Ostrovica Castle

The Ostrovica Castle (Serbo-Croatian: Stari grad Ostrovica, Ottoman Turkish: Ostroviçe kalesi) is a large medieval structure situated above the small village of Ostrovica near Kulen Vakuf, Bihać municipality, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Having been built on a heavily wooded ridge of a steep hill overlooking left bank of the shallow Una river, the castle was located on a strategic site connecting the northern and southern parts of the long Una valley.

Ostrovica Castle
Ostrovica, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Ostrovica Castle
Ostrovica Castle
Coordinates44.558°N 16.081°E / 44.558; 16.081
TypeHilltop castle
Site information
Controlled byDisislavić noble family, Kurjaković noble family (later renamed Karlović), Juraj Mikulčić, Ivan Keglević, Frankopan noble family
Conditiondamaged, partially renovated
Site history
Built15th century
Built by(unknown)
Materialshewn stone (ashlar)
Site is protected as National Monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina by the Government of BiH and its KONS
Ostrovica Castle on a foggy autumn day in 2013

The first mention of the castle was in charter from 1407, in which King Ladislaus of Naples, confirmed possession over Ostrovica to a Bosnian magnate and Grand Duke, Sandalj Hranić, who most likely rebuilt the fortress at the beginning of 15th century on a foundations of an ancient fortification, which dates back to ancient Roman times or even earlier. In 1523 it was conquered by the Ottomans.

History

The first mention of the castle was in the Middle Ages, in a charter from 1407, in which King Ladislaus of Naples, confirmed possession over Ostrovica and Skradin to a Bosnian magnate and Grand Duke, Sandalj Hranić, who received it as a dowry for his second marriage, this time to a niece of Hrvoje Vukčić Hrvatinić, daughter of Vuk Vukčić Hrvatinić, Katarina Vuković in May 1405. When Ladislaus started giving up of his reign over Dalmatia between 1409 and 1410 and selling possessions there to Venice, Sandalj, following in Ladislaus footsteps, sold both Skradin and Ostrovica also to Venice for 5000 ducats in 1409/1410. He also divorced Katarina in 1411.[1][2][3] Most likely it was Sandalj who rebuilt the fortress at the beginning of 15th century on the foundations of ancient fortification which dates back to ancient Roman times or even earlier.[4][5]

The Ottoman threatened Ostrovica since the fall of the medieval Kingdom of Bosnia in 1463. Still, the castle resisted until December 1523, when the castle and surrounding area came under Ottoman control.

The long period of Ottoman rule lasted until 1878. In that period the castle was enlarged and reinforced, serving as an Ottoman military stronghold. Military units situated there were commanded first by dizdar (16th and 17th century) and then (from the beginning of the 18th century) by a captain.

A significant enlargement of the castle occurred during the reign of sultan Ahmed I at the beginning of the 17th century. The present-day look of the castle was finally given at the beginning of the 18th century. It measures 117 meters long and 83 meters wide. The main entrance is situated on the south side, while the auxiliary one is put at the north side of the fortification.

During the Ottoman period Ostrovica was the seat of Kapetanija Stara Ostrovica (Old Ostrovica captaincy), also comprising smaller strongholds like Orašac, Havala, Džisri-kebir (modern-day Kulen Vakuf), Čovka and Donji Lapac. Long-term captains were members of the Kulenović noble family (titled begs), one of the most prominent families in Ottoman Bosnia.

After Donji Lapac had been returned to Croatian control (being within Habsburg Monarchy), the Ottomans moved the seat of captaincy away from the nearby Croatian-Bosnian frontier to Prkose, a stronghold in the same-named village, situated northeast of Ostrovica.

In 1737, the fort was unsuccessfully besieged by the army of the Habsburg Empire during the Austro-Russian–Turkish War (1735–39).

The Austrian Empire took over governing Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878, but despite Croat demands, Ostrovica was not returned to the Croatian Kingdom, of which it had been part before the arrival of Ottoman Turks. Moreover, the whole territory of Turkish Croatia, including Ostrovica, Bihać, Banja Luka and so on, was given to direct Habsburg imperial control, as a part of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Today the castle is protected as National Monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina by the Government of BiH and its KONS, and with its surroundings is part of Una National Park. The castle is occasionally renovated in the recent years in order to be more attractive to tourists.[5][4]

See also

References

  1. Kurtović, Esad (2010). "Sandalj Hranić Kosača - Biografija bosanskog vlastelina". Bosna Franciscana (in Bosnian) (33): 73–74. ISSN 1330-7487. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  2. Lovrenović, Dubravko (1 September 1986). "Kako je bosanski vojvoda Sandalj Hranić došao u posjed Ostrovice i Skradina". Radovi : Radovi Zavoda za hrvatsku povijest Filozofskoga fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu (in Croatian). 19 (1): 231–236. ISSN 0353-295X. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  3. "Data" (PDF). nationalpark-una.ba. Retrieved 2020-06-09.
  4. "Ostrovica - .Una spring of life". www.unaspringoflife.com. Retrieved 12 January 2021.
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2018-03-03. Retrieved 2018-03-02.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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