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Paul them proclaimed himself Ban and invaded Bosnia. Paul died in 1312 and his successor, Mladen II claimed the titles of Ban of Croatia and of Bosnia. When Stephen I died in 1314, Stephen II who in theory inherited the Banate, fled with his brothers and mother, Jelisaveta, and into exile to the Republic of Dubrovnik.
Throughout his reign in the fourteenth century, Stephen ruled the lands from Sava to the Adriatic and from Cetina to Drina. He was a member of the Kotromanić dynasty. Read more on Wikipedia. Since 2007, the English Wikipedia page of Stephen II, Ban of Bosnia has received more than 88,458 page views. His biography is available in 15 different ...
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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.
- 17 November 1461
- Thomas
- 10 July 1461 – 25 May 1463
Bosnia: Date of death: 1353 (statement with Gregorian date earlier than 1584) Bosnia: Country of citizenship
Catherine. Mary. House. Kotromanić. Father. Prijezda I. Mother. Elizabeth of Slavonia. Stephen I Kotromanić ( Serbo-Croatian: Стефан I / Stjepan I) (1242–1314) was a Bosnian Ban from 1287 to 1290 jointly with Ban Prijezda II and 1290–1314 alone as a vassal of the Kingdom of Hungary.
- Elizabeth of Slavonia
- Prijezda I
- 1287–1314
- Elizabeth of Serbia
S. Stephen (honorific) Stephen I, Ban of Bosnia. Stephen II, Ban of Bosnia. Mladen II Šubić of Bribir. Paul I Šubić of Bribir.
Although Hungarian kings viewed Bosnia as part of Hungarian Crown Lands, the Banate of Bosnia was a de facto independent state for most of its existence. [1] [2] [3] It was founded in the mid-12th century and existed until 1377 with interruptions under the Šubić family between 1299 and 1324. In 1377, it was elevated to a kingdom.