City of Split Heritage Journal, No. 34, 2007.
Original scientific paper
ABOUT OLDER TOMBSTONES IN SPLIT
Arsen Duplančić
; Arheološki muzej u Splitu
Abstract
The paper deals with six sepulchral monuments from Split churches and determines their belonging. The fragment of the slab with the figure of the deceased kept in the Split Archaeological Museum is attributed to archbishop Jakobin Badoer († 1451) and was
supposedly chiseled by Andrija Aleši who, at the time, built St. Catherine’s chapel in the Dominican church and the Lukari Family tomb inside it. This presumption is founded on the strong resemblance with Aleši’s slab of Ivan Scaffa, bishop of Rab, commissioned in 1454.
In the perypteros of St. Doimus Cathedral stood the slab of Ivan Fabjanov that attracted attention for, as it was then considered, its pompous patriotism. New study yielded a different sense and meaning: the deceased rejected any other fame in exchange for piousness and honor.
It was also determined that the slab belonged to a canon from Split mentioned in the first half of the 15th century. Based on archive data, it was determined that the tombstone with the figure of the deceased from the church at Sustipan belonged to Ivan Krstitelj Augubio (†1490), canon from Split and life-long commendatory abbot of St. Stephen’s monastery. The paper also deals with his family’s coat of arms. Further, it deals with the slab of Petar Tartaglia († 1597),
considered to originate from St. Francis Church, and depicts relation between the Tartaglia and Papalić families coats of arms. Archive facts and candlesticks from the cathedral treasury helped identify the tomb with the coat of arms of Stjepan Deodonat († 1622), cathedral
canon. In the end, the author proves that the sepulchral slab in Gospe od Pojasa, church at the Peristyle, belonged to the Tisičić family from Split (17th c.) as well as the coat of arms on the keystone of the church apse.
Keywords
Hrčak ID:
66605
URI
Publication date:
1.12.2007.
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