Humska zemlja
The Humska Zemlja is a historical zemlja that arose in the Middle Ages as well-defined administrative unit of medieval Bosnia ruled by the Kosača dynasty. It included most of today's Herzegovina, in Bosansko Primorje including Konavle, territories on the south of Dalmatia between Omiš and Neretva Delta, in Boka Kotorska and south to Budva. The name for this zemlja derived from the earlier name for the region, Zahumlje. The seat of Kosače family was in the town and fortress of Blagaj and during the winter seasons, Novi.
Name
The name for the region changed over time and had different geographical and political meaning. As a politically separate entity, Humska zemlja is not synonymous with Zahumlje, nor Herzegovina.The Zahumlje was first mentioned in the 10th century. The name Humska zemlja can be traced back to the 12th century. It was mentioned in a charter by Stefan Nemanja to Split commune. At that time it already incorporated Zahumlje into new geopolitical paradigm.
During the 14th and 15th centuries, many people of different status were migrating from Hum to the Dalmatian cities of Split, Trogir, Šibenik, and Zadar. They would identify themselves as originating or coming from the Humska zemlja or. In one case in Split from 1454, it was recorded that an individual identified as a person coming from the "Principality of the Herzog Stjepan the Bosnian".
Geography
In a geopolitical sense the Humska zemlja is not synonymous to Zahumlje, and it differs geographically from both Zahumlje and today's Herzegovina. Geographically, roughly outlined, it included in the west–east direction, the area along the Adriatic coast, from Vrulja near Omiš and the big bend of the river Cetina to the hinterland of Dubrovnik, and in the south–north direction, from the coast of the Adriatic and Pelješac to the Upper Neretva and Konjic.From the 9th to the first half of the 11th century, in the neighborhood of the Principality of Hum, on the left bank of the Neretva all the way to Dubrovnik, there was another political formation, independent of the Principality of Hum, and it was called "Zahumlje".
History
The Humska zemlja functioned as a principality until 1326. From the middle of the 12th century onwards, Hum's knez recognized the senior rights of the Hungarian-Croatian king, and for some time during the 13th century they would recognize the authority of Serbian king, while after 1326, the Bosnian ban Stjepan II annexed it for Bosnia.Until the end of the 11th century, the Principality of Hum itself was part of the broader structure of the Croatian king's authority. At the time of the dynastic crisis and the dissolution of the Croatian Kingdom at the end of the 11th century, the Knez of Hum gained almost complete independence. As a result, his rule now extended to the west as far as Imotski with the župa of the same name. On the other hand, during the 12th century, Hum knez
After 1326, the Bosnian ban Stjepan II conquered the country. This signified formal disappearance as an independent principality. It still functioned in line with medieval understandings of a state and the way medieval kingdoms functioned, so it retained a certain form of separate political life and the elements of the previous order. This primarily refers to the type of representative body whose most important function was judicial, known as the "Hum's table", and traditional procedure known as "the Hum's question". However, with an emergence of Kosača these political characteristics and local traditions will begin to wither away.
During the 13th and early 14th centuries the Bosnian House of Kotromanić, the Bosnian bans Stjepan I Kotromanić and Stjepan II Kotromanić, joined these regions to the Bosnian state, with the King Tvrtko I Kotromanić extending territories even further, beyond what is modern-day Herzegovina proper. The region was overwhelmed by Stjepan II in 1322–1326. By the second half of the 14th century, Bosnia apparently reached its peak under Ban Tvrtko I who came into power in 1353 and became the first Bosnian king by 1377.
Bosnian annexation
In the first half of the 1330s, the Branivojević family had emerged as strongest clan in Hum, claiming the territories from Cetina River to the town of Kotor, including entire Pelješac, and controlling Ston, where their court was located. Though nominal vassals of Serbia, the Branivojević family attacked Serbian interests and other local nobles of Hum, who in 1326 turned against both Serbia and Branivojević clan by approaching to Stjepan Kotromanić II, the ban of Bosnia, who took matters into his hands and annexed Hum in campaign between April and June 1326, banishing Serbs and Branivojevićs. The war of Hum between Bosnia and Dubrovnik against Serbia, will have a new episode between 1327 and 1328, when Dečanski attacked Dubrovnik because the Republic annexed Branivojevićs holdings in Ston and Pelješac. This whole affair and the fact that loyal Bosnian lordship was in Hum and Branivojevićs destroyed altogether, along with the unrest on the east, prompted Dušan, to sell Ston and Pelješac to Dubrovnik in 1333 and turned to the east to acquire territories in Macedonia.Most of the local nobility and ruling elite, attached itself to the new supreme ruler, the Bosnian ban and later king.
Other than a rebellion by knez Peter, son of Toljen of Hum, whom Stjepan captured and put to death, the Hum nobles remained loyal to Kotoromanićs who firmly held the region from now on. These nobles also continued to manage their local affairs in the region. At first, vassals of the Bosnian Ban, Draživojević-Sanković from Nevesinje, become the leading family of Hum in the second half of the 1330s, while Serbian vassals retained easternmost reaches of Hum. Stjepan II, however, did take direct control of the valuable custom and market-town at Drijeva. The population of Hum remained largely Orthodox, compared to elsewhere in Bosnia where the Bosnian Church predominated, and after the arrival of the Franciscans in the 1340s, Catholicism also began to spread.
In 1350, Tsar Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia attacked Bosnia in order to regain Hum. Since the invasion was not successful, the tsar tried to negotiate peace, which would be sealed by arranging Elizabeth's marriage to his son and heir apparent, Stephen Uroš V.The tsar expected Hum to be ceded as Elizabeth's dowry, which her father refused. Later that year she was formally betrothed to the 24-year-old Louis, who hoped to counter Dušan's expansionist policy either with her father's help or as his eventual successor. In 1357, Louis summoned the young Tvrtko I to Požega and compelled him to surrender most of western Hum as Elizabeth's dowry, and under whose rule territory remained for only about thirty years, until 1390. During that period, the function of the local knez was re-established, but this time not as a semi-independent ruler, but merely as a king's emissary. Since 1390, the land of Hum has been retaken by the Bosnian king again and put under the direct administration of the local noble family Jurjević-Radivojević.
Emergence of Kosača and Pavlovićs
Beside an emerging Kosača family another powerful Bosnian noble family, the Pavlović's from eastern Bosnia, at the time headed by Pavle Radinović, whose seat was in Borač near Rogatica, including holdings in župa of Vrhbosna and župa of Drina, also shared some of the territories in Hum, mostly centered around Trebinje, including fortress of Klobuk in župa Vrm.But, at the time when Kosače received the Hum from the King, it was Draživojević-Sanković's who had a primacy in the region. This Bosnian noble family is credited for capturing Hum for Bosnia and the Ban Stjepan II, who in 1326 dispatched their early branch, the Draživojević's, headed by Milten, along with other noblemen, into Hum to oust the Branivojević family, at the time nominal vassals of Serbia, and take Hum for him.
Sankovićs' prominence
So, Sanković's were very active in the 14th and beginning of the 15th century in Hum. Their seat was in Zaborani and in Glavatičevo's hamlet Biskupi, where today the family necropolis with a stećci is still present and protected as a National monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The most prominent members were Sanko Miltenović and his oldest son, Radič Sanković. Sanko, the eponymous founder of the Sanković's branch, died in a battle while leading the Bosnian army to aid Ragusa against Serbian lord, the Nikola Altomanović, who campaigned against Ragusa in 1370.The Ottoman threat was brewing to the east, threatening Bosnia and its southeastern regions in Hum. On 27 August 1388, Radić participated in the Battle of Bileća, when the Bosnian army led by the Grand Duke Vlatko Vuković, defeated the Ottoman raiding party of up to 18,000 strong. Bosnian heavy cavalry is typically credited with winning the battle as they broke the Ottoman ranks and pursued the retreating enemy. Celebrated Ottoman commander Lala Sahin Pasha barely managed to save himself with the small band of his soldiers.
In 1391–1392, Radič and his brother Beljak tried to sell their possessions in Konavle to the Republic of Ragusa. However, a stanak was convoked by the king and the noblemen who opposed the sale of Konavli by Radič Sanković to Dubrovnik. The Grand Duke Vlatko Vuković and the knez Pavle Radinović were sent against Radič in December 1391 after receiving the stanak