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Good articleTvrtko I of Bosnia has been listed as one of the History good articles under the good article criteria. If you can improve it further, please do so. If it no longer meets these criteria, you can reassess it.
Article milestones
DateProcessResult
July 29, 2017Good article nomineeListed
Did You Know
A fact from this article appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "Did you know?" column on August 23, 2017.
The text of the entry was: Did you know ... that Tvrtko I, the first King of Bosnia, maintained cordial relations with all three churches in his realm—Bosnian, Catholic, and Orthodox?
On this day...Facts from this article were featured on Wikipedia's Main Page in the "On this day..." column on March 10, 2020, March 10, 2021, and March 10, 2024.


mention of Slavonia

[edit]

There's a mention of Slavonia among Tvrtko's conquests, but this is incoherent with other descriptions. While the medieval meaning of Slavonia was much larger than today, it was largely towards the west, not towards the south. Does someone have access to the full text of Fine (1994) page 398? @Surtsicna added this back in 2016. --Joy (talk) 18:48, 3 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]

In the meantime, @Norden1990 posted some links in the discussion Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Bosnian-Hungarian War (1387-1390) where I read some machine translations that mention how flags of Naples were raised in the Syrmian and Slavonian counties, but I still didn't find clear explanations of where Tvrtko may have invaded to his north, rather mostly to his southwest. --Joy (talk) 13:26, 6 April 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Google Books preview showed me pages 397 and 398 now and it says:
Soon Bosnian and Croatian troops were campaigning together on behalf of Naples in Croatia in the region around Zagreb. And by the end of the year, 1387, the Bosnians and their Croatian allies were in control of most of Croatia and Slavonia. The Horvats, who had sought refuge with Tvrtko, were now able to make their return to Croatia.
John of Paližna had been named Ban of Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia in 1385 by the ill-fated Charles of Naples. Tvrtko recognized John's title and appointed him to be his deputy for various Dalmatian towns that submitted to him.
Some of the towns seem to have been unhappy with the change, preferring as their suzerain the more distant Hungary to near-by Bosnia. Tvrtko never tried to force his rule upon either Zadar or Dubrovnik. Thus between 1387 and 1389 Tvrtko made himself overlord over a large part of Slavonia, Dalmatia and Croatia south of Velebit—including Knin, Ostrovica, and Klis. On behalf of Naples his troops even passed through Slavonia into Srem. Though these actions were carried out in the name of Naples, it is evident that Tvrtko and his own vassal, Hrvoje, with whom he was closely associated in this venture, were acting for themselves and it was they who held the actual authority in much of this vast area. In 1390 Tvrtko began to call himself King of Croatia and Dalmatia.
There aren't any internal references on this page so it's hard to tell how precise this is intended to be, but made himself overlord doesn't necessarily mean having practical control throughout the 2-3 year period, it's more like a claim...
I also looked for sources about Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić at this time and found this in the Croatian Biographical Lexicon's article about that[1]:
Na poč. 1387. pošao je s bratom Vukom na čelu bosanske vojske u pomoć svrgnutom zagrebačkom biskupu Pavlu Horvatu i dvojici pobunjenih hrvatskih velikaša, banu Ivanišu Horvatu i vranskom prioru Ivanu Paližni. Usput su opljačkali posjede Žigmundovih pristaša Zrinskih. Potkraj 1388. Hrvoje je s bratom Vojislavom bio zauzet događajima u Dalmaciji [...]
So we can confirm that the focus was on the south already by the next year. This article is attributed to Pejo Ćošković.
Likewise when reading about Paul Horvat[2]:
Kraljica Marija u lipnju je oslobođena, a 14. IX. 1387. posjede Horvatâ predala je Gorjanskima.
This is likewise possibly just a claim, but it indicates that the Luxembourg factions didn't sit still about the issue of who controls Slavonia even that same year. This article is attributed to Josip Lučić[3] and Zrinka Nikolić[4].
And in turn reading about Nikola II Gorjanski[5]:
Kao jedan od najvjernijih pristaša kraljice Marije i njezina muža kralja Žigmunda, Nikola je 1387. bio jedan od vojvoda u pohodu kraljevske vojske koja je pobunjene pristaše braće Horvat potisnula preko Drave i tamo ih u nekoliko bitaka pobijedila. Nikola je potom Ivaniša Horvata opkolio u Požegi i prisilio na predaju, ali je ovaj – dok je Nikola pošao u Mačvu da je otme Srbima – uspio iz zarobljeništva pobjeći u Bosnu svojemu savezniku kralju Tvrtku. Nikoli su se te godine predali zagrebački Gradec i Kaptol, a za zasluge ga je Žigmund imenovao mačvanskim banom. Nikola je 1387–89. uspješno suzbijao provale Ivaniša Horvata preko Save u istočnu Slavoniju, a uspio je svojega tasta, kneza Lazara, nagovoriti da prestane podupirati Horvata.
So the Horvats had advanced across the Drava in '87, but were pushed back, and in turn defeated in both Zagreb and Požega, presumably the same year. Further advances are also described as successfully repelled. This article is attributed to Mladen Švab [hr].
Note that HBL articles are dated 2002, which is presumably just the date of the latest editorial change, as Lučić had died in 1994 and Švab had died in 2000.
So it doesn't look like there's consensus that any meaning of Slavonia was an area conventionally under control of the Anjou factions throughout these three years, rather it was at the very least contested by the Luxembourg factions throughout the period. --Joy (talk) 13:36, 17 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Indeed Fine said that on pp.307-398 : Soon Bosnian and Croatian troops were campaigning together on behalf of Naples in Croatia in the region around Zagreb. And by the end of the year, 1387, the Bosnians and their Croatian allies were in control of most of Croatia and Slavonia. The Horvats, who had sought refugc with Tvrtko, were now able to make their retum to Croatia. Tvrtko himself also čame out openly for Naples in the course of 1387. He sent his own armies into Hungarian Dalmatia, in particular into the strip of coastland betvveen Zadar and Dubrovnik. Actively helped by John of Paližna and Hrvoje, Tvrtko established his suzcrainty over ali the towns between these two cities, though not including Zadar and Dubrovnik themselves; thus Split, Omiš, Trogir, Šibenik, and even sevcral Adriatic islands submitted to Tvrtko. He issucd charters confirming their existing privileges, including their rights to remain self-governing under their own town councils and existing law codes. Tvrtko evidently intended to retain these towns for Bosnia. John of Paližna had been named Ban of Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in 1385 by the ill-fated Charles of Naples. Tvrtko recognized John’s title and appointed him to be his deputy for various Dalmatian towns that submitted to him. Some of the towns seem to have been unhappy with the change, preferring as their suzerain the more distant Hungary to near-by Bosnia. Tvrtko never tried to force his rule upon either Zadar or Dubrovnik. Thus between 1387 and 1389 Tvrtko made himself overlord over a large part of Slavonia, Dalmatia, and Croatia south of Velebit — including Knin, Ostrovica, and Klis. On behalf of Naples his troops even passed through Slavonia into Srem. Though these actions were carried out in the name of Naples, it is evident that Tvrtko and his own vassal, Hrvoje, with whom he was closely associated in this venture, were acting for themselves and it was they who held the actual authority in much of this vast area. In 1390 Tvrtko began to call himself King of Croatia and Dalmatia. ౪ Santa ౪99° 20:37, 20 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
@Santasa99 yes, I cited that part of Fine above, the question is how much weight do we put on the between 1387 and 1389 Tvrtko made himself overlord over a large part of Slavonia. My rephrasing edit was this, ideally we expand that paragraph by another sentence or two, referenced to something solid. --Joy (talk) 19:36, 30 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Not much. Maybe, for the sake of respecting Surtiscna quite considerable knowledge on the all-medieval.Balkan history, some kind of mention with a context, of sort that he intruded there and that he considered himself an overlord, but I admit no historian gives that episode same weight as to Tvrtko's takeover of, say, islands, where he also had very short effective control but that episode is important for variety of other reasons. (I responded before checking your link, so let me get back later if I missed something.). ౪ Santa ౪99° 20:03, 30 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I would not phrase it like that neither: "His realm now encompassed much of Slavonia", but some context to your sentence should give reader a better understanding of what that intrusion in Slavonia meant. I can't say from top of my head how and what else to say - if you have an idea, then go ahead, or maybe I could do it later. ౪ Santa ౪99° 20:11, 30 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
There is something else that you missed in this - remember that Vego's map we discussed earlier, the "greatest extent" and all that - Slavonia is considered to spread across the Sava into a territory already north of the Sana river and town of Prijedor, so that corner of modern-day BiH between Una, Sava, Sana and Vrbas, drawn in those maps like Vego's as temporary holdings, vis-a-vis "greatest extent, with some very light shadings or drawn with "isprekidane crtice" (can't remember English :-)) or dots. So, this Slavonia territory is mostly in moder-day Bosnia around the Sava (Babonić family was there) ౪ Santa ౪99° 20:23, 30 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
Could be, but I'd prefer to cite a source with text specifically discussing the same level of toponymy as the other quality information, as opposed to relying on any of these vague maps. --Joy (talk) 20:38, 30 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
No, certainly - I just wanted to make a point about the fact that Slavonia spread across the Sava into that triangle between rivers (unlike today), probably much of northern Bosnia around Sava was considered Slavonia at the time. In any case, I would avoid saying "large part of Slavonia" - the problem is that that part of Fine's text mention only Zagreb, so it is difficult to use it for refing which part or how much of Slavonia - so if we can't specifically say which part I would say "some portion of Slavonia territory", probably not much. If there's no rush, we should check some works on specific subject (Pavao Živković, Pejo Ćošković, why not Mrgić). But if it's not that important, just say as you said:"between 1387 and 1389 Tvrtko I made himself overlord over a large part of Slavonia". ౪ Santa ౪99° 21:18, 30 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
I'd keep it out because this is going to be inherently confusing to the average English reader, who we already confuse with Slavonia vs Slovenia vs Slovakia, excess varying usage of "Croatia" and "Slavonia" that doesn't match modern-day meanings is just making the article less readable for no discernible benefit. --Joy (talk) 22:28, 30 June 2024 (UTC)[reply]
OK, leave it with that one sentence as it is now, may be in time something coherent could be drained out of materials on the subject. ౪ Santa ౪99° 01:08, 1 July 2024 (UTC)[reply]