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'''Dominik Andrijašević''' ({{lang-it|Domenico Andreassi}}, {{lang-la|Dominicus Andriasius/Dominicus Andreassius}}; 1572–1639), was a [[Republic of Ragusa|Ragusan]] [[Franciscans|Francisan]] [[friar]] who served as the Catholic Bishop of [[Skadar]] (Scutari) (1622–24) and later [[Mostar]] (1637).
'''Dominik Andrijašević''' ({{lang-it|Domenico Andreassi}}, {{lang-la|Dominicus Andriasius/Dominicus Andreassius}}; 1572–1639), was a [[Republic of Ragusa|Ragusan]] [[Franciscans|Franciscan]] [[friar]] who served as the Catholic Bishop of [[Skadar]] (Scutari) (1622–24) and later [[Mostar]] (1637).


==Life==
==Life==

Revision as of 23:05, 13 February 2021

Dominik Andrijašević (Template:Lang-it, Template:Lang-la; 1572–1639), was a Ragusan Franciscan friar who served as the Catholic Bishop of Skadar (Scutari) (1622–24) and later Mostar (1637).

Life

Born in 1572 in Orahov Do[1] in Herzegovina, Andrijašević was a resident in Ragusa (Dubrovnik).[2]

He was sent with Damjan Ljubibratić several times to the Popes with petitions of aid in Balkan uprisings.

In 1608, Andrijašević arrived in Ragusa (Dubrovnik) from Spain with letters for Grdan.[3]

In 1624, the Ottomans expelled him from Scutari.[4]

Legacy

Andrijašević was a member of the Andrijašević-Mrše family of the Slano region.[5]

References

  1. ^ Journal of Croatian Studies. Croatian Academy of America. 1990. p. 109.
  2. ^ Robin Harris (January 2006). Dubrovnik: A History. Saqi Books. ISBN 978-0-86356-959-3.
  3. ^ Zdenko Zlatar (1 January 1992). Our Kingdom Come: The Counter-Reformation, the Republic of Dubrovnik, and the Liberation of the Balkan Slavs. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0-88033-239-2. In July of 1608 Domenico Andreassi (Dominik Andrijasevic) came from Spain to Dubrovnik with letters for vojvoda Grdan. Vojvoda Grdan ...
  4. ^ Karlo Jurišić (1972). Katolička crkva: na biokovsko-neretvanskom području u doba turske vladavine. Kršćanska Sadašnjost. pp. 46–.
  5. ^ Antun Golušić (1991). Rodovi Slanskog primorja. Hrvatska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti u Zagrebu. p. 103. ISBN 9788681265048.