Stephen II of Croatia
King of Croatia
1020 CE to 1091 CE
Stephen II (died 1091) is the last member of the Trpimirović dynasty and last native Croatian king to rule the entire medieval Croatian Kingdom.
Stephen's father was Častimir, the younger brother of Peter Kresimir IV of Croatia.
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Zvonimir's death from natural causes is the most commonly accepted of the several versions of Demetrius Zvonimir's death, recorded by Thomas the Archdeacon.
Another account, from the Presbyter of Doclea, says that on April 20, 1089, Pope Urban II, desiring to heal the East-West Schism, asked Zvonimir, his strongest Balkan ally, to come to the military aid of Alexios I Komnenos against the Seljuqs.
Zvonimir convened the Sabor at Kosovo Polje near Knin that year to mobilize the army on behalf of the pope and the emperor, but the nobility refused him and a rebellion erupted, leading to Zvonimir's assassination at the hands of his own soldiers.
In any event, his death marks the collapse of Croatian royal power.
The myth of the "Curse of King Zvonimir" is based on the legend of his assassination.
He is most likely buried in the church of St. Mary in his capital Knin, while his remains are transferred to Solin some time after.
Zvonimir was married to his distant relative Jelena, the sister of Ladislaus I of Hungary.
Through Helen, he was connected to the royal families of not only Hungary, but also Poland, Denmark, Bulgaria, and Constantinople.
She had borne him a son, Radovan, who had predeceased him, and a daughter, Claudia, who, being married to the vojvoda of Lapcani Lika, is ineligible for the throne.
Stephen, the last of the House of Trpimirović, had been due to succeed Peter Kresimir IV, but had been sidelined by the people and clergy in 1075 who instead bestowed the title of king to Zvonimir, previously a ban in Slavonia, and a member of the junior Svetoslavić branch of the House of Trpimirović (descendants of Svetoslav Suronja).
By the time Zvonimir dies in 1089, Stephen is old and seriously affected by ill health.
Nevertheless, he assumes the throne after being persuaded by the aristocracy and clergy.
The rule of Stephen II over Croatia had been relatively ineffectual and lasted less than two years.
He spent most of this time in the tranquility of the monastery of Sv.
Stjepan pod Borovima (St. Stephen beneath the Pines) near Split.
Zvonimir's widow, Queen Jelena, reportedly plots the inheritance of the Croatian Crown for her brother, King Ladislaus I of Hungary.
Stephen II had died peacefully in December 1090, or at the beginning of 1091, without leaving an heir.
War and unrest had broken out in Croatia shortly afterward, with the southern nobility electing Petar Svačić as King of Croatia in 1093, immediately entering into conflict with the Hungarian king Ladislaus.
The name Zagreb appears to have been first recorded in 1134 in a document relating to the establishment of the Zagreb bishopric around 1094 by the Hungarian King Ladislaus, returning from his campaign against Croatia.
The origins of the name Zagreb are less clear.