Biograd Zadar-Knin Croatia
1102 CE
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The Middle of The Earth
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The income from the cities further has strengthened Kresimir's power, and he had subsequently fosters the development of more cities, such as Šibenik, Biograd, Nin, Karin, and Skradin.
He also has several monasteries constructed, like the Benedictine monastery of St. John the Evangelist in Biograd, and donated much land to the Church.
…including both his capitals, …
The Hungarian troops reach as far as the Adriatic Sea and occupy Biograd na Moru, an important port.
The citizens of two other towns—Trogir and Split—threatened by the advance of Coloman's army, swear fidelity to the Doge of Venice, Vitale Michiel, who has sailed to Dalmatia.
Coloman, having no fleet, sends his envoys with a letter to the doge in order to "remove all the former misunderstandings concerning what is due to one of us or the other by right of our predecessors".
Their agreement of 1098—the so-called Conventio Amicitiae—determines the spheres of interest of each party, by allotting the coastal regions of Croatia to Hungary, and Dalmatia to Venice.
Coloman of Hungary controls the greater part of Dalmatia by 1102, though this latter acquisition brings him into conflict with other major powers interested in the fate of this province.
The Croatian hinterland, having succumbed in 1097 to Hungary, is by a dynastic union in 1102 joined formally to Hungary.
The Croats retain their autonomy under King Coloman (and, under his successors, will begin to become Latinized and thereby separate from their Slavic kin to the east and south).
Coloman is crowned king of Croatia in Biograd na Moru in 1102.
The thirteenth-century Thomas the Archdeacon writes that the union of Croatia and Hungary was the consequence of conquest.
On the other hand, the late fourteenth-century manuscript known as the Pacta conventa narrates that Coloman was only crowned after he had reached an agreement with twelve leading Croatian noblemen, because the Croats were preparing to defend their kingdom against him by force.
Whether this document is a forgery or an authentic source is subject to scholarly debate.
In any event, the alleged crowning of Coloman forges a link between the Croatian and Hungarian crowns that will last until the end of the First World War.
Croats will maintain for centuries that Croatia remains a sovereign state despite the voluntary union of the two crowns, but Hungarians will claim that Hungary annexed Croatia outright in 1102.
In either case, Hungarian culture will permeate Croatia, the Croatian-Hungarian border will shift often, and at times Hungary will treat Croatia as a vassal state.
Croatia, however, will maintain its own local governor, or ban; a privileged landowning nobility; and an assembly of nobles, the Sabor.