Boszniai Bánság (Hungarian) Бановина Босна (Serbo-Croatian) Banovina Bosna
Banate of the Kingdom of Hungary
1154–1377
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Territorial evolution of Bosnia
History
• Established
1154
• Tvrtko I crowned King of Bosnia
1377
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Bosnia (early polity)
Kingdom of Bosnia
Today part of
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Croatia
Montenegro
Serbia
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History of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Early history
Prehistory Neolithic cultures: (Kakanj / Butmir)
Illyrian period (Glasinac culture / Central Bosnian culture)
Roman Dalmatia
Roman Pannonia
Middle Ages
Bosnia in the Early Middle Ages (before 10th c.)
Travunia - Zachumlia (~9th–14th c.)
Banate (~1154–1377) - Kingdom (1377-1463) ("zemlje"/counties: Usora / Soli / Donji Kraji / Hum (Herzegovina from 1454) / Podrinje)
Bosansko Krajište (1451-1463)
Duchy of Herzegovina (1463–1482)
Ottoman era
Ottoman conquest
(Bosansko Krajište (1451-1463))
Ottoman era (Bosnia Sanjak (1463–1580), Sanjak of Herzegovina (1481–1833) / Bosnia Eyalet (1580-1867), Herzegovina Eyalet (1833–1851) / Bosnia Vilayet (1867-1908) / Herzegovina Uprising (1875–1877))
Habsburg era
Habsburg era (Bosnian crisis)
Yugoslavia
Kingdom of Yugoslavia (Drina Banovina)
World War II
SFR Yugoslavia (SR Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Breakup of Yugoslavia
Contemporary
Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Bosnian War (defunct: Herzeg-Bosnia / Western Bosnia)
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The Banate of Bosnia (Serbo-Croatian: Banovina Bosna / Бановина Босна), or Bosnian Banate (Bosanska banovina / Босанска бановина), was a medieval state based in what is today Bosnia and Herzegovina. Although Hungarian kings viewed Bosnia as part of Hungarian Crown Lands, the Banate of Bosnia was a de facto independent state for most of its existence.[1][2][3] It was founded in the mid-12th century and existed until 1377 with interruptions under the Šubić family between 1299 and 1324. In 1377, it was elevated to a kingdom. The greater part of its history was marked by a religiopolitical controversy revolving around the native Christian Bosnian Church condemned as heretical by the dominant Chalcedonian Christian churches, namely the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, with the Catholic Church being particularly antagonistic and persecuting its members through the Hungarians.[4][5]
^Fine 1994, pp. 44, 148.
^Paul Mojzes. Religion and the war in Bosnia. Oxford University Press, 2000, p 22; "Medieval Bosnia was founded as an independent state by Ban Kulin (1180-1204).".
^Vego 1982, p. 104.
^Bringa, Tone (1995). Being Muslim the Bosnian Way. Princeton University Press. pp. 15. ISBN 978-0-691-00175-3.
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