Grand Duke of Bosnia explained

Grand Duke of Bosnia (veliki vojvoda rusaga bosanskog,[1] Latin: Bosne supremus voivoda / Sicut supremus voivoda regni Bosniae)[2] [3] was a court title in the Bosnian medieval state, with its first holders being recorded around the middle of the 14th century. The title was bestowed by the monarch to its highest military commander, rarely two, usually reserved for the most influential and most capable among the highest most prominent Bosnian nobility highest Bosnian nobility.[4] [5] [6] [7] It was very much different from the Grand duke title found in Europe at the time. To interpret it as an office post rather than a court rank could be equally accurate, and although it was retained for life by a nobleman who gained it, it was not meant to be hereditary, at least not at first. although it was not hereditary at first, it served both purposes and was retained for life by a nobleman who gained it. However, in the last several decades of the Bosnian medieval state it became hereditary, which means it became more than just an office or a court rank.[8] [9]

History

Unlike usage in Western Europe or Central Europe, as well as in various Slavic lands from Central to North-East Europe, where analogy between grand duke and grand prince was significant, with both titles corresponding to sovereign lower than king but higher than duke, in the Kingdom of Bosnia the title of grand duke corresponded more to the Byzantine military title megas doux.[9] [10]

Generally, the Slavic word knez often referred to the ruler, sometimes analogous to the king, thus veliki knez was more like a high king than a grand duke.[11] In that sense, although like in the rest of South Slavic neighbouring states and among its nobility, in Bosnia also existed the title knez and veliki knez, nominally analogous to prince and grand prince, it was ranked as a medium to major feudal landlord, with corresponding influence in the Bosnian Stanak (also Great Bosnian Rusag ("veliki bosanski rusag"), Whole of Bosnia ("sva Bosna")), which was institute of assembly of all Bosnian nobility, regardless of rank and status.[9]

However, in neighbouring countries, title duke, in Slavic vojvoda, also had military signification, but in that sense "grand duke" was specifically, even exclusively, a Bosnian title.[8]

Accordingly, the title Grand Duke of Bosnia was explicitly given by Bosnian rulers, whether ban, king or queen, to their highest-ranking military commander.[11] As such, it was an actually more like an office rather than a court rank, although it was also a grade in the court order of precedence, and was often held by one individual at the time, rarely two.[8]

Title-holders

Some of the most significant title-holders were:

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Esad Kurtović . Esad Kurtović . Veliki vojvoda bosanski Sandalj Hranić Kosača . 2009 . Institut za istoriju . Sarajevo . 978-9958-649-01-1 . 159, 233, 409 . Book 4 of Historijske monografije . 4 March 2021 . bs .
  2. Sulejmanagić . Amer . Novac Hrvoja Vukčića Hrvatinića . Numizmatičke Vijesti . 30 November 2012 . 54 . 65 . 54–85 . 8 May 2020 . Coins minted by Duke Hrvoja Vukčića Hrvatinića . sh . 0546-9422.
  3. Web site: Vatroslav Jagić . Lajos Thalloczy . Franz Wickhoff . Vatroslav Jagić . Lajos Thalloczy . Franz Wickhoff . Missale Glagoliticum Hervoiae ducis Spalatensis . archive.org . 10 May 2020 . Latin . 1899.
  4. Book: Miller . William . Essays on the Latin Orient . 2014 . Cambridge University Press . 9781107455535 . 481 . 16 February 2019 . en.
  5. Book: Preveden . Francis Ralph . A history of the Croatian people from their arrival on the shores of the Adriatic to the present day: with some account of the Gothic, Roman, Greek, Illyrian, and prehistoric periods of the ancient Illyricum and Pannonia . 1962 . Philosophical Library . 98,99,100 . 16 February 2019 . en.
  6. Book: Zlatar . Zdenko . The Poetics of Slavdom: The Mythopoeic Foundations of Yugoslavia . 2007 . Peter Lang . 9780820481357 . 544 . 16 February 2019 . en.
  7. Cvetković . Branislav . The Header to the Ten Commandments in the Hval Codex: a Contribution to the Semantics of Medieval Illumination . Ars Adriatica . hrcak.srce.hr . 16 February 2019 . 155–172 . hr, en . 19 December 2014. 4 . 10.15291/ars.493 . free .
  8. Book: Kurtović. Esad. Veliki vojvoda bosanski Sandalj Hranić Kosača. Institut za istoriju Sarajevo. 2009. 978-9958-649-01-1. Historijske monografije; knj. 4. 10 January 2016. Bosnian. .pdf. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305184319/http://www.iis.unsa.ba/pdf/kurtovic_sandalj_hranic_kosaca.pdf. 5 March 2016. dead.
  9. Book: Fine. John Van Antwerp. The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. 1994. University of Michigan Press.
  10. Filipović. Emir O.. Viteske svecanosti u Budimu 1412. godine i ucesce bosanskih predstavnika (Festivities held in Buda in 1412 and the participation of Bosnian magnates). Spomenica Akademika Marka Šunjića (1927-1998), Filozofski Fakultet U Sarajevu. 2010. 10 January 2016. Filozofski fakultet u Sarajevu. Bosnian, English. .pdf/.html.
  11. Book: Malcolm. Noel. Bosnia: A Short History. 2002. Pan Books, Pan Macmillan of Macmillan Publishers Ltd. 978-0814755617.