The family can be traced from the second-half of the 13th century and were cousins and relatives of the Croatian noble Šubić family.[A][2] It is considered that in the beginning had estates in the "Donji Kraji" (English: Lower Ends), specifically in župa Banica with town Ključ, Vrbanja with town Kotor (Kotor Varoš) and Zemljanik with town Greben as well as Glamoč.[2]
History
The family started to grow in power during Stjepan (d. before 1301) whose only surely known son was named as Hrvatin.[2][3] The family's eponymous founder was Hrvatin Stjepanić (fl. 1299–1304), a count and holder of possession in parts of "Donji Kraji" (English: Lower Ends) and "Zapadne Strane" (English: "Western Sides"), and a vassal of Croatian magnate Paul I Šubić of Bribir.[4] Hrvatin's sons was part of a coalition of Bosnian and Slavonian nobility that revolted against Mladen II Šubić of Bribir between 1316 and 1317.[5]
From around 1322 the family submitted to the Kotromanić dynasty of the Banate of Bosnia,[6] but during the Hungarian-Bosnian struggles until 1357 mostly allied with the Hungarian king.[3] In 1363, the Hrvatinić supported Tvrtko I of Bosnia against Hungary, after which they came up through the ranks in Bosnia, while their most prominent member, Hrvoje Vukčić, along with major new possessions in Donji Kraji and Zapadne Strane was awarded with the title Grand Duke of Bosnia.[7]
In c. 1387, while loyal to Tvrtko I, they supported rebellion in Dalmatia against Sigismund.[7] The last member of the family was Matija Vojsalić who was last mentioned in the archives of Republic of Ragusa in 1476. He was installed as a puppet king of Bosnia by the Ottoman sultan as an answer to Nicholas of Ilok, named king of Bosnia by Matthias Corvinus. Matija Vojsalić was removed after conspiring with Matthias Corvinus against the Ottomans and was not mentioned after that.
Religion
During the 1320s, the first mention of the institutionally developed Bosnian Church is tied to the clan, to which some branches were affiliated. Other branches, however, were loyal to the Catholic Church and were also relatives of the Bribir's knezs, to which they owe their rise under the Croatian-Hungarian throne and helped Bribir's extend their rule over the greater part of the Bosnian Banate for couple of decades.[2][8]
Lineage
Stjepan or Stipan (Latin: Stephan; died before 1301),[9] according to F. Šišić possibly knez in Donji Kraji, possibly as early as 1244.[10]
Hrvatin Stjepanić (Latin: Horvatinus, Huruatin; fl. 1299–1304), knez (count) in Donji Kraji of Bosnia (de inferioribus Bosne confinibus[4]) and vassal of Paul I Šubić of Bribir.[11][12] Believed by F. Šišić to have died around the same time as Paul I (1312).[13] He had three sons.[13] Called Hrvatin Stjepanić or Hrvatin Stipanić in historiography.
Vukoslav Hrvatinić (Latin: Vlkosslaus; fl. 1315–1326), issued a charter in 1315 in Sanica.[10] In ca. 1326, Ban Stjepan II in a land grant mentioned that Vukoslav "had left the Croatian lord".[14] Served as Knez of Ključ (fl. 1325).[15] Married Jelena, the daughter of Knez Kurjak.[8][16]
Vlatko (fl. 1364)
Pavao Hrvatinić (fl. 1323–1332)
Grgur (fl. 1357)
Vladislav (fl. 1357)
Vukac Hrvatinić (fl. 1357–1366), defended the Soko fortress in the Pliva county in ca. 1363 against the Hungarians, for which he was awarded an entire župa Pliva and a title of vojvoda (transl. duke) by Ban Tvrtko I.[17]
Hrvatin Stjepanić is called in 1299 by Charles II of Naples as "Hrovatinus comes, nec non filii et fratres eius, consanguinei et cognati virorum nobilium Pauli, bani Croatorum nec non Georgii et Mladeni, fratrum" (of Paul I Šubić of Bribir and his brothers George I and Mladen I Šubić),[10] while by Paul I Šubić as "compatrem nostrum dilectum et fidelem" (1304) and "cognati nostri dilecti et fidelis" (1305).[19][20]
References
^ abSulejmanagić, Amer (23 July 2015). "Grbovi Vukčića Hrvatinića"(html, pdf). Povijesni Prilozi (in Serbo-Croatian). 34 (48): 33–68. Retrieved 28 February 2019 – via Hrčak.