Solos (Bosnia)

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Soli was a Bosnian area (oblast) and a county in the Middle Ages . The center was in the city of the same name or today's Tuzla .

Konstantin Porphyrogennetos (Constantine VII) mentions solos around the middle of the 10th century in his work De Administrando Imperio as a region of Christian Serbia . This was the first mention of the area. After that, solos alternated between Byzantine and Bulgarian rulers. Around 1204, Soli first came into the fabric of Bosnia. It was first mentioned in 1225 under the name Soli. From 1253 it is in the Hungarian bank Usora and Soli . Subsequently, Soli was part of the Serbian kingdom under Stefan Dragutin (1284-1316). In 1324 the Bosnian Ban Stjepan II. Kotromanić conquered the region and incorporated Solos in Bosnia. Soli remained in this composition until the temporary Ottoman conquest in 1463. Towards the end of this year, the Hungarian- Croatian King Matthias Corvinus took Soli and combined it with the Srebrenička banovina . Soli remained so until the fall of 1512. The Banats Ottoman erected on this area, the Nahiyen upper and lower Tuzla, which is part of Sandschak of Zvornik ( Zvornički Sandžak ) and the Kadiluk Srebrenik ( Srebrenički Kadiluk were).

The first king of the medieval Bosnian state , Tvrtko I , described himself in 1356 as the Ban of "all of Bosnia and all of Usora and Soli" ( čitave Bosne i čitave Usore i Soli ). After the proclamation of the Bosnian Kingdom, Soli entered the title of ruler separately from Usora . It read: " Kralj Srbljem, Bosni, Primorju, Hlmsci Zemli, Zapadnim Stranam, Dolnim Krajem, Usori, Soli, Podrinju ik tomu ".

source

Individual proof

  1. a b Zvonimir Banović:  SOLANA 125 GODINA.  In:  http://solana.ba/corporate_solana/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Solana-monografija-3.pdf  SOLANA dd Tuzla Tuzla, Ulica soli 3, 2010; Retrieved December 23, 2017 (Croatian, Bosnian).