Peter Dóczy Petar Doci | |
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Peter Dóczy [2] de Nagylucse ( Hungarian: nagylucsei Dóczy Péter; Serbian: Петар Дојчин) was a 15th-century Hungarian nobleman. In 1462 he was a captain of the Belgrade fortress. Around 1479 he was a commander of the Hungarian fleet on Danube in Varadin. In 1480 he was a ban of Jajce ( Hungarian: Jajca) in Bosnia. [3] [4]
The alternative names of Peter Dóczy include Petrus de Docz, Petrus Doczy, [5] [6]: 197 Petar Dojčin, Petar Dovac, Peter Doći [7] and Petar Varadinac. [8]
In 1462 Dóczy was a captain of the Belgrade fortress. [6] In period between 1476 and 1479 he was a commander of the Hungarian fleet of hundred ships on Danube and Sava. [9] A part of his fleet participated in Hungarian capture of Šabac ( Hungarian: Szabács) in 1476. [9] In 1480 he was a ban of Jajce. [10] At the end of 1480, together with Vuk Grgurević Branković and Hungarian ban of Slavonia Ladislaus Egervári, Dóczy attacked and plundered the Sanjak of Bosnia whose sanjakbey was Koca Davud Pasha. [11] They managed to reach Vrhbosna [12] and plundered it for three days. [13]
Dóczy traveled to Istanbul to meet Ottoman sultan Mehmed two times as envoy of the Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus. [14] On 9 September 1482 Dóczy, Grgurević and Pavle Kanjiži defeated Ottoman forces of 10,000 spearmen near Óbecse (today: Bečej, Serbia). [15] Ottomans had intention to reach and plunder the region of Temesvár (today: Timișoara, Romania). [16]
In Serbian epic poetry Dóczy became Petar Dojčin, ban of Varadin. [17] The most famous epic song about Petar Dojčin is "Dojčin Petar and King Matthias" ( Serbian: Дојчин Петар и Краљ Матијаш) also known as "Petar Dojčin drinks wine" ( Serbian: Вино пије Дојчин Петар), which is published for the first time in period between 1716 and 1733 in Erlangen Manuscript. [8] [18]
Petar Dojčin and Bolani Dojčin, another hero of Serbian epic poetry, are unrelated.
Doczy.
{{
cite book}}
: |author2=
has generic name (
help)
Peter Dóczy Petar Doci | |
---|---|
Peter Dóczy [2] de Nagylucse ( Hungarian: nagylucsei Dóczy Péter; Serbian: Петар Дојчин) was a 15th-century Hungarian nobleman. In 1462 he was a captain of the Belgrade fortress. Around 1479 he was a commander of the Hungarian fleet on Danube in Varadin. In 1480 he was a ban of Jajce ( Hungarian: Jajca) in Bosnia. [3] [4]
The alternative names of Peter Dóczy include Petrus de Docz, Petrus Doczy, [5] [6]: 197 Petar Dojčin, Petar Dovac, Peter Doći [7] and Petar Varadinac. [8]
In 1462 Dóczy was a captain of the Belgrade fortress. [6] In period between 1476 and 1479 he was a commander of the Hungarian fleet of hundred ships on Danube and Sava. [9] A part of his fleet participated in Hungarian capture of Šabac ( Hungarian: Szabács) in 1476. [9] In 1480 he was a ban of Jajce. [10] At the end of 1480, together with Vuk Grgurević Branković and Hungarian ban of Slavonia Ladislaus Egervári, Dóczy attacked and plundered the Sanjak of Bosnia whose sanjakbey was Koca Davud Pasha. [11] They managed to reach Vrhbosna [12] and plundered it for three days. [13]
Dóczy traveled to Istanbul to meet Ottoman sultan Mehmed two times as envoy of the Hungarian king Matthias Corvinus. [14] On 9 September 1482 Dóczy, Grgurević and Pavle Kanjiži defeated Ottoman forces of 10,000 spearmen near Óbecse (today: Bečej, Serbia). [15] Ottomans had intention to reach and plunder the region of Temesvár (today: Timișoara, Romania). [16]
In Serbian epic poetry Dóczy became Petar Dojčin, ban of Varadin. [17] The most famous epic song about Petar Dojčin is "Dojčin Petar and King Matthias" ( Serbian: Дојчин Петар и Краљ Матијаш) also known as "Petar Dojčin drinks wine" ( Serbian: Вино пије Дојчин Петар), which is published for the first time in period between 1716 and 1733 in Erlangen Manuscript. [8] [18]
Petar Dojčin and Bolani Dojčin, another hero of Serbian epic poetry, are unrelated.
Doczy.
{{
cite book}}
: |author2=
has generic name (
help)