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{{short description|Founder and first king of the Kingdom of Bosnia (r. 1377–91)}}
]
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2024}}
'''] Tvrtko I''' (], sometimes translated as ''Stjepan'', ''Stevan'',...) (]–]) was a ruler of ]. He ruled in ]–] and again in ]–] as ] and in ]–] as the first Bosnian King. He also took the Serbian crown. Tvrtko was a member of the ].
{{good article}}
{{Infobox royalty
|name = Tvrtko I
|succession1 = ]
|image =
| image_size = 300
|caption = Statue of Tvrtko I in ]
|reign1 = October 1377 – 10 March 1391
|coronation1 = (26 October?) 1377
|cor-type1 = ]
|successor1 = ]
|succession = ]
|reign = September 1353&nbsp;– October 1377<br>(interrupted by ], 1366–1367)
|predecessor = ]
|spouse = ]
|issue = ]
|house = ]
|father = ]
|mother = ]
|birth_date = {{circa}} 1338
|birth_place = ]<ref>https://poslovnenovine.ba/2023/01/13/srebrenik-rodni-grad-prvog-bosanskog-kralja/</ref>
|death_date = {{death date and age|1391|3|10|1338|||df=yes}}
|death_place = ]
|place of burial= ]
|religion = ]
}}


'''Stephen Tvrtko I''' ({{lang-sh-Latn-Cyrl|separator=" / "|Stjepan/Stefan Tvrtko|Стјепан/Стефан Твртко}}; {{circa}} 1338 – 10 March 1391) was the ] of ]. A member of the ], he succeeded his uncle ] as the ] in 1353. As he was a minor at the time, Tvrtko's father, ], briefly ruled as ], followed by Tvrtko's mother, ]. Early in his personal rule, Tvrtko quarrelled with his country's ] clergy but later enjoyed cordial relations with all the religious communities in his realm. After initial difficulties—the loss of large parts of Bosnia to his overlord, King ], and being briefly ] by his ]s—Tvrtko's power grew considerably. He conquered some remnants of the neighbouring ] in 1373, after the death of its last ruler and his distant relative, ]. In 1377, he had himself crowned ] and ], claiming to be the heir of Serbia's extinct ].
Tvrtko I was an able Bosnian ruler and his state included most of Bosnia as well as the neighbouring territories. He transformed the country from an autonomous banate into an independent and prosperous kingdom. After he became the ], he added the title ''Stephanos'' (''Stefan'', the crowned one), and ''Miroslav'' or ''Mircea''{{Fact|date=February 2007}}.


As the Kingdom of Bosnia continued to expand, Tvrtko's attention shifted to the ] coast. He gained control of the entire ] region and the major maritime cities of the area, established new settlements and started building a navy, but never succeeded in subjugating the lords of the independent Serbian territories. The death of King Louis and the accession of ] in 1382 allowed Tvrtko to take advantage of the ensuing succession crisis in Hungary and Croatia. After bitter fighting, from 1385 to 1390, Tvrtko succeeded in conquering large parts of ], and ]. Following the ] in 1389, his tenuous claim to Serbia became a mere fiction, as the Serbian rulers he sought to subdue became ]s of the victorious ]. The Ottoman Turks also launched their first attacks on Bosnia during Tvrtko's reign, but his army was able to repel them. Tvrtko's sudden death in 1391 prevented him from solidifying the Kotromanić hold on Croatian lands.
Tvrtko's title was "King of Serbs and Bosnia".''


Tvrtko is widely considered one of Bosnia's greatest medieval rulers, having enlarged the country's borders to their greatest extent, left a strong economy, and improved the living standards of his subjects. He was survived by at least one son, ], but was succeeded by ], under whom Tvrtko's burgeoning realm began to decay.
== Family Connections ==
Tvrtko was the firstborn child of ] and ], who were married at the ]'s stronghold of ] in a summer long festivities open to the whole population. Tvrtko was a scion of the two most prominent families. Tvrtko was the first cousin of ],
the daughter of Vladislav's brother, ban ], and his third wife the Polish Princess Elizabeth of ].


==Minority==
In the times when the plague was devastating the region, Tvrtko's mother Jelena Šubić was in charge of the household, which, among others, included her own family, including her ailing husband Vladislav, and the family of her ailing in-laws of Stephen II Kotromanić. Jelena brought up her own children, Tvrtko and his younger brother ], and her nieces and adopted daughters ] and her older sister ].
] at the deathbed of his uncle Stephen, as depicted on the ], dated 1380.]]


Tvrtko was the elder son of ] and ] and was likely born within a year of their marriage, which was celebrated in 1337. His father was the brother of the Bosnian ], ], and his mother the daughter of the Croatian lord ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=122}} Although Vladislav was still alive, Stephen's title passed directly to Tvrtko; the reason for Vladislav's exclusion from the ] succession is unclear.{{sfn|Fine|1994|pp=284–285}} Tvrtko, however, was only about fifteen years old at the time,{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=284}} so his father governed as ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=122}} Soon after his accession, Tvrtko travelled with his father throughout the realm to settle relations with his ].{{sfn|Ćošković|2009|p=}} Jelena replaced Vladislav as regent upon his death in 1354. She immediately travelled to ] to obtain consent to Tvrtko's accession from ], his overlord. Following her return, Jelena held an assembly ('']'') in ], with mother and son confirming the possessions and privileges of the noblemen of "all of ], ], ], and the ]".{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=122}}
In ], ] was hand-picked to become, in ], the second wife of the king and later emperor ], king of ], since ] of ], etc. In ], Katarina was married to ]. They became parents of ] and grandparents of ], ],
]
the future wife, queen and empress to the ] ] of Luxemburg.


The death of Tvrtko's maternal uncle ] in 1348 led to a decline of the ] and a long conflict over their lands. In May 1355, Jelena and Tvrtko marched with an army to ] in order to claim Tvrtko's share of her brother's patrimony.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=122}} An agreement was reached with the vice-] by which Tvrtko was to inherit all the cities held by his maternal grandfather and a city which belonged to his aunt Katarina. Still, it is unknown whether he actually took possession of them.{{sfn|Ćošković|2009|p=}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=123}}
All ] siblings, Tvrtko and Elizabeta in particular, were very close, calling themselves, even in official documents, as ''my beloved brother and my beloved sister'', respectively. Thus, Tvrtko was, in fact, the brother-in-law, vassal and trusted ally of Louis I, and the brother-in-law of Hermann I of Celje.
Tvrtko was also a descendant, on both paternal and maternal sides, from the ] that ruled ] and ], and ], that ruled the Serbian Lands and at its peak the Greek lands.
Tvrtko's paternal grandmother was Jelisaveta Nemanjic, the daughter of the ] ] ] of ] and his wife the ] Princess ], the daughter of the Cuman Koteny Princess christened Elizabeth and her husband ] who was the son of King ].
Tvrtko's maternal great-grandmother was Ursa Nemanjic, Jelisaveta's sister.


The state assembled by Tvrtko's uncle Stephen broke apart on Tvrtko's accession,{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=284}} much to the satisfaction of his overlord King Louis.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} The Hungarians were keen to encourage Stephen's vassals to act independently from Tvrtko, forcing Tvrtko to compete with Louis for their loyalty in order to rebuild the Bosnian state.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} Louis posed a more direct threat as well; he was determined to enlarge his ], and throughout his realm he ardently reclaimed all lands that once belonged to the monarch.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=122}} Taking advantage of the precarious situation early in Tvrtko's reign, Louis moved to claim most of Donji Kraji and western Hum up to the river ], including the prosperous customs town of ]. In 1357, he succeeded in compelling Tvrtko to come to Hungary and surrender these territories as the ] of Stephen's daughter ], who had been married to Louis since 1353.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=124}} In July, King Louis confirmed Tvrtko and his younger brother ] as rulers of Bosnia and ].{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=124}} Donji Kraji and Hum were purposely omitted from their title,{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} with Usora likely having been granted as compensation.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=124}} Two conditions were forced upon the Bosnians: one of the two Kotromanić brothers would be at Louis's court whenever the other was in Bosnia, and they would make an effort to suppress the "heretical" ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=124}}
Tvrtko's maternal uncle ] was married to ], the daughter of ], from Nemanjić dynasty, and ], and a half-sister of Serbian Emperor ].


== Initial difficulties ==
Tvrtko's paternal aunt Marija was the wife of Nicolae Alexandru Basarab and the grandmother of ]. Tvrtko's maternal uncle Pavao III Šubić was married to ], his maternal aunt Katarina Šubić was married to ],
Little is known about internal affairs in Bosnia between 1357 when Tvrtko started ruling on his own and 1363. His religious policy came into focus in this period, as the ] became more insistent on curbing the Bosnian Church. This endangered Tvrtko, for although he was a Roman Catholic throughout his life, Louis now had a religious pretext for invading Bosnia. The death of the ]—], a supporter of both Stephen II and Tvrtko I{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=124}} and acknowledged by the latter as his "spiritual father"{{sfn|Fine|2007|p=161}}—led to the appointment of ] to the episcopal throne. Peter actively promoted the idea of launching a new ], earning him Tvrtko's hostility.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=124}} Tvrtko even attempted to plot against Peter but failed when his letters to a ] in Peter's ] residence were discovered.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|pp=124–125}} The Bosnian Church, meanwhile, survived throughout Tvrtko's reign but only became prominent in state affairs after his death. One hostile source even tried to link Tvrtko himself to the Church due to his tolerance of all local faiths, including Hum's ].{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=370}}
his grand-aunt was ] (later known as ]), while his grand-uncle was ].


]
== Ruler ==
At the start of his personal rule, the young Ban somehow considerably increased his power.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} Although he constantly emphasized his subservience and loyalty to the King, Tvrtko started regarding the loyalty of the Donji Kraji noblemen to Louis as treachery against himself.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=125}} In 1363, a conflict broke out between the two men.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=128}} The cause is not clear, although Louis stated that his intention was to eradicate the Bosnian heretics. By April, the King had begun amassing an army; and in May, officials of the ] ordered their merchants to leave Bosnia due to an imminent clash.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=128}} An army led by Louis himself attacked Donji Kraji,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=129}} where the nobility was divided in its loyalties between Tvrtko and Louis.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} A month later an army led by the ], ], and the ], ], struck Usora.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=129}}{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} ] deserted to Louis and surrendered to him the important ], but ] succeeded in defending the ] fortress in the '']'' of ], forcing the Hungarians to retreat.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} In Usora, the ] held out against a "massive attack" by the royal army,{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} which suffered the embarrassment of losing the King's seal.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=129}} The successful defense of Srebrenik marked Tvrtko's first victory against Hungary.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}}
=== Ban ===
[[Image:Bosna.jpg|thumb|250px|right|<small><font color="#EE7CA3">Bosnia in 10th century</font><br>
<font color="#EF6E30">Bosnian state during Ban Kulin 1180–1204</font><br>
<font color="#2859A3">Bosnian state during king Tvrtko 1353–1391</font><br>
<font color="#FBF066">Borders of Bosnian state in second part of 15th century</font><br>
<font color="#30925F">Bosnia in second part of 19th century</font><br></small>]]
Tvrtko succeeded his uncle Ban ] as ] in the Hungarian King's name in ] at the age of 15. He was still young, so his father Vladislav Kotromanić ruled in his name. The first year of Tvrtko's reign passed mostly as confirming and issuing new edicts. In ], Tvrtko and his brother Vuk were declared as Bans of Bosnia, the Lower Edges, Zagorje and the ]. The same year Tvrtko's father and Bosnia's de fact ruler, Vladislav, died. Tvrtko's mother, Banass Jelena Šubić asserted to the throne, but she wasn't accepted in Bosnia because she was a woman, so much of the Bosnian nobility refused to obey her. The first one to rebel was Tvrtko's close cousin Pavle Kulišić. Tvrtko gathered a small force, defeated Pavle, took his ] cities for himself and threw him in the dungeon, where he died.


]
Mladen III Šubić had died and his lands were being split. The ] and the ] quarraled over ] and ], the cities which where held by ]. The Hungarian King wanted Jelena Šubić Kotromanić to take over the cities with the Bosnians. So in ], Tvrtko and his mother moved with their forces to ] for the negotiations with the Croatian Prince, Ivan Nelipac. The Bosnian Ban managed to get a hold for himself over some of the former Šubićs' cities and forged a military alliance with Prince Ivan Nelipac ready to advance to ] if the cities didn't answer their side's demands. But, Skradin and Klis themselves were taken by the forces of ] ].
The unity of the Bosnian magnates waned as soon as the Hungarians were defeated, weakening Tvrtko's position and that of a united Bosnia. In 1364, Tvrtko, his mother, and his brother were granted citizenship of the ], an honour that guaranteed them sanctuary in Venice in case of necessity but also obligated Tvrtko to protect Venetian merchants. Various charters issued by the previous bans of Bosnia, and confirmed by Tvrtko on his accession, promised the same protection to Ragusan merchants. In late 1365, however, both republics complained to Tvrtko about the treatment of their merchants by his vassals. Evidently, the Ban had lost control over his feudatories.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=130}} The anarchy escalated, and in February of the following year, the magnates revolted against Tvrtko and dethroned him.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=130}} Little is known about the circumstances under which Tvrtko was deposed. Accusing the magnates of treachery against "foremostly God" and himself, Tvrtko fled Bosnia with his mother.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=130}} He was replaced by his younger brother,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=130}}{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} who had hitherto functioned as "junior ban".{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=130}} Vuk's personal role in the rebellion is uncertain.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=370}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=130}}


Tvrtko acted resolutely and efficiently.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=130}} He and Jelena took refuge at the Hungarian royal court, where they were welcomed by Tvrtko's former enemy and overlord, King Louis.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} Apparently dissatisfied with the turn of events in Bosnia, Louis provided Tvrtko with aid (likely military) in reclaiming Bosnia.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=131}} Tvrtko returned to Bosnia in March and reestablished control over a part of the country by the end of the month, including the areas of Donji Kraji, ] (where he then resided), Hum, and Usora.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=370}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=131}} In order to secure the loyalty of the noblemen he had subjugated, as well as to win over those still supporting Vuk, Tvrtko bestowed a number of grants;{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=131}} in August he invested Vukac Hrvatinić with the entire ''župa'' of Pliva for his part in the 1363 war with Hungary.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=131}}{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}} After initially rapid success, Tvrtko's campaign slowed.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=132}} ], ruler of eastern Hum, defected to Vuk in late 1366. Throughout the following year, Tvrtko forced Vuk southwards, eventually compelling him to flee to Ragusa. Sanko, Vuk's last supporter, submitted to Tvrtko in late summer and was allowed to retain his holdings.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=132}} Ragusan officials made an effort to procure peace between the feuding brothers,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=132}} and in 1368, Vuk asked ] to intervene with King Louis I on his behalf.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=369}}{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=132}} Those efforts were futile; but by 1374, Tvrtko had reconciled with Vuk on very generous terms.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=132}}
In ]–] the Hungarian King was at war with Venetia, so he had mustered Tvrtko's forces, but Ban Tvrtko was unwilling to assist him. In the middle of ], Tvrtko visited the King's court and the King had forced Tvrtko to relinquish Završje and the Hum as well as swear an oath of loyalty and promise to extirminate the ] heresy. The last task was given to Bosnian Bishop Petar Šikloš, who unlike his predecessor Peregrin, wasn't loyal to the ]. In turn, the King confirmed Tvrtko and his brother Vuk as the ''Bans of Bosnia and Usora''. The King also imposed a law that always, either Tvrtko or his brother had to be at the Hungarian court as hostages. The Hungarian King also took the rulers of the Lower Edges from Tvrtko's suzeiranity for himself and continued to rile up the rest of the Bosnian nobility against the Ban.


== Conquests in Serbia and marriage ==
Ban Tvrtko desired to restore power. He threatened the nobility of the Lower Edges and mustered a side out of the nobility loyal to him, but his party began to crumble. The Hungarian King had finished his conquest of ] from Venetia by ] and even had put the Republic of Dubrovnik under his supreme rule, to which he issued an edict that totally undermined Tvrtko's authority. Tvrtko's plot against the Hungarian King and the Bosnian Bishop Petar Šikloš later that year utterly failed.
The death of ] and the accession of his son ] in December 1355 was soon followed by the breakup of the once-powerful and threatening ]. It disintegrated into autonomous lordships that could not resist Bosnia by themselves. This paved the way for Tvrtko to expand towards the east, but internal problems prevented him from seizing the opportunity immediately. A lordship on Bosnia's eastern border was that of ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=126}} When Vojislav attacked Ragusa in 1361, the republic appealed to Tvrtko for help, but to no avail.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=127}} Vojislav's widow Gojislava, ruling on behalf of their minor sons, provided Tvrtko with passage through the family's land during his struggle with Vuk, and Tvrtko remained cordial with the family.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=132}} He was, however, unable to defend her from her nephew ], who, by November 1368, had seized her sons' lands. All Tvrtko could do was help the dispossessed widow safely reach her native Albania.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=133}}


]
]n ] Vojislav Vojinović counterattacked the Hungarian Kingdom at the Republic of Dubrovnik, which asked Ban Tvrtko for assistance as the Hungarian King recommended. Tvrtko amassed his forces, but the war was already over by the time he was prepared. In the peace treaty, the Hungarian King again undermined Tvrtko's authority. In ], the ] was attacked by Prince Vojislav again. After numerous pleas from the Republic's envoys, the Ban dispatched ] Sanko Miltenović to negotiate. Prince Vojislav refused all negotiations, so Tvrtko claimed that nothing more could be done. The war was eventually over in ], so the Republic's pleas have stopped.
The ambitious Nicholas soon started inciting rebellions against Tvrtko; Sanko Miltenović rose against his lord again and was once more defeated and pardoned in 1369. Tvrtko and Nicholas made peace in August 1370, but the latter's belligerence soon earned him the enmity of all his neighbours. Entering into a coalition with Venice and the ], ], Nicholas intended to attack Ragusa and ]. Tvrtko and ], lord of ], both backed by Louis of Hungary, acted to protect the cities. Lazar, too, swore fealty to Louis, after which he and Tvrtko were given 1,000 horsemen to counter Nicholas,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=134}} who was completely defeated in the autumn of 1373,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=134}} his lands being divided between the victorious allies. Tvrtko took the upper ], ], and a part of ] with the ]. This was the first significant expansion of Bosnia during Tvrtko's reign and gave him substantial influence over Serbian affairs.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=135}}


In 1374, Tvrtko married ], daughter of Tsar ]. {{sfn|Fine|1994|p=367}} The marriage was likely arranged by Louis,{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=370}} who had kept Dorothea and her sister as honored hostages at his court to ensure Ivan Stratsimir's loyalty.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=370}}{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=367}} The bride was Orthodox, but the marriage was celebrated in the Catholic rite by Tvrtko's old enemy Peter, bishop of Bosnia, to whom Tvrtko then awarded large tracts of land.{{sfn|Fine|2007|p=165}} Tvrtko thereby solidified his relations with the Roman Catholic Church and earned recognition from ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=139}}
The Bosnian Bishop had the permission from the Pope to raise arms since 1360 and the Hungarian King was to supply them. In ], the Hungarian King attempted a double invasion of Tvrtko's Bosnia to resolve Tvrtko from his office. The first and primary target was the city of ] on ]. Tvrtko's ] Vukac Hrvatinić led a three-day defence against the siege of the city from ] to ]. The Hungarian Palatine MIklós Kont was sent later to renew the invasion. He attacked ] in ]. The Hungarians suffered heavy losses and someone even stole the royal seal from the its guardian the Archbishop of ] from the Hungarian camp. After this triumph, by ] Tvrtko called himself Ban of All Bosnia ''by the mercy of God'' instead of ''by the mercy of the Hungarian King''. The Republic of Venetia, Hungary's old enemy nominated Tvrtko as its honorary citizen. The war strengthened the Bosnian nobility. Prince Sanko Miltenović and the Dabišić brothers have stopped recognizing the Ban's supreme rule and numerous ] and ] trade caravans have been raided by the lesser nobility. Anarchy ruled in Tvrtko's Bosnia.


The division of Nicholas Altomanović's lands created friction between Tvrtko and ] since the latter seized coastal ''župas'', which Tvrtko had expected to annex. In early 1377, Tvrtko successfully plotted with the ]ns the takeover of ], ], and ], making his final conquests of the Serbian lands. By that time, Serbia had been reduced to a patchwork of independent lordships.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=135}}
In February ] opened conflicts emerged. The Bosnian nobility deposed Tvrtko from his throne and brought his brother, Vuk. Tvrtko had to flee to ]. By the end of March 1366, Tvrtko managed to return to Bosnia and take one part of it. Tvrtko again inserted the Hungarian King in his title. With the help of the Hungarian King and the Republic of Dubrovnik, Tvrtko restored control and defeated the rebels by the middle of ]. Tvrtko tricked the nobility, bribed some, some punished and gave privileges to some and managed to regain support from the Bosnian nobility. Ban Tvrtko fograve ] Pavle Vukoslavić for the betrayal. Tvrtko again forgot about his loyalty to the Hungarian King and asserted the throne with the title ''by the mercy of God Lord of many lands, ], and ] and ] and the Lower Edges and the ] and the ] Lord''. His brother Vuk fled to the Dubrovnik Republic. The Ragusians and the brothers' mother, Jelena Kotromanić invited Tvrtko to make peace with his brother, but Tvrtko came to the Republic with an army in July 1367. Although he feasted in Dubrovnik, Vuk escaped from the city.


==Coronation==
The new Serbian nobleman, Prince ] attacked the widow of Prince Vojislav Vojinović. Tvrtko assisted her by helping her to flee to ]. Out of revenge, Prince Nikola attacked the ] area of Tvrtko. ] Altomanović assisted Tvrtko's brother, Vuk and then mustered ] ] against him. Prince Sanko was on egde, so he made peace with Tvrtko in the summer of 1367, but rebelled against him again the following ]. In ], Tvrtko went to the ] and raided Sanko's land with his army. Prince Sanko had to flee to the Dubrovnik Republic. Tvrtko again made peace with Sanko, whom he gave his army to lead. Sanko leading Tvrtko's forces raided the lands of Prince Nikola Altomanović, although was killed in a trap set for him when he entered ].


Uroš the Weak, the last of the ], died in December 1371. His chosen co-ruler, ], left a son, ], who took up the royal title. Having been forced to accept ] suzerainty, Marko was not recognized as king by any of the Serbian magnates, effectively leaving the throne vacant. Serbia was divided between Marko (whose small realm extended no further than western ]), Lazar (the greatest lord), ] (Lazar's son-in-law), George of Zeta, and Tvrtko of Bosnia.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=136}}
Tvrtko's brother Vuk appealed to Pope Urban V accusing Tvrtko for heresy and stating that he supports the ] ]. The Pope asked then the Hungarian King to restore control over Bosnia and give the authority to Vuk. In ] Vuk raised an army and assaulted Tvrtko's capital, ]. Bobovac was defended by Stipan Rajković, who managed to convince Vuk to give up his military attempts against Tvrtko for the sake of the brotherhood.


The idea of restoring the Serbian Empire nevertheless persisted. George discussed it in one of his charters, but the Serbian regional lords were not considered suitable. They had only recently risen to prominence and lacked illustrious family backgrounds and formal titles to their lands; they were mere "lords". Tvrtko not only controlled a significant portion of Serbia but was a member of the dynasty which had ruled as bans of Bosnia from ] and—most importantly—could boast descent from the Nemanjić dynasty. A genealogy published in Tvrtko's newly conquered Serbian lands emphasized his Nemanjić ancestry, derived from his paternal grandmother, ], daughter of King ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=136}} A Serbian ] named Blagoje,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=136}} having found refuge at Tvrtko's court, attributed to Tvrtko the right to a "double crown": one for Bosnia, which his family had ruled since its foundation, and the other for the Serbian lands of his Nemanjić ancestors, who had "left the earthly realm for the heavenly kingdom". Arguing that Serbia had been "left without its pastor", Tvrtko set out to be crowned as its king.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=137}}<ref>{{Cite book |last=Ćirković |first=Sima |url=http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/0350-7653/2014/0350-76531445107C.pdf |title=The Double Wreath, A Contribution to the History of Kingship in Bosnia |pages=108}}</ref>
In the Spring of 1370, Tvrtko led Bosnia's nobility to a war against Prince Nikola Altomanović. Negotiations were initiated already in the Summer. In Serbia Nikola's power was rapidly decreasing and that of the ] rapidly increasing. Tvrtko negotiated with Serb King ] to marry a cousin, the daughter of Grgur II Šubić to Vukašin's son, Young Serb King Marko. Marko was ], so the Pope wasn't supportive of the marriage and Vuk had mettled around the affair, so Tvrtko gave up of the idea. In ], Tvrtko prepared a joint offensive against Nikola Altomanović with two Serbian noblemen, ] and ]. The move was stopped as the Mrnjavčević brothers attacked the ] at the famous ]. The ] ] himself died very soon. Tvrtko sought help in the remaining Serbian lords that still didn't recognize supreme Ottoman rule. He forged an alliance with ], the ] of ]. The decisive conflict was in ]. Ban Tvrtko raised his army and the Hungarian King sent a thousand pikeman under Srem's Ban Miklós Garai. Tvrtko attacked from the west, while Prince Lazar attacked from the east. Very soon, the two armies met at ], where they forced Nikola Altomanović to surrender. Nikola was blinded and banished to a monastery, while his demesne was split. Tvrtko gained the Upper ] area and the ] area with ] as well as ]. ], ] and ]; other lands in which was Tvrtko interested, were seized by ] of ]. The other lands were given to Prince Lazar.


]
In ], Tvrtko finally made peace with his brother Vuk. By the end of the same year, he married the daughter of Bulgarian Prince ] of ], Dorrothea upon the appeal of the Hungarian King. The ceremony took place in December 1374 in Saint Ilija (today's ]) near ]. Tvrtko soon raised his armies and occupied ], ] and ]. Đurađ Balšić died before he could counterattack. Tvrtko took the remaining Serbian lands from the ] to the ] monastery, a pilgrimage site with the remains of ], the founder of the ]. He also subjected the ] that lived there.


Tvrtko's ] as ] and ] was held in the fall of 1377 (probably 26 October, the ] of ]). However, there is still no full consensus as to where, and by whom it was performed. The opinion that the Ragusan chronicler ], when he wrote in 1601 that the coronation was performed by ] in the monastery of "Mileševa in town with the same name",{{sfn|Lovrenović|1996|pp=26, 27, 31}}{{sfn|Lovrenović|1999|p=228}} meant the monastery was ] and the person who performed coronation was its Orthodox ],{{sfn|Lovrenović|1996|p=31}} was adopted among historians like Jiriček (in 1923), Ćorović (1925), Dinić (1932), Solovjev (1933).{{sfn|Lovrenović|1999|pp=227–230}} Such an opinion, still perpetuated only in ],{{sfn|Zadro|2006|pp=45–48}}{{sfn|Lovrenović|1996|pp=26–27, 31–32}} contradict recent researches based on modern methodology elsewhere.{{sfn|Lovrenović|1999|pp=227–230}}{{sfn|Lovrenović|1999|p=235}} Citing more recent archaeological and historical researches, Croatian and Bosnian historians agree that the coronation took place in the Franciscan Church of Saint Nicholas in the Bosnian town of ].{{sfn|Lovrenović|1999|pp=227–230}} This place is certainly the undisputed location of the coronations of Tvrtko I's successors, as well as the burial place of some of his predecessors.{{sfn|Ćošković|2009|p=}}
=== King ===
], near ]]]


Writing to Ragusa shortly after his coronation, Tvrtko successfully claimed ], which had been paid to the kings of Serbia since the 13th century.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=150}} Although he presented himself as the heir to the Nemanjić crown, Tvrtko decided to assume the royal title of his great-grandfather, rather than continue Dušan's unpopular claim to an imperial style, thus becoming "] king of the Serbs, Bosnia, ] and the ]". In addition to the royal title, Tvrtko also adopted the symbolic name ] in order to associate himself with the Nemanjić kings; his successors followed suit. Tvrtko, at times, completely omitted his birth name and used only the honorific.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=137}} Tvrtko's right to kingship was derived from his right to the Serbian throne,{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=386}} and was likely recognized by Lazar Hrebljanović and Vuk Branković. Still, Tvrtko never established authority over the regional lords of Serbia.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=138}} Tvrtko's new title was also approved by Louis and by his successor ]. Venice and Ragusa consistently referred to Tvrtko as king of ], Ragusa even complaining, in 1378, about Tvrtko's preoccupation with his new kingdom.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=138}} Despite his cordial relations with its clergy,{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=370}} Tvrtko's claim to Serbia did not enjoy the support of the Orthodox Church, severely hindering Tvrtko's efforts.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964a|pp=349–350}}


== Economy ==
Tvrtko crowned himself on ] ] as Stefan Tvrtko I ''by the mercy of God King of ], ] and the Seaside and the Western Lands''. Today, serbian historians consider that he was crowned in ], even there is no evidence of that <ref name=Rastko> .</ref>. Another possibility, supported by archaeological evidences, is that he was crowned in Mile near ] in the church which was built in time of ]'s reign, where he was also buried alongside his uncle Stjepan II.<ref name=Mile> . 2003.</ref><ref name=Anđelić>Anđelić Pavao, Krunidbena i grobna crkva bosanskih vladara u Milima (Arnautovićima) kod Visokog. Glasnik Zemaljskog muzeja XXXIV/1979., Zemaljski muzej Bosne i Hercegovine, Sarajevo, 1980,183-247</ref> ''Stefan'' was the standard title of the rulers from the ]. In 1375–1377 Tvrtko created a unique genealogy that explicitly stated his descendency from the ].
] and his coat of arms{{Citation needed|date=December 2023|reason=Coin is unverified, as per Talk article.}}]]
Having taken as much Serbian land as he could, King Tvrtko turned his attention to the coast. The rapid economic growth of Bosnia, having begun during the reign of Tvrtko's uncle, continued unabated even during the political upheavals that followed Tvrtko's accession.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=140}} The export of metal ores and metalwork (mainly silver, copper and lead) formed the backbone of the Bosnian economy. These goods were transported over the ] to the seashore, where they were bought chiefly by the Republics of Ragusa and Venice.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=141}} The maritime cities of Ragusa and Kotor also depended on Tvrtko's realm for food, a dependency the King leveraged to increase the initially low and, for the Bosnians, disadvantageous prices.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=142}} Yet, Bosnia could not make economical use of its share of the ], from the river ] to the ], which lacked any major settlements. The three major cities in the area were all controlled by Hungary: Drijeva (which Tvrtko was forced to cede to Louis in 1357), ], and ]. {{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=144}}


The ] erupted between the old-time rival Republics of Venice and ] in 1378, and it soon involved Venice's neighbours. King Louis took Genoa's side, and Ragusa—subordinate to Hungary, and Venice's competitor in the Adriatic—did so as well. The Venetians, having taken Kotor in August 1378, made an effort to have Tvrtko join the war on their side, which caused panic in Ragusa. Tvrtko, however, offered the Ragusans help in fighting Venice, which they initially refused. The death of George I of Zeta warranted Tvrtko's involvement in Serbian affairs, which reduced his ability to take an active part in the conflict.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=145}} The Ragusans started calling for the destruction of Kotor, whose officials promised to renounce fealty to Venice and return to Louis. Kotor failed to fulfil this promise but instead promised fealty to Tvrtko, who laid claim to the city as part of his Nemanjić ancestors' heritage. The political climate was ideal since he was to take Kotor from his overlord's enemy. The Ragusans were furious, and an embargo ensued.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=146}} Tvrtko defended Kotor from Ragusa but was betrayed in June 1379, when the city overthrew its Venetian governor and submitted again directly to Louis.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=147}}
:''And ] the King, brother of ] the King, Uroš II, that held Srem, with his wife Katalina, daughter of the Hungarian King Ladislaus, birthed Urošica and Jelisaveta. And Jelisaveta had three sons: Stefan the Bosnian Ban, Ninoslav and Vladislav. And Vladislav had Tvrtko the Ban and Vuk.''
]


The failure to seize Kotor, the damage to the Bosnian economy from the Ragusan embargo, and the need for easier access to maritime trade led Tvrtko to found the youngest medieval town on the eastern Adriatic coast. In early 1382, Tvrtko constructed a new fortress in the Bay of Kotor and decided that it should form the basis of a new ] center. Initially named after ], the city came to be known as ] (meaning "new"). Commerce started in August, when the first ships carrying salt arrived, but so did trouble.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=148}} Kotor and the merchants from ] and the ] looked favourably on the development, but the Ragusans were very displeased at the prospect of losing their salt trade monopoly.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=149}} They argued that Tvrtko, as king of Serbia, should respect the exclusive rights to salt trade granted by his Nemanjić predecessors to Ragusa, Kotor, Drijeva, and ]. During the dispute, Ragusa hindered Novi's commerce and assembled an alliance of ] against Bosnia and Venice. Tvrtko relented by November, and his new city failed to achieve his purpose.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=150}}
Tvrtko assessed the '''Double crown''' (''Sugubi vijenac'') as King of Bosnia, his native God-given land and King of Serbia, the land of his Serbian forefathers. Logothet Vladoje abandoned the Serbian throne and went to work for Tvrtko, for whom he modelled his ruling ideology identical to the Serbian. King Stephen Tvrtko took the titles from the Serbian throne and gave them to the Bosnian nobility. His crowning was recognized by the most powerful noblemen in ], Princes ] and ]. Although the Hungarian King recognized his crowning, he continued to call him Ban until his death in 1382. By this, Tvrtko officially declared the independence of the Kingdom of Bosnia and Serbia.


== Hungarian succession crisis ==
In ], a new war erupted between the Hungarian Kingdom and the Republic of Venetia. Venetia desired to take the ] area from the Republic of Dubrovnik, so Ragusa asked King Tvrtko for assistance. King Stephen Tvrtko I was too busy to intervene as he was waging a war in ] to consolidate power. ] was conquered by Venetia and the Dubrovnik Republic wanted to use ] to finally destroy its greatest adversary, the City of Kotor. The Citizens of Kotro promised Bosnia's King Stephen that they will accept his supreme rule if he liberates them from Venetian rule. The Dubrovnik Republic didn't like this, so the relations between it and Tvrtko sharpened. In ], the relations between them were good again. Kotor played him out as it recognize the supreme rule of the Hungarian King as soon as it rebelled from Venetian rule. Tvrtko was mad and planned a joint attack on ] and ]. He couldn't launch an attack, though, since his army had to quell a rebellion in the vicinity of ]. Although, Tvrtko gave support to the surrounded Venetian garrison in Kotor by sending them mercenaries, food and weapons. In ] in ], it was finally decided that Hungary will have Kotor.
]
Tvrtko's yielding in the legal dispute with Ragusa may have been brought about by another major change: the death of King Louis I on 11 September 1382. Without a male heir, the Hungarian crown passed to Louis's 13-year-old daughter Mary and the reins of government to his widow, Tvrtko's cousin Elizabeth. The great unpopularity of the queens led to rebellions and presented an opportunity for Tvrtko, not only to reclaim Drijeva and other lands lost to Louis in 1357 but also to seize Kotor. When exactly or how this took place is not known. Already in the spring of 1383, Tvrtko started building a navy: he bought a galley from Venice, ordered two more to be built, and employed a Venetian patrician as his admiral with the consent of the republic. Around the same time, he erected a new town, ], near present-day ]. {{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=151}}


In 1385, Tvrtko still formally recognized Hungarian supremacy, although it no longer had any practical meaning. He emphasized his loyalty to the queens, "his dearest sisters", and cited his oath of fealty to them. Mary and Elizabeth, however, had no power to enforce their suzerainty over him.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=153}} In fact, they so respected his strength that they made concessions to win his favour: one of the concessions being their recognition of Tvrtko's possession of Kotor in the spring of 1385.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=152}}{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=396}} The incorporation of the trade centres of Drijeva and Kotor did not result in a significant expansion on the coast, but it was of great importance to the Bosnian economy and the King's finances.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=153}}
He built, and in ] opened the ports of Brstanik near Počitelj and Sveti Stefan, now known as ] in ] ] as a line of defence from Dubrovnik and Kotor. The Fort was soon renamed to Novi. The Republic of Dubrovnik was jealous of its trading and solt producing success, so it sent a Galleon to block entrance to the port. King Stephen Tvrtko asked Venetia to dispatch two warships to help him raise the blockade of Novi, but the Venetians didn't have anything to spare. In the end, King Stephen decided in December 1382 that no solt would be distributed in Novi any more, which ended the crisis with the Republic of Dubrovnik, which began to rile up the neighbouring Bosnian cities in the meantime.


The capture of Kotor earned Tvrtko the enmity of George I of Zeta's brother and successor, ], who also desired the city. Nothing is known about Balša's military conflict with Tvrtko except that the latter asked Venice, whose trading opportunities were threatened by the clashes, to mediate with the Lord of Zeta. The mediation was thwarted by Balša's death in the 1385 ] against the invading Ottomans. Balša's nephew and successor, ], maintained Zeta's hostility toward Bosnia.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=157}}
After Hungarian King Louis I's death in 1382, Stefan became the protector of his sister and Louis's widow Elizabeta, and her daughters, queen ], and ], who became the Queen of ]. King Stephen received Nicholas Baseja from Venetia, who became admiral of the new Bosnian fleet. Stephen Tvrtko bought a Galleon from Venetia and ordered two more. In ], he became the honorary citizen of the Republic of Venetia. In 1383, a rebellion of members of the ] broke out in ] which was assisted by Stefan Tvrtko, but Queen Maria quickly quelled it. The rebellion ended with a rebellion in ] in ], but it was broken quickly.


The revolt against Elizabeth and Mary culminated in late 1385 when Mary was deposed in favour of her kinsman, King ]. Elizabeth had Charles assassinated the following February, and Mary was restored to the throne. On 25 July, however, both women ended up imprisoned by the supporters of the murdered monarch's son, King ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=153}} Civil war engulfed Mary's realm. Her betrothed, ], invaded Bohemia with the intent to liberate her and ascend her throne.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=154}} The neighbouring countries took sides: Venice opted for the queens and Sigismund,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=154}} but Tvrtko chose to support their opponents and Ladislaus's claim to Hungary,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=154}}{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=398}} thus tacitly renouncing vassalage that had in any case been only nominal since {{circa}} 1370.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=396}} Elizabeth was strangled in prison, while Sigismund's coronation as King of Hungary in March 1387 and subsequent liberation of Mary prompted Tvrtko to act more resolutely. From Ragusa, still loyal to Queen Mary, exacted a promise of support against everyone but the Queen. From then on, he was free to attack ],{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=154}} ostensibly in the name of the king of Naples. {{sfn|Fine|1994|p=398}}
In ], Elizabeta lost to King Stephen her patrimoni of ]. The same year, Stefan Tvrtko took some territories of ]: ], ] and ]. Tvrtko met later that same year with the Hungarian Palatine Nikola Gorjanski and achieved a political understanding. Stefan was not to help rebels against Queen Maria's authority anymore and become a Hungarian vassal. In return, he received the City of ]. To ensure his authority over the city, King Stphen sent numerous gifts to its citizens and swore to defend them.
]]]


] remained loyal to Mary and Sigismund, not least thanks to the couple's alliance with Venice. A notable exception was ], which supported the rebellious nobleman ]. Tvrtko took control of the ] in July 1387, which enabled him to launch attacks on ]. Although the Bosnian army laid waste to Split and ] areas, the cities refused to capitulate. Their officials were willing to honour King Tvrtko but insisted that Queen Mary and King Sigismund were their legitimate sovereigns. {{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=155}} ] submitted to Tvrtko in November, followed by ]. {{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=156}}
In ], after the murder of Tvrtko's sister, Regent Elizabeta, and captivity of her daughter queen Maria, probably arranged by Maria's able but wicked husband and consort ] of Luxemburg, Tvrtko might have become, on Maria's request, the heir presumptive as well.


The military forces of Tvrtko and his vassal ] campaigned in ] together with ] and ].{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=398}}<!-- TODO: document the ultimate failure of this military campaign in the north 1387–89 -->
Since 1387, Tvrtko had pretensions to rule the Croatian lands of the Bribir Prince, ancestors across his mother's side as well. He dispatched that year Duke ] to relieve the Siege of Bishop Pavle Horvat in ]. In July the same year, King Stephen made his first greater military success by making ] to surrender. From there he continued on to ] and then the ] hinterland. Finally his forces reached ] and freed the rebels from the Hungarian rule that were being besieged there. King Sigismund's men had to fall back to ], which was subsequently attacked by Bosnians. ] was captured in ]. Tvrtko's forces conducted terror in the Dalmatian cities. Split's hinterland was entirely burned to the ground as a punishment for its stouch loyalty to the Hungarian King and other cities suffered too. The Bosnian forces held ], ], ] and ]. It is because of this that ] decided to accept Tvrtko's supreme rule. ], ] and ] were frightened because of this, so they asked Hungarian King Sigismund for assistance. Tvrtko's ground forces were too weak to assault those cities, so he started building up a navy of his own in Kotor.


By 1388, the devastation of Dalmatia by the Bosnian army had become so severe that the authorities of the cities pleaded with Sigismund to either help them or to allow them to save themselves by submitting without being labelled as traitors. Neither Sigismund's army nor an alliance of Dalmatian cities and noblemen was able to counter Tvrtko's advances. ], ], and ] having lost all hope, Tvrtko called upon them to negotiate their surrender in March 1389. Each city asked to be the last one to submit and even to be allowed to request Sigismund's assistance.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=156}} Tvrtko granted their wish and decided that Split should be the last to submit by 15 June 1389.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=157}}
In ]-] numerous breaches of ] into Bosnia occurred under the request of ] of ]. The greatest battle occurred on ] ] near ] when the Ottoman commander Shahin advanced deep into Tvrtko's realm with 18,000 soldiers. Tvrtko's ] ] and Prince ] led the Bosnian Army and fought off the ]. In the meantime, Hungarian King Sigismund dispatched Ladislaus Loszonac to help the Dalmatian cities. The Hungarian Army moved from ], but Ladislaus called it off subsequently. As a punishment, Tvrtko's forces broke into the city of Zadar and burned a part of it. The Dalmatian cities saw that the Hungarian King couldn't help them, so they asked Tvrtko to issue them a deadline for surrender, which King Tvrtko subsequently did.


== Ottoman attacks ==
The Dalmatian cities received some more time as the ] were braking into Europe. Tvrtko had accepted the necessity of defending Christian Europe on his shoulders and dispatched the best squadrons of his military under the ] ] to fight in the Serbian Army of Prince ] in the epic ] on ] ]. The Ottomans were led by Sultan ] himself. In the battle, both sides suffered heavy losses, as both Prince Lazar and Sultan Murad lost their lives.
During his campaign in Dalmatia and ], Tvrtko was also engaged in skirmishes in the east of his realm, preventing him from focusing all of his manpower on expansion westwards. The ] was believed to be far from the reach of the Ottomans during Tvrtko I's reign, shielded by a belt of independent Serbian statelets.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=157}} George II of Zeta, however, purposely enabled the Turks to launch raids against Bosnia, first in 1386 (of which little is known) and again in 1388. In the second instance, the Ottoman and Zetan invaders, led by ], penetrated as far as ]. The ], which took place in late August 1388, ended with the victory of the Bosnian army, led by Duke ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=158}}


15 June 1389, the date by which Tvrtko had intended to complete his conquest of Dalmatia, was also the day when the Ottoman army met the forces of a coalition of Serbian states at the ]. Tvrtko, feeling it is his duty as king of Serbia, ordered his army to leave Dalmatia and assist the lord's ] and ].{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=159}}{{sfn|Ćošković|2009|p=}} He resented the Milanese ruler, ], for selling weaponry to the Ottomans in wake of the battle.{{sfn|Ćorović|2001|loc=part 3, chapter 12}} The highest ranking among the casualties, which also included Bosnian noblemen, were Lazar and the Ottoman ruler ]. The outcome of the battle was difficult to ascertain,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=159}} but Vlatko's letters from the battlefield convinced Tvrtko that the Christian alliance came out victorious.{{sfn|Ćorović|2001|loc=part 3, chapter 12}} Tvrtko, in turn, informed various Christian states of his great triumph; the authorities of the ] responded praising both the Kingdom of Bosnia and its king for achieving a "victory so glorious that the memory of it would never fade". The triumph, however, was hollow. Tvrtko's Serbian title lost what little actual significance it had when Lazar's successors accepted Ottoman suzerainty, while Vuk Branković turned to Tvrtko's enemy Sigismund. Since the Battle of Kosovo, the Bosnian claim to the Serbian throne was merely nominal.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=160}}
Tvrtko cherished the battle as his personal success, claiming that he had defended Europe and Christianity in the name of the ] against the infidel soldiers that threaned the civilized world. He dispatched the news across to western Europe and described how 12 Serbian noblemen managed to break through the Ottoman ranks to Sultan Murad and kill him. However, after the Battle of Kosovo, Tvrtko's rule in ] remained only ''de jure''.


== Final achievements and aftermath ==
In the meantime, Hungarian commander Ladislaus conquered Klis in July 1389. Duke ] returned from ] soon, as the ] were temporarily stopped. Tvrtko launched a counteroffensive in the Fall of the same year and struck at the surroundings of Zadar. The Bosnian forces moved to Vrana, where they fought the Hungarian forces several days. The Hungarians have took Vrana and held hostage Tvrtko's ally, Ivan Paližna. The Hungarian Army suffered a heavy defeat and Klis subsequently surrendered to King Stephen Tvrtko. In April ] the Dalmatian cities started to negotiate terms of surrender. In the Summer, Split, Trogir and Šibenik all accepted his rule as well as the islands of ], ] and ]. Tvrtko accepted the title ''by the mercy of God famous King of ], ], ], ], the ]...''
]
Tvrtko's engagement in the east allowed Sigismund's forces to reverse some of his gains in Dalmatia. Klis was briefly lost in July, the Dalmatian cities again refused to surrender, and Tvrtko was forced to relaunch raids. A series of battles and skirmishes from November to December resulted in a decisive Bosnian victory and the retreat of the Hungarian army.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=161}} In May 1390, the cities and the ] finally surrendered to Tvrtko,{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=163}} who then started calling himself "by the grace of God king of Rascia, Bosnia, Dalmatia, Croatia, and Pomorje".{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=164}} Acting as king of Dalmatia and Croatia, Tvrtko appointed his supporters John of Palisna and John Horvat as his ] and hosted the ] ] in ]. {{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=164}}


In the last months of his reign, Tvrtko devoted himself to solidifying his position in Dalmatia and to plans for taking Zadar, the only Dalmatian city that had evaded his rule. He offered an extensive alliance to Venice, but it did not suit the republic's interests.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=164}} Meanwhile, Tvrtko was also fostering relations with ]. By the late summer of 1390, a marriage was expected to be contracted between the recently widowed Tvrtko and a member of the Austrian ruling family, the ]. Hungary remained the focus of Tvrtko's foreign policy, however. Although they did not recognize each other as kings, Tvrtko and Sigismund started negotiating peace in September. Sigismund was in a weaker position and likely ready to make concessions to Tvrtko when his ambassadors arrived at Tvrtko's court in January 1391. The negotiations were probably never concluded, as Tvrtko died on 10 March.{{sfn|Ćirković|1964|p=165}} He is buried in Mile alongside his uncle Stephen II.{{sfn|Anđelić|1980|p=230}}
Tvrtko's last territorial aims were at Zadar, and he failously requested ships from Venetia to take the city. His wife, Queen Dorothea died, so old King Stephen Tvrtko negotiated with ] of the ] line to remarry into the Habsburg dynasty. Austrian duke Albert III also acted as a mediator to finally bring peace between Tvrtko and the Hungarian King Sigismund.


Tvrtko I left at least one son, ], whose legitimacy is debated,{{sfn|Ćošković|2009|p=}} and who was a minor and apparently not considered fit to succeed his father.{{sfn|Fine|1994|p=454}} ], a relative (possibly illegitimate half-brother) exiled by Tvrtko I for his part in the 1366 rebellion and reconciled with him in 1390, was elected king instead. ], the next king, may have been Tvrtko I's illegitimate son (or more likely another illegitimate half-brother).{{sfn|Ćošković|2009|p=}}
King Stephen Tvrtko I Kotromanić surprisingly died on ] ].


=== The Aftermath === == Assessment ==
Tvrtko I is considered one of the greatest medieval rulers of Bosnia, having "left behind a country larger, stronger, politically more influential and militarily more capable than the one he inherited." His political achievements were aided by the feudal anarchy in Serbia and Croatia, while the Ottomans were still not close enough to threaten him seriously. The Bosnian economy flourished, new settlements and trade centres appeared, and his subjects' living standards improved.{{sfn|Ćošković|2009|p=}}
Following ]'s death, any agreement which appear to have been reached with the ], became null and void.
*In ] ] died of battle wounds. He was succeeded by Ban Ivan Krcki ], who died in ].
*In ], ] died and was succeeded by his nephew ] ].
*In ], ] lost ] to ] and was forced to accept their vassalship.
*In ] Tvrtko's niece Queen ] died under suspicious circumstances.
*In ] Tvrtko's niece Queen ] died of childbirth complications.


] noted that, compared with Dušan, who had also left a considerably extended state, Tvrtko was not an overly ambitious conqueror as much as he was an able statesman. Tvrtko, he wrote, used force when necessary but otherwise took care to appear to Serbians as the legitimate heir rather than as a foreign subjugator and to the Croatians as the preferable ruler. Emphasizing his patience and diplomacy, Ćorović calls Tvrtko a man capable of making the most out of his opportunities. {{sfn|Ćorović|2001|loc=part 3, chapter 12}}
Within two decades following ]'s death,

] fomented a number of wars in ] and ] and murdered almost 200 prominent families. Some of carnage is known as ] ] u Krizevcima (The Bloody Council of ]) and the ] ]. ] became the ]. A few surviving ] and ] noble families in the eastern part were forced to accept ] vassalship and converted to ]. Some members of those families became prominent military leaders of the ] armies, governors, Grand Viziers, Sultan's son-in-laws and the mother of ] ].
==Family tree==
{{start box}}
<div style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; overflow:auto; width: 90%;">
{{succession box |
{{chart top |width=100%|Simplified family tree illustrating Tvrtko's connections to the royals and nobles of Bosnia and its neighbors}}
before=] |
{{Tree chart/start|align=center}}
title=] of ] and ] |
{{Tree chart |border=0| | | | | |Uro| |Uro=]}}
years=]&ndash;] |
{{Tree chart | | | |,|-|-|^|-|-|.| | |}}
after=Tvrtko |
{{Tree chart |border=0| | |Milu| | | |Dra| |Dra=]|Milu=]}}
}}
{{Tree chart | | | |!| | | | | |!| | |}}
{{succession box |
{{Tree chart |border=0| | |Uro| | | |Eli|v|Ste| | | | | |Geo| |Cas=]|Eli=]|Ste=]|Geo=]|Uro=]}}
before=Tvrtko |
{{Tree chart | | | |!| | | |,|-|-|-|^|-|-|-|.| | | |,|-|^|-|.|}}
title=] of ], ], ], the Lower Edges and the ] |
{{Tree chart |border=0| | |Uro| |Ste| | | | | |Vls|v|Jel| |Mla| |Ste=]||Vls=]|Jel=]|Mla=]|Uro=]}}
years=]&ndash;] ] |
{{Tree chart | | | |!| | | |!| | | | | | | |,|-|^|-|.| | | | | | | |}}
after=Stephen Tvrtko I |
{{Tree chart |border=0| | |Uro| |Eli|v|Lou| |Tvr| |Vuk|Eli=]|Lou=]|Tvr='''Tvrtko I of Bosnia'''|Uro=]|Vuk=]}}
}}
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File:Tuzla - Spomenik Kralju Stjepanu Tvrtku I Kotromaniću (2019).jpg|Monument at Central Park of Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2012.
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File:Herceg Novi - kralj Tvrtko I.jpg|Monument at Herceg Novi, Montenegro, 2013.
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File:Tvrtko I, kralj Bosne.jpg|Monument at Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2023.
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File:Spomenik kralju Stefanu Tvrtku I Kotromaniću Banja Luka.jpg|Monument at Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2024.
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==References== ==References==
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== See also == ==Bibliography==
* {{Cite book|last=Anđelić|first=Pavao|author-link=Pavao Anđelić|title=Anđelić, Pavao, Krunidbena i grobna crkva bosanskih vladara u Milima (Arnautovićima) kod Visokog" 183–247|publisher=Glasnik Zemaljskog muzeja XXXIV/1979., Zemaljski muzej Bosne i Hercegovine, Sarajevo|year=1980|language=sh}}
* ]
* {{Cite book|last=Ćirković|first=Sima|author-link=Sima Ćirković|title=Историја средњовековне босанске државе|publisher=Srpska književna zadruga|year=1964|language=sh}}
:* ]
* {{Cite book|last=Ćirković|first=Sima|title=Сугуби венац: прилог историји краљевства у Босни|section=Зборник радова Филозофског факултета|publisher=University of Belgrade Faculty of Philosophy|year=1964a|language=sh}}
* ]
* {{Cite book|last=Ćorović|first=Vladimir|author-link=Vladimir Ćorović|title=Istorija srpskog naroda|publisher=Janus|year=2001|url=https://www.rastko.rs/rastko-bl/istorija/corovic/istorija/index_l.html}}
* ]
*{{citation|title=Kotromanići|last=Ćošković|first=Pejo|publisher=Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography|year=2009|language=sh|url=http://hbl.lzmk.hr/clanak.aspx?id=249#TvrtkoI}}
* ]
* {{cite book | last=Fine | first=John Van Antwerp Jr. |author-link=John Van Antwerp Fine, Jr. | title=The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest | publisher=University of Michigan Press | location=Michigan | year=1994 | isbn=0-472-08260-4 }}
* ]
* {{Cite book|last=Fine |first=John Van Antwerp Jr. |title=The Bosnian Church: Its Place in State and Society from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Century|publisher=Saqi|year=2007|isbn=978-0-86356-503-8}}
* ]
*{{Cite book |last=Jireček |first=Konstantin |title=Istorija Srba |year=1891 |language=Serbian}}
* ]
*{{cite journal |last1=Lovrenović |first1=Dubravko |author1-link=Dubravko Lovrenović |title=Bosanski mitovi |journal=Erasmus – časopis za kulturu demokracije |date=1996 |issue=18 |pages=26–37 |url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/viewpdf?id=263025 |access-date=5 July 2022 |trans-title=Bosnian Myths |publisher=Erasmus Gilda |language=bs |format=pdf}}
* ]
*{{cite journal |last1=Lovrenović |first1=Dubravko | title=Proglašenje Bosne Kraljevstvom 1377 |journal=Forum Bosnae |date=1999 |issue=3–04 |pages=227–287 |url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=225841 |access-date=5 July 2022 |trans-title=The proclamation of Bosnia as the kingdom in 1377 |publisher=Međunarodni forum Bosna |language=bs|format=pdf}}
* ]
* {{Cite book |last=Malcom |first=Noel |title=Bosnia: A Short History |publisher=NYU Press |year=1996 |language=English}}
*{{cite journal |last1=Zadro |first1=Dejan |title=Grobovi bosanskih srednjovjekovnih vladara u crkvi srpsko-pravoslavnog manastira Vaznesenja Gospodnjeg u Mileševi? |journal=Pro Tempore |date=8 January 2006 |issue=3 |pages=45–50 |url=https://hrcak.srce.hr/clanak/81810 |language=hr |issn=1334-8302}}


== External links == ==External links==
* {{commons-inline}}
*
*Emir O. Filipović: . In: A Companion to Seals in the Middle Ages, (ed. Laura Whatley), Brill, Leiden, 2019, 264–276.
* (in ])
* (])
*
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Latest revision as of 01:18, 3 January 2025

Founder and first king of the Kingdom of Bosnia (r. 1377–91)

Tvrtko I
Ban of Bosnia
ReignSeptember 1353 – October 1377
(interrupted by Vuk, 1366–1367)
PredecessorStephen II
King of Bosnia
ReignOctober 1377 – 10 March 1391
Coronation(26 October?) 1377
SuccessorDabiša
Bornc. 1338
Srebrenik
Died10 March 1391(1391-03-10) (aged 52–53)
Bobovac
BurialMile, Visoko
SpouseDorothea of Bulgaria
IssueTvrtko II of Bosnia
HouseKotromanić
FatherVladislav of Bosnia
MotherJelena of Bribir
ReligionRoman Catholic

Stephen Tvrtko I (Serbo-Croatian: Stjepan/Stefan Tvrtko / Стјепан/Стефан Твртко; c. 1338 – 10 March 1391) was the first king of Bosnia. A member of the House of Kotromanić, he succeeded his uncle Stephen II as the ban of Bosnia in 1353. As he was a minor at the time, Tvrtko's father, Vladislav, briefly ruled as regent, followed by Tvrtko's mother, Jelena. Early in his personal rule, Tvrtko quarrelled with his country's Roman Catholic clergy but later enjoyed cordial relations with all the religious communities in his realm. After initial difficulties—the loss of large parts of Bosnia to his overlord, King Louis I of Hungary, and being briefly deposed by his magnates—Tvrtko's power grew considerably. He conquered some remnants of the neighbouring Serbian Empire in 1373, after the death of its last ruler and his distant relative, Uroš the Weak. In 1377, he had himself crowned king of Bosnia and Serbia, claiming to be the heir of Serbia's extinct Nemanjić dynasty.

As the Kingdom of Bosnia continued to expand, Tvrtko's attention shifted to the Adriatic coast. He gained control of the entire Primorje region and the major maritime cities of the area, established new settlements and started building a navy, but never succeeded in subjugating the lords of the independent Serbian territories. The death of King Louis and the accession of Queen Mary in 1382 allowed Tvrtko to take advantage of the ensuing succession crisis in Hungary and Croatia. After bitter fighting, from 1385 to 1390, Tvrtko succeeded in conquering large parts of Dalmatia, and Croatia proper. Following the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, his tenuous claim to Serbia became a mere fiction, as the Serbian rulers he sought to subdue became vassals of the victorious Ottoman Empire. The Ottoman Turks also launched their first attacks on Bosnia during Tvrtko's reign, but his army was able to repel them. Tvrtko's sudden death in 1391 prevented him from solidifying the Kotromanić hold on Croatian lands.

Tvrtko is widely considered one of Bosnia's greatest medieval rulers, having enlarged the country's borders to their greatest extent, left a strong economy, and improved the living standards of his subjects. He was survived by at least one son, Tvrtko II, but was succeeded by Dabiša, under whom Tvrtko's burgeoning realm began to decay.

Minority

Tvrtko with his mother, brother and cousin Elizabeth at the deathbed of his uncle Stephen, as depicted on the Chest of Saint Simeon, dated 1380.

Tvrtko was the elder son of Vladislav Kotromanić and Jelena Šubić and was likely born within a year of their marriage, which was celebrated in 1337. His father was the brother of the Bosnian ban, Stephen II, and his mother the daughter of the Croatian lord George II Šubić of Bribir. Although Vladislav was still alive, Stephen's title passed directly to Tvrtko; the reason for Vladislav's exclusion from the Kotromanić succession is unclear. Tvrtko, however, was only about fifteen years old at the time, so his father governed as regent. Soon after his accession, Tvrtko travelled with his father throughout the realm to settle relations with his vassals. Jelena replaced Vladislav as regent upon his death in 1354. She immediately travelled to Hungary to obtain consent to Tvrtko's accession from King Louis I, his overlord. Following her return, Jelena held an assembly (stanak) in Mile, with mother and son confirming the possessions and privileges of the noblemen of "all of Bosnia, Donji Kraji, Zagorje, and the Hum land".

Seal of King Tvrtko I

The death of Tvrtko's maternal uncle Mladen III Šubić in 1348 led to a decline of the Šubić noble family and a long conflict over their lands. In May 1355, Jelena and Tvrtko marched with an army to Duvno in order to claim Tvrtko's share of her brother's patrimony. An agreement was reached with the vice-ban of Dalmatia by which Tvrtko was to inherit all the cities held by his maternal grandfather and a city which belonged to his aunt Katarina. Still, it is unknown whether he actually took possession of them.

The state assembled by Tvrtko's uncle Stephen broke apart on Tvrtko's accession, much to the satisfaction of his overlord King Louis. The Hungarians were keen to encourage Stephen's vassals to act independently from Tvrtko, forcing Tvrtko to compete with Louis for their loyalty in order to rebuild the Bosnian state. Louis posed a more direct threat as well; he was determined to enlarge his royal domain, and throughout his realm he ardently reclaimed all lands that once belonged to the monarch. Taking advantage of the precarious situation early in Tvrtko's reign, Louis moved to claim most of Donji Kraji and western Hum up to the river Neretva, including the prosperous customs town of Drijeva. In 1357, he succeeded in compelling Tvrtko to come to Hungary and surrender these territories as the dowry of Stephen's daughter Elizabeth, who had been married to Louis since 1353. In July, King Louis confirmed Tvrtko and his younger brother Vuk as rulers of Bosnia and Usora. Donji Kraji and Hum were purposely omitted from their title, with Usora likely having been granted as compensation. Two conditions were forced upon the Bosnians: one of the two Kotromanić brothers would be at Louis's court whenever the other was in Bosnia, and they would make an effort to suppress the "heretical" Bosnian Church.

Initial difficulties

Little is known about internal affairs in Bosnia between 1357 when Tvrtko started ruling on his own and 1363. His religious policy came into focus in this period, as the Avignon papacy became more insistent on curbing the Bosnian Church. This endangered Tvrtko, for although he was a Roman Catholic throughout his life, Louis now had a religious pretext for invading Bosnia. The death of the bishop of BosniaPeregrin Saxon, a supporter of both Stephen II and Tvrtko I and acknowledged by the latter as his "spiritual father"—led to the appointment of Peter Siklósi to the episcopal throne. Peter actively promoted the idea of launching a new crusade against Bosnia, earning him Tvrtko's hostility. Tvrtko even attempted to plot against Peter but failed when his letters to a lector in Peter's Đakovo residence were discovered. The Bosnian Church, meanwhile, survived throughout Tvrtko's reign but only became prominent in state affairs after his death. One hostile source even tried to link Tvrtko himself to the Church due to his tolerance of all local faiths, including Hum's Eastern Orthodoxy.

Louis I of Hungary's first seal, infamously lost (officially "stolen") during his campaign against Bosnia

At the start of his personal rule, the young Ban somehow considerably increased his power. Although he constantly emphasized his subservience and loyalty to the King, Tvrtko started regarding the loyalty of the Donji Kraji noblemen to Louis as treachery against himself. In 1363, a conflict broke out between the two men. The cause is not clear, although Louis stated that his intention was to eradicate the Bosnian heretics. By April, the King had begun amassing an army; and in May, officials of the Republic of Ragusa ordered their merchants to leave Bosnia due to an imminent clash. An army led by Louis himself attacked Donji Kraji, where the nobility was divided in its loyalties between Tvrtko and Louis. A month later an army led by the palatine of Hungary, Nicholas Kont, and the archbishop of Esztergom, Nicholas Apáti, struck Usora. Vlatko Vukoslavić deserted to Louis and surrendered to him the important fortress of Ključ, but Vukac Hrvatinić succeeded in defending the Soko Grad fortress in the župa of Pliva, forcing the Hungarians to retreat. In Usora, the Srebrenik Fortress held out against a "massive attack" by the royal army, which suffered the embarrassment of losing the King's seal. The successful defense of Srebrenik marked Tvrtko's first victory against Hungary.

Tvrtko and his brother Vuk on Saint Simeon's chest (detail of the scene depicting Stephen II's death)

The unity of the Bosnian magnates waned as soon as the Hungarians were defeated, weakening Tvrtko's position and that of a united Bosnia. In 1364, Tvrtko, his mother, and his brother were granted citizenship of the Republic of Venice, an honour that guaranteed them sanctuary in Venice in case of necessity but also obligated Tvrtko to protect Venetian merchants. Various charters issued by the previous bans of Bosnia, and confirmed by Tvrtko on his accession, promised the same protection to Ragusan merchants. In late 1365, however, both republics complained to Tvrtko about the treatment of their merchants by his vassals. Evidently, the Ban had lost control over his feudatories. The anarchy escalated, and in February of the following year, the magnates revolted against Tvrtko and dethroned him. Little is known about the circumstances under which Tvrtko was deposed. Accusing the magnates of treachery against "foremostly God" and himself, Tvrtko fled Bosnia with his mother. He was replaced by his younger brother, who had hitherto functioned as "junior ban". Vuk's personal role in the rebellion is uncertain.

Tvrtko acted resolutely and efficiently. He and Jelena took refuge at the Hungarian royal court, where they were welcomed by Tvrtko's former enemy and overlord, King Louis. Apparently dissatisfied with the turn of events in Bosnia, Louis provided Tvrtko with aid (likely military) in reclaiming Bosnia. Tvrtko returned to Bosnia in March and reestablished control over a part of the country by the end of the month, including the areas of Donji Kraji, Rama (where he then resided), Hum, and Usora. In order to secure the loyalty of the noblemen he had subjugated, as well as to win over those still supporting Vuk, Tvrtko bestowed a number of grants; in August he invested Vukac Hrvatinić with the entire župa of Pliva for his part in the 1363 war with Hungary. After initially rapid success, Tvrtko's campaign slowed. Sanko Miltenović, ruler of eastern Hum, defected to Vuk in late 1366. Throughout the following year, Tvrtko forced Vuk southwards, eventually compelling him to flee to Ragusa. Sanko, Vuk's last supporter, submitted to Tvrtko in late summer and was allowed to retain his holdings. Ragusan officials made an effort to procure peace between the feuding brothers, and in 1368, Vuk asked Pope Urban V to intervene with King Louis I on his behalf. Those efforts were futile; but by 1374, Tvrtko had reconciled with Vuk on very generous terms.

Conquests in Serbia and marriage

The death of Dušan the Mighty and the accession of his son Uroš the Weak in December 1355 was soon followed by the breakup of the once-powerful and threatening Serbian Empire. It disintegrated into autonomous lordships that could not resist Bosnia by themselves. This paved the way for Tvrtko to expand towards the east, but internal problems prevented him from seizing the opportunity immediately. A lordship on Bosnia's eastern border was that of Vojislav Vojinović. When Vojislav attacked Ragusa in 1361, the republic appealed to Tvrtko for help, but to no avail. Vojislav's widow Gojislava, ruling on behalf of their minor sons, provided Tvrtko with passage through the family's land during his struggle with Vuk, and Tvrtko remained cordial with the family. He was, however, unable to defend her from her nephew Nicholas Altomanović, who, by November 1368, had seized her sons' lands. All Tvrtko could do was help the dispossessed widow safely reach her native Albania.

Division of the Serbian Empire between Bosnia and Serbian regional lords after 1374

The ambitious Nicholas soon started inciting rebellions against Tvrtko; Sanko Miltenović rose against his lord again and was once more defeated and pardoned in 1369. Tvrtko and Nicholas made peace in August 1370, but the latter's belligerence soon earned him the enmity of all his neighbours. Entering into a coalition with Venice and the Lord of Zeta, Đurađ I, Nicholas intended to attack Ragusa and Kotor. Tvrtko and Lazar Hrebljanović, lord of Moravian Serbia, both backed by Louis of Hungary, acted to protect the cities. Lazar, too, swore fealty to Louis, after which he and Tvrtko were given 1,000 horsemen to counter Nicholas, who was completely defeated in the autumn of 1373, his lands being divided between the victorious allies. Tvrtko took the upper Podrinje, Gacko, and a part of Polimlje with the Mileševa Monastery. This was the first significant expansion of Bosnia during Tvrtko's reign and gave him substantial influence over Serbian affairs.

In 1374, Tvrtko married Dorothea, daughter of Tsar Ivan Stratsimir of Bulgaria. The marriage was likely arranged by Louis, who had kept Dorothea and her sister as honored hostages at his court to ensure Ivan Stratsimir's loyalty. The bride was Orthodox, but the marriage was celebrated in the Catholic rite by Tvrtko's old enemy Peter, bishop of Bosnia, to whom Tvrtko then awarded large tracts of land. Tvrtko thereby solidified his relations with the Roman Catholic Church and earned recognition from Pope Gregory XI.

The division of Nicholas Altomanović's lands created friction between Tvrtko and Đurađ I Balšić since the latter seized coastal župas, which Tvrtko had expected to annex. In early 1377, Tvrtko successfully plotted with the Travunians the takeover of Trebinje, Konavli, and Dračevica, making his final conquests of the Serbian lands. By that time, Serbia had been reduced to a patchwork of independent lordships.

Coronation

Uroš the Weak, the last of the Nemanjić dynasty, died in December 1371. His chosen co-ruler, Vukašin Mrnjavčević, left a son, Marko, who took up the royal title. Having been forced to accept Ottoman suzerainty, Marko was not recognized as king by any of the Serbian magnates, effectively leaving the throne vacant. Serbia was divided between Marko (whose small realm extended no further than western Macedonia), Lazar (the greatest lord), Vuk Branković (Lazar's son-in-law), George of Zeta, and Tvrtko of Bosnia.

The idea of restoring the Serbian Empire nevertheless persisted. George discussed it in one of his charters, but the Serbian regional lords were not considered suitable. They had only recently risen to prominence and lacked illustrious family backgrounds and formal titles to their lands; they were mere "lords". Tvrtko not only controlled a significant portion of Serbia but was a member of the dynasty which had ruled as bans of Bosnia from time immemorial and—most importantly—could boast descent from the Nemanjić dynasty. A genealogy published in Tvrtko's newly conquered Serbian lands emphasized his Nemanjić ancestry, derived from his paternal grandmother, Elizabeth, daughter of King Dragutin. A Serbian logothete named Blagoje, having found refuge at Tvrtko's court, attributed to Tvrtko the right to a "double crown": one for Bosnia, which his family had ruled since its foundation, and the other for the Serbian lands of his Nemanjić ancestors, who had "left the earthly realm for the heavenly kingdom". Arguing that Serbia had been "left without its pastor", Tvrtko set out to be crowned as its king.

Tvrtko I's signature, identifying him as "king of the Serbs and of Bosnia and of Primorie"

Tvrtko's coronation as king of Bosnia and Serbia was held in the fall of 1377 (probably 26 October, the feast day of Saint Demetrius). However, there is still no full consensus as to where, and by whom it was performed. The opinion that the Ragusan chronicler Mavro Orbini, when he wrote in 1601 that the coronation was performed by metropolitan bishop in the monastery of "Mileševa in town with the same name", meant the monastery was Mileševa and the person who performed coronation was its Orthodox metropolitan bishop, was adopted among historians like Jiriček (in 1923), Ćorović (1925), Dinić (1932), Solovjev (1933). Such an opinion, still perpetuated only in Serbian historiography, contradict recent researches based on modern methodology elsewhere. Citing more recent archaeological and historical researches, Croatian and Bosnian historians agree that the coronation took place in the Franciscan Church of Saint Nicholas in the Bosnian town of Mile. This place is certainly the undisputed location of the coronations of Tvrtko I's successors, as well as the burial place of some of his predecessors.

Writing to Ragusa shortly after his coronation, Tvrtko successfully claimed Saint Demetrius' income, which had been paid to the kings of Serbia since the 13th century. Although he presented himself as the heir to the Nemanjić crown, Tvrtko decided to assume the royal title of his great-grandfather, rather than continue Dušan's unpopular claim to an imperial style, thus becoming "by the Grace of God king of the Serbs, Bosnia, Pomorje and the Western Areas". In addition to the royal title, Tvrtko also adopted the symbolic name Stephen in order to associate himself with the Nemanjić kings; his successors followed suit. Tvrtko, at times, completely omitted his birth name and used only the honorific. Tvrtko's right to kingship was derived from his right to the Serbian throne, and was likely recognized by Lazar Hrebljanović and Vuk Branković. Still, Tvrtko never established authority over the regional lords of Serbia. Tvrtko's new title was also approved by Louis and by his successor Mary. Venice and Ragusa consistently referred to Tvrtko as king of Rascia, Ragusa even complaining, in 1378, about Tvrtko's preoccupation with his new kingdom. Despite his cordial relations with its clergy, Tvrtko's claim to Serbia did not enjoy the support of the Orthodox Church, severely hindering Tvrtko's efforts.

Economy

Tvrtko's coin, featuring fleur-de-lis and his coat of arms

Having taken as much Serbian land as he could, King Tvrtko turned his attention to the coast. The rapid economic growth of Bosnia, having begun during the reign of Tvrtko's uncle, continued unabated even during the political upheavals that followed Tvrtko's accession. The export of metal ores and metalwork (mainly silver, copper and lead) formed the backbone of the Bosnian economy. These goods were transported over the Dinaric Alps to the seashore, where they were bought chiefly by the Republics of Ragusa and Venice. The maritime cities of Ragusa and Kotor also depended on Tvrtko's realm for food, a dependency the King leveraged to increase the initially low and, for the Bosnians, disadvantageous prices. Yet, Bosnia could not make economical use of its share of the Adriatic coast, from the river Neretva to the Bay of Kotor, which lacked any major settlements. The three major cities in the area were all controlled by Hungary: Drijeva (which Tvrtko was forced to cede to Louis in 1357), Ragusa, and Kotor.

The War of Chioggia erupted between the old-time rival Republics of Venice and Genoa in 1378, and it soon involved Venice's neighbours. King Louis took Genoa's side, and Ragusa—subordinate to Hungary, and Venice's competitor in the Adriatic—did so as well. The Venetians, having taken Kotor in August 1378, made an effort to have Tvrtko join the war on their side, which caused panic in Ragusa. Tvrtko, however, offered the Ragusans help in fighting Venice, which they initially refused. The death of George I of Zeta warranted Tvrtko's involvement in Serbian affairs, which reduced his ability to take an active part in the conflict. The Ragusans started calling for the destruction of Kotor, whose officials promised to renounce fealty to Venice and return to Louis. Kotor failed to fulfil this promise but instead promised fealty to Tvrtko, who laid claim to the city as part of his Nemanjić ancestors' heritage. The political climate was ideal since he was to take Kotor from his overlord's enemy. The Ragusans were furious, and an embargo ensued. Tvrtko defended Kotor from Ragusa but was betrayed in June 1379, when the city overthrew its Venetian governor and submitted again directly to Louis.

Fortress of Novi, built by Tvrtko I in 1382, with its newly founded port immediately became an economic hub of the kingdom.

The failure to seize Kotor, the damage to the Bosnian economy from the Ragusan embargo, and the need for easier access to maritime trade led Tvrtko to found the youngest medieval town on the eastern Adriatic coast. In early 1382, Tvrtko constructed a new fortress in the Bay of Kotor and decided that it should form the basis of a new salt trading center. Initially named after Saint Stephen, the city came to be known as Novi (meaning "new"). Commerce started in August, when the first ships carrying salt arrived, but so did trouble. Kotor and the merchants from Dalmatia and the Italian Peninsula looked favourably on the development, but the Ragusans were very displeased at the prospect of losing their salt trade monopoly. They argued that Tvrtko, as king of Serbia, should respect the exclusive rights to salt trade granted by his Nemanjić predecessors to Ragusa, Kotor, Drijeva, and Sveti Srđ. During the dispute, Ragusa hindered Novi's commerce and assembled an alliance of Dalmatian cities against Bosnia and Venice. Tvrtko relented by November, and his new city failed to achieve his purpose.

Hungarian succession crisis

Louis's realm (red) with dependent and claimed territories, including Tvrtko's Bosnia (pink)

Tvrtko's yielding in the legal dispute with Ragusa may have been brought about by another major change: the death of King Louis I on 11 September 1382. Without a male heir, the Hungarian crown passed to Louis's 13-year-old daughter Mary and the reins of government to his widow, Tvrtko's cousin Elizabeth. The great unpopularity of the queens led to rebellions and presented an opportunity for Tvrtko, not only to reclaim Drijeva and other lands lost to Louis in 1357 but also to seize Kotor. When exactly or how this took place is not known. Already in the spring of 1383, Tvrtko started building a navy: he bought a galley from Venice, ordered two more to be built, and employed a Venetian patrician as his admiral with the consent of the republic. Around the same time, he erected a new town, Brštanik, near present-day Opuzen.

In 1385, Tvrtko still formally recognized Hungarian supremacy, although it no longer had any practical meaning. He emphasized his loyalty to the queens, "his dearest sisters", and cited his oath of fealty to them. Mary and Elizabeth, however, had no power to enforce their suzerainty over him. In fact, they so respected his strength that they made concessions to win his favour: one of the concessions being their recognition of Tvrtko's possession of Kotor in the spring of 1385. The incorporation of the trade centres of Drijeva and Kotor did not result in a significant expansion on the coast, but it was of great importance to the Bosnian economy and the King's finances.

The capture of Kotor earned Tvrtko the enmity of George I of Zeta's brother and successor, Balša II, who also desired the city. Nothing is known about Balša's military conflict with Tvrtko except that the latter asked Venice, whose trading opportunities were threatened by the clashes, to mediate with the Lord of Zeta. The mediation was thwarted by Balša's death in the 1385 Battle of Savra against the invading Ottomans. Balša's nephew and successor, George II, maintained Zeta's hostility toward Bosnia.

The revolt against Elizabeth and Mary culminated in late 1385 when Mary was deposed in favour of her kinsman, King Charles III of Naples. Elizabeth had Charles assassinated the following February, and Mary was restored to the throne. On 25 July, however, both women ended up imprisoned by the supporters of the murdered monarch's son, King Ladislaus of Naples. Civil war engulfed Mary's realm. Her betrothed, Sigismund, invaded Bohemia with the intent to liberate her and ascend her throne. The neighbouring countries took sides: Venice opted for the queens and Sigismund, but Tvrtko chose to support their opponents and Ladislaus's claim to Hungary, thus tacitly renouncing vassalage that had in any case been only nominal since c. 1370. Elizabeth was strangled in prison, while Sigismund's coronation as King of Hungary in March 1387 and subsequent liberation of Mary prompted Tvrtko to act more resolutely. From Ragusa, still loyal to Queen Mary, exacted a promise of support against everyone but the Queen. From then on, he was free to attack Dalmatia, ostensibly in the name of the king of Naples.

Tvrtko I's coat of arms

Dalmatian cities remained loyal to Mary and Sigismund, not least thanks to the couple's alliance with Venice. A notable exception was Klis, which supported the rebellious nobleman John of Palisna. Tvrtko took control of the Klis Fortress in July 1387, which enabled him to launch attacks on Split. Although the Bosnian army laid waste to Split and Zadar areas, the cities refused to capitulate. Their officials were willing to honour King Tvrtko but insisted that Queen Mary and King Sigismund were their legitimate sovereigns. Ostrovica Fortress submitted to Tvrtko in November, followed by Trogir.

The military forces of Tvrtko and his vassal Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić campaigned in Slavonia together with John and Paul Horvat.

By 1388, the devastation of Dalmatia by the Bosnian army had become so severe that the authorities of the cities pleaded with Sigismund to either help them or to allow them to save themselves by submitting without being labelled as traitors. Neither Sigismund's army nor an alliance of Dalmatian cities and noblemen was able to counter Tvrtko's advances. Split, Zadar, and Šibenik having lost all hope, Tvrtko called upon them to negotiate their surrender in March 1389. Each city asked to be the last one to submit and even to be allowed to request Sigismund's assistance. Tvrtko granted their wish and decided that Split should be the last to submit by 15 June 1389.

Ottoman attacks

During his campaign in Dalmatia and Croatia, Tvrtko was also engaged in skirmishes in the east of his realm, preventing him from focusing all of his manpower on expansion westwards. The Kingdom of Bosnia was believed to be far from the reach of the Ottomans during Tvrtko I's reign, shielded by a belt of independent Serbian statelets. George II of Zeta, however, purposely enabled the Turks to launch raids against Bosnia, first in 1386 (of which little is known) and again in 1388. In the second instance, the Ottoman and Zetan invaders, led by Lala Şahin Pasha, penetrated as far as Bileća. The Battle of Bileća, which took place in late August 1388, ended with the victory of the Bosnian army, led by Duke Vlatko Vuković.

15 June 1389, the date by which Tvrtko had intended to complete his conquest of Dalmatia, was also the day when the Ottoman army met the forces of a coalition of Serbian states at the Battle of Kosovo. Tvrtko, feeling it is his duty as king of Serbia, ordered his army to leave Dalmatia and assist the lord's Lazar Hrebljanović and Vuk Branković. He resented the Milanese ruler, Gian Galeazzo Visconti, for selling weaponry to the Ottomans in wake of the battle. The highest ranking among the casualties, which also included Bosnian noblemen, were Lazar and the Ottoman ruler Murad I. The outcome of the battle was difficult to ascertain, but Vlatko's letters from the battlefield convinced Tvrtko that the Christian alliance came out victorious. Tvrtko, in turn, informed various Christian states of his great triumph; the authorities of the Republic of Florence responded praising both the Kingdom of Bosnia and its king for achieving a "victory so glorious that the memory of it would never fade". The triumph, however, was hollow. Tvrtko's Serbian title lost what little actual significance it had when Lazar's successors accepted Ottoman suzerainty, while Vuk Branković turned to Tvrtko's enemy Sigismund. Since the Battle of Kosovo, the Bosnian claim to the Serbian throne was merely nominal.

Final achievements and aftermath

Map of Bosnia at its greatest extent, under Tvrtko I in 1390.

Tvrtko's engagement in the east allowed Sigismund's forces to reverse some of his gains in Dalmatia. Klis was briefly lost in July, the Dalmatian cities again refused to surrender, and Tvrtko was forced to relaunch raids. A series of battles and skirmishes from November to December resulted in a decisive Bosnian victory and the retreat of the Hungarian army. In May 1390, the cities and the Dalmatian islands finally surrendered to Tvrtko, who then started calling himself "by the grace of God king of Rascia, Bosnia, Dalmatia, Croatia, and Pomorje". Acting as king of Dalmatia and Croatia, Tvrtko appointed his supporters John of Palisna and John Horvat as his bans and hosted the Archbishop of Split Andrea Gualdo in Sutjeska.

In the last months of his reign, Tvrtko devoted himself to solidifying his position in Dalmatia and to plans for taking Zadar, the only Dalmatian city that had evaded his rule. He offered an extensive alliance to Venice, but it did not suit the republic's interests. Meanwhile, Tvrtko was also fostering relations with Albert III, Duke of Austria. By the late summer of 1390, a marriage was expected to be contracted between the recently widowed Tvrtko and a member of the Austrian ruling family, the Habsburgs. Hungary remained the focus of Tvrtko's foreign policy, however. Although they did not recognize each other as kings, Tvrtko and Sigismund started negotiating peace in September. Sigismund was in a weaker position and likely ready to make concessions to Tvrtko when his ambassadors arrived at Tvrtko's court in January 1391. The negotiations were probably never concluded, as Tvrtko died on 10 March. He is buried in Mile alongside his uncle Stephen II.

Tvrtko I left at least one son, Tvrtko II, whose legitimacy is debated, and who was a minor and apparently not considered fit to succeed his father. Dabiša, a relative (possibly illegitimate half-brother) exiled by Tvrtko I for his part in the 1366 rebellion and reconciled with him in 1390, was elected king instead. Ostoja, the next king, may have been Tvrtko I's illegitimate son (or more likely another illegitimate half-brother).

Assessment

Tvrtko I is considered one of the greatest medieval rulers of Bosnia, having "left behind a country larger, stronger, politically more influential and militarily more capable than the one he inherited." His political achievements were aided by the feudal anarchy in Serbia and Croatia, while the Ottomans were still not close enough to threaten him seriously. The Bosnian economy flourished, new settlements and trade centres appeared, and his subjects' living standards improved.

Vladimir Ćorović noted that, compared with Dušan, who had also left a considerably extended state, Tvrtko was not an overly ambitious conqueror as much as he was an able statesman. Tvrtko, he wrote, used force when necessary but otherwise took care to appear to Serbians as the legitimate heir rather than as a foreign subjugator and to the Croatians as the preferable ruler. Emphasizing his patience and diplomacy, Ćorović calls Tvrtko a man capable of making the most out of his opportunities.

Family tree

Simplified family tree illustrating Tvrtko's connections to the royals and nobles of Bosnia and its neighbors
Uroš I of Serbia
Uroš II Milutin of SerbiaDragutin of Serbia
Uroš III of SerbiaElizabeth of SerbiaStephen I of BosniaGeorge II of Bribir
Uroš IV Dušan of SerbiaStephen II of BosniaVladislaus of BosniaJelena of BribirMladen III of Bribir
Uroš V of SerbiaElizabeth of BosniaLouis I of HungaryTvrtko I of BosniaVuk of Bosnia
Sigismund of LuxembourgMary of Hungary

Gallery

  • Monument at Central Park of Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2012. Monument at Central Park of Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2012.
  • Monument at Herceg Novi, Montenegro, 2013. Monument at Herceg Novi, Montenegro, 2013.
  • Monument at Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2023. Monument at Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2023.
  • Monument at Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2024. Monument at Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, 2024.

References

  1. https://poslovnenovine.ba/2023/01/13/srebrenik-rodni-grad-prvog-bosanskog-kralja/
  2. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 122.
  3. Fine 1994, pp. 284–285.
  4. ^ Fine 1994, p. 284.
  5. ^ Ćošković 2009.
  6. Ćirković 1964, p. 123.
  7. ^ Fine 1994, p. 369.
  8. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 124.
  9. Fine 2007, p. 161.
  10. Ćirković 1964, pp. 124–125.
  11. ^ Fine 1994, p. 370.
  12. Ćirković 1964, p. 125.
  13. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 128.
  14. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 129.
  15. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 130.
  16. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 131.
  17. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 132.
  18. Ćirković 1964, p. 126.
  19. Ćirković 1964, p. 127.
  20. Ćirković 1964, p. 133.
  21. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 134.
  22. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 135.
  23. ^ Fine 1994, p. 367.
  24. Fine 2007, p. 165.
  25. Ćirković 1964, p. 139.
  26. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 136.
  27. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 137.
  28. Ćirković, Sima. The Double Wreath, A Contribution to the History of Kingship in Bosnia (PDF). p. 108.
  29. Lovrenović 1996, pp. 26, 27, 31.
  30. Lovrenović 1999, p. 228.
  31. Lovrenović 1996, p. 31.
  32. ^ Lovrenović 1999, pp. 227–230.
  33. Zadro 2006, pp. 45–48.
  34. Lovrenović 1996, pp. 26–27, 31–32.
  35. Lovrenović 1999, p. 235.
  36. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 150.
  37. Fine 1994, p. 386.
  38. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 138.
  39. Ćirković 1964a, pp. 349–350.
  40. Ćirković 1964, p. 140.
  41. Ćirković 1964, p. 141.
  42. Ćirković 1964, p. 142.
  43. Ćirković 1964, p. 144.
  44. Ćirković 1964, p. 145.
  45. Ćirković 1964, p. 146.
  46. Ćirković 1964, p. 147.
  47. Ćirković 1964, p. 148.
  48. Ćirković 1964, p. 149.
  49. Ćirković 1964, p. 151.
  50. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 153.
  51. Ćirković 1964, p. 152.
  52. ^ Fine 1994, p. 396.
  53. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 157.
  54. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 154.
  55. ^ Fine 1994, p. 398.
  56. Ćirković 1964, p. 155.
  57. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 156.
  58. Ćirković 1964, p. 158.
  59. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 159.
  60. ^ Ćorović 2001, part 3, chapter 12.
  61. Ćirković 1964, p. 160.
  62. Vego, Marko (1957). "Historijska karta Srednjevjekovovne Bosanske Države". kolekcije.nub.ba (in Bosnian). Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  63. Marko Vego. "Historijska karta srednjevjekovne bosanske države / sastavio Marko Vego; izrada i reprodukcija Geokarta". digitalna.nsk.hr. Digitalne zbirke Nacionalne i sveučilišne knjižnice u Zagrebu. Retrieved 10 April 2021.
  64. Ćirković 1964, p. 161.
  65. Ćirković 1964, p. 163.
  66. ^ Ćirković 1964, p. 164.
  67. Ćirković 1964, p. 165.
  68. Anđelić 1980, p. 230.
  69. Fine 1994, p. 454.

Bibliography

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  • Ćorović, Vladimir (2001). Istorija srpskog naroda. Janus.
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  • Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr. (2007). The Bosnian Church: Its Place in State and Society from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Century. Saqi. ISBN 978-0-86356-503-8.
  • Jireček, Konstantin (1891). Istorija Srba (in Serbian).
  • Lovrenović, Dubravko (1996). "Bosanski mitovi" [Bosnian Myths] (pdf). Erasmus – časopis za kulturu demokracije (in Bosnian) (18). Erasmus Gilda: 26–37. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
  • Lovrenović, Dubravko (1999). "Proglašenje Bosne Kraljevstvom 1377" [The proclamation of Bosnia as the kingdom in 1377] (pdf). Forum Bosnae (in Bosnian) (3–04). Međunarodni forum Bosna: 227–287. Retrieved 5 July 2022.
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  • Zadro, Dejan (8 January 2006). "Grobovi bosanskih srednjovjekovnih vladara u crkvi srpsko-pravoslavnog manastira Vaznesenja Gospodnjeg u Mileševi?". Pro Tempore (in Croatian) (3): 45–50. ISSN 1334-8302.

External links

Regnal titles
Preceded byStephen II Ban of Bosnia
1353–1366
Succeeded byVuk
Preceded byVuk Ban of Bosnia
1367–1377
Became king
New title King of Bosnia
1377–1391
Succeeded byDabiša
VacantTitle last held byUroš V — TITULAR —
King of Serbia
1377–1391
Conquest — DISPUTED —
King of Croatia and Dalmatia
1390–1391
Disputed by Mary and Sigismund
Kotromanić dynasty
Bans of Bosnia
(1254–1377)


Banesses of Bosnia
Kings of Bosnia
(1377–1463)
Queens of Bosnia
Other significant members
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