Pavlović noble family
Pavlović | |
---|---|
Country | Kingdom of Bosnia |
Estates |
Jablan grad (family estate) Borač (main estate) |
Titles |
Grand Duke of Bosnia Knez Vojvoda |
Founded |
Pavle Radenović 1391 |
Final ruler | Nikola Pavlović |
Dissolution |
1463 Ottoman conquest |
The Pavlovići, also known as Jablanići after their family estate at Jablan grad, was a medieval family in Bosnia that ruled parts of eastern and southeastern Bosnia. The family had their seat at Borač (Rogatica). Their most known member and founder was Pavle Radenović, who ruled a territory in the east of the Bosnian Kingdom from the late 14th century until his death in 1415.
History
The family hailed and ruled from Jablan grad (Mezgraja, Ugljevik). Raden Jablanić was a local lord of Krivaja and Prača and father of Pavle Radenović.
Pavle Radenović was plotted against by king Ostoja and Sandalj Hranić, and was killed in 1415 and buried in Vrhbosna.[1]
Possessions
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Family tree
- Raden Jablanić (-1391), vlasteličić
- Pavle Radenović (Founder) (1391–1415), Prince (Knez) and Duke (Vojvoda)
- Petar I Pavlović (1415–1420), Duke (Vojvoda)
- Radoslav Pavlović (1420–1441), Grand Duke of Bosnia
- Ivaniš Pavlović (1441–1450), Duke (Vojvoda)
- Petar II Pavlović (1450–1463), Duke (Vojvoda)
- Nikola Pavlović (1450–1463), Prince (Knez)
- Pavle Radenović (Founder) (1391–1415), Prince (Knez) and Duke (Vojvoda)
Coat of arms
The Pavlović family left six seals, which all have the same heraldic symbol, a tower, or fortified city.[2] The oldest coat of arms is that of Pavle, dated to 1397, which has a fortified city with one tower.[2] On the seals of his son, Radoslav, one has one tower (1432), the other three (1437), while Radoslav's son Ivaniš has three towers in his seal.[2] The fortification is most likely modeled after Ragusan seals.[2] This seal was likely used as the family coat of arms, despite the fact that there are no authentic complete coat of arms with shield, helmet and crest.[2]
In two stećci in Boljuni near Stolac, there are engravings of a castle with three towers, which Š. Bešlagić believes to have belonged to members of the family.[2] On the other hand, there is an assumption that the necropolis at Pavlovac near Sarajevo belonged to the family, thus, the resting place of the family remains unsolved.[2]
The Illyrian Armorials depict the family coat of arms as a fortified city with three towers, on both the shield and the crest.[2] The red shield has a golden city, while the city in the crest is red.[2] The mantling is red, with an interior of golden.[2] The Ohmučević Armorial added three golden fleur-de-lis in the shield, however, that interpretation is not in line with sphragistics, and is likely to be decorative.[2]
According to Croatian archaeologist Ćiro Truhelka (1865–1942), the Illyrian Armorials, according to its "ideological-propagandic message", used the red color in the coat of arms, instead of Radoslav Pavlović's coat of arms in Ragusa which used ultramarine.[3] According to Nada Grujić and Danko Zelić Radoslav Pavlović's coat of arms was in gold and lapis lazuli.[4] Radoslav Pavlović's coat of arms at his palace in Ragusa was made by Ratko Ivančić in 1427, measuring 1,28x1,28 m.[5]
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Coat of arms (Blue and gold version).
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Coat of arms (Fojnica Armorial, 17th century)
References
- ↑ Mihovil Mandić (December 1927). "Postanak Sarajeva". Naroda starina (in Croatian) (Croatian State Archives) 6 (14): 4, 7. Retrieved 2012-09-11.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Ivić et. al 1987, p. 189.
- ↑ Truhelka, Ćiro (1914). "Osvrt na sredovječne kulturne spomenike Bosne". Sarajevo, BiH: GZM BiH XXVI – 1914. p. 229.
Osvrt na sredovječne kulturne spomenike Bosne", 229. "Tako, barem u segmentu figura na štitu grba, možemo biti sigurni da ih jeautor prototipa tzv. Ilirskog grbovnika manje - više vjerodostojno prenio. Tose, naravno, ne može reći za boju štita grba. U skladu sa svojom ideološko – propagandnom porukom tzv. Ilirski grbovnik štit grba Pavlovića boji crvenom bojom nemanjićke kvazitradicije, dok je moćni bosanski magnat RadoslavPavlović za svoj grb u Dubrovniku koristio skupi ultramarin.
- ↑ Nada Grujić, Danko Zelić, Palača vojvode Sandalja Hranića u Dubrovniku, Anali Dubrovnik 48, Dubrovnik, 2010, 70, nap. 71; “Mi znamo, da se je vojvoda Radoslav Pavlović trsio, da njegov dvor u Dubrovniku bude što sjajniji a na svom grbu, što je imao da ukrasi ulaz, nije žalio potrošiti ni zlata ni lapis lazuli, najskupocjeniji slikarski materijal one dobe...”
- ↑ Sulejmanagić, Amer (2012). "The Coat of Arms of the Pavlović Family" (html/pdf). Bosna Franciscana (in Bosnian and English) (Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina: Franjevačka teologija Sarajevo). 36/2012 (36): 165–206. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
"Duos cimerios de arma" koje je 1427. god. Ratko Ivančić klesao za Radoslavljevu palaču bili su dimenzija 2,5 lakta po visini i širini (1,28 x1,28 m)
Sources
- Aleksa Ivić; Dušan Mrđenović; Dušan Spasić; Aleksandar Palavestra (1987). Rodoslovne tablice i grbovi srpskih dinastija i vlastele. Belgrade: Nova knjiga.