 via Hrcak Portal znanstvenih casopisa Republike Hrvatske Zakon o odlikovanjima i priznanjima Republike Hrvatske Archived 2007 06 11 at the Wayback Machine Narodne novine 20 95 Law on Decorations accessed 1 September 2016 in Croatian Sources Edit Treaty of peace with Germany Hearings before the Committee on Foreign Relations signed at Versailles on June 28 1919 and submitted to the Senate on July 10 1919 the Slavs rescued them from a strangle hold namely Nicholas Zrinsky and John Sobieski one a Croatian and the other a Pole This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Bain Robert Nisbet 1911 Zrinyi Miklos Count elder Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed p 1045 Reynolds Francis J ed 1921 Zrinyi Count Niklas Collier s New Encyclopedia New York P F Collier amp Son Company Further readingJosip Bratulic Vladimir Loncarevic Bozidar Petrac Nikola Subic Zrinski u hrvatskom stihu in Croatian 2016 Croatian Writers Association Zagreb pages 756 ISBN 978 953 278 235 6 Szabolcs Varga Leonidasz a vegvideken Zrinyi Miklos 1508 1566 in Hungarian 2016 Kronosz Pecs Budapest 2016 pages 280 ISBN 978 615 549 783 4External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nikola Subic Zrinski Zrinyi Nicolaus at the Deutsche Biographie Zrinski s sabre at the Kunsthistorisches Museum Zrinski s helmet at the Kunsthistorisches Museum Zrinski s funeral picture at the Hungarian National Museum Croatian documentary episode Nikola Subic Zrinski of TV series Hrvatski Velikani by Hrvatska Radiotelevizija 2016Nikola IV ZrinskiHouse of ZrinskiBorn 1507 1508 Died 7 September 1566Political officesPreceded byPetar Keglevic Ban of Croatia1542 1556 Succeeded byPeter ErdodyPreceded byGabor Perenyi Master of the treasury1557 1566 Succeeded byJuraj Zrinski Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nikola IV Zrinski amp oldid 1131354071, 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