Sunday, October 13, 2019
Bosnia-Hercegovina :: World History Essays
Bosnia-Hercegovina  Missing Works Cited    	The origin of the arms with the argent between 6 fleur-de-lys,  which is now on the flag of the republic of Bosnia-Hercegovina, has long  puzzled me, but they are in fact the arms of the Kotromanic family, which  ruled Bosnia in the 14th and 1 5th centuries. Other arms have also been  attributed to Bosnia in the 19th century.    	I finally thought of a way to get at this question of the origin  of the current Bosnian flag: numismatics, of course. I found a book by one  Ivan Rengjeo, Corpus der mittel-alterlichen Mnnzen von Kroatien, Slavonien,  Dalmatien und Bosnien, Graz, 1959, which is as exhaustive as you can get  on the topic (coins from those regions, that is). I have also consulted an  article by Pavao Andelic on Medieval Seals of Bosnia-Hercegovina, in the  monograph series of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia-Hercegovina  (Sarajevo, 1970),but it is in Serbo-Croat, so I can only look at the  (numerous) illustra tions. What follows is a historical/heraldic account,  pieced together from these sources, and a few encyclopedias. Bosnia was  dominated alternatively by Serbia and, from the 12th c. onward, by Croatia  (in personal union with Hungary) until the early 14th c. Typically, the  king of Hungary and Croatia appointed bans, or local governors; and, in  typical medieval fashion, these bans took advantage of any weakness of the  central monarchy to carve out territories for themselves.    	In the early 14th c., the ban of Croatia was Pavao (Paul) Subic of  Brebir or Breberio (a town in Dalmatia which was given to the family in  1222): his father and grandfather were counts or Trau or Trogir, his  cousins were counts of Spalato or Split. This p owerful man titles himself  ban of Croatia and dominus Bosniae, and appoints his brother Mladen I  Subic (1302-04) and later his eldest son Mladen II (1312-14) as ban of  Bosnia. His second son Georg was count of Trau and Split, his third son  Pavao was count of Trau. By the third generation, however, the family had  lost its power. This first dynasty of bans issued byzantine-style coins,  with no heraldry. Their seals, however, show the Subic arms: an eagle wing  displayed, and 5 flowers with stems as crest (mi sread by Siebmacher as  ostrich-feathers). The style of the arms is very German, with the shield  tilted to the left, a German helm, lambrequins, and a crest. There are no  tinctures, but a junior branch issued from Pavao count of Trau, the Subic  de Zrin, bo re Gules, two wings sable (an interesting violation of the s  -called tincture rule).  					    
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