Chapter

Hungarian-Croatian Kingdom & Frankopan Lordship

Under the Hungarian-Croatian crown, the Frankopan family (documented from 1118) became the dominant regional lords, their castle network stretching from Krk Town across the Kvarner littoral and into Gorski Kotar. The Vinodol Codex (1288), written in Chakavian Croatian, records the legal compact between the Frankopans and nine free communes—a rare instance of a local Slavic-language statute governing feudal relations. The Glagolitic tradition on Krk continued under Frankopan patronage, with the Vrbnik statute (1388) and surviving manuscripts in Krk's cathedral treasury. Climb to any Frankopan castle ruin today and you see the same maritime-and-mountain vista they controlled: sea trade below, mountain passes behind.

1100 - 1526
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Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

political

Grobnik Castle

A Frankopan-era castle on the Rijeka hinterland, now a heritage-venue hosting the annual Knights' Tournament (Viteški turnir)—a modern medieval re-enactment that performs an imagined chivalric culture. The castle's crenellated silhouette and medieval tavern create a visitor experience that blends documented Frankopan history with heritage performance. Anchor modes: material_layer, living_ritual | Search hooks: Grobnik Castle; Viteški turnir; Frankopan Heritage Route; Knights Tournament Grobnik; medieval re-enactment Kvarner

Watch the annual Knights' Tournament with jousting re-enactments, visit the medieval tavern inside the castle walls, and explore Frankopan Heritage Route interpretation.

political

Kaštel Frankopan (Krk)

The Frankopan castle in Krk Town was the family's island seat, commanding the channel approach and anchoring their control over Kvarner maritime routes. Now part of the EU-funded Frankopan Heritage Route, it hosts cultural events including the Kino na kaštelu film festival. Anchor modes: material_layer, custodian | Search hooks: Kaštel Frankopan Krk; Frankopan Heritage Route; medieval castle Kvarner; Kino na kaštelu; EU heritage route

Visit the restored castle (now a cultural venue), see the heritage-route interpretation, and attend seasonal events like the Kino na kaštelu open-air film festival.

knowledge

Novi Vinodolski

One of the nine communes that signed the Vinodol Codex (1288)—the legal compact between Frankopan lords and free communes written in Chakavian Croatian. The town preserves fragments of its medieval statute tradition and Frankopan-era urban fabric. Anchor modes: material_layer, custodian | Search hooks: Novi Vinodolski; Vinodol Codex; Chakavian legal tradition; Frankopan commune; 1288 statute

Explore the old town's medieval stone streets and search for references to the Vinodol Codex in local heritage interpretation.

political

Stara Sušica Castle

A Frankopan castle in the Gorski Kotar highlands, now the venue for the annual kirijašenje forestry procession—a living ritual that celebrates the timber-rafting economy that sustained Gorski Kotar communities. The castle also hosts the Kino na kaštelu open-air film festival. This combination of Frankopan-era architecture and living mountain-ritual tradition makes Stara Sušica unique in the region. Anchor modes: living_ritual, material_layer, custodian | Search hooks: Stara Sušica Castle; kirijašenje; timber rafting procession; Gorski Kotar forestry; Kino na kaštelu; Frankopan Heritage Route

Attend the kirijašenje forestry procession and the Kino na kaštelu film festival, and explore the restored castle in its forested Gorski Kotar setting.

political

Trsat Castle

A Frankopan castle on the hilltop above Rijeka, Trsat Castle guarded the approaches to the Kvarner coast and later served as a Habsburg military position. Now part of the Frankopan Heritage Route, it functions as a cultural venue and viewpoint. Its position above the Trsat Shrine creates a secular-sacred double summit that mirrors the region's layered governance. Anchor modes: material_layer, custodian | Search hooks: Trsat Castle; Frankopan Heritage Route; hilltop fortress Rijeka; Frankopan castle Kvarner; cultural venue Rijeka

Visit the restored castle with its panoramic views of Kvarner Bay, the Frankopan Heritage Route interpretation, and the café/venue space.

knowledge

Vrbnik

A cliff-top commune on Krk that produced the Vrbnik statute (1388), one of the best-preserved medieval Croatian communal statutes, written in Chakavian Glagolitic script. The town's narrow medieval streets (including the famous Klančić street, barely 60 cm wide) and Glagolitic manuscript tradition make it a repository of Croatian communal legal culture under both Frankopan and Venetian governance. Anchor modes: material_layer, custodian | Search hooks: Vrbnik; Vrbnik statute 1388; Glagolitic Chakavian; Klančić street; Krk medieval commune

Walk the medieval streets including the famously narrow Klančić, visit the local Glagolitic heritage displays, and taste Vrbnička Žlahtina wine from the surrounding vineyards.

Celebrations and traditions

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More chapters in Kvarner and Lika region

Adjacent chapters stay inside the same cultural region.

Chapter

Slavic Migration & Early Croatian Christianization

600 - 1100

As Avar and Slavic peoples moved into the Roman-Illyrian vacuum, Croatian tribal groups settled the Kvarner coast and Lika highlands by the 7th century. Christianity arrived early—by the 9th century, Glagolitic liturgy in the local Slavic tongue was already practiced, a tradition codified in the Baška Tablet (~1100), the earliest substantial Croatian Glagolitic inscription, found on Krk. The Krk island tradition of Slavic-rite liturgy received papal sanction from Innocent IV in 1248—the only Slavic language so permitted—ensuring that the island would become a Glagolitic stronghold. On Lika, early Croatian church foundations dotted the highland landscape, though much of this layer was later overwritten by Military Frontier fortifications.

Chapter

Venetian Thalassocracy & Island Communes

1409 - 1797

Venice acquired Krk (Veglia) in 1480 and gradually extended its influence across the Kvarner islands—Cres, Lošinj, Rab—while the mainland remained under Habsburg-Croatian governance. This created a dual world: islands oriented toward the Venetian maritime empire with their communal statutes, Italian-language administration, and Adriatic trade networks; mainland oriented toward Central European political structures. The Glagolitic tradition on Krk survived under Venetian rule through accommodation rather than resistance—the 1248 papal permission provided legal cover. Rab's 1364 liberation celebration from Venetian rule (the origin of Rabska Fjera) reveals how island communities negotiated their own civic identity within and against Venetian power. The urban fabric of Cres, Krk, and Rab towns still bears the Venetian imprint: loggias, campaniles, stone-painted facades.

Chapter

Illyrian-Liburnian Foundations & Roman Imperial Integration

-800 - 600

Long before Slavic or Italian names marked these coasts, the Liburnians—a seafaring Illyrian people—built a thalassocratic culture across the Kvarner archipelago, manning the pirate-proof galleys that Rome would later co-opt for its imperial navy. Roman Tarsatica (modern Rijeka Old Town) anchored the eastern Adriatic leg of the Via Flavia, while Senia (Senj) served as a naval base. On the islands, Liburnian hill-forts merged into Roman municipia, and the Latin inscription still visible on the Roman Arch in Rijeka marks where imperial authority met local trade. Walk the cardo-decumanus grid beneath today's Old Town and you tread on a Roman street plan; look south across the channel and you see the same maritime approach the Liburnians defended.

Chapter

Ottoman-Habsburg Frontier & Military Border Governance

1526 - 1671

After the Battle of Mohács (1526), the Kvarner-Lika region became a frontline of the Ottoman-Habsburg wars. The Habsburgs organized the Military Frontier (Vojna Krajina), settling Vlach/Morlach pastoral communities under the Statuta Valachorum (1630) in exchange for military service. Senj became the base of the Uskoks—a multi-ethnic frontier community of refugees who operated as Habsburg-licensed privateers, holy warriors against the Ottomans, and (to Venice) pirates—until the Treaty of Madrid (1617) led to their forced relocation. Nehaj Fortress (built 1558) still dominates Senj's skyline. In Lika, Vlach/Morlach transhumance culture introduced pastoral-calendar observances (spring Djurđevdan, autumn migration) that left a deep cultural layer now largely erased by the 1990s displacement. The Frankopans' role in frontier governance ended with their execution in 1671, dissolving the last independent regional lordship.