Kosača Косача Kosačić Косачић |
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Country |
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Estates |
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Titles |
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Founded | first half of the 14th century |
Founder | Vuk Kosača |
Final ruler | Vlatko Hercegović |
Dissolution | 1483 |
The Kosača (Serbo-Croatian in Cyrillic: Косача, pl. Kosače / Косаче), somewhere Kosačić (Serbo-Croatian in Cyrillic: Косачић, pl. Kosačići / Косачићи), was a Bosnian medieval noble family which ruled over parts of modern Bosnia and Herzegovina, Dalmatia (in southern Croatia), Old Herzegovina (in western Montenegro) and Raška (in southwestern Serbia), between the 14th century and the 15th century. The land they controlled was known as Hum (Zahumlje), roughly corresponding to modern region of Herzegovina, which itself was derived from the title "Herzog", which Stjepan Vukčić Kosača adopted in 1448. The family ruled as vassals to several states, including the Kingdom of Bosnia and Ottoman Empire. The Kosača family members belonged to the Bosnian Church, Catholic Church and Serbian Orthodox Church.
The family name Kosača was probably taken after the village of Kosače near Goražde, in the Upper Drina region of eastern Bosnia, where the Kosača family were originally estate owners.