Radič Božić
Despot Radič Božić Radič Božić | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Serbian Despot | |||||
Despot of Serbia | |||||
Reign | 1527-1528 | ||||
Predecessor | Stevan Berislavić | ||||
Successor | Pavle Bakić | ||||
Born | Serbia | ||||
Died | September 1528 | ||||
| |||||
Religion | Serbian Orthodox Christian |
Radič Božić (Serbian: Радич Божић ; fl. 1502 - September 1528) was the Despot of Serbia in 1527 until his death in September 1528. He ruled a territory under the Hungarian crown, and was the voivode of a large army that fought the Ottoman Empire in several battles, most notably the Battle of Mohács.
Life
He left Ottoman-occupied Serbia for Hungary, and received the towns of Solymos and Lippa by Vladislas II of Hungary. He was part of the Hungarian-Serbian Army that crossed into Serbia in 1502 and burnt the Ottoman bases at Kladovo, Vidin and Nikopolje.
In 1522, he became the commander of a flotilla with 500 chaiki. Together with Pál Tomori he defeated the Bosnian Pasha Ferhat at Manđelos in Syrmia in August 12, 1523. Although he was sick and old, he defeated an Ottoman band at Petrovaradin in 1526, then participated in the Battle of Mohács, as well as destroying an Ottoman Army department at Titel after the battle. Voivode John Zápolya called him the most revered Serbian person in Hungary.
During the succession war between Ferdinand I and John Zápolya, he took the side of Zápolya. In 1527, he received the title of Despot by Zápolya, the King of Hungary.
He died in September 1528.
See also
Regnal titles | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Stevan Berislavić |
Serbian Despot 1527 - 1528 |
Succeeded by Pavle Bakić |
References
Sources
- Stanojević, Pavle, Classification of archive material in the Church of Saints Peter and Paul in Arad a comprehensive list of documents, in Temišvarski zbornik 2006, iss. 4, pp. 143–174, Matica srpska, Novi Sad
- Aleksa Ivić: Istorija Srba u Vojvodini. Novi Sad 1929.
- Tekst dr Bogomila Hrabaka akademika ANUK univ. prof, Filozofskog fakulteta u Novom Sadu i Beogradu za Enciklopediju Jugoslavije JLZ, Zagreb 1982. god.