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Original scientific paper

Proclamationes of the Šibenik duke Fantino de Cha de Pesaro (1441–1443)

Danko Zelić ; Institut za povijest umjetnosti


Full text: croatian pdf 282 Kb

page 149-190

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Abstract

This essay examines a small volume titled Proclamationes, originally a part of the official book of the chancellery of the Šibenik count Fantino de Cha de Pesaro (1441–1443), discovered by the author in the legacy of Ivan Kukuljević, in the Archives of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Zagreb. The volume records around fifty deliberations of the count, representative of the supreme Venetian rule in the town, that were proclamed by town criers. For the understanding of the multilingual
reality of late medieval Šibenik it is important to note that proclamations, although written in Latin, the official language of administration, were publicly proclaimed in Croatian. After a brief overview of the content and structure of this juridical source, the author analyzes their relationship with other legal texts from Šibenik of that period, starting with the municipal statute. A comparison with contemporary sources and with the already known Šibenik proclamations from 1543 helps to draw conclusions on the place of criminal justice in the administration of the town, as well as the role of proclamations in everyday urban life. Finally, the Šibenik proclamations are discussed within a broader context of sources related to political history of the urban communities in Venetian Dalmatia towards the mid-fifteenth century. A full transcription of the volume is edited and printed as an appendix to the essay.

Keywords

Šibenik; Venice; Middle Ages; Fantino de Cha de Pesaro; legal history

Hrčak ID:

35531

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/35531

Publication date:

11.12.2008.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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