- Source: List of people associated with the Republic of Ragusa
Here follows a list of notable Ragusans and Rectors of the Republic of Ragusa (also known as the Republic of Dubrovnik), a maritime republic centered on the city of Dubrovnik on the eastern coast of the Adriatic.
Note on first and last names
Reflecting the dual Romance and Slavic influence on Ragusan culture, most Ragusan noble families, as well as members of the citizen class, used both Romance and Slavic versions of their first and last names, especially since the Late Middle Ages onward, while the lower classes mostly only used Slavic names. Some used only one version of their family name exclusively, e.g. the noble families Natali and Zlatarić. Since the official language of the Republic was always from the Romance language group, the official records record the last names almost exclusively in those versions, although in the older records the first names can be found in Slavic. Members of noble families, even those originally of Slavic descent, used the Slavic forms of their family names in an unofficial capacity in literary works written in Slavic, and in an official capacity only in treaties that the Ragusan State signed with its neighboring Slavic states in their language and script. In the noble class' everyday usage, most commonly the first name was in Slavic and the last name in Italian, a traditional practice which has continued until today, and transformed into official.
When only the Romance version of a first or last name appears in the sources, modern Croatian and Serbian scientific literature very frequently translates it creating a new slavicized version, which often results in various errors due to insufficient knowledge of Ragusan traditions, e.g. erroneously using non-Ragusan Slavic form "Vinko" instead of Ragusan Slavic form "Vicko", or "Blaž" instead of "Vlaho", or incorrectly adapting a Romance version while ignoring actual Ragusan usage, e.g. "Natal" instead of "Božo", "Junije" instead of "Džono".: 20, 21, 23
When several persons had the same first and last name, it was Ragusan custom to append the father's name in the genitive case, also changing the declension of the last name (in Ragusan the genitive case for nouns ending in -o is -a), e.g. there were two persons named Đivo Gundulić, so one was called Đivo Frana Gundulića, and the other Đivo Nika Gundulića (in modern literature this is sometimes indicated with the possessive determiner -ov, thus Franov, Nikov, translated to English as Frano's, Niko's). When translating this into Latin, the genitive case was kept, e.g. Joannes Francisci Gundulae, however, when translating into languages in which names do not have grammatical cases (such as Italian) it was written as effectively a middle name (Giovanni Francesco Gondola). It is important to differentiate this from actual middle names, such as Roger Joseph Boscovich, an example where the names were also anglicized.
Some examples of Romance and Slavic versions of last names:
Bassegli, Basilio - Basiljević
Bobali, Babalio - Bobaljević
Bona - Bunić
Bonda - Bundić
Caboga - Kabužić
Cerva, Cervinus - Crijević
Ghetaldi - Getaldić
Giorgi - Đorđić, Đurđević
Gondola - Gundulić
Gozze - Gučetić
Gradi - Gradić
Luccari - Lukarević
Menze - Menčetić
Palmotta - Palmotić
Pozza - Pucić
Resti - Rastić, Restić
Sorgo - Sorkočević
Stay - Stojković
Zamagna - Zamanja, Zamanjić
Notable Ragusans
= 14th century
=Franco Sacchetti (c.1335–1400) - poet and short story writer, his father was a Florentine merchant.
= 15th century
=Benedetto Cotrugli (1416–1469) - merchant, humanist, scientist, diplomat
Džore Držić (1461–1501) - poet and playwright
Bonino De Boninis (1454–1528) - printer and publisher
Mavro Vetranović (1482/1483-1576) - Benedictine, writer
Šiško Menčetić (1457–1527) - poet and nobleman
Elio Lampridio Cerva (c. 1460 - 1520) - orator, lexicographer, poet of Latin laudes,
Paladino Gondola (fl. 1423–1472) - diplomat and merchant
= 16th century
=Savino Bobali (1530–1585) - writer
Nikola Nalješković (1505–1587) - poet, playwright and scientist
Marin Držić (1508–1567) - playwright and poet
Cvijeta Zuzorić (1555-c.1600) - poet
Marino Ghetaldi (1568–1626) - scientist, mathematician and physicist
Ivan Bunić Vučić (1591–1658) - politician and poet
Dinko Zlatarić (1558–1613) - poet and translator
Maria Gondola-Gozze (*1585) - poet
Nikola Vitov Gučetić (1549–1610) - statesman, philosopher, scientist
Ivan Gundulić (1589–1638) - writer, poet, statesman, nobleman
Dinko Ranjina (1536–1607) - poet
Nikša Ranjina (1494–1577) - collector of poems
Trojan Gundulić - merchant, printer
Mavro Orbini (mid-16th century -1614) - writer, ideologist and historian
Luco Ghetaldi - writer
Božo Tudisi - writer
Niko Primi - writer
Đulia Bona - poet
Miho Monaldi - writer
= 17th century
=Vladislav Menčetić (1600/1617- 1666) - poet
Giorgio Baglivi (1668–1707) - physician and researcher
Junije Palmotić (1607–1657) - writer, nobleman and dramatist
Dživo Šiškov Gundulić (1677–1721) - nobleman, poet
Šišmundo Gundulić (1634–1682) - politician (Rector) poet, nobleman
Brno Ghetaldi - clergyman and historian
Stjepan Gradić (1613–1683) - philosopher and scientist
Frano Điva Gundulića (1630–1700) - nobleman and soldier (Austrian marshal)
Beno Rogacci (1646–1719) - Jesuit, poet
Ignjat Đurđević (1675–1737) - poet and translator
= 18th century
=Serafino Cerva (1696–1759) - historian and encyclopedist
Sebastiano Dolci (1699–1777) - writer and Franciscan
Đivo Frana Sorgo (1706–1771) - writer, poet
Rajmundo Kunić (1719–1794) - writer and humanist
Roger Joseph Boscovich (1711–1787) - physicist, astronomer, mathematician, philosopher, diplomat, poet, and Jesuit
Đuro Ferić (1739–1820) - Jesuit, general-bicar
Šišmundo Ghetaldi-Gondola (1795–1860) - politician, nobleman
Vlaho Getaldić (1788–1872) - nobleman, politician, poet
Luko Stulić (1772–1828) - scientist and physician
Antun Kaznačić (1784–1874) - writer
Marc Bruère (1770–1823) - writer, diplomat, dramatist and nobleman
Jeronim Ljubibratić (1716–1779) - nobleman, soldier (Austrian marshal)
Ivan Mane Jarnović (1740–1804) - composer
Bernardo Zamagna (1735–1820) - theologian, Jesuit, and Dominican
Giunio Resti (1755–1814) - politician, writer, nobleman
Elena Pucić-Sorkočević (1786–1865) - composer
Pijerko Franatice Sorga (1749–1826) - nobleman, writer, poet
Antun Sorkočević (1775–1841) - diplomat, writer, composer
Luka Sorkočević / Luca Sorgo (1734–1789) - diplomat and composer
Benedetto Stay (1714–1801) - Jesuit and theologian
Joakim Stulić (1730–1817) - lexicographer and linguist
Bernardin Pavlović - Franciscan, writer
Vito Marija Bettera-Vodopić (1771–1841) - soldier, politician, Dubrovnik patriot
Bernhard Caboga-Cerva (1785–1855) - nobleman and soldier (Austrian marshall)
Partial list of rectors of the Ragusan Republic (1358-1808)
See also
Republic of Ragusa
Dubrovnik
List of people from Dubrovnik
Sources
Zbornik Župe dubrovačke, Author Pero Butigan, Franica Grbić, Ivo Grbić, Josipa Kerner, Ivan Bošković, Mirjana Butigan
Heyer von Rosenfeld, Carl Georg Friedrich, Der Adel des Königreiches Dalmatien, J. Siebmacher's grosses und allgemeines Wappenbuch, Nürnberg, 1873.
Harris, Robin (2003). Dubrovnik, A History. Saqi Books. ISBN 0-86356-332-5.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of people associated with the Republic of Ragusa
- List of people from Serbia
- Maritime republics
- Laos
- Republic of Venice
- Republic of Genoa
- List of people from Italy
- Roger Joseph Boscovich
- Luka Sorkočević
- Marino Ghetaldi