Stanak
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Stanak is the most common name used to refer to the assembly of nobility in medieval Bosnia. The assembly was also known as the Rusag (from the Hungarian word orszag, meaning "country"), Zbor, Sva Bosna (meaning "Whole of Bosnia") or just Bosna, with the officials of the Republic of Ragusa employing several Latin terms as well. The term stanak is first attested in the charter of Tvrtko I in 1354.[1]
The right to take part in the sessions of the Stanak was enjoyed by every Bosnian knez, from magnates to petty lords, collectively known as vlastela, but the ultimate authority belonged to the highest nobility.[2] The Stanak was convoked when required, usually by the ruler, who presided over it and led its sessions.[1][2] If male, his wife was allowed to attend, but his sons were not.[1] The Bosnian Church clergy, not belonging to the vlastela, were also barred, but influenced decision-making in the Stanak through the great lords associated with it.[2] The magnates of the country convoked the Stanak themselves when the country experienced greater domestic issues, such as succession crisis or deposition of the ruler. It normally took place wherever the monarch held court: in Mile, Milodraž, Bobovac, Kraljeva Sutjeska and Jajce.[1]
The Stanak enjoyed great power and authority; it deliberated on matters such as election of the new king or queen and coronation, foreign policy, sale or cession of territory, contracting and signing treaties with neighbouring countries, and military issues.[1][2] Charters issued by monarchs reflected the decisions made by the Stanak; as the royal power weakened, the Stanak's increased.[1] Its influence peaked between the 1390s and the 1420s. The Serbian historian Sima Ćirković and most other Yugoslav scholars believed that the existence of the Stanak proved a unity and feeling of belonging to a Bosnian entity, while their American colleague John Van Antwerp Fine, Jr. argued that it only illustrated weakness of the monarch and decentralization of the state.[3]
References
- ^ a b c d e f Radušić, Edin (2010). "Istorija parlamentarizma u BiH". Parlamentarna skupština Bosne i Hercegovine. Parliamentary Assembly of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
- ^ a b c d Enciklopedija Jugoslavije: Bje-Crn. Jugoslavenski leksikografski zavod. 1980. p. 217.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Van Antwerp Fine, John (2007), The Bosnian Church: Its Place in State and Society from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Century, Saqi, p. 174, ISBN 0863565034