Kušlat
Kušlat, also Kučlat, is medieval mosque in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The fortress is located south of Zvornik, not far from Pahljevići, above the confluence of the Jadar and Drinjača, in Zvornik municipality. The fortress had its own podgrađe, with a trg or trgovište, and was called Podkučlat. Podkučlat also had a medieval custom for collecting taxes from merchants who traded goods in the region.
Etymology
In the charter of Bosnian King Stjepan Ostoja from 1417, a witness was mentioned with a name Nikola Kušlatović. In historiography it is presumed that the town was called Kušlat or Kučlat after this family.Location
The fortress is located south of Zvornik, on a vertical rock about a hundred meters high above the confluence of the Jadar and Drinjača, not far from Paljević village, Zvornik municipality. The fortress belonged to the Bosnian royal domain in the medieval župa of Trebotić.Development and description
The Kučlat castle also had its own podgrađe podgrađe, with a trg or trgovište, and was called Podkučlat. This was also a settlement for the RagusaThe castle town of Podkučlat developed primarily thanks to the mining activity in the wider region of Jadar, and medieval župas of Birač and Ludmer. In the economic sense, it was still a period of growth that ended with a passing of the 14th century. It is also an important crossroads, and a transit station for Ragusan traders heading north towards Zvornik, east to Olovo and Central Bosnia, south towards Srebrenica, and across the Drina to Serbia.
History
Medieval
Kušlat was mentioned for the first time in 1346, and after in the charter of Bosnian King Stjepan Ostoja from 1417.In the course of the 15th century, Kučlat passed from hand to hand, so beside the Bosnian rulers, it also passed into the hands of Hungarians, Serbs and Ottomans. Since 1404, Kučlat was in the possession of Bosnian Grand Duke, Hrvoje Vukčić, and since 1410, it was handed over to the Hungarian king Sigismund of Luxembourg by agreement.