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  1. The House of Kotromanić (Serbian Cyrillic: Котроманић, pl. Kotromanići / Котроманићи) was a late medieval Bosnian noble and later royal dynasty.Rising to power in the middle of the 13th century as bans of Bosnia, with control over little more than the valley of the eponymous river, the Kotromanić rulers expanded their realm through a series of conquests to include ...

  2. From a page move: This is a redirect from a page that has been moved (renamed).This page was kept as a redirect to avoid breaking links, both internal and external, that may have been made to the old page name.

  3. 4 Südost-Forschungen 78 (2019) The Most Noble and Royal House of Kotromanić later, on 17 May 1456, Francesco de Benessa, Ragusan envoy to Bosnian King Stefan Tomaš (r. 1443 –1461), was instructed to remind the ruler about the sincere and pure benevolence that his predecessors showed to their city, and the similar love and appreciation that ...

  4. Dec 1, 2019 · This study analyses mechanisms used by the Bosnian ruling house of Kotromanić to construct their dynastic identity through discourses of legitimacy based on a tradition about their predecessors.

  5. Kotromanić Dynasty, royal house that ruled Bosnia from the late 13th to the mid-15th century. The dynasty was founded by Stephen Kotroman, a vassal of the Hungarian king and the ruler of a portion of Bosnia from 1287 to 1316. His son Stephen Kotromanić became the independent lord of all Bosnia in 1322. Extending his domain southward, Stephen ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  6. Ostoja of Bosnia. Vladislav of Bosnia ( Serbo-Croatian: Vladislav Kotromanić / Владислав Котроманић; died 1354) was a member of the House of Kotromanić who effectively ruled the Banate of Bosnia from September 1353 to his death. Vladislav was a younger son of Stephen I, Ban of Bosnia, and Elizabeth of Serbia.

  7. Dec 1, 2019 · Members of the Kotromanić family ruled Bosnia from at least the second half of the thirteenth century, perhaps even earlier, until the Ottoman conquest of the Bosnian Kingdom in 1463.1 During those two centuries of political domination they developed their authority “by divine right” and, apart from a short interruption at the beginning of the 1300s when they were forced to surrender ...

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