Civil Croatia originated as a territory after 1577 and survived as such until the dissolution of the military frontier in the early 1880s. The term is therefore negatively connoted, since one always endeavors the reunification of the medieval Triune Kingdom. Civil Croatia has been practically the smallest territorial unit where Croatian state law was preserved over time. Opposite of it the Habsburg monarchy established the military border. Thus, Civil Croatia was not only a result of the Turkish invasion, but also a proof of the loss of sovereignty. Civil Croatia was thus conceived only in the absence of a better solution. The reliquiae reliquiarum formed the basis for the survival of historical state law and its institutions. The incorporation of those territories first meant the renewal of territorial continuity that had been interrupted since the middle of the 16th century. Croatia and Slavonia, together with Syrmia, now formed a whole, but in the eyes of the Croats it was not yet in harmony with their national requirements. Civil Croatia had to evolve into Greater Croatia, whose maximum extent would include Slovenia, parts of Inner Austria, Bosnia and Herzegovina. However, the successive territorial forms – except for the Independent State of Croatia under Ante Pavelić 1941–1944 – never fulfilled this ambition.
dle vidění ctihodné Anny Kateřiny Emmerichové napsal Klement Brentano ; z jazyka německého přeložil Matěj Fencl, Bibliofilie, Sáňka 401, Zdobený tit. list, and Converted from MODS 3.5 to DC version 1.8 (EE patch 2015/06/25)
Záměrem tohoto textu je zpřístupnit specifickou kategorii archeologického pramene (keramické značky) a upozornit na možnosti jeho využití pro studium dějin hrnčířství a distribuce keramiky. Prezentován je jeden z našich nejrozsáhlejších souborů, shromážděný v raně středověkém hradišti Stará Boleslav. Sledovány jsou podíly značené keramiky, dále identické značky, jejich distribuce na lokalitě a konečně technologické vlastnosti výrobků, které pocházejí z téže dílny. and Maker’s marks on the bases of ceramic vessels from Stará Boleslav. The aim of this text is to make available a specific category of archaeological resource (ceramic maker’s marks) and to draw attention to the opportunities for the use of this resource in studying the history of pottery and the distribution of ceramics. One of the largest available assemblages is presented, that which was brought together in the Early Medieval castle at Stará Boleslav. The article considers the proportion of marked ceramics, as well as identity markers, their distribution over the site and lastly the technological properties of those products that came from these workshops.
(Statement of Responsibility) J. Zawodny, (Acquisition) d, (Version Identification) Druck U. & R. Nawratil in Znaim., and (Version Identification) Tištěno švabachem. Jiné vyd. na D 9562.