Dražen Bogopenec

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Dražen Bogopenec
County lord (župan) in Zagorje
Coat of armsSankovići.png
Predecessor?
SuccessorMilten Draživojević
BornMid 13th century
Nevesinje[1][2]
Diedafter 1307
BuriedGlavatičevo
Noble familyBogopanković[a] (Sanković)
Issue
Milten Draživojević
OccupationBrigand, nobility

Dražen Bogopenec (Serbian Cyrillic: Дражен Богопенец; fl. 1306–1307) was a county lord (župan) in Zagorje,[3][4] a region in Kalinovik (between Kalinovik, Konjic and Nevesinje[5]), in Hum (today part of Herzegovina). Zagorje was part of eastern Hum, which at the time was a province of the Serbian Kingdom under Stephen Uroš II Milutin, while western Hum had been taken by Paul I Šubić of Bribir, the Ban of Croatia, amid the dynastic civil war between Stephen Uroš II Milutin and Stephen Dragutin of Syrmia.[6]

He was born in Nevesinje,[1] in the middle of the 13th century.[3] Bogopenec was a member of the prominent Bogopanković family,[a] of which history little is known about.[1] He and his associate župan plundered in Hum;[1] Bogopenec is mentioned for the first time in Ragusan documents, in the Diversa Cancellarie from the year 1306;[7] (dated to 20[8] or 24 May[2]) when Ragusan nobleman (Thomadus de Dersa) complained to the Republic about the plundering and hijacking of a cargo filled with textile goods from Večerić, worth 800 perpers, in which Bogopenec participated in.[1][2][8] Later, on 7 January 1307, a Đurko gave his testimony to the Ragusan knez and judges that he had been in , in Hum, when sued Bogopenec, Purćić and , and their associates, in front of knez Konstantin.[5] The charged party returned some of the goods, and the rest they took from their properties and people.[5] Bogopenec, Purćić and Bogavčić were the most powerful nobility of Hum in the beginning of the 14th century.[5] Bogopenec' family gained a wider region in the 1330s, after the removal of Purćić.[9]

Bogopenec was the founder of the House of Sanković and was the father of župan Milten Draživojević, who was in the service of Stephen II, Ban of Bosnia.[7]

Political offices
Vacant
Last known title holder:
Radoslav
as [Serbian] Lord of Hum
Lord of Zagorje
(Eastern Hum)

fl. 1306
Succeeded by
Milten Draživojević

Annotations[]

  1. ^
    Bogopanković family: The Bogopanković family included Vidomir, Hlapec, his son Branislav, but it is not known which exact tie they had with Dražen Bogopenec.[2] Their prominence is evident in their inclusion in the Armorial of Petar Ohmućević.[2][10] The name is also rendered as Bogopanec,[2] which was registered as late as 1388, showing that the name was strongly bonded in the tradition of the family.[1]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Prosveta, pp. 18–19
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Ivić 1987, p. 119
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b Matica Srpska, p. 41
  4. ^ Zemaljski muzej u Sarajevu 1965, p. 297
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Zemaljski muzej Bosne i Hercegovine 1976, pp. 261–262
  6. ^ Fine 1991, p. 258
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Fajfrić 2000, ch. 4. Ban Tvrtko (1353–1377)
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Zemaljski muzej Bosne i Hercegovine 1976, p. 261: "Na 20. maja 1306. godine u dubrovačku knjigu »Diversa Cancellarie« zavedena je tužba (dubrovačkog) vlastelina Tome Držića u. kojoj navodi da mu je u Večeriću (Vecerich) otet tovar sa tekstilnom robom u vrijednosti od 800 perpera"
  9. ^ Грачев, p. 270
  10. ^ Kalić 2006, p. 247

Sources[]

  • Željko Fajfrić (2000). Internet izdanje (ed.). Kotromanići (in Serbian).
  • Matica Srpska, Biografije, СРПСКИ БИОГРАФСКИ РЕЧНИК, Азбучник, III том, Д ‐ З (in Serbian)
  • Prosveta (Jan 1, 1960). Istorijski časopis, Volumes 11–13 (in Serbian). Belgrade: Srpska akademija nauka. Istorijski institut u Beogradu.
  • Aleksa Ivić; Dušan Mrđenović; Dušan Spasić; Aleksandar Palavestra (1987). Rodoslovne tablice i grbovi srpskih dinastija i vlastele (in Serbian). Nova knj. ISBN 9788673350509. Богопенец
  • Jovanka Kalić (2006). Evropa i Srbi: srednji vek (in Serbian). Историјски Институт. ISBN 9788677430580.
  • Zemaljski muzej u Sarajevu (1965). Glasnik Zemaljskog muzeja u Sarajevu: Arheologija, Volume 20, Part 1 (in Serbo-Croatian).
  • Zemaljski muzej Bosne i Hercegovine (1976). Glasnik Zemaljskog muzeja Bosne i Hercegovine u Sarajevu: Arheologija, Volumes 29–31 (in Serbo-Croatian).
  • Виктор Петрович Грачев (1972). Сербская государственность в X-XIV вв: Критика теории "Жупной организации.". Наука (in Russian).
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