Examples of 'ragusan' in a sentence
Meaning of "ragusan"
ragusan (adjective): Ragusan refers to something related to the ancient city-state of Ragusa, which is now modern-day Dubrovnik in Croatia. It may be used to describe historical or cultural aspects associated with Ragusa
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- Relating to Ragusa.
- A native or inhabitant of Ragusa.
How to use "ragusan" in a sentence
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ragusan
Ragusan merchants in particular had trading privileges throughout the realm.
That was the beginning of the decline of both the Venetian and Ragusan republics.
Ragusan military officer in Russian service.
Their sons also received Ragusan citizenship.
Ragusan merchants and Bosnian Franciscan priests came there as well.
The terms Bosnia and Podvisoki are often mentioned in Ragusan charters and documents.
In Ragusan documents he is referred to as Kojčin or Gojčin.
The Proculo was a Ragusan noble family.
Ragusan merchant The most used spellings are Tudisi and Tudisio.
The Volcasso or Volcassio was a Ragusan noble family.
The Ragusan republic.
Used version of his name in Croatian language, instead of the Ragusan.
According to Ragusan documents the Borovinić noble family were from the Borovinići village near Foča.
In the Middle Ages, it was a silver mining site, frequented by Ragusan merchant caravans.
As he had earlier been made a Ragusan nobleman, the Ragusan government now proclaimed him a traitor.
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Ragusan authorities, having settled their differences with Tvrtko, refused her appeal for financial aid.
Michael was soon entrusted as a captive to Damjan Đurđević, a Ragusan servant of the Despotate.
The Ragusan republic, victim of Napoleon and its own conservatism.
In the 15th century they were one of the eleven smallest Ragusan houses.
Was a Ragusan diplomat and merchant, a member of noble Gondola noble family.
The fortification is most likely modeled after Ragusan ( today Dubrovnik ) seals.
The Ragusans were worried because of the anti-Ottoman actions of Ragusan Jesuits.
Her widowed stepdaughter-in-law, Queen Maria, was also denied access to the Ragusan islands until July.
April - Ragusan Senate promised Skanderbeg safe haven from Ottomans in case he would need one.
The available sources include hardly 260 Ragusan words.
It was the birthplace of Ragusan merchant Nikola Bošković, father of famed astronomer Ruđer Bošković.
The available sources include roughly 260 Ragusan words.
In medieval Ragusan documents, the Serbian name of the city Peć, lit.
Giorgio survived until at least 1453, and his name appears in various Ragusan documents.
Ragusan colonies were established during the 14th and 15th centuries.
The name Šabac was first mentioned in Ragusan documents dating to 1454.
The remarkable Ragusan family became extinct as its last scion, Jelena Palmotić, died in 1709.
Mavro Orbini, a 16th-century Ragusan chronicler, believed that the boy was born to Vojača.