Stjepan Berislavić

(Redirected from Stefan Berislavić)

Stjepan Berislavić[1] (Serbian: Стефан Бериславић, Hungarian: Beriszló István; c. 1505 – 1535) was a Croatian nobleman[2] and titular Despot of Serbia between 1520 and 1535. He was a prominent nobleman in several counties (Syrmia, Vukovar and Požega) of Slavonia, Hungary.[3][4][5]

Stjepan Berislavić
titular Despot of Serbia
Despot of Serbia
Reign1520–1535
PredecessorIvaniš Berislavić
SuccessorPavle Bakić
Bornc. 1505 (1505)
Died1535 (aged 29–30)
SpouseCatherine Batthyany
HouseIvaniš Berislavić
MotherJelena Jakšić

Life

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Siege of Belgrade (1521)
 
Ruins of Kupinik fortress, once residence of Stjepan Berislavić, destroyed by Suleiman the Magnificent in 1521 during the Siege of Belgrade

Stjepan Berislavić was member of the noble family Berislavić of Grabarje,[6] from the Požega County (central region of modern Slavonia). He was the elder son of Ivaniš Berislavić (d. 1514), who served as titular Despot of Serbia (1504–1514), and Ban of Jajce (1511–1513).[7]

Stjepan's mother was Jelena Jakšić, a member of the Jakšić noble family, who had previously been married to Jovan Branković, the last Serbian Despot of the Branković dynasty (1496–1502). As Jelena and his first husband had no male issue, the title of Serbian Despot became vacant upon Jovan's death in 1502. When Jelena remarried to Ivaniš Berislavić in 1504, he received the title, from Croato-Hungarian king Vladislaus II (d. 1516), and held it until his death in 1514.[8][9]

Stjepan was c. nine years old when his father died, and thus the title of Serbian Despot was granted to him only in 1520, by king Louis II (d. 1526).[10] After the Ottoman conquest of Belgrade in 1521, he tried to hold his fortress of Kupinik in Syrmia county, but the region was eventually lost to Ottoman invasion.[11]

After the defeat at the Battle of Mohács (1526), Kingdom of Hungary became divided between two rival fractions; one was led by King Ferdinand Habsburg, while the other was led by John Zápolya, the Duke of Transylvania, who was also proclaimed King. At first, Stjepan Berislavić supported Zapolja (1526), but soon opted for Ferdinand, at the beginning of 1527. Learning of that, Zapolja tried to suppress Stjepan's authority over Serbs by appointing Serbian nobleman Radič Božić as titular Despot of Serbia (1527–1528). In spite of that, Stjepan continued to act as Serbian Despot, and was recognized as such by King Ferdinand. In 1529, Stjepan fell out of Ferdinand's favor and was confined in Buda, but soon escaped.[12][13]

At that time, Ferdinand's territories in Hungary were invaded again by the Ottomans, who acted as allies of rival king John Zápolya, ruler of the Eastern Hungarian Kingdom. Stjepan decided to join them, and in return received confirmation of his domains. Since 1529, he has controlled frontier regions in Slavonian Posavina, centered in Brod. During 1532 and 1533, he negotiated again with king Ferdinand, but no agreement was reached. In 1535, he came in conflict with Ottoman governor of Bosnia. During the invasion, Stjepan was killed by janissary, and his domain was conquered by the Ottomans.[14][15] In a letter written from Stoni Beograd, dated 1 May 1542, his widow, Catherine Batthyany (d. after 1542), former Despotess of Serbia informs her brother, Ferenc Batthyány, former Ban of Croatia, that Murat Bey Tardić already conquered Orahovica and that she fears she will soon fall into the hands of the Ottomans.[16]

Ancestors

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Regnal titles
Preceded by titular Despot of Serbia
1520–1535
Succeeded by

Annotations

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  • Name: Serbian historiography uses Stefan or Stevan, while Croatian historiography uses Stjepan.[17] In Hungarian historiography, his full name is written as Beriszló István.[18]

References

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  1. ^ "Croatian nobility in the fight against the Ottomans. An example of the Berislavić Grabarski family from Slavonia". CEEOL - Central and Eastern European Online Library. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  2. ^ "A Displaced Noble Family during the Ottoman Threat: the Example of the Berislavići de Werhreka de Mala Mlaka". CROSBI-Croatian Scientific Bibliography. Retrieved 2021-04-26.
  3. ^ Ивић 1929.
  4. ^ Ћирковић 1982, p. 479–490.
  5. ^ Karbić 2006, p. 79-84.
  6. ^ Karbić 2006, p. 71-85.
  7. ^ Karbić 2006, p. 76-78.
  8. ^ Jireček 1918, p. 256.
  9. ^ Krstić 2017, p. 152.
  10. ^ Jireček 1918, p. 257.
  11. ^ Fodor & Dávid 2000, p. 80-81.
  12. ^ Ћирковић 1982, p. 484, 487.
  13. ^ Karbić 2006, p. 80-82.
  14. ^ Ћирковић 1982, p. 488.
  15. ^ Karbić 2006, p. 82-84.
  16. ^ https://d-nb.info/366893718/04
  17. ^ Karbić 2006, p. 79-85.
  18. ^ Thallóczy & Áldásy 1907, p. 47-48, 110-113, 357-362.

Sources

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