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Ostoja of Bosnia
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Stephen Ostoja |
| succession | King of Bosnia |
| reign | 1398–1404 |
| reign-type | First reign |
| predecessor | Jelena Gruba |
| successor | Stephen Tvrtko II |
| succession1 | King of Bosnia |
| reign1 | 1409–1418 |
| reign-type1 | Second reign |
| predecessor1 | Stephen Tvrtko II |
| successor1 | Stephen Ostojić |
| spouse | Vitača |
| Kujava Radinović | |
| Jelena Nelipčić | |
| issue | Stephen Ostojić of Bosnia |
| Radivoj of Bosnia | |
| Thomas of Bosnia | |
| house | House of Kotromanić |
| death_date | September 1418 |
| religion | Church of Bosnia |
|reign-type = First reign |reign-type1 = Second reign Kujava Radinović Jelena Nelipčić Radivoj of Bosnia Thomas of Bosnia
Stephen Ostoja (; died September 1418) was King of Bosnia from 1398 to 1404 and from 1409 to 1418.
Family connections
He was a member of the House of Kotromanić, most likely son of Vladislaus and brother of King Tvrtko I. When duke Hrvoje Vukčić in 1416 died, King Ostoja divorced his old wife Kujava from the house of Radinović and married Hrvoje's widow Jelena Nelipčić the next year. Jelena Nelipčić was the sister of Prince Ivan III Nelipić from the Croatian noble Nelipić family. That way Ostoja inherited most of Hrvoje's lands.
Rise to power
Ostoja was crowned King on 10 May 1398 by the forces of Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić, Grand Duke of Bosnia, Knez of Donji Kraji and a Herzog of Split, which deposed Queen Jelena Gruba in 1398. In 1403 he sided with King Ladislaus of Naples in his plights against the Hungarian King Sigismund, Bosnia's liege. King Ostoja led a war against the Republic of Dubrovnik, a Hungarian vassalage that year. In 1404, the Bosnians under Hrvoje Vukčić replaced him by his brother Tvrtko II because of his pro-Hungarian views. He had to flee to Hungary, after a stanak in Mile, Visoko.
In 1408, Hungarian King Sigismund managed to defeat the Bosnian nobility and King Stephen Tvrtko II and restore Ostoja to the throne in 1409. King Stephen Ostoja ended the decade-long dispute with the Hungarians but recognizing the suzerainty of the Hungarian crown and in 1412 visited the Hungarian throne in Buda together with the rest of the Bosnian and Serbian nobility including Serbian Despot Stefan Lazarević.
King Stephen Ostoja died in September 1418 and his oldest son from his marriage with Kujava, Stephen Ostojić, was elected King of Bosnia.
References
before=Jelena Gruba| title= King of Bosnia| years=1398–1404| after=Tvrtko II| before=Tvrtko II| title=King of Bosnia| years=1409–1418| after=Stephen Ostojić|
References
- Fine, John Van Antwerp. (1994). "The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest". The University of Michigan Press.
- His name in [[Bosnian language. Bosnian]] is rendered Stjepan Ostoja ({{Cyrl. Стјепан Остоја), while in [[Croatian language. Croatian]] it is Stjepan Ostoja. In [[Serbian language. Serbian]], he is called Stefan Ostoja ({{Cyrl. Стефан Остоја).
- John Van Antwerp Fine, Bosnian Institute; ''The Bosnian Church: Its Place in State and Society from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Century'', Saqi in association with The Bosnian Institute, 2007
- Ćošković, Pejo. (2005). "Jelena". Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography.
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