Jeronim Trogiranin

Jerome of Trogir OFM (Croatian: Jeronim Trogiranin; Latin: Hieronymus de Tragurio) was a prelate of the Catholic Church who served as the bishop of Duvno from 1439 to his resignation in 1459.

Jerome, a Franciscan, who was accoriding to Dominik Mandić born in Trogir,[1] was appointed as the bishop of Duvno by Pope Eugene IV on 22 April 1439.[2] The episcopal seat was vacant for 27 years and the diocese was administered by its previous bishop George of Imotski who was translated to Hvar until his death in 1428[3] and after by Peter Tilikonis, the bishop of Makarska.[4] Jerome was consecrated on 16 February 1440, and after twenty years in the episcopal chair, he resigned around 1459.[2][5] Ante Škegro considers that some forty leaders and other members of the Bosnian Church who have been expelled by the Catholic Bosnian king Thomas in 1459, and who have found the protection and refuge in the domains of Stjepan Vukčić Kosača, who controlled the territory of the Diocese of Duvno, have expressed their animosity towards the Catholic Church. This, coupled with frequent Ottoman incursions in the territory, were, according to Škegro, possible reasons for Jerome's resignation.[6] The last document mentioning Jerome was his will written in Omiš in 1465, in which he left all of his personal possessions to Juraj Cesarović, a parish priest from Nerežiće in the isle of Brač, under the condition that he takes care of him until his death and gives him a proper burial.[5][7]

Footnotes

  1. Mandić 1936, p. 26.
  2. Škegro 2002, p. 174.
  3. Škegro 2002, p. 171, 174.
  4. Škegro 2002, p. 173.
  5. Mandić 1936, p. 27.
  6. Škegro 2002, p. 175.
  7. Škegro 2002, p. 176.

References

Books

  • Mandić, Dominik (1936). Duvanjska biskupija od XIV.–XVII. stoljeća [The Diocese of Duvno from 14th to 17th century] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Tisak nadbiskupske tiskare.
  • Škegro, Ante (2002). Na rubu opstanka: Duvanjska biskupija od utemeljenja do uključenja u Bosanski apostolski vikarijat [On the verge of existence: the Diocese of Duvno from its foundation till inclusion in the Vicarate of Bosnia] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Dom i svijet. ISBN 9536491850.
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