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  1. Matej Ninoslav (Serbian Cyrillic: Матеј Нинослав; died 1250) was the Ban of Bosnia in the period of 1232–50. Most of Bosnia was under the Kingdom of Hungary from 1235 to 1241. Ninoslav was also a Prince of Split in 1242–1244 during the local civil war.

  2. Ban Matej Ninoslav je bio krstjanin, koji je prešao na katoličanstvo. Razdoblje od početka 12. stoljeća pa do dolaska na vlast bana Mateja Ninoslava 1232. godine u Bosni je obilježeno jačanjem i širenjem Crkve bosanske i njenog učenja, te naglim porastom moći i utjecaja lokalnog plemstva.

  3. Prijezda I ( Serbian Cyrillic: Пријезда I; pronounced [prǐjezda] (1211–1287) was a Bosnian Ban as a vassal of the Hungarian Kingdom, reigning 1250–1287. He was probably the founder of the House of Kotromanić . Biography. From Christianity to Heresy and back.

  4. Ban Matej Ninoslav Ban Matej Ninoslav is first mentioned in sources in 1233 as a Hungarian vassal and a Catholic who renounced the heretical teachings of his predecessors. At the beginning of the new ban’s rule, the situation in Bosnia was very complicated.

  5. Ban Matej Ninoslav is first mentioned in sources in 1233 as a Hungarian vassal and a Catholic who renounced the heretical teachings of his predecessors. At the beginning of the new ban’s rule, the situation in Bosnia was very complicated.

  6. The Banate of Bosnia ( Serbo-Croatian: Banovina Bosna / Бановина Босна), or Bosnian Banate ( Bosanska banovina / Босанска бановина), was a medieval state based in what is today Bosnia and Herzegovina.

  7. Matej (given name) 1250 deaths. Bans of Bosnia. Monarchs of Bosnia. Non-topical/index: Uses of Wikidata Infobox with no image. Uses of Wikidata Infobox with no family name. Uses of Wikidata Infobox with unknown birth category. Men by name. People by name. Deceased people by name.

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