We kindly inform you that, as long as the subject affiliation of our 300.000+ articles is in progress, you might get unsufficient or no results on your third level or second level search. In this case, please broaden your search criteria.
Although relations between Austria and Bosnia as well as confessional history of Bosnian Middle Ages have not been especially thematized in his extensive and valuable work, Thalloczy’s contribution to this problematic is evident. Following the centenarian matrix about the visual relation of Bosnian rulers towards the Holy Austrian Crown Thalloczy has woven into this discourse the thesis about the decisive role of the rulers in political history of the Middle Ages reducing thus the question of overemphasized vassal relation into real frameworks of relations between the so called historical rights and historical realities. His main postulates are contained first in the early phase represented by several works, and then in the later, mature phase, represented by his History of Jajce. On this developmental line one can follow the author’s deepening of the results from accepting earlier conceptions to original insights into the same subject contained in his revolutionary thesis that in the center of Ugric-Bosnian relations and thus also confessional issue which since the emergence of the Bosnian Church suppressed Bosnian rulers and aristocracy there is the position of Bosnian Bishop as the head of Bosnian State Church and potential coronator of Bosnian kings who since middle of the XIII century resided on the territory under the sovereignty of the Holy Crown. On the basis of this rested the patronage right of the Ugric kings over the Bosnian bishopric in Djakovo. This gives the answer to the question about the rights of Ugric kings in Bosnia which established its own alternative, non-canonic bishopric, the Bosnian Church, with its head (pontificate) as the coronator of Bosnian kings. All of this emerged when in late 1416 Bosnian crown was replaced with Pope’s crown and the prelate of the Catholic Church as the coronator of Bosnian kings replaced the pontificate of the Bosnian Church.
More...
Memory of philosophical-theological study on the occasion of the hundred-year anniversary of Franciscan theology in Sarajevo
More...
The offered content represents the building material for the history of modern science in Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as a valuable stronghold for following the life and work of Marko Vega and his contemporaries. Here it also serves as a contribution to the question of today’s review. Today, numerous high-school institutions, publishers, and ministries of culture are the greatest strongholds of the value judgment which due to the trend of a more meager publishing of reviews mostly remains unknown to the broader circle of the faculty and public. One could publish yearly reviews, reports, selections, advancements, and the like within the protection of faculties, publishers, and ministry of culture, in which both development and recognition of the ‘struggle’ for true value within the profession would be more productive.
More...
This work questions the role and mode of shaping the space in travelogues by Bosnian Franciscan, cultural, and literary worker Ivan Franjo Jukić, by dividing the texts into two spheres: while in one there is only a travelogue, traveling from Sarajevo to Constantinople in year 1852, in the other there is the rest of his works. The other assembly of travelogues in his work is related with Jukic’s work Zemljopis i poviestnica Bosne, which used travelogues as preliminary work, which also defined relation of the writer towards the space – style of his narrative mediation is close to scientific one, and description of space is prevalent to narrative plot. Illustration of the travel to Constantinople, however, emerges from different reasons so that travelogue writer’s relation towards the space and his shaping are closer to literary-artistic conception, and events framework of the travelogue becomes more important than the spatial. The work, thereto, also tends to question the function of space in these travelogues with respect to literary-narrative time – Ilirism.
More...