Count Stefan Frankopan Modriškii - Castle Chapel of St George - Ljubljanski Grad - Ljubljana
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member SMacB
N 46° 02.921 E 014° 30.473
33T E 461928 N 5099573
Coat of Arms of Count Stefan Frankopan Modriškii (Stephen III. Count Frankopan), on the ceiling of the Castle Chapel of St George, Ljubljanski Grad, Ljubljana.
Waymark Code: WMT83J
Location: Slovenia
Date Posted: 10/12/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Dorcadion Team
Views: 2

2 Coats of Arms of Count Stefan Frankopan Modriškii (Stephen III. Count Frankopan) on the ceiling of the Castle Chapel of St George, Ljubljanski Grad, Ljubljana. The arms bear the legend 'Stephan Graf von Frangepan u. Modr. A 1443' & 'Steph. Gr. v.
Frangepan v. Mod. A 1453'
A 3rd belongs to Count Trojan Frankopan, bearing the legend 'Troian Graf von Frangepan A 1444'

House of Frankopan -
In 1430 the family proclaimed themselves descendants of Frangipani and changed their coat of arms with the support of the Pope.
Ref - (visit link)

Count of Tržan Castle in Modruš -
"According to the famous Croatian historian Vjekoslav Klaic (1849–1928), a kind of a castle or stronghold most probably existed above Modruš already at the beginning of the 9th century, during a war between Borna, Duke of Dalmatian Croatia, and Ljudevit Posavski, Duke of Pannonian Croatia.

Almost ideal position, dominating over the surrounding area, made Tržan Castle never to be conquered by anyone in its history, although the town of Modruš below the castle was plundered and burned by the Ottomans in 1493, just before the battle of Krbava Field.

From 1193 the castle was property of the Knezes (Princes) of Krk, (later, from around 1430, known as the Frankopans), a distinguished Croatian noble family. Bartol II Krcki /Bartholomew II of Krk/ was given the whole vast Modruš estate, including the castle, by the Croato-Hungarian king Bella II (III) for his merits in the wars he fought. The next more than 350 years Tržan was owned by the Frankopans, not only as one among the many castles in their property, but as the main seat and stronghold of the family in the whole continental part of Croatia. From thence ruled, among others, Ivan V Krcki /John V of Krk/ (born before 1343, died 1393) and his son Nikola IV /Nicholas IV/ (born around 1360, died 1432), the most powerful man in Croatia at the beginning of the 15th century, both Bans (Viceroys) of Croatia. They reconstructed and enlarged the old, irregular shaped castle, which was from around 1437 called Tržan or Tržan-grad, because of an increased trade that was going on there (Croatian: tržiti means to trade or to sell).

The walls, bastions and towers were built of hewn stone (ashlar) in the „fishbone“ style and represented a kind of masterpiece of the contemporary building skill. There are some signs which indicate that the foreign building masters took part in the works, most probably those from the Republic of Venice. The castle itself consisted of central part with a large guard tower and a palace as residence for members of the princely family with its supporting staff, northern part with outbuildings for economic services, various workshops, warehouses, water tanks and rectangular defending tower, and southern part containing mostly facilities for retail trade, accommodation for traders and travellers etc. Following the walls and bastions of the castle, there were defensive walls, about 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) long, around the town of Modruš, descending the slope of the hill.

In 1449 a well-known partition of the huge Frankopan estates, spread throughout central and western Croatia, took place, as the eight sons of Nikola IV Frankopan agreed to split and share their father`s property (legally valid) among themselves. In the course of this, the whole Modruš estate belonged to Stjepan III /Stephen III/ (born before 1416, died around 1481–84); in the sharing inheritance document it was written: „...to Stjepan belongs the market town Modruš with the Tržan Castrum“... It was a time of constant and steady rise, a „golden age“ of Modruš, that reached its peak in 1460, as the town became a seat of a bishop.

Bernardin Frankopan (1453–1529), the only son of Stjepan III, successfully managed the whole of his property further from the Tržan Castle, although there was increasing threat of the Ottoman raids from the already conquered Bosnian territory, east of Modruš County. This led to decrease of importance of Tržan by the end of the 15th century, and the population of the whole area started to move away more and more from its old places of residence to the other, safer parts of Croatia and neighbouring countries, not willing to live in endangered territory.

In the first half of the 16th century the castle was always less maintained and repaired than needed, and after 1553 came under control of the military authorities of the Croatian Military Frontier. A relatively small military deployment unit was permanently stationed there. After several unsuccessful attempts to renovate or rebuild the more and more severely damaged parts of the castle during the 17th and 18th century, the military authorities decided in 1791 to abandon it. Following the negligible Ottoman danger at that time, they presumed that it was not necessary to keep soldiers in Tržan and it was left to its own destiny, becoming a badly damaged castle ruin today."

SOURCE - (visit link)
Bearer of Coat of Arms: Noble (aristocratic) family

Full name of the bearer: Count Stefan Frankopan Modriškii (Grof Stefan Frankopanski in Modriški)

Where is Coat of Arms installed (short description) ?:
Ceiling of the Castle Chapel of St George - Ljubljanski Grad - Ljubljana


Material / Design: Painting on plaster

Blazon (heraldic description):
Slovene - Grof Stefan Frankopanski in Modriški:na srebrnem drug proti drugemu obrnjena, vzpeta zlata leva z zlatim hlebcem v šapah. Zlat šlem s krono in dvema zlatima perutma. Pregrinjalo modrordečezlato (zlato). SOURCE - www.dlib.si/stream/URN:NBN:SI:doc...4f60.../PDF


Address:
St George's Chapel Ljubljana Castle Ljubljana 1000 Slovenia


Web page about the structure where is Coat of Arms installed (if exists): [Web Link]

Web page about the bearer of Coat of Arms (if exists): Not listed

Visit Instructions:
Logging requirements: Please upload your own personal photo of the coat of arms. You or your GPS can be in the picture, but it’s not a requirement.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Coats of Arms
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
aendgraend visited Count Stefan Frankopan Modriškii - Castle Chapel of St George - Ljubljanski Grad - Ljubljana 08/21/2020 aendgraend visited it