Bosnia’s hereditary ban Stjepan II Kotromanic dies …
Years: 1353 - 1353
Bosnia’s hereditary ban Stjepan II Kotromanic dies in 1353; his nephew, Tvrtko, claims descent from Serbia’s powerful Nemanja dynasty, to which Serbian ruler Stefan Dusan belongs.
Tvrtko is the firstborn child of Vladislaus of Bosnia and Jelena Šubić, who had been married at the Šubić's Klis Fortress in Croatia during summerlong festivities open to the whole population.
Tvrtko's father was the son of Stephen I, Ban of Bosnia, and Elizabeth of Serbia.
Tvrtko's mother Jelena Šubić is the daughter of Count George II Šubić from the noble Šubić family.
Tvrtko is the first cousin of Elizabeth of Bosnia, the daughter of Vladislaus's brother, Ban Stephen II Kotromanić.
During the years when the plague was devastating the region, Jelena had been in charge of the household, which, among others, included her ailing husband Vladislaus, and the family of her ailing in-laws of Stephen II Kotromanić.
Jelena has brought up her own children, Tvrtko, his younger brother Stephen Vuk, and his sister Catherine, together with her niece and adopted daughter Elizabeth.
Tvrtko succeeds his uncle as Ban of Bosnia in the Hungarian King's name in 1353 at the age of fifteen.
He is a minor, so his father Vladislav Kotromanić rules in his name.
The first year of Tvrtko's reign passes mostly in confirming and issuing new edicts.
