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Paul I Šubić of Bribir

Paul I Šubić of Bribir (Croatian: Pavao I. Šubić Bribirski, Hungarian: bribiri I. Subics Pál; c. 1245 – 1 May 1312) was Ban of Croatia between 1275 and 1312, and Lord of Bosnia from 1299 to 1312. As the oldest son of Stephen II of the Šubić noble family, he inherited the title of count of Bribir. He was appointed ban in 1273. He was relieved from duty in 1274, following his involvement in disputes between the Dalmatian coastal cities of Trogir and Split, and was returned to office in 1275.

Paul I Šubić of Bribir
Depiction of Paul Šubić from the 14th century Chest of Saint Simeon[1]
Ban of Croatia
Reign
  • 1273–1274
  • 1275–1312
Predecessor
  • Maurus (1st term)
  • Nicholas Gutkeled (2nd term)
SuccessorMladen II Šubić
Lord of Bosnia
Reign1299–1312
PredecessorStephen I Kotromanić
SuccessorMladen II Šubić
Bornc. 1245
Died1 May 1312 (aged 66–67)
Burial
Church of St. Mary, Bribir, Kingdom of Croatia
Spouse
Ursa
(m. 1289; died 1303)
Issue
HouseŠubić
FatherStephen II Šubić
ReligionRoman Catholic

With the help of his brothers, Mladen I and George I, Paul imposed direct rule over most of the coastal cities. The contest over the lands of the Kačić family in southern Croatia, who were known for piracy in the Adriatic Sea, brought Paul into conflict with the Republic of Venice. At the same time, the Šubićs became allies with the House of Anjou from Naples. Fighting with Venice continued intermittently until a peace treaty in 1294.

During the succession crisis of the 1290s, Paul emerged as one of the most powerful oligarchs in the realm, and was the main ally of the Angevins in their struggle against the Árpád dynasty. In 1300, Paul invited the Angevin contender to the throne, Charles Robert, to Split and from there accompanied him to Zagreb, where Charles was recognized as king of Hungary and Croatia. Paul did not take part in subsequent activities of Charles in Hungary, where he was not recognized as king for another 10 years. Paul expanded his dominion eastward, over the Banate of Bosnia in 1299, and Hum in 1301, whose territories he distributed among his family members. In 1304, Paul led a campaign into Bosnia after Mladen I, whom Paul appointed Ban of Bosnia, was killed by rebels. The rebellion was quickly quelled, and Paul passed the title of Bosnian ban to his son, Mladen II.

The king's authority over the lands held by Paul was only nominal throughout the entirety of his rule, during which he managed to turn his titles into hereditary ones for his family. His main seats were in Bribir and the city of Skradin. He issued his own coin, minted with silver from Bosnia, and arranged the establishment of three new Catholic dioceses in Croatia. In 1311, Paul assisted a revolt against Venice in Zadar and gained control over the city, which led to another war with the Venetians. Paul died shortly after the capture of Zadar, in May 1312, while peace negotiations with Venice were underway. He was succeeded by his eldest son, Mladen II.

Early life edit

 
The seal of Paul, which reads "Paul of Bribir, Ban of the Croats and Lord of Bosnia".

Paul was the eldest son of Stephen II of the Šubić family,[2] the most influential noble house in the Kingdom of Croatia and Dalmatia, at the time in a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary.[3] The exact date of Paul's birth is unknown, the year is estimated around 1245. He had two brothers, Mladen I and George I.[4] Of his sisters, the name of Stanislava is known.[5][6] Paul's father, Stephen II, was involved in the war with the Mongol Empire in 1242, when King Béla IV took refugee in the city of Trogir, which he governed. For his assistance, Béla granted the County of Bribir hereditarily to Stephen in 1251. Around this time, Stephen emerged as the head of the Šubić family, following an internal struggle for leadership. Along with Trogir and Bribir, the Šubićs governed the County of Šibenik. Stephen's wife, whose name is not known, was related to the royal Árpád dynasty, probably with one of its female branches.[7]

Paul inherited the title of count of Bribir from his father, who died before 1267.[8] The first mention of his name occurs in 1272, when he was Podestà of the city of Trogir. In May 1273, Paul was Count of Trogir and Split.[9] His brother, George I, was named Count of Šibenik.[8] Paul had good relations with the Gutkeleds, and supported Slavonian Ban Joachim Gutkeled, who was probably his cousin, in his struggle with competing nobles.[9][10] From 1273, Paul was the ban of the maritime regions (Latin: banus maritimus),[11][12] in place of previous ban Maurus.[9] The ban of the maritime regions, also referred to as Ban of Croatia, was in the 13th century the deputy of the ban of all Slavonia, who governed both the Croatian Kingdom and Slavonia.[13] Through this duty, the influence of Paul and his brothers grew rapidly.[14]

Reign edit

Consolidation of power edit

 
Remains of the fortress of Bribir, one of Paul's seats

Paul became involved in the longstanding dispute between Split and Trogir.[14] The two cities were at war in the 1240s over possessions in the hinterland of Split.[15] Paul acted in favor of Split and tried to strengthen his rule over Trogir, which had mutinied against Paul. He ignored the warnings of King Ladislaus IV, who took Trogir under his protection. In the winter of 1273/1274, Split attacked the Fortress of Klis, whose castellan was a supporter of Trogir. While the attack failed, Paul managed to subjugate Trogir in the spring of 1274.[9][10] He was also involved in the dispute between Šibenik and Trogir over the Church of Šibenik. Paul favored the position of Šibenik, and pressed for the secession of its Church from the Diocese of Trogir. He was then briefly removed from the position of ban in the second half of 1274. He returned to the office in the summer of the following year. The position of ban of all Slavonia was held jointly by Ivan Kőszegi and Nicholas Gutkeled. For Nicholas, a new title, ban of all Croatia and Dalmatia, was established.[16][17] Nicholas held this title in 1275,[18] and Paul remained the only ban in Croatia after he moved to Hungary.[19]

Paul's brother, Mladen I, succeeded him as Podestà of Trogir,[19] and was later Count of Trogir and Split.[20] By 1278, the Šubićs governed almost all coastal cities south of the Velebit Mountain. Among them was Skradin near Šibenik.[19] Skradin was one of Paul's seats, along with Bribir, Klis, and the Ostrovica Fortress.[5] Beside these, Paul also owned the castles of Knin and Počitelj.[21] The lands owned by the Šubićs did not form a compact area, and they competed with other noble families for control over counties and forts.[22]

Paul sought to consolidate his control over the holdings of the Kačić family, a pirate stronghold in southern Croatia, centred around the city of Omiš. The House of Anjou from the Kingdom of Naples was also active in suppressing the pirates from that area. During this period, the Šubić and the Anjou families established friendly relations.[23] The Angevins controlled southern Italy, which was an important source of grain for Dalmatian coastal cities and the hinterland in late 13th century.[24] The first contacts between the two families were made before Paul's 2nd term as ban, at the initiative of the Angevins who saw in them potential allies.[11]

The Angevin forces took the islands of Hvar and Brač from the Kačićs in 1275. The Republic of Venice started its own war against the Kačićs in 1276. By April 1278, the islands of Hvar and Brač recognized Venetian authority. This threatened Paul's interests and he intervened in the conflict against Venice. In the course of the war, Paul gained control of Omiš and the island of Brač, where he appointed a nobleman from Zadar to govern it. George I was appointed Count of Omiš.[25] The Kačićs were no longer in power, which eliminated the threat of pirates to Paul's ships in the Adriatic Sea.[23]

In 1288, Paul started negotiating a peace deal with Venice. After long talks, a peace treaty was concluded in May 1290. Paul's representatives in the negotiations guaranteed that the pirates from Omiš would not attack Venetian ships and that they would not sail in the northern Adriatic. The Venetian authority over the islands of Hvar and Brač was acknowledged. The cities of Trogir, Šibenik, and Split agreed to pay 20,000 libras to Venice as a warranty. The Venetians guaranteed that they would not attack Paul's territories and gave his brother, George I, a free passage in his visits to the Papal States and in other trips. The peace treaty was broken in May 1293, when Venice captured Omiš with the help of a local noble. The conflict was renewed and lasted until March 1294 and a new peace treaty, signed under the same conditions as the first one, and Omiš returned to the Šubićs.[25] Paul turned to seeking allies in Venice, through his ties with the Tiepolo family,[26] as well as in the Venetian-controlled Dalmatian communes of Rab and Zadar. Marital ties were established with the House of Gorizia, who were rivals of Venice.[27]

Paul maintained good relations with the Pope and the Catholic Church.[28] He shared common interests with the Roman Curia in suppressing heresy in the region and countering Venetian dominance in the Adriatic, and both supported the House of Anjou in their claim to the throne. Their contacts became more frequent after 1290, during the pontificate of Pope Nicholas IV. Prior to becoming pope, Nicholas was the Franciscan minister provincial of Slavonia, which covered the Kingdom of Croatia and Dalmatia. The Šubićs were also close to the Franciscan movement in Croatia.[29]

Succession crisis edit

 
The dominion of Paul among the other oligarchs during the interregnum
 
Coat of Arms of the Šubić family

With the death of King Ladislaus IV in 1290, who left no heirs, a war of succession broke out between Andrew III of the Árpád dynasty, supported by most of the Hungarian nobles, and Charles Martel of the House of Anjou, with the support of most of the Croatian nobility. Among them were the Šubić, the Kurjaković, the Frankopan, and the Babonić families, but their loyalty varied.[30] Andrew III and Charles Martel competed with each other for the support of the nobility in Croatia and Slavonia.[31] The Angevins primarily turned to Paul. Andrew found an ally in Slavonian Ban Stephen III Babonić.[32] This resulted in a dispute between the Šubićs and the Babonićs over the county of Drežnik near Bihać, which Andrew granted to the Babonićs, while the Angevins granted it to the Šubićs.[33]

In November 1291, the Angevins and Paul agreed on the import of grain from Apulia.[34] In 1292, Charles Martel's father, Charles II, in the name of his son, awarded Paul and the Šubić family the hereditary rights to all of Croatia from the Gvozd Mountain to the Neretva River,[30] "with all the barons, vassals, cities, castles, and villages, with adjacent islands and all the rights and appurtenances", except for the westernmost part of Croatia, ruled by the Frankopans.[34] In 1293, Andrew III made a similar gesture by naming Paul the hereditary ban of Croatia and Dalmatia. With this move, Andrew may have won Paul's support for a brief time.[35] Andrew III also asked Paul to recognize his mother, Tomasina Morosini, as the duchess of all Slavonia, a title that covered the entire territory from the Drava and Danube rivers to the Adriatic sea. This was not acceptable to Paul and he turned back to the Angevins.[36][34]

The sudden death of Charles Martel from the plague in 1295 hampered the ambitions of the Anjou family. Charles Martel's rights to the throne passed to his son, Charles Robert.[37] Charles II confirmed Paul's position of ban for life.[34] Andrew III was accepted as king by the nobility and a short period of peace followed.[35] In 1299, Andrew appointed his uncle, Albertino Morosini, Duke of Slavonia,[38] and as he had no sons, the heir to the throne. This led to a new revolt on behalf of Charles Robert.[35] The same year, Charles II confirmed all possessions of Paul and his brothers, both current and any in the future, on the condition that the Šubićs provide troops for the Angevin campaigns. Previous grants were unconditioned, and Paul started distancing himself from the Angevins.[39]

Paul held the view that the right to the Hungarian and Croatian kingdoms is determined by the Holy See, on the grounds that Croatian King Demetrius Zvonimir and Hungarian King Stephen I were enthroned by the Pope.[40] He sent George I to visit the Pope in Rome and the Anjou seat in Naples in January 1300. George convinced Charles II to press his grandson's claim to the throne and arrange Charles Robert's journey over the Adriatic Sea to the city of Split, where Paul would meet him. He also won Papal approval for one of the goals of the Šubić family, to remove the Church in Šibenik from the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Trogir, and to create a Diocese of Šibenik directly under the Archbishop of Split. George and Charles Robert arrived in Split in August. From there, Paul accompanied Charles to Zagreb, where loyal nobles – for instance, Ugrin Csák – recognized him as king. Of the lands and cities under the authority of Paul, only the city of Trogir, presumably due to the separation of the Diocese of Šibenik, tried to challenge the recognition of Charles.[41][42]

Charles's opponent, Andrew III, died in January 1301.[35] Around this time, Paul was on a pilgrimage to Rome.[43] Charles hurried to Esztergom, where he was crowned with a provisional crown in the spring of 1301.[44] Paul was not involved in Charles Robert's subsequent activities in Hungary, and focused on expanding his realm to the city of Zadar, then under Venetian rule, and the Banate of Bosnia.[45] Despite the coronation, Charles was not fully recognized for another 10 years, and ruled only some parts of Hungary, while his power in Croatia was only nominal. Paul rarely made a reference to the king in his charters, and was de facto an independent ruler within his realm.[46] He and his family members did not attend Charles Robert's coronation in 1309, to which he sent his emissaries.[47][45] George, who ruled as count of maritime towns,[10] maintained stronger contacts with the Angevins due to the threat of Venice.[48]

Expansion edit

 
The dominion of Paul in 1312 (Croatia, Bosnia, and Hum), shortly after the capture of Zadar

In 1299, Paul expanded his rule to the Banate of Bosnia and took the title of lord of Bosnia (Latin: dominus Bosne). The main ally of Paul in Bosnia was Hrvatin Stjepanić of the Hrvatinić family, with kinship ties to the Šubićs, who ruled as Count of Donji Kraji.[49] Paul's rule was contested by Bosnian Ban Stephen I Kotromanić. In the spring of 1302, Mladen I marched against Stephen, and by May he gained control of most of the banate up to the Drina River in the east. The offensive was over in June, when Mladen I, as the new ban of Bosnia, issued trading privileges to Split from Foča, a town on the banks of the Drina.[50]

Paul also expanded to the southeast, on lands ruled by Serbian King Stefan Milutin, in 1301. He took advantage of the civil war in Serbia between Stefan Milutin and Stefan Dragutin, and captured the entire region of Hum. He then attacked the city of Kotor, with the help of the Venetian fleet, and from Dubrovnik and Zadar, cities under the sovereignty of Venice. The city held off the attack, which was the furthest point reached by Paul's armies. Peace negotiations between Paul and Stefan Milutin were planned in 1303, but it is not known whether the negotiations occurred and what was the outcome. Paul's eldest son, Mladen II, was appointed Lord of Hum.[49][51] The administration of the land was entrusted to the Nelipić family.[52]

The death of his brother Mladen I in June 1304, who had been reportedly murdered by the supporters of Stephen I Kotromanić, described by the Šubićs as heretics, compelled Paul to lead an army into Bosnia and reaffirm his authority. He re-established his rule by February 1305, and passed the title of ban to Mladen II.[49][51] Paul took the title of lord of all Bosnia.[53] Charles Robert granted Paul the hereditary right to the Banate of Bosnia in 1308.[51]

Last years edit

 
Coins of Paul and Mladen I

Paul preferred the title ban of the Croats (Latin: banus Croatorum), instead of ban of Croatia or ban of the maritime regions, suggesting that his power came from the people and the Croatian nobility rather than a higher authority.[49] In this way, he stressed out his independence from the ban of all Slavonia.[13] Paul's coat of arms was an eagle's wing on a shield. He kept a chancellery in both Skradin and Bribir. He issued his own coins, minted with silver from Bosnia,[54] and modeled after the Venetian grosso. The coins bore the names of Mladen I and later Mladen II, the bans of Bosnia, and the name of Paul.[55]

Along with the Diocese of Šibenik, two new dioceses were established, one in Duvno, and the other one in Omiš. In Skradin, which became Paul's main seat, the church of St. John the Baptist was built. Paul chose that saint as the protector of his family.[56] A Franciscan monastery of Saint Elizabeth, where his sister Stanislava served as part of the Poor Clares order, was also built in Skradin.[5] In Bribir, the Franciscan church of St. Mary was built, which served as the funerary church of the Šubićs.[57]

The Šubićs invoked the memory of earlier Croatian dukes and kings of the Domagojević and Trpimirović dynasties, in order to portray their rule as a continuity.[58][59] This was particularly reflected in the invoking of King Demetrius Zvonimir, who ruled Croatia in the 2nd half of the 11th century. A chronicle from the early 14th century about Zvonimir, attributed to the Šubićs, says that Zvonimir was buried in the same funerary church that was used by the Šubićs.[47] In 1302, Paul wrote to the Pope that Croatia was since the times of King Zvonimir the fief of the Holy See.[29] Before 1310, Pope Clement V declared Paul the patron and protector of the monastery of St. Gregory in Vrana, which was donated by Zvonimir to Pope Gregory VII,[47] and then granted to the Knights Templar.[60] There are indications that Paul erected a memorial plaque in the church of St. Mary, in honor of Zvonimir.[61] Stone inscriptions mentioning the 9th century Duke Branimir were restored and placed in newly constructed church buildings.[62]

 
A Latin charter issued by Paul in 1305 to Hrvatin Stjepanić

At the peak of his power, Paul turned his attention to the city of Zadar, the only Dalmatian coastal city that was not under his control. He maintained close connections with the nobility of Zadar, appointed them on various positions within his realm,[56] and arbitrated in land disputes between the citizens of Zadar and the Bribir County, to which Venice threatened with harsh fines.[63] In 1308, Venice captured the city of Ferrara in northern Italy. As the city was claimed as a part of the Papal States, Pope Clement V laid and interdict on Venice.[63]

In 1310, Venice was faced with a failed attempt by Bajamonte Tiepolo to overthrow the Doge of Venice. Bajamonte then took refugee in Paul's lands.[56] Paul assembled an army in the vicinity of Zadar in the spring of 1310, and remained stationary until an uprising against the Venetian authorities broke out in Zadar in March 1311. Paul's son, Mladen II, was at the head of the army sent to help the rebels, and the Venetians were forced to flee the city. Mladen II was proclaimed Count of Zadar and Prince of Dalmatia (Latin: princeps Dalmacie), as Zadar was considered the capital of Dalmatia. The Doge responded by sending a large fleet to recover the city.[64] Paul informed the Pope about the course of events, asserted that Zadar was "freed from the unlawful Venetian seizure", and referred to Pope's interdict as a pretext for the intervention.[65]

The forces under Mladen's command successfully repelled the attacks. Both Pope Clement V and King Charles Robert protested the attacks on Zadar, and Venice agreed on peace negotiations that began in April 1312.[66] Fighting nonetheless continued, in the course of which the commander of the Venetian fleet was captured.[67] The negotiations were handled by the second son of Paul, George II, and they dragged on after Paul's death. Paul died on 1 May and was buried in the church of St. Mary in Bribir. He was succeeded by his son, Mladen II.[64][68]

Family edit

The name of Paul's first wife is not known. Paul married his second wife, Ursa, in 1289.[69] She was probably the sister of Hrvatin Stjepanić,[49][70] or the daughter of Stefan Dragutin and Catherine of the Árpáds.[71] Ursa died in 1303. In a chronicle about her death, she was referred to as the baness of the Croats.[72] Paul's two brothers, Mladen I and George I, had a significant influence during his rule. Paul had four sons to whom he gave positions and holdings.[73] His first son was Mladen II, who was Prince of Dalmatia, Count of Zadar, and Ban of Bosnia, and succeeded his father as Ban of Croatia and Lord of Bosnia.[74] He was married to Helen, a relative of the House of Anjou.[60] After his father's death, Mladen kept to himself the title of ban of Bosnia and lord of Hum, and only let his brother George II, the second son of Paul, to participate in the higher level of government. George II was the count of Dalmatian cities. The other two sons, Paul II and Gregory II, were much younger and held lower titles.[75]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Mikulić 2016, p. 48.
  2. ^ Karbić 2004, p. 10.
  3. ^ Karbić 2004, p. 1.
  4. ^ Karbić 2004, pp. 10–11.
  5. ^ a b c Tolić 2016, p. 126.
  6. ^ Klaić 1897, p. 43.
  7. ^ Karbić 2004, pp. 9–10.
  8. ^ a b Budak 2017, p. 102.
  9. ^ a b c d Karbić 2004, p. 11.
  10. ^ a b c Budak 2017, p. 103.
  11. ^ a b Karbić 2010, p. 126.
  12. ^ Zsoldos 2011, p. 46.
  13. ^ a b Karbić 1999, p. 521.
  14. ^ a b Klaić 1989.
  15. ^ Fine 1994, pp. 150–151.
  16. ^ Karbić 2004, pp. 11–12.
  17. ^ Zsoldos 2011, pp. 47–48.
  18. ^ Sălăgean 2016, p. 98.
  19. ^ a b c Karbić 2004, p. 12.
  20. ^ Karbić 2008, pp. 46–47.
  21. ^ Engel 1996, pp. 343, 392.
  22. ^ Ančić 1997, pp. 85–86.
  23. ^ a b Karbić 2008, p. 49.
  24. ^ Raukar 2003, pp. 34–35.
  25. ^ a b Karbić 2004, pp. 13–14.
  26. ^ Karbić 2004, p. 18.
  27. ^ Karbić 2010, p. 133–134.
  28. ^ Ančić 2002, p. 103.
  29. ^ a b Karbić 2010, pp. 130–131.
  30. ^ a b Fine 1994, pp. 207–208.
  31. ^ Kekez 2008, p. 75.
  32. ^ Kekez 2008, p. 70.
  33. ^ Ančić 1997, pp. 86–87.
  34. ^ a b c d Budak 2017, p. 104.
  35. ^ a b c d Fine 1994, p. 208.
  36. ^ Mikulić 2016, pp. 46–47.
  37. ^ Kekez 2008, pp. 75–76.
  38. ^ Kekez 2008, p. 76.
  39. ^ Budak 2017, pp. 104–105.
  40. ^ Ančić 2020, pp. 145–146.
  41. ^ Fine 1994, pp. 208–209.
  42. ^ Karbić 2004, pp. 15–16.
  43. ^ Karbić 2010, p. 128.
  44. ^ Engel 2001, p. 128.
  45. ^ a b Karbić 2004, p. 16.
  46. ^ Fine 1994, pp. 209–210.
  47. ^ a b c Budak 2017, p. 105.
  48. ^ Granić 1994, p. 45.
  49. ^ a b c d e Budak 2017, p. 106.
  50. ^ Karbić 2004, pp. 16–17.
  51. ^ a b c Karbić 2004, p. 17.
  52. ^ Ančić 1997, p. 97.
  53. ^ Ančić 1997, p. 95.
  54. ^ Budak 2017, pp. 106–107.
  55. ^ Sulejmanagić 2014, p. 53.
  56. ^ a b c Budak 2017, p. 107.
  57. ^ Laszlo Klemar 2016, pp. 90–91.
  58. ^ Jakšić 1998, p. 122.
  59. ^ Ančić 2002, pp. 102–103, 107–108.
  60. ^ a b Karbić 2010, p. 130.
  61. ^ Laszlo Klemar 2016, p. 97.
  62. ^ Ančić 2002, p. 102.
  63. ^ a b Granić 1994, p. 47.
  64. ^ a b Karbić 2004, pp. 18–19.
  65. ^ Granić 1994, pp. 47–48.
  66. ^ Budak 2017, p. 108.
  67. ^ Granić 1994, p. 49.
  68. ^ Engel 1996, p. 22.
  69. ^ Klaić 1897, p. 61.
  70. ^ Kekez 2008, p. 78.
  71. ^ Ančić 2002, p. 107.
  72. ^ Klaić 1897, p. 79.
  73. ^ Klaić 1897, p. 76.
  74. ^ Klaić 1897, pp. 98, 179.
  75. ^ Karbić 2004, p. 25.

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Paul I Šubić of Bribir
Born: c. 1245 Died: 1 May 1312
Regnal titles
Preceded by
Maurus
Ban of Croatia
1273–1274
Succeeded by
Unknown
Preceded by
Nicholas Gutkeled
Ban of Croatia
1275–1312
Succeeded by
Preceded by Lord of Bosnia
1299–1312

paul, Šubić, bribir, croatian, pavao, Šubić, bribirski, hungarian, bribiri, subics, pál, 1245, 1312, croatia, between, 1275, 1312, lord, bosnia, from, 1299, 1312, oldest, stephen, Šubić, noble, family, inherited, title, count, bribir, appointed, 1273, relieved. Paul I Subic of Bribir Croatian Pavao I Subic Bribirski Hungarian bribiri I Subics Pal c 1245 1 May 1312 was Ban of Croatia between 1275 and 1312 and Lord of Bosnia from 1299 to 1312 As the oldest son of Stephen II of the Subic noble family he inherited the title of count of Bribir He was appointed ban in 1273 He was relieved from duty in 1274 following his involvement in disputes between the Dalmatian coastal cities of Trogir and Split and was returned to office in 1275 Paul I Subic of BribirDepiction of Paul Subic from the 14th century Chest of Saint Simeon 1 Ban of CroatiaReign1273 12741275 1312PredecessorMaurus 1st term Nicholas Gutkeled 2nd term SuccessorMladen II SubicLord of BosniaReign1299 1312PredecessorStephen I KotromanicSuccessorMladen II SubicBornc 1245Died1 May 1312 aged 66 67 BurialChurch of St Mary Bribir Kingdom of CroatiaSpouseUrsa m 1289 died 1303 wbr IssueMladen IIGeorge IIPaul IIGregory IIHouseSubicFatherStephen II SubicReligionRoman Catholic With the help of his brothers Mladen I and George I Paul imposed direct rule over most of the coastal cities The contest over the lands of the Kacic family in southern Croatia who were known for piracy in the Adriatic Sea brought Paul into conflict with the Republic of Venice At the same time the Subics became allies with the House of Anjou from Naples Fighting with Venice continued intermittently until a peace treaty in 1294 During the succession crisis of the 1290s Paul emerged as one of the most powerful oligarchs in the realm and was the main ally of the Angevins in their struggle against the Arpad dynasty In 1300 Paul invited the Angevin contender to the throne Charles Robert to Split and from there accompanied him to Zagreb where Charles was recognized as king of Hungary and Croatia Paul did not take part in subsequent activities of Charles in Hungary where he was not recognized as king for another 10 years Paul expanded his dominion eastward over the Banate of Bosnia in 1299 and Hum in 1301 whose territories he distributed among his family members In 1304 Paul led a campaign into Bosnia after Mladen I whom Paul appointed Ban of Bosnia was killed by rebels The rebellion was quickly quelled and Paul passed the title of Bosnian ban to his son Mladen II The king s authority over the lands held by Paul was only nominal throughout the entirety of his rule during which he managed to turn his titles into hereditary ones for his family His main seats were in Bribir and the city of Skradin He issued his own coin minted with silver from Bosnia and arranged the establishment of three new Catholic dioceses in Croatia In 1311 Paul assisted a revolt against Venice in Zadar and gained control over the city which led to another war with the Venetians Paul died shortly after the capture of Zadar in May 1312 while peace negotiations with Venice were underway He was succeeded by his eldest son Mladen II Contents 1 Early life 2 Reign 2 1 Consolidation of power 2 2 Succession crisis 2 3 Expansion 2 4 Last years 3 Family 4 Footnotes 5 ReferencesEarly life edit nbsp The seal of Paul which reads Paul of Bribir Ban of the Croats and Lord of Bosnia Paul was the eldest son of Stephen II of the Subic family 2 the most influential noble house in the Kingdom of Croatia and Dalmatia at the time in a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary 3 The exact date of Paul s birth is unknown the year is estimated around 1245 He had two brothers Mladen I and George I 4 Of his sisters the name of Stanislava is known 5 6 Paul s father Stephen II was involved in the war with the Mongol Empire in 1242 when King Bela IV took refugee in the city of Trogir which he governed For his assistance Bela granted the County of Bribir hereditarily to Stephen in 1251 Around this time Stephen emerged as the head of the Subic family following an internal struggle for leadership Along with Trogir and Bribir the Subics governed the County of Sibenik Stephen s wife whose name is not known was related to the royal Arpad dynasty probably with one of its female branches 7 Paul inherited the title of count of Bribir from his father who died before 1267 8 The first mention of his name occurs in 1272 when he was Podesta of the city of Trogir In May 1273 Paul was Count of Trogir and Split 9 His brother George I was named Count of Sibenik 8 Paul had good relations with the Gutkeleds and supported Slavonian Ban Joachim Gutkeled who was probably his cousin in his struggle with competing nobles 9 10 From 1273 Paul was the ban of the maritime regions Latin banus maritimus 11 12 in place of previous ban Maurus 9 The ban of the maritime regions also referred to as Ban of Croatia was in the 13th century the deputy of the ban of all Slavonia who governed both the Croatian Kingdom and Slavonia 13 Through this duty the influence of Paul and his brothers grew rapidly 14 Reign editConsolidation of power edit nbsp Remains of the fortress of Bribir one of Paul s seats Paul became involved in the longstanding dispute between Split and Trogir 14 The two cities were at war in the 1240s over possessions in the hinterland of Split 15 Paul acted in favor of Split and tried to strengthen his rule over Trogir which had mutinied against Paul He ignored the warnings of King Ladislaus IV who took Trogir under his protection In the winter of 1273 1274 Split attacked the Fortress of Klis whose castellan was a supporter of Trogir While the attack failed Paul managed to subjugate Trogir in the spring of 1274 9 10 He was also involved in the dispute between Sibenik and Trogir over the Church of Sibenik Paul favored the position of Sibenik and pressed for the secession of its Church from the Diocese of Trogir He was then briefly removed from the position of ban in the second half of 1274 He returned to the office in the summer of the following year The position of ban of all Slavonia was held jointly by Ivan Koszegi and Nicholas Gutkeled For Nicholas a new title ban of all Croatia and Dalmatia was established 16 17 Nicholas held this title in 1275 18 and Paul remained the only ban in Croatia after he moved to Hungary 19 Paul s brother Mladen I succeeded him as Podesta of Trogir 19 and was later Count of Trogir and Split 20 By 1278 the Subics governed almost all coastal cities south of the Velebit Mountain Among them was Skradin near Sibenik 19 Skradin was one of Paul s seats along with Bribir Klis and the Ostrovica Fortress 5 Beside these Paul also owned the castles of Knin and Pocitelj 21 The lands owned by the Subics did not form a compact area and they competed with other noble families for control over counties and forts 22 Paul sought to consolidate his control over the holdings of the Kacic family a pirate stronghold in southern Croatia centred around the city of Omis The House of Anjou from the Kingdom of Naples was also active in suppressing the pirates from that area During this period the Subic and the Anjou families established friendly relations 23 The Angevins controlled southern Italy which was an important source of grain for Dalmatian coastal cities and the hinterland in late 13th century 24 The first contacts between the two families were made before Paul s 2nd term as ban at the initiative of the Angevins who saw in them potential allies 11 The Angevin forces took the islands of Hvar and Brac from the Kacics in 1275 The Republic of Venice started its own war against the Kacics in 1276 By April 1278 the islands of Hvar and Brac recognized Venetian authority This threatened Paul s interests and he intervened in the conflict against Venice In the course of the war Paul gained control of Omis and the island of Brac where he appointed a nobleman from Zadar to govern it George I was appointed Count of Omis 25 The Kacics were no longer in power which eliminated the threat of pirates to Paul s ships in the Adriatic Sea 23 In 1288 Paul started negotiating a peace deal with Venice After long talks a peace treaty was concluded in May 1290 Paul s representatives in the negotiations guaranteed that the pirates from Omis would not attack Venetian ships and that they would not sail in the northern Adriatic The Venetian authority over the islands of Hvar and Brac was acknowledged The cities of Trogir Sibenik and Split agreed to pay 20 000 libras to Venice as a warranty The Venetians guaranteed that they would not attack Paul s territories and gave his brother George I a free passage in his visits to the Papal States and in other trips The peace treaty was broken in May 1293 when Venice captured Omis with the help of a local noble The conflict was renewed and lasted until March 1294 and a new peace treaty signed under the same conditions as the first one and Omis returned to the Subics 25 Paul turned to seeking allies in Venice through his ties with the Tiepolo family 26 as well as in the Venetian controlled Dalmatian communes of Rab and Zadar Marital ties were established with the House of Gorizia who were rivals of Venice 27 Paul maintained good relations with the Pope and the Catholic Church 28 He shared common interests with the Roman Curia in suppressing heresy in the region and countering Venetian dominance in the Adriatic and both supported the House of Anjou in their claim to the throne Their contacts became more frequent after 1290 during the pontificate of Pope Nicholas IV Prior to becoming pope Nicholas was the Franciscan minister provincial of Slavonia which covered the Kingdom of Croatia and Dalmatia The Subics were also close to the Franciscan movement in Croatia 29 Succession crisis edit nbsp The dominion of Paul among the other oligarchs during the interregnum nbsp Coat of Arms of the Subic family With the death of King Ladislaus IV in 1290 who left no heirs a war of succession broke out between Andrew III of the Arpad dynasty supported by most of the Hungarian nobles and Charles Martel of the House of Anjou with the support of most of the Croatian nobility Among them were the Subic the Kurjakovic the Frankopan and the Babonic families but their loyalty varied 30 Andrew III and Charles Martel competed with each other for the support of the nobility in Croatia and Slavonia 31 The Angevins primarily turned to Paul Andrew found an ally in Slavonian Ban Stephen III Babonic 32 This resulted in a dispute between the Subics and the Babonics over the county of Dreznik near Bihac which Andrew granted to the Babonics while the Angevins granted it to the Subics 33 In November 1291 the Angevins and Paul agreed on the import of grain from Apulia 34 In 1292 Charles Martel s father Charles II in the name of his son awarded Paul and the Subic family the hereditary rights to all of Croatia from the Gvozd Mountain to the Neretva River 30 with all the barons vassals cities castles and villages with adjacent islands and all the rights and appurtenances except for the westernmost part of Croatia ruled by the Frankopans 34 In 1293 Andrew III made a similar gesture by naming Paul the hereditary ban of Croatia and Dalmatia With this move Andrew may have won Paul s support for a brief time 35 Andrew III also asked Paul to recognize his mother Tomasina Morosini as the duchess of all Slavonia a title that covered the entire territory from the Drava and Danube rivers to the Adriatic sea This was not acceptable to Paul and he turned back to the Angevins 36 34 The sudden death of Charles Martel from the plague in 1295 hampered the ambitions of the Anjou family Charles Martel s rights to the throne passed to his son Charles Robert 37 Charles II confirmed Paul s position of ban for life 34 Andrew III was accepted as king by the nobility and a short period of peace followed 35 In 1299 Andrew appointed his uncle Albertino Morosini Duke of Slavonia 38 and as he had no sons the heir to the throne This led to a new revolt on behalf of Charles Robert 35 The same year Charles II confirmed all possessions of Paul and his brothers both current and any in the future on the condition that the Subics provide troops for the Angevin campaigns Previous grants were unconditioned and Paul started distancing himself from the Angevins 39 Paul held the view that the right to the Hungarian and Croatian kingdoms is determined by the Holy See on the grounds that Croatian King Demetrius Zvonimir and Hungarian King Stephen I were enthroned by the Pope 40 He sent George I to visit the Pope in Rome and the Anjou seat in Naples in January 1300 George convinced Charles II to press his grandson s claim to the throne and arrange Charles Robert s journey over the Adriatic Sea to the city of Split where Paul would meet him He also won Papal approval for one of the goals of the Subic family to remove the Church in Sibenik from the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Trogir and to create a Diocese of Sibenik directly under the Archbishop of Split George and Charles Robert arrived in Split in August From there Paul accompanied Charles to Zagreb where loyal nobles for instance Ugrin Csak recognized him as king Of the lands and cities under the authority of Paul only the city of Trogir presumably due to the separation of the Diocese of Sibenik tried to challenge the recognition of Charles 41 42 Charles s opponent Andrew III died in January 1301 35 Around this time Paul was on a pilgrimage to Rome 43 Charles hurried to Esztergom where he was crowned with a provisional crown in the spring of 1301 44 Paul was not involved in Charles Robert s subsequent activities in Hungary and focused on expanding his realm to the city of Zadar then under Venetian rule and the Banate of Bosnia 45 Despite the coronation Charles was not fully recognized for another 10 years and ruled only some parts of Hungary while his power in Croatia was only nominal Paul rarely made a reference to the king in his charters and was de facto an independent ruler within his realm 46 He and his family members did not attend Charles Robert s coronation in 1309 to which he sent his emissaries 47 45 George who ruled as count of maritime towns 10 maintained stronger contacts with the Angevins due to the threat of Venice 48 Expansion edit nbsp The dominion of Paul in 1312 Croatia Bosnia and Hum shortly after the capture of Zadar In 1299 Paul expanded his rule to the Banate of Bosnia and took the title of lord of Bosnia Latin dominus Bosne The main ally of Paul in Bosnia was Hrvatin Stjepanic of the Hrvatinic family with kinship ties to the Subics who ruled as Count of Donji Kraji 49 Paul s rule was contested by Bosnian Ban Stephen I Kotromanic In the spring of 1302 Mladen I marched against Stephen and by May he gained control of most of the banate up to the Drina River in the east The offensive was over in June when Mladen I as the new ban of Bosnia issued trading privileges to Split from Foca a town on the banks of the Drina 50 Paul also expanded to the southeast on lands ruled by Serbian King Stefan Milutin in 1301 He took advantage of the civil war in Serbia between Stefan Milutin and Stefan Dragutin and captured the entire region of Hum He then attacked the city of Kotor with the help of the Venetian fleet and from Dubrovnik and Zadar cities under the sovereignty of Venice The city held off the attack which was the furthest point reached by Paul s armies Peace negotiations between Paul and Stefan Milutin were planned in 1303 but it is not known whether the negotiations occurred and what was the outcome Paul s eldest son Mladen II was appointed Lord of Hum 49 51 The administration of the land was entrusted to the Nelipic family 52 The death of his brother Mladen I in June 1304 who had been reportedly murdered by the supporters of Stephen I Kotromanic described by the Subics as heretics compelled Paul to lead an army into Bosnia and reaffirm his authority He re established his rule by February 1305 and passed the title of ban to Mladen II 49 51 Paul took the title of lord of all Bosnia 53 Charles Robert granted Paul the hereditary right to the Banate of Bosnia in 1308 51 Last years edit nbsp Coins of Paul and Mladen I Paul preferred the title ban of the Croats Latin banus Croatorum instead of ban of Croatia or ban of the maritime regions suggesting that his power came from the people and the Croatian nobility rather than a higher authority 49 In this way he stressed out his independence from the ban of all Slavonia 13 Paul s coat of arms was an eagle s wing on a shield He kept a chancellery in both Skradin and Bribir He issued his own coins minted with silver from Bosnia 54 and modeled after the Venetian grosso The coins bore the names of Mladen I and later Mladen II the bans of Bosnia and the name of Paul 55 Along with the Diocese of Sibenik two new dioceses were established one in Duvno and the other one in Omis In Skradin which became Paul s main seat the church of St John the Baptist was built Paul chose that saint as the protector of his family 56 A Franciscan monastery of Saint Elizabeth where his sister Stanislava served as part of the Poor Clares order was also built in Skradin 5 In Bribir the Franciscan church of St Mary was built which served as the funerary church of the Subics 57 The Subics invoked the memory of earlier Croatian dukes and kings of the Domagojevic and Trpimirovic dynasties in order to portray their rule as a continuity 58 59 This was particularly reflected in the invoking of King Demetrius Zvonimir who ruled Croatia in the 2nd half of the 11th century A chronicle from the early 14th century about Zvonimir attributed to the Subics says that Zvonimir was buried in the same funerary church that was used by the Subics 47 In 1302 Paul wrote to the Pope that Croatia was since the times of King Zvonimir the fief of the Holy See 29 Before 1310 Pope Clement V declared Paul the patron and protector of the monastery of St Gregory in Vrana which was donated by Zvonimir to Pope Gregory VII 47 and then granted to the Knights Templar 60 There are indications that Paul erected a memorial plaque in the church of St Mary in honor of Zvonimir 61 Stone inscriptions mentioning the 9th century Duke Branimir were restored and placed in newly constructed church buildings 62 nbsp A Latin charter issued by Paul in 1305 to Hrvatin Stjepanic At the peak of his power Paul turned his attention to the city of Zadar the only Dalmatian coastal city that was not under his control He maintained close connections with the nobility of Zadar appointed them on various positions within his realm 56 and arbitrated in land disputes between the citizens of Zadar and the Bribir County to which Venice threatened with harsh fines 63 In 1308 Venice captured the city of Ferrara in northern Italy As the city was claimed as a part of the Papal States Pope Clement V laid and interdict on Venice 63 In 1310 Venice was faced with a failed attempt by Bajamonte Tiepolo to overthrow the Doge of Venice Bajamonte then took refugee in Paul s lands 56 Paul assembled an army in the vicinity of Zadar in the spring of 1310 and remained stationary until an uprising against the Venetian authorities broke out in Zadar in March 1311 Paul s son Mladen II was at the head of the army sent to help the rebels and the Venetians were forced to flee the city Mladen II was proclaimed Count of Zadar and Prince of Dalmatia Latin princeps Dalmacie as Zadar was considered the capital of Dalmatia The Doge responded by sending a large fleet to recover the city 64 Paul informed the Pope about the course of events asserted that Zadar was freed from the unlawful Venetian seizure and referred to Pope s interdict as a pretext for the intervention 65 The forces under Mladen s command successfully repelled the attacks Both Pope Clement V and King Charles Robert protested the attacks on Zadar and Venice agreed on peace negotiations that began in April 1312 66 Fighting nonetheless continued in the course of which the commander of the Venetian fleet was captured 67 The negotiations were handled by the second son of Paul George II and they dragged on after Paul s death Paul died on 1 May and was buried in the church of St Mary in Bribir He was succeeded by his son Mladen II 64 68 Family editThe name of Paul s first wife is not known Paul married his second wife Ursa in 1289 69 She was probably the sister of Hrvatin Stjepanic 49 70 or the daughter of Stefan Dragutin and Catherine of the Arpads 71 Ursa died in 1303 In a chronicle about her death she was referred to as the baness of the Croats 72 Paul s two brothers Mladen I and George I had a significant influence during his rule Paul had four sons to whom he gave positions and holdings 73 His first son was Mladen II who was Prince of Dalmatia Count of Zadar and Ban of Bosnia and succeeded his father as Ban of Croatia and Lord of Bosnia 74 He was married to Helen a relative of the House of Anjou 60 After his father s death Mladen kept to himself the title of ban of Bosnia and lord of Hum and only let his brother George II the second son of Paul to participate in the higher level of government George II was the count of Dalmatian cities The other two sons Paul II and Gregory II were much younger and held lower titles 75 Footnotes edit Mikulic 2016 p 48 Karbic 2004 p 10 Karbic 2004 p 1 Karbic 2004 pp 10 11 a b c Tolic 2016 p 126 Klaic 1897 p 43 Karbic 2004 pp 9 10 a b Budak 2017 p 102 a b c d Karbic 2004 p 11 a b c Budak 2017 p 103 a b Karbic 2010 p 126 Zsoldos 2011 p 46 a b Karbic 1999 p 521 a b Klaic 1989 Fine 1994 pp 150 151 Karbic 2004 pp 11 12 Zsoldos 2011 pp 47 48 Sălăgean 2016 p 98 a b c Karbic 2004 p 12 Karbic 2008 pp 46 47 Engel 1996 pp 343 392 Ancic 1997 pp 85 86 a b Karbic 2008 p 49 Raukar 2003 pp 34 35 a b Karbic 2004 pp 13 14 Karbic 2004 p 18 Karbic 2010 p 133 134 Ancic 2002 p 103 a b Karbic 2010 pp 130 131 a b Fine 1994 pp 207 208 Kekez 2008 p 75 Kekez 2008 p 70 Ancic 1997 pp 86 87 a b c d Budak 2017 p 104 a b c d Fine 1994 p 208 Mikulic 2016 pp 46 47 Kekez 2008 pp 75 76 Kekez 2008 p 76 Budak 2017 pp 104 105 Ancic 2020 pp 145 146 Fine 1994 pp 208 209 Karbic 2004 pp 15 16 Karbic 2010 p 128 Engel 2001 p 128 a b Karbic 2004 p 16 Fine 1994 pp 209 210 a b c Budak 2017 p 105 Granic 1994 p 45 a b c d e Budak 2017 p 106 Karbic 2004 pp 16 17 a b c Karbic 2004 p 17 Ancic 1997 p 97 Ancic 1997 p 95 Budak 2017 pp 106 107 Sulejmanagic 2014 p 53 a b c Budak 2017 p 107 Laszlo Klemar 2016 pp 90 91 Jaksic 1998 p 122 Ancic 2002 pp 102 103 107 108 a b Karbic 2010 p 130 Laszlo Klemar 2016 p 97 Ancic 2002 p 102 a b Granic 1994 p 47 a b Karbic 2004 pp 18 19 Granic 1994 pp 47 48 Budak 2017 p 108 Granic 1994 p 49 Engel 1996 p 22 Klaic 1897 p 61 Kekez 2008 p 78 Ancic 2002 p 107 Klaic 1897 p 79 Klaic 1897 p 76 Klaic 1897 pp 98 179 Karbic 2004 p 25 References editAncic Mladen 1997 Putanja klatna Ugarsko hrvatsko kraljevstvo i Bosna u 14 stoljecu Swing of the Pendulum Ugro Croatian Kingdom and Bosnia in the 14th Century in Croatian Acad Scientiarum et Artium Croatica ISBN 978 953 154 308 8 Ancic Mladen 2002 From the Demigod King to the First Ideas About a National Kingdom In Borosak Marijanovic Jelena Boskovic Dora Bregovac Pisk Marina Jurdana Ela Pandzic Ankica eds Kolomanov put Zagreb Croatian History Museum ISBN 953 6046 26 1 Ancic Mladen 2020 The Unlikely Winner Charles Robert s Rise to Power Miscellanea Hadriatica et Mediterranea 7 Zadar Croatia Department of history University of Zadar 127 156 Budak Neven 2017 Paulus de Breberio banus Croatorum dominus et Bosne In Ostrowski Donald Raffensperger Christian eds Portraits of Medieval Eastern Europe 900 1400 Routledge ISBN 9781351790222 Engel Pal 1996 Magyarorszag vilagi archontologiaja 1301 1457 I Secular Archontology of Hungary 1301 1457 Volume I in Hungarian Historia MTA Tortenettudomanyi Intezete ISBN 963 8312 44 0 Engel Pal 2001 The Realm of St Stephen A History of Medieval Hungary 895 1526 I B Tauris Publishers ISBN 1 86064 061 3 Fine John Van Antwerp Jr 1994 1987 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest Ann Arbor Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0472082604 Granic Miroslav 1994 Jadranska politika Subica Bribirskih Adriatic Policy of the Subics of Bribir Radovi Zavoda za povijesne znanosti HAZU u Zadru in Croatian 36 Zadar Croatia Hrvatska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti Zavod za povijesne znanosti u Zadru 35 68 Karbic Damir 1999 Defining the Position of Croatia during the Restauration of Royal Power 1345 1361 An Outline In Nagy Balazs M Bak Janos Sebok Marcell eds The Man of Many Devices who Wandered Full Many Ways Central European University Press ISBN 963911667X Karbic 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 22 Zagreb Croatia Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 1 26 Karbic Damir 2010 Diplomacy of the Subici regarding relations between them Neapolitan Angevins Papacy and Venice at the end of the thirteenth and in the first decades of the fourteenth century In Korde Zoltan Petrovics Istvan eds Diplomacy in the Countries of the Angevin Dynasty in the Thirteenth Fourteenth Centuries Accademia d Ungheria in Roma pp 125 141 ISBN 978 963 315 046 7 Karbic Damir 2008 Odnosi gradskoga plemstva i bribirskih knezova Subica Prilog poznavanju međusobnih odnosa hrvatskih velikasa i srednjovjekovnih dalmatinskih komuna The relationship between the urban nobility and the counts Subic of Bribir a contribution to the study of the relationship between Croatian magnates and medieval Dalmatian communes Historical Contributions in Croatian 27 35 Zagreb Croatia Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 43 58 Kekez Hrvoje 2008 Između dva kralja plemicki rod Babonica u vrijeme promjene na ugarsko hrvatskom prijestolju od 1290 do 1309 godine Between two kings the Babonic family in the period of dynastic succession on the Croatian and Hungarian throne 1290 1310 Historical Contributions in Croatian 27 35 Zagreb Croatia Croatian Institute of History 61 87 Klaic Nada 1989 Bribirski knezovi Croatian Biographical Lexicon in Croatian Miroslav Krleza Lexicographical Institute retrieved 25 April 2020 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 Jaksic Nikola 1998 Srednjovjekovni sabor plemenitih Hrvata II Podbrizanima The Mediaeval Sabor Assembly of Noble Croats at Podbrizane Starohrvatska Prosvjeta in Croatian 3 25 Zadar Croatia Sveuciliste u Zadru Odjel za povijest umjetnosti 109 126 Laszlo Klemar Kosjenka 2016 Srednjovjekovni franjevacki samostan i crkva sv Marije u Bribiru The medieval Franciscan monastery and church of St Mary in Bribir Prilozi Povijesti Umjetnosti U Dalmaciji in Croatian 43 1 Zagreb Croatia Hrvatski restauratorski zavod Zagreb 87 105 Mikulic Tihomir 2016 Dosad nepoznati tip poludenara Nikole Banffyja A Previously Unknown Type of Half Denar of Nikola Banffy Numizmaticke Vijesti in Croatian 58 69 Zagreb Croatia Croatian numismatic society 46 67 Raukar Tomislav 2003 Srednjovjekovne ekonomije i hrvatska drustva Medieval economy and Croatian society in Croatian Zagreb Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences University of Zagreb ISBN 9789531751940 Sălăgean Tudor 2016 Transylvania in the Second Half of the Thirteenth Century The Rise of the Congregational System BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 24362 0 Sulejmanagic Amer 2014 Bosanski srednjovjekovni novac u kontekstu europskih monetarnih tijekova periodizacija te analiza njegove ikonografije metrologije i grafije do 1353 godine Bosnian Medieval Coins in the Context of European Monetary Currents Periodization and Analysis of their Iconography Metrology and Inscriptions Before 1353 Numizmaticke Vijesti in Croatian 56 67 Zagreb Croatia Hrvatsko Numizmaticko Drustvo 44 78 Tolic Zeljko 2016 Samostani klarisa u hrvatskome srednjovjekovlju Monasteries of the Poor Clares in Medieval Croatia Obnovljeni zivot Casopis za Filozofiju i Religijske Znanosti in Croatian 71 1 Split Croatia The Catholic Faculty of Theology The University of Split 119 131 Zsoldos Attila 2011 Magyarorszag vilagi archontologiaja 1000 1301 Secular Archontology of Hungary 1000 1301 in Hungarian Historia MTA Tortenettudomanyi Intezete ISBN 978 963 9627 38 3 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Paul I Subic of Bribir Paul I Subic of BribirHouse of SubicBorn c 1245 Died 1 May 1312 Regnal titles Preceded byMaurus Ban of Croatia1273 1274 Succeeded byUnknown Preceded byNicholas Gutkeled Ban of Croatia1275 1312 Succeeded byMladen II Subic Preceded byStephen I Kotromanic Lord of Bosnia1299 1312 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Paul I Subic of Bribir amp oldid 1221484884, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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