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Župan

Župan is a noble and administrative title used in several states in Central and Southeastern Europe between the 7th century and the 21st century. It was (and in Croatia still is) the leader of the administrative unit župa (or zhupa, županija). The term in turn was adopted by the Hungarians as ispán and spread further.

Origin of the title

The exact origin of the title is not definitively known and there have been several hypotheses: Slavic (Franz Miklosich), Turkic-Avarian (A. Bruckner), Iranian (F. Altheim), Proto Indo-European (V. Machek), Indo-European (D. Dragojević), Illyrian-Thracian (K. Oštir), Old-Balkan (M. Budimir), among others.[1] The title was preserved primarily among the Slavic peoples and their neighbours who were under their influence.[2] Its presence among Pannonian Avars and Avar language is completely undetermined.[1][3] The title origin is not necessarily related to the origin of the titleholder.[1]

In 2009, A. Alemany considered that the title *ču(b)-pān, often in a northeastern Iranian milleu, had an Eastern and Central Asian derivation, čupan, and a Western and European derivation, župan. The Eastern čupan first occurs, but allegedly as is usually connected with čupan, in a Bactrian contract dated to 588 AD, where are mentioned two "headman" (σωπανο, "sopano");[4] among the Western Turks (582–657), the leader of the fifth Shunishi Duolu tribe was a chuban chuo (čupan čor), while the leader of the fifth Geshu Nushibi tribe was chuban sijin (čupan irkin), with chuo and sijin being the standard title of the each tribe's leader,[5] inferior to qayan (khagan), but superior to bäg.[4] However, there is no mention of čupan in Old Turkic runic incsriptions;[6] a Chinese document (c. 8th century) near Kucha mentions several persons (allegedly Tocharians) with patronymic Bai and title chuban;[7] in the same century, in the Chinese documents of province Khotan are mentioned word chiban and alleged title of low rank chaupam;[7] the first (Old) Turkic document recording the title čupan is a Uyghur decree from Turpan dated c. 9th–11th century.[7] According to the work Dīwānu l-Luġat al-Turk by the 11th century scholar Mahmud al-Kashgari, a čupan is an assistant to a village headman.[7]

The first known mention of Western župan occurs in a charter of Kremsmünster abbey, by Bavarian duke Tassilo III in 777 AD, in which the monastery was granted by a group of Slavs, headed by the chieftains Taliup and Sparuna, whose abode lied beneath the boundaries reported under oath by the iopan Physso;[8] the zo(ō)apan of Buyla inscription on a buckled bowl of a heterogeneous and chronologically uncertain (7th or 8th century) Treasure of Nagyszentmiklós;[9] the supan in Lusatian and Latin language (7th century):[10] the ζουπανος (zoupanos) on a silver bowl found at Veliki Preslav, capital of First Bulgarian Empire (893–972), and zhupan in Greek stone inscriptions and Cyrillic alphabet (Codex Suprasliensis);[9] the zuppanis in Latin charter of St. George's church at Putalj by Croatian duke Trpimir in 852 AD;[11] the Slavic, generally considered of White Croats, title of king's deputy mentioned by Ibn Rusta in the 10th century, the sūt.ğ or sūb.ğ, of which corrupted text some transcribe as sūbanğ (probably Turkic sū beḫ);[11] according to Constantine VII in his 10th century work De Administrando Imperio, Croats, Serbs and other Slavic nations of Dalmatia had the ζουπάνους (zoupanous), "Princes, as they say, these nations had none, but only župans, elders, as is the rule in the other Slavonic regions";[11] also the Croatian state was divided in 11 ζουπανίας (zoupanias) administrative regions,[11] with additional three ruled by βοάνος (boanos) or μπάνος (b/mpanos) (Ban);[12] and is individually mentioned ζουπανου (zoupanou) Beloje of Travunia;[13] later among Serbs it also temporary became a title for supreme leader ζουπανος μεγας (zoupanos megas, Grand Župan);[14] in Czech sources supani (1187).[15]

Etymology

In Belarusian, Czech, Polish, Slovak and Ukrainian allegedly from župan was shortened to pan, meaning "master, mister, sir".[16][17]

  • Franz Altheim derived the title from Iranian etymon *fsu-pāna- that evolved to šuβān in Parthian, šupān and šubān in Persian; all these words meaning "shepherd".[18][19] Gerhard Doerfer suggested possible Iranian origin for Mahmud al-Kashgari's čupan linking it with New Persian čōpan, a variant form of šubān, with usual change of š- to č-.[18] Omeljan Pritsak in Iranian *fsu-pāna saw "shepherd of (human) cattle" in Avar service, using the Slavic masses as cannon fodder.[18] Some scholars derived it from alleged Old Iranian ašurpan/aszurpan, meaning "great lord, noblemen".[20][21] It is considered that the title origin can be traced to the Slavic and Iranian cultural interrelation in the Eastern and Southeastern Europe in the first centuries AD.[20][21]
  • Karl Brugmann derived the Common Slavic *županъ from župa "district, small administrative region",[22] < *geupā, comparing this word with Skt. gopā- (herdsman, guardian), derived from gopaya (to guard, protect), of gup-, or even go-pā (cow-herd), Avestan gufra- (deep, hidden), among others.[18] Oleg Trubachyov derived it from *gupana (from gopaya, the guard of cattle).[17] A Central Asian descent was claimed by Karl Heinrich Menges, who considered župan a slavicized form of Altaic čupan (a loanword from Iranian), with modified meaning from "clan, community" to "district".[23] According to research done by scholars Ambroży Bogucki, Bohumil Vykypĕl and Georg Holzer, in 2007 Franjo Smiljanić concluded that is excluded any Avar influence on the origin, yet within the Avar authority were preserved the remnants of Slavic tribal organization.[3]
  • According to Alemany, the (Old) Turkic ču(b) is most probably a Turkic loanword from Khotanese -cū and Chinese zhou (prefecture), which was a Chinese territorial administration applied to Central Asian regions inhabited by Iranians, but it has even older meaning of small island; a township unit; a region, up to zhoumu (regional governor) from Han to Sui dynasty.[24] Alemany pointed out that, as there were settlements of Central Asian Iranians at least in some of those zhou, the title čupan as *ču(b)-pān (protecting a ču(b) or zhou), was an Iranian rendering (see marz-bān, "protecting the marches"), of the Chinese zhoumu.[25] The suffix -pān (from Avestan and Old Persian pat, "protector"; pā-, "to protect, to care") is well documented in Manichean Parthian texts from Turpan, and lesser extent in Sogdian and Khotanese.[25] He concluded that the title designs both regio and rector, and if čupan was a loanword introduced by the Avars as some assumed, but there was already a common Slavic word župa, their association could explain the shift č- > ž- in župan.[26]

However, as the title among Avars is undetermined, on the basis of preserved toponyms which are etymologically related to the title župan, like Županovo kolo in Novgorod, Russia, and Župany kolo in Ukraine, as well it was spread in Slavic languages which were not in contact with Avar language,[15] the assumption it was of Avar origin is highly doubtful and dismissed by many scholars as it occurs in wider area than is the area where lived Slavs and Avars together.[3][15]

Usage of the title and division

The title had a widespread distribution, and did not always have a concrete institutional definition.[2] Slavic tribes were divided into fraternities, each including a certain number of families.[27] The territory inhabited by a tribe was a župa, and its leader was the župan.[27]

The župans, once as kopan, of the First Bulgarian Empire are traditionally seen as Slavic chiefs,[28] or leaders of a local tribe and district.[29] The župan title was also used in Wallachia and Moldavia (in modern Romania) but only with the meaning "mister" and bearing no administrative connotations.[citation needed]

Bosnia

Similarly to Serbia and Croatia, Bosnian rulers of the early Middle Ages were referred to as župan. According to Fine, the governorship was hereditary, and the župan reported to a ban or a king, whom they were obliged to aid in war.[30]

Croatia

As heads of the županija, the most important role of the župans were their public authority function.[31] They were the primates populi, nobile aristocracy from where the king (or duke) recruited the official servants.[32] Those župans by origin most probably belonged to the tribal or noble family structure, in historiography known as the Twelve noble tribes of Croatia, which are mentioned in the Pacta conventa and Supetar Cartulary.[32] In the Supetar Cartulary, and in Croatian redaction of Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, they were called as nobile sapienciroes and starac (elderman), indicating that to the agreement with king Coloman went twelve "elders župan".[33]

According to the charter by Croatian duke Muncimir (892 AD) it can be identified various official functions; župans who work at the ducal palace (Budimiro zuppani palatii, Prisna maccererarii, Pruade zuppano cauallario, Zelestro zuppano camerario, Zestededo zuppano pincernario, Bolledrago zuppano carnicario, Budimiro zuppano comitisse, Augina zuppano armigeri), who are part of territorial organization (Zelllerico zuppano Cleoniae, Sibidrago zuppano Clesae), or are only noble by position (Petro zuppano, Pribritreco filius Petri zuppano).[31] The župans were usually listed in historical documents only as witnesses, without mark of duty.[31]

The transition of 12th to the 13th century is characterized by terminological change of the title župan and the spreading beyond the tribal main territory.[34] The older social rank of the župan (iupanus) in Latin documents was changed with the title comes.[34] The Latin term comes in the 14th and 15th century Croatia was translated in two different ways, as špan and knez.[34] The first signified the royal official in the županija, while the second the hereditary lord of the županija exempted from the direct royal rule.[34] Thus the term lost its old tribal and got a new administrative meaning, while the old Croatian tribes (genus) under the title of knez preserved the inheritance rights over the lands of županija.[34]

Hungary

There were several "ispán"'s in the royal court of Hungarian Kingdom: 'nádorispán' (palatine), 'udvarispán' (court ispán), 'kápolna ispán' (chapel ispán), and 'ispán's of the financial hierarchy ('harmincadispán', 'pénzverőispán', 'sókamaraispán', 'urburaispán'). Similarly the leaders of the ethnic groups were called 'ispán' like 'besenyők ispánja' (Besermian ispán) 'székelyispán' (Szekler ispán).

Serbia

According to Fine, the governorship was hereditary, and the župan reported to the Serbian prince, whom they were obliged to aid in war.[30] The earlier župan title was abolished and replaced with the Greek-derived kefalija (kephale, "head, master").[35]

Slovakia

The title župan is widely used as an informal name for presidents of self-governing regions (župa) in Slovakia.

Slovenia

In Slovenia, župan is the official title of the mayor of the 212 municipalities. In the Slovene-speaking municipalities in Italy, the term županstvo is used for the municipal administration (similar to the Spanish ayuntamiento), while in Slovenia, this usage is obsolete. Before the 19th century, župan was used as a name for the village elder. With the introduction of modern municipal administration in the Austrian Empire in 1849, it became the official Slovene title for mayors.

The Slovene name for parishes, župnija, has the same etymology. The parish priest is called župnik.

The name županija is used to refer to the counties of Hungary (the term has been historically used by the Prekmurje Slovenes, who were part of the Kingdom of Hungary from the 10th century until 1918).

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Štih 1995, p. 127.
  2. ^ a b Biliarsky 2011, p. 368.
  3. ^ a b c Smiljanić 2007, p. 34.
  4. ^ a b Alemany 2009, p. 3.
  5. ^ Golden 2012, footnote 37.
  6. ^ Alemany 2009, pp. 3–4.
  7. ^ a b c d Alemany 2009, p. 4.
  8. ^ Alemany 2009, pp. 4–5.
  9. ^ a b Alemany 2009, p. 5.
  10. ^ Gluhak 1990, p. 713.
  11. ^ a b c d Alemany 2009, p. 6.
  12. ^ Živković 2012, p. 143.
  13. ^ Živković 2012, p. 188.
  14. ^ Gluhak 1993, p. 713.
  15. ^ a b c Gluhak 1990, p. 227.
  16. ^ Kmietowicz 1976, pp. 185, footnote.
  17. ^ a b Trubachyov 1965.
  18. ^ a b c d Alemany 2009, p. 7.
  19. ^ Erdal 1988, p. 227.
  20. ^ a b Majorov 2012, pp. 95, 92–95.
  21. ^ a b Bechcicki 2006, pp. 8–9.
  22. ^ Brugmann 1900, p. 111.
  23. ^ Alemany 2009, p. 8.
  24. ^ Alemany 2009, pp. 8–10.
  25. ^ a b Alemany 2009, p. 11.
  26. ^ Alemany 2009, p. 12.
  27. ^ a b D.oRS 1972, p. 39.
  28. ^ Petkov 2008, pp. 9–10, 37–38, 448, 508.
  29. ^ Curta 2006, p. 164.
  30. ^ a b Fine 1991, p. 225.
  31. ^ a b c Smiljanić 2007, p. 35.
  32. ^ a b Smiljanić 2007, p. 36.
  33. ^ Smiljanić 2007, p. 39.
  34. ^ a b c d e Karbić 2004, p. 5.
  35. ^ Anderson 1996.

Sources

  • Alemany, Agustí (2009). "From Central Asia to the Balkans: the title *ču(b)-pān". In Allison, Christine; Joisten-Pruschke, Anke; Wendtland, Antje (eds.). Daēnā to Dîn: Religion, Kultur und Sprache in der iranischen Welt. pp. 3–12. ISBN 978-344705917-6.
  • Anderson, Perry (1996) [First published by New Left Books 1974]. Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism. London; New York: Verso. ISBN 1-85984-107-4.
  • Bechcicki, Jerzy (2006). "O Problematici Etnogeneze Bijele Hrvatske" [On the issue of ethno-genesis of the White Croatia]. In Nosić, Milan (ed.). Bijeli Hrvati I [White Croats I] (in Croatian). Rijeka: Maveda. pp. 8–9. ISBN 953-7029-04-2.
  • Biliarsky, Ivan (2011). Word and Power in Mediaeval Bulgaria. Brill. p. 368. ISBN 978-900419145-7.
  • Brückner, Alexander (1908). "Über Etymologische Anarchie". Indogermanische Forschungen (in German). 23: 206–219. doi:10.1515/if-1909-0118. S2CID 202507000.
  • Brugmann, Karl (1900). "Aksl. župa 'Bezirk'". Indogermanische Forschungen (in German). 11: 111–112. doi:10.1515/9783110242539.111. S2CID 170500221.
  • Curta, Florin (2006). Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages, 500-1250. Cambridge University Press. p. 164. ISBN 978-052181539-0 – via Internet Archive.
  • Erdal, Marcel (1988). "The Turkic Nagy-Szent-Miklós inscription in Greek letters". Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae. 42: 221–234.
  • Evans, Arthur (2007). Through Bosnia and the Herzegovina on Foot During the Insurrection, August and September 1875. Cosimo. ISBN 978-1-60206-270-2.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (1991). The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-08149-7.
  • Fine, John Van Antwerp (1994), The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest, University of Michigan Press, ISBN 978-0-472-08260-5
  • Gluhak, Alemko (1990), Porijeklo imena Hrvat [Origin of the name Croat] (in Croatian), Zagreb, Čakovec: Alemko Gluhak
  • Gluhak, Alemko (1993), Hrvatski etimološki rječnik [Croatian etymological dictionary] (in Croatian), Zagreb: August Cesarec, ISBN 953-162-000-8
  • Golden, Peter Benjamin (2012), (PDF), Turkish and Middle Eastern Studies, Rutgers University, footnote 37, archived from the original (PDF) on 19 April 2015, retrieved 5 January 2016
  • Karbić, Damir (2004). "Šubići Bribirski do gubitka nasljedne banske časti (1322.)" [The Šubići of Bribir until the Loss of the Hereditary Position of the Croatian Ban (1322)] (PDF). Papers and Proceedings of the Department of Historical Research of the Institute of Historical and Social Research of Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts (Zbornik Odsjeka za povijesne znanosti Zavoda za povijesne i društvene znanosti Hrvatske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti) (in Croatian). Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts. 22: 5.
  • Kmietowicz, Frank A. (1976). Ancient Slavs. Worzalla Pub. Co. pp. 185, footnote.
  • Majorov, Aleksandr Vjačeslavovič (2012). Velika Hrvatska: etnogeneza i rana povijest Slavena prikarpatskoga područja [Great Croatia: ethnogenesis and early history of Slavs in the Carpathian area] (in Croatian). Zagreb, Samobor: Brethren of the Croatian Dragon, Meridijani. pp. 95, 92–95. ISBN 978-953-6928-26-2.
  • Petkov, Kiril (2008). The Voices of Medieval Bulgaria, Seventh-Fifteenth Century: The Records of a Bygone Culture. Brill. pp. 9–10, 37–38, 448, 508. ISBN 978-900416831-2.
  • Smiljanić, Franjo (2007), "O položaju i funkciji župana u hrvatskim srednjovjekovnim vrelima od 9. do 16. stoljeća" [On the position and function of župan in Croatian historical sources from 9th until 16th century], Povijesni Prilozi (in Croatian), 33 (33)
  • Štih, Peter (1995). "Novi pokušaji rješavanja problematike Hrvata u Karantaniji" [New attempts to resolve the problems of Croats in Karantania]. In Budak, Neven (ed.). Etnogeneza Hrvata [Ethnogenesis of Croats] (in Croatian). Matica hrvatska. ISBN 953-6014-45-9.
  • Tomović, G. (1999). "Župa i Župan". Leksikon srpskog srednjeg veka [Lexicon of the Serbian Middle Ages] (in Bosnian). Belgrade. pp. 195–198.
  • Trubachyov, Oleg (1965). "To the Question of Slavic-Iranian Language Connections". V. Stetsyuk. Retrieved 15 April 2015.[self-published source]
  • The Yugoslav village. Dept. of Rural Sociology. 1972. p. 39.
  • Živković, Tibor (2012). De conversione Croatorum et Serborum: A Lost Source. Belgrade: The Institute of History.

Župan, confused, with, Żupan, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multilingual, support, templates, also, us. Not to be confused with Zupan This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why June 2020 Zupan is a noble and administrative title used in several states in Central and Southeastern Europe between the 7th century and the 21st century It was and in Croatia still is the leader of the administrative unit zupa or zhupa zupanija The term in turn was adopted by the Hungarians as ispan and spread further Contents 1 Origin of the title 2 Etymology 3 Usage of the title and division 3 1 Bosnia 3 2 Croatia 3 3 Hungary 3 4 Serbia 3 5 Slovakia 3 6 Slovenia 4 See also 5 Notes 6 SourcesOrigin of the title EditThe exact origin of the title is not definitively known and there have been several hypotheses Slavic Franz Miklosich Turkic Avarian A Bruckner Iranian F Altheim Proto Indo European V Machek Indo European D Dragojevic Illyrian Thracian K Ostir Old Balkan M Budimir among others 1 The title was preserved primarily among the Slavic peoples and their neighbours who were under their influence 2 Its presence among Pannonian Avars and Avar language is completely undetermined 1 3 The title origin is not necessarily related to the origin of the titleholder 1 In 2009 A Alemany considered that the title cu b pan often in a northeastern Iranian milleu had an Eastern and Central Asian derivation cupan and a Western and European derivation zupan The Eastern cupan first occurs but allegedly as is usually connected with cupan in a Bactrian contract dated to 588 AD where are mentioned two headman swpano sopano 4 among the Western Turks 582 657 the leader of the fifth Shunishi Duolu tribe was a chuban chuo cupan cor while the leader of the fifth Geshu Nushibi tribe was chuban sijin cupan irkin with chuo and sijin being the standard title of the each tribe s leader 5 inferior to qayan khagan but superior to bag 4 However there is no mention of cupan in Old Turkic runic incsriptions 6 a Chinese document c 8th century near Kucha mentions several persons allegedly Tocharians with patronymic Bai and title chuban 7 in the same century in the Chinese documents of province Khotan are mentioned word chiban and alleged title of low rank chaupam 7 the first Old Turkic document recording the title cupan is a Uyghur decree from Turpan dated c 9th 11th century 7 According to the work Diwanu l Luġat al Turk by the 11th century scholar Mahmud al Kashgari a cupan is an assistant to a village headman 7 The first known mention of Western zupan occurs in a charter of Kremsmunster abbey by Bavarian duke Tassilo III in 777 AD in which the monastery was granted by a group of Slavs headed by the chieftains Taliup and Sparuna whose abode lied beneath the boundaries reported under oath by the iopan Physso 8 the zo ō apan of Buyla inscription on a buckled bowl of a heterogeneous and chronologically uncertain 7th or 8th century Treasure of Nagyszentmiklos 9 the supan in Lusatian and Latin language 7th century 10 the zoypanos zoupanos on a silver bowl found at Veliki Preslav capital of First Bulgarian Empire 893 972 and zhupan in Greek stone inscriptions and Cyrillic alphabet Codex Suprasliensis 9 the zuppanis in Latin charter of St George s church at Putalj by Croatian duke Trpimir in 852 AD 11 the Slavic generally considered of White Croats title of king s deputy mentioned by Ibn Rusta in the 10th century the sut g or sub g of which corrupted text some transcribe as subang probably Turkic su beḫ 11 according to Constantine VII in his 10th century work De Administrando Imperio Croats Serbs and other Slavic nations of Dalmatia had the zoypanoys zoupanous Princes as they say these nations had none but only zupans elders as is the rule in the other Slavonic regions 11 also the Croatian state was divided in 11 zoypanias zoupanias administrative regions 11 with additional three ruled by boanos boanos or mpanos b mpanos Ban 12 and is individually mentioned zoypanoy zoupanou Beloje of Travunia 13 later among Serbs it also temporary became a title for supreme leader zoypanos megas zoupanos megas Grand Zupan 14 in Czech sources supani 1187 15 Etymology EditIn Belarusian Czech Polish Slovak and Ukrainian allegedly from zupan was shortened to pan meaning master mister sir 16 17 Franz Altheim derived the title from Iranian etymon fsu pana that evolved to suban in Parthian supan and suban in Persian all these words meaning shepherd 18 19 Gerhard Doerfer suggested possible Iranian origin for Mahmud al Kashgari s cupan linking it with New Persian cōpan a variant form of suban with usual change of s to c 18 Omeljan Pritsak in Iranian fsu pana saw shepherd of human cattle in Avar service using the Slavic masses as cannon fodder 18 Some scholars derived it from alleged Old Iranian asurpan aszurpan meaning great lord noblemen 20 21 It is considered that the title origin can be traced to the Slavic and Iranian cultural interrelation in the Eastern and Southeastern Europe in the first centuries AD 20 21 Karl Brugmann derived the Common Slavic zupan from zupa district small administrative region 22 lt geupa comparing this word with Skt gopa herdsman guardian derived from gopaya to guard protect of gup or even go pa cow herd Avestan gufra deep hidden among others 18 Oleg Trubachyov derived it from gupana from gopaya the guard of cattle 17 A Central Asian descent was claimed by Karl Heinrich Menges who considered zupan a slavicized form of Altaic cupan a loanword from Iranian with modified meaning from clan community to district 23 According to research done by scholars Ambrozy Bogucki Bohumil Vykypĕl and Georg Holzer in 2007 Franjo Smiljanic concluded that is excluded any Avar influence on the origin yet within the Avar authority were preserved the remnants of Slavic tribal organization 3 According to Alemany the Old Turkic cu b is most probably a Turkic loanword from Khotanese cu and Chinese zhou prefecture which was a Chinese territorial administration applied to Central Asian regions inhabited by Iranians but it has even older meaning of small island a township unit a region up to zhoumu regional governor from Han to Sui dynasty 24 Alemany pointed out that as there were settlements of Central Asian Iranians at least in some of those zhou the title cupan as cu b pan protecting a cu b or zhou was an Iranian rendering see marz ban protecting the marches of the Chinese zhoumu 25 The suffix pan from Avestan and Old Persian pat protector pa to protect to care is well documented in Manichean Parthian texts from Turpan and lesser extent in Sogdian and Khotanese 25 He concluded that the title designs both regio and rector and if cupan was a loanword introduced by the Avars as some assumed but there was already a common Slavic word zupa their association could explain the shift c gt z in zupan 26 However as the title among Avars is undetermined on the basis of preserved toponyms which are etymologically related to the title zupan like Zupanovo kolo in Novgorod Russia and Zupany kolo in Ukraine as well it was spread in Slavic languages which were not in contact with Avar language 15 the assumption it was of Avar origin is highly doubtful and dismissed by many scholars as it occurs in wider area than is the area where lived Slavs and Avars together 3 15 Usage of the title and division EditThe title had a widespread distribution and did not always have a concrete institutional definition 2 Slavic tribes were divided into fraternities each including a certain number of families 27 The territory inhabited by a tribe was a zupa and its leader was the zupan 27 The zupans once as kopan of the First Bulgarian Empire are traditionally seen as Slavic chiefs 28 or leaders of a local tribe and district 29 The zupan title was also used in Wallachia and Moldavia in modern Romania but only with the meaning mister and bearing no administrative connotations citation needed Bosnia Edit See also Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Middle Ages Similarly to Serbia and Croatia Bosnian rulers of the early Middle Ages were referred to as zupan According to Fine the governorship was hereditary and the zupan reported to a ban or a king whom they were obliged to aid in war 30 Croatia Edit Main articles Duchy of Croatia and Counties of Croatia As heads of the zupanija the most important role of the zupans were their public authority function 31 They were the primates populi nobile aristocracy from where the king or duke recruited the official servants 32 Those zupans by origin most probably belonged to the tribal or noble family structure in historiography known as the Twelve noble tribes of Croatia which are mentioned in the Pacta conventa and Supetar Cartulary 32 In the Supetar Cartulary and in Croatian redaction of Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja they were called as nobile sapienciroes and starac elderman indicating that to the agreement with king Coloman went twelve elders zupan 33 According to the charter by Croatian duke Muncimir 892 AD it can be identified various official functions zupans who work at the ducal palace Budimiro zuppani palatii Prisna maccererarii Pruade zuppano cauallario Zelestro zuppano camerario Zestededo zuppano pincernario Bolledrago zuppano carnicario Budimiro zuppano comitisse Augina zuppano armigeri who are part of territorial organization Zelllerico zuppano Cleoniae Sibidrago zuppano Clesae or are only noble by position Petro zuppano Pribritreco filius Petri zuppano 31 The zupans were usually listed in historical documents only as witnesses without mark of duty 31 The transition of 12th to the 13th century is characterized by terminological change of the title zupan and the spreading beyond the tribal main territory 34 The older social rank of the zupan iupanus in Latin documents was changed with the title comes 34 The Latin term comes in the 14th and 15th century Croatia was translated in two different ways as span and knez 34 The first signified the royal official in the zupanija while the second the hereditary lord of the zupanija exempted from the direct royal rule 34 Thus the term lost its old tribal and got a new administrative meaning while the old Croatian tribes genus under the title of knez preserved the inheritance rights over the lands of zupanija 34 Hungary Edit Main article Ispan There were several ispan s in the royal court of Hungarian Kingdom nadorispan palatine udvarispan court ispan kapolna ispan chapel ispan and ispan s of the financial hierarchy harmincadispan penzveroispan sokamaraispan urburaispan Similarly the leaders of the ethnic groups were called ispan like besenyok ispanja Besermian ispan szekelyispan Szekler ispan Serbia Edit See also Serbia in the Middle Ages According to Fine the governorship was hereditary and the zupan reported to the Serbian prince whom they were obliged to aid in war 30 The earlier zupan title was abolished and replaced with the Greek derived kefalija kephale head master 35 Slovakia Edit The title zupan is widely used as an informal name for presidents of self governing regions zupa in Slovakia Slovenia Edit In Slovenia zupan is the official title of the mayor of the 212 municipalities In the Slovene speaking municipalities in Italy the term zupanstvo is used for the municipal administration similar to the Spanish ayuntamiento while in Slovenia this usage is obsolete Before the 19th century zupan was used as a name for the village elder With the introduction of modern municipal administration in the Austrian Empire in 1849 it became the official Slovene title for mayors The Slovene name for parishes zupnija has the same etymology The parish priest is called zupnik The name zupanija is used to refer to the counties of Hungary the term has been historically used by the Prekmurje Slovenes who were part of the Kingdom of Hungary from the 10th century until 1918 See also EditGrand Zupan a Bulgarian and Serbian medieval title equivalent to Grand Prince Gespan Ban ZupaNotes Edit a b c Stih 1995 p 127 a b Biliarsky 2011 p 368 a b c Smiljanic 2007 p 34 a b Alemany 2009 p 3 Golden 2012 footnote 37 Alemany 2009 pp 3 4 a b c d Alemany 2009 p 4 Alemany 2009 pp 4 5 a b Alemany 2009 p 5 Gluhak 1990 p 713 a b c d Alemany 2009 p 6 Zivkovic 2012 p 143 Zivkovic 2012 p 188 Gluhak 1993 p 713 a b c Gluhak 1990 p 227 Kmietowicz 1976 pp 185 footnote a b Trubachyov 1965 a b c d Alemany 2009 p 7 Erdal 1988 p 227 a b Majorov 2012 pp 95 92 95 a b Bechcicki 2006 pp 8 9 Brugmann 1900 p 111 Alemany 2009 p 8 Alemany 2009 pp 8 10 a b Alemany 2009 p 11 Alemany 2009 p 12 a b D oRS 1972 p 39 Petkov 2008 pp 9 10 37 38 448 508 Curta 2006 p 164 a b Fine 1991 p 225 a b c Smiljanic 2007 p 35 a b Smiljanic 2007 p 36 Smiljanic 2007 p 39 a b c d e Karbic 2004 p 5 Anderson 1996 Sources EditAlemany Agusti 2009 From Central Asia to the Balkans the title cu b pan In Allison Christine Joisten Pruschke Anke Wendtland Antje eds Daena to Din Religion Kultur und Sprache in der iranischen Welt pp 3 12 ISBN 978 344705917 6 Anderson Perry 1996 First published by New Left Books 1974 Passages from Antiquity to Feudalism London New York Verso ISBN 1 85984 107 4 Bechcicki Jerzy 2006 O Problematici Etnogeneze Bijele Hrvatske On the issue of ethno genesis of the White Croatia In Nosic Milan ed Bijeli Hrvati I White Croats I in Croatian Rijeka Maveda pp 8 9 ISBN 953 7029 04 2 Biliarsky Ivan 2011 Word and Power in Mediaeval Bulgaria Brill p 368 ISBN 978 900419145 7 Bruckner Alexander 1908 Uber Etymologische Anarchie Indogermanische Forschungen in German 23 206 219 doi 10 1515 if 1909 0118 S2CID 202507000 Brugmann Karl 1900 Aksl zupa Bezirk Indogermanische Forschungen in German 11 111 112 doi 10 1515 9783110242539 111 S2CID 170500221 Curta Florin 2006 Southeastern Europe in the Middle Ages 500 1250 Cambridge University Press p 164 ISBN 978 052181539 0 via Internet Archive Erdal Marcel 1988 The Turkic Nagy Szent Miklos inscription in Greek letters Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 42 221 234 Evans Arthur 2007 Through Bosnia and the Herzegovina on Foot During the Insurrection August and September 1875 Cosimo ISBN 978 1 60206 270 2 Fine John Van Antwerp 1991 The Early Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century Michigan University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 08149 7 Fine John Van Antwerp 1994 The Late Medieval Balkans A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 08260 5 Gluhak Alemko 1990 Porijeklo imena Hrvat Origin of the name Croat in Croatian Zagreb Cakovec Alemko Gluhak Gluhak Alemko 1993 Hrvatski etimoloski rjecnik Croatian etymological dictionary in Croatian Zagreb August Cesarec ISBN 953 162 000 8 Golden Peter Benjamin 2012 Oq and Ogur Oguz PDF Turkish and Middle Eastern Studies Rutgers University footnote 37 archived from the original PDF on 19 April 2015 retrieved 5 January 2016 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 PDF Papers and Proceedings of the Department of Historical Research of the Institute of Historical and Social Research of Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts Zbornik Odsjeka za povijesne znanosti Zavoda za povijesne i drustvene znanosti Hrvatske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti in Croatian Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 22 5 Kmietowicz Frank A 1976 Ancient Slavs Worzalla Pub Co pp 185 footnote Majorov Aleksandr Vjaceslavovic 2012 Velika Hrvatska etnogeneza i rana povijest Slavena prikarpatskoga podrucja Great Croatia ethnogenesis and early history of Slavs in the Carpathian area in Croatian Zagreb Samobor Brethren of the Croatian Dragon Meridijani pp 95 92 95 ISBN 978 953 6928 26 2 Petkov Kiril 2008 The Voices of Medieval Bulgaria Seventh Fifteenth Century The Records of a Bygone Culture Brill pp 9 10 37 38 448 508 ISBN 978 900416831 2 Smiljanic Franjo 2007 O polozaju i funkciji zupana u hrvatskim srednjovjekovnim vrelima od 9 do 16 stoljeca On the position and function of zupan in Croatian historical sources from 9th until 16th century Povijesni Prilozi in Croatian 33 33 Stih Peter 1995 Novi pokusaji rjesavanja problematike Hrvata u Karantaniji New attempts to resolve the problems of Croats in Karantania In Budak Neven ed Etnogeneza Hrvata Ethnogenesis of Croats in Croatian Matica hrvatska ISBN 953 6014 45 9 Tomovic G 1999 Zupa i Zupan Leksikon srpskog srednjeg veka Lexicon of the Serbian Middle Ages in Bosnian Belgrade pp 195 198 Trubachyov Oleg 1965 To the Question of Slavic Iranian Language Connections V Stetsyuk Retrieved 15 April 2015 self published source The Yugoslav village Dept of Rural Sociology 1972 p 39 Zivkovic Tibor 2012 De conversione Croatorum et Serborum A Lost Source Belgrade The Institute of History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zupan amp oldid 1134100519, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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