Bocignolo Explained

Bocignolo should not be confused with Binciola.

The House of Bocignolo or Bučinić was a Ragusan noble family.

History

It hailed from Chlieuno (Livno),[1] a town in Hum. In the 15th century they were one of the eleven smallest Ragusan houses. It was mentioned as living in the city of Ragusa (Dubrovnik) in 1588.[1] In 1535 a member was at Vienna in the service of Ferdinand Habsburg, the future emperor.

Prominent members

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Serafino Razzi. La storia di Raugia. 1595. Busdraghi. 1–.
  2. Book: Споменици сръбски од 1395 до 1423--то ест писма писана од Републике Дубровачке краљевима, деспотима, воиводама и кнезовима сръбскием, босанскием и приморскием. 2007. Филозофски факултет, Катедра за историју српског народа у средњем веку. xxxv. 9788686563224.
  3. Book: Zbornik za istoriju, jezik i književnost srpskog naroda. 1963. Naučno delo. 117.
  4. Book: Joseph von Hammer-Purgstall. Geschichte des Osmanischen Reiches. 1828. Hartleben. 49–.
  5. Book: Rad Jugoslavenske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti. 1869. Jugoslavenska akademija zanosti i umjetnosti.. 265–.
  6. Book: Ilaria Lasagni. Chiese, conventi e monasteri in Crema e nel suo territorio dall'inizio del dominio veneto alla fondazione della diocesi: repertorio di enti ecclesiastici tra XV e XVI secolo. 2008. UNICOPLI. 72. 9788840012575.
  7. D'Atri. Stefano. Per conservare la città tributtaria et divota. 2010. Dubrovnik Annals. 14. 91. PDF. 13 March 2020.
  8. Book: Bojana Radojković. Nakit kod Srba od XII do kraja XVIII veka. 1969. Muzej primenjene umetnosti. 287.