• Thumbnail for Juraj Drašković
    Juraj II Drašković (English: George II Drashkovich, Croatian: Juraj II. Drašković, Hungarian: Draskovics II. György; 5 February 1525 – 31 January 1587)...
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  • Drašković (meaning "son of Draško") is a surname used in Croatia, Montenegro and Serbia, and may refer to: Drašković family, Croatian noble family Juraj...
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  • Thumbnail for Drašković family
    Croatia as politicians, army leaders, and religious dignitaries. Juraj II Drašković (1525–1585) was trained for priesthood in Kraków, Vienna, Bologna...
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  • Thumbnail for Croatian–Slovene Peasant Revolt
    Zagreb Statue of Matija Gubec, St. Mark's Square, Zagreb, Croatia Juraj Drašković Hvar Rebellion Čečuk 1960, p. 499. Čečuk 1960, p. 500. Adamček 1968...
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  • Thumbnail for Trakošćan Castle
    Trakošćan Castle (category Drašković family)
    estate to Juraj Drašković (1525–1587) for services rendered, first personally, and then as family heritage. This was how, in 1584, the Drašković family finally...
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    English colonial administrator in America (d. 1627) January 31 – Juraj Drašković, Croatian Roman Catholic cardinal (b. 1525) January – Thomas Seckford...
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  • (d. 1572) 1519 – René of Châlon, prince of Orange (d. 1544) 1525 – Juraj Drašković, Croatian Catholic cardinal (d. 1587) 1533 – Andreas Dudith, Croatian-Hungarian...
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    seat of the Drašković noble family in the 15th century and in the beginning of the 16th century. Bartol (English: Bartholomew) Drašković, the head of...
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  • Thumbnail for Matija Gubec
    February 1573 facing an army of the nobility led by bishop governor Juraj Drašković. Before the battle he made a speech trying to convince the men that...
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  • Thumbnail for Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zagreb
    1463) Nicolaus Olahus (1543–1548) Wolfang Vuk de Gyula (1548–1550) Juraj Drašković (22 March 1564 – 27 October 1578) Nikola Stepanić Selnički (1598–1602)...
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  • Thumbnail for Ban of Croatia
    1567 Franjo Frankopan Slunjski 1567 1572 Maximilian II (1563–1576) Juraj Drašković (1525–1587) 1567 1576 Gašpar Alapić (?–1584) 1575 1577 Kristóf Ungnad...
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  • but had to move to estate of Juraj IV Zrinski in Nedelišće because of the conflict with Franjo Tahi. In 1574 Juraj Drašković, the bishop of the Roman Catholic...
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    Renaissance humanist and anti-Trinitarian reformer (d. 1562) February 5 – Juraj Drašković, Croatian Catholic cardinal (d. 1587) March 19 – Caspar Cruciger the...
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    Luigi d'Este, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1538 1587 January 31 – Juraj Drašković, Croatian Roman Catholic cardinal (b. 1525) January – Thomas Seckford...
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  • Thumbnail for Franjo Frankopan Slunjski
    In 1567 King Maximilian of Habsburg appointed him, together with Juraj II Drašković, the Bishop of Zagreb, as Ban of Croatia. Both Bans had a common official...
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  • Thumbnail for Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kalocsa–Kecskemét
    (1349–1350, elected) Nicholas Apáti (1356–1358) Thomas Telegdi (1358–1367) Juraj Drašković † (1574 Appointed – 31 January 1587 Died) Márton Pethe (died 1607)...
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  • Juraj Ratkaj (also known as Juraj Rattkay, born in Veliki Tabor, on December 22, 1612 — Zagreb, on September 1, 1666) was a Croatian historian, priest...
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  • Martinuzzi (1551) Antun Vrančić (1573) Andrew Báthory (1584–1599) Juraj Drašković (1585–1587) Ferenc Forgách (1607–1615) Péter Pázmány (1629–1637) Leopold...
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  • Thumbnail for Antun Vrančić
    the Turkish yoke. This attitude was in stark contrast with cardinal Juraj Drašković, ban of Croatia. On 25 September 1573, he crowned Rudolf II king of...
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    Montmorency's Catholic troops. February 15 – On orders of the Croatian Viceroy Juraj Drašković, Matija Gubec, the defeated leader of the Croatian–Slovene Peasant...
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  • Thumbnail for Janko Drašković
    revival. Drašković studied law and philosophy before joining the military, from which he was discharged on medical grounds. In the 1790s, Drašković pursued...
    34 KB (3,809 words) - 01:52, 27 August 2024
  • Renaissance humanist and anti-Trinitarian reformer (d. 1562) February 5 – Juraj Drašković, Croatian Catholic cardinal (d. 1587) March 19 – Caspar Cruciger the...
    292 bytes (25,607 words) - 21:26, 16 November 2023
  • Thumbnail for George Martinuzzi
    sister, Ana, married Bartol Drašković and had three sons (one of whom was Croatian Ban (viceroy) and cardinal Juraj Drašković). The Ottoman Sultan Suleiman...
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  • against the Ottoman Empire in 1552, including setting fire to Gradiška with Juraj Frankopan. He was given the titles of Reichsgraf in 1565 and Reichsfürst...
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  • Thumbnail for Ivan III Drašković
    the Drašković noble family. He served as Palatine of Hungary from 1646 until his death. Count Ivan III Drašković was a son of Ivan II Petar Drašković and...
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  • (1975) Atentat u Sarajevu (1975) - Islednik Anno Domini 1573 (1975) - Juraj Draskovic Death of a Corrupt Man (1977) - (uncredited) Le Dernier Amant romantique...
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  • Palondra Boris Festini - Guska Marina Nemet - Regica Charles Millot - Juraj Drašković Lojze Rozman - Gašpar Alapić The biggest Croatian production of the...
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  • Thumbnail for Catholic Faculty of Theology, University of Zagreb
    : 33–34  In 1578, in the tradition of the Tridentine renewal, Bishop Juraj Drašković established the Zagreb Seminary with humanistic studies and moral theology...
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    Montmorency's Catholic troops. February 15 – On orders of the Croatian Viceroy Juraj Drašković, Matija Gubec, the defeated leader of the Croatian–Slovene Peasant...
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  • gathered on the left bank of the Kupa river, under Croatian ban Ivan Drašković, colonel Juraj Lenković, and Johan Herberstein of the Military Frontier. Judging...
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