Talk:Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić
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Prominent member of the Bosnian Church
[edit]If Hrvoje Vukcic was indeed a prominent member of the Bosnian Church, could someone explain me why the most beautiful Catholic Glagolitic Missal is named after him? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 161.53.64.83 (talk) 13:54, 1 December 2010 (UTC)
"Bani Croatorum" or "Croatieque regius viceregens"
[edit]- Croatian ban's titles in charters in Latin: "Paulus banus Crovatorum et dominus Bosnae", "Pauli bani Croatorum nec non Georgii et Maldini fratrum, comitum civitatum Dalmatiæ".
- Hrvoje Vukčić's title in Latin: "Dux Spaleti, Dalmatie Croatieque regius viceregens ac Bosne supremus vojvoda" (this one used on money minted and charters issued in Split, after being appointed by Ladislaus - when quoting Gordan Ravančić of "Croatian Institute of History" than: "Grand Duke of Bosnia, Knyaz of Donji Kraji, Duke of Split")--౪ Santa ౪99° 00:53, 26 March 2019 (UTC)
John V.A. Fine's "When ethnicity..."
[edit]From Fine's seminal book "A Study of Identity in Pre-Nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-Modern Periods", starting with the "Index":
Hrvatinić, Hrvoje Vukčić (Bosnian nobleman), 127–28, 288, 302
-- pp.636
Further evidence that the term “Croat” was not used as commonly as is sometimes thought, even in parts of the northern coastal area, comes from documents regarding Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić. In the 1390s, after involving himself in a civil war over the Hungarian throne, this great Bosnian nobleman and lord of the Donji kraji took for himself a great chunk of Dalmatia stretching from Omiš and Split up to Zadar. His subjects were referred to by their individual city names and as “Dalmatians.” Out of the thirtytwo documents issued by or to Hrvoje that Stojanović published, if we exclude a reference to the Hungarian Ban of Croatia and another to some Croatians serving under the ban - which, of course, did not pertain to Hrvoje’s extensive Dalmatian holdings - we have only one reference to anything Croatian regarding Hrvoje’s lands and subjects. That reference comes in a letter to Hrvoje from Dubrovnik of 22 October 1406 and simply refers to “your [Hrvoje’s] Croatian towns.” In this case, the term “Croatian” is clearly referring to a territory or geographical region, separating these towns from those lying in his Bosnian (or Donji kraji) lands. Ladislav of Naples, who in the first years of the fifteenth century laid claim to the Hungarian throne, made Hrvoje his deputy for this Dalmatian territory, calling him his Vicar General for the regions of Slavonia (in partibus Sclavonie). Thus, like Venice, the Neapolitans still considered the region simply “Slavonia,” and Hrvoje seems to have had no objections to the nomenclature.
-- pp. 127
In “Danica,” Palmotić refers to Hrvoje as Ban of the Croats (Od Hrvata ban Hrvoje) and to him ruling the Croatian lands; the real Hrvoje Vukčić was never Ban of Croatia. ...
Palmotić, it may be noted, chose Bosnian (a variant of the Štokavian spoken in his native Dubrovnik) as the purest Slavic dialect. ...
Also considering Bosnian as the purest Slavic dialect was Palmotić’s contemporary, the Italian Jesuit from Apulia (almost certainly from a family of refugees from Dalmatia) and linguist Jacob Mikalja (Micalia, Micaglia, ca.1600–1654). Having spent much time as a missionary in and around Dubrovnik, he called Bosnian the most beautiful of all the Illyrian dialects. He was one of the first to state explicitly that the languages (dialects) of Bosnia and Dubrovnik were for all practical purposes the same language.
-- pp. 302
Being serious scholar of international reputation, not a charlatan, Fine refers to Vukčić in this manner in all of his books and research, starting with his two-volume magnum opus, The Early Medieval Balkans and The Late Medieval Balkans. These couple of passages from this seminal work on ethnicity are really illustrative of misuse of historical sciences in the Balkans, which reflects in wikipedia to unbearable degree, unfortunately.--౪ Santa ౪99° 13:32, 7 May 2020 (UTC)
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