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Organization in the Episcopal Estates of Zagreb Diocese. Case study of Dubrava, Ivanić and Čazma (CROSBI ID 633712)

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Cepetić Rogić, Maja Organization in the Episcopal Estates of Zagreb Diocese. Case study of Dubrava, Ivanić and Čazma // Unity and diversity of medieval (Central) Europe Olomouc, Češka Republika, 31.03.2016-02.04.2016

Podaci o odgovornosti

Cepetić Rogić, Maja

engleski

Organization in the Episcopal Estates of Zagreb Diocese. Case study of Dubrava, Ivanić and Čazma

This poster aims at presenting the main tendencies in the political and territorial organisation on the estates of Zagreb Diocese from the 12th to the 14th century. The focus will be on the Diocese’s first estate, Dubrava, a donation by King Ladislas in the process of the founding of Zagreb Diocese at the end of the 11th century. The estate of Dubrava, a comitatus in the 12th century, was fragmented into the three smaller estates in the 13th: Dubrava, Ivanić and Čazma. Politically, all three were (bishops’) comitatus in the 13th century. Their central settlements bearing the same names (Dubrava, Ivanić, Čazma) grew quickly from (novae) villae to become liberae villae, and they became, along with their privileges and new functions, a sign of fast development of the bishops’ territory. A similar development may be observed on king’s territories, especially in the 13th century. Old larger territorial units kept declining while new smaller ones bearing the (same) name of comitatus were organized. Also, the appearance of liberae villae Regis is quite noticeable in this period. The differences in position between the royal and Episcopal villas are in the fact that the Episcopal villas rarely failed to develop into real towns with typically urban social and economic structure. The specific functions performed by the liberae villae allow us to observe both their spatial organisation and urban structure which may help us to determine typology. During the 13th century, within the borders of each estate, the territory started to break down into smaller units, praedia, which produced a new social order, praediales. In that time the tendency of creating (bishops’) privileged settlements, liberae villae, is still noticeable. Both trends continued throughout the middle ages with a favourable impact on economic, social, religious and cultural life on Episcopal estates.

Slavonia ; Middle Ages ; Zagreb Diocese ; Episcopal Estates

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Podaci o prilogu

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Podaci o skupu

Unity and diversity of medieval (Central) Europe

poster

31.03.2016-02.04.2016

Olomouc, Češka Republika

Povezanost rada

Povijest, Povijest umjetnosti