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  1. Mar 31, 2024 · Stjepan II Kotromanić was buried in the Franciscan monastery in Mila, near Visoko, in 1353. The 14th century represented a new era in the further development of the medieval Bosnian state. This is the period when Bosnia enters the courses of Balkan and European politics and catches the momentum for the Western European states.

  2. Elizabeth of Kuyavia (Polish: Elżbieta, Serbo-Croatian: Elizabeta/ Елизабета; 1315/1320 – after 22 August 1345) was a Polish noblewoman of the House of Piast. She was the only daughter of Duke Kazimierz III of Gniewkowo and his wife, whose name and origins are unknown; her brother, Władysław the White , was later a candidate for ...

  3. Vuk (died after 1378) was the Ban of Bosnia from 1366 until 1367, a member of the Kotromanić dynasty that ruled the Banate of Bosnia since the turn of the 14th century. Vuk was the younger son of Vladislav Kotromanić and Jelena Šubić, who were married in 1337. His brother, Tvrtko I, became Ban of Bosnia following the death of their paternal ...

  4. Stephen Kulinić. Stephen or Stjepan Ban of Bosnia, was the third Bosnian ban who ruled the banate of Bosnia recorded by name in written sources. He was in power sometime between 1204 and 1232. [1] His rule was not popular, due to his Catholicism and allegiance to the Kingdom of Hungary. He was the last ruler of the House of Kulinić .

  5. The Kingdom of Croatia ( Croatian: Kraljevina Hrvatska, Hrvatsko kraljevstvo, Hrvatska zemlja; Hungarian: Horvát királyság; Latin: Regnum Croatiae) entered a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary in 1102, after a period of rule of kings from the Trpimirović and Svetoslavić dynasties and a succession crisis following the death of king ...

  6. Born about 1339, Elizabeth was the daughter of Ban Stephen II of Bosnia, the head of the House of Kotromanić. [1] Her mother, Elizabeth of Kuyavia, was a member of the House of Piast [2] and grandniece of King Władysław I of Poland. [3] The Hungarian queen dowager Elizabeth was a first cousin once removed of Elizabeth's mother.

  7. Vladislav was a younger son of Stephen I, Ban of Bosnia, and Elizabeth of Serbia. Upon the death of Ban Stephen I in c. 1314, Vladislav's mother assumed regency in the name of his older brother, Ban Stephen II. Unclear circumstances soon forced her to flee Bosnia and seek refuge in the Republic of Ragusa. She took her children with her, and ...

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