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  1. Born in 1438, Stephen hailed from the House of Kotromanić as one of the two known sons of the Bosnian prince Thomas by a commoner named Vojača. The other son died as an adolescent. Stephen's father was an adulterine son of King Ostoja and a younger brother of Radivoj, who contested the rule of their cousin King Tvrtko II.

  2. Ban of Bosnia; Reign: September 1353 – October 1377 (interrupted by Vuk, 1365–1366) Predecessor: Stephen II: King of Bosnia; Reign: October 1377 – 10 March 1391: Coronation (26 October?) 1377: Successor: Dabiša

  3. Stephen Tvrtko II was married during his first reign; his wife was mentioned by the Ragusans in 1409 as "the Queen, wife of King Tvrtko of Bosnia", but her name was not recorded. During his second reign, he considered it very important to marry a Catholic noblewoman and entertained the idea of choosing a bride from the Italian House of Malatesta .

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  5. 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 .

  6. Pages in category "Bans of Bosnia". The following 18 pages are in this category, out of 18 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . Borićević dynasty. Kotromanić dynasty. Kulinić dynasty. List of rulers of medieval Bosnia.

  7. The Kingdom of Bosnia ( Serbo-Croatian: Kraljevina Bosna / Краљевина Босна), or Bosnian Kingdom ( Bosansko kraljevstvo / Босанско краљевство), was a medieval kingdom that lasted for nearly a century, from 1377 to 1463, and evolved out of the Banate of Bosnia, which itself lasted since at least 1154.

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