The House of Drašković (English: Draskovich), is a prominent Croatian noble family, supposedly descended from an old Croatian noble tribe of Kršelac, Stupić or Poletčić, while others considered the Mogorović family but it is less likely because they had a different coat of arms.[1][2]
Baron (since 1567) Count (since 1631) Ban of Croatia
Close
There is no reliable data on the family before the 15th century. The first reliable information is provided by three documents written in Glagolitic alphabet in 1490 (mentioning "35 noblemen of the Drašković family" from 18 families),[2] kept at the Budapest National Archives. In the 15th century, they owned an estate in Donje Zazično (today's Donje Pazarište) in the Buška parish and around Knin in Dalmatia, which is why Bartol, who started the family's noble line, was in a document from 1520, referred to as "Kninjanin" ("from Knin").
In the first half of the 16th century, due to the Turkish threat, Bartol left Zazično and moved to the Kolpa river valley in Croatia proper. He fathered cardinal Juraj I Gašpar who was made a baron in 1567 and given Trakošćan Castle in 1569. After that, the family members were referred to as "Trakošćanski" ("from or of Trakošćan"). The Drašković family also occupied the Klenovnik Castle, the largest in Croatia before renovating Trakošćan in the mid-19th century. Klenovnik still stands as a hospital.
From the 16th to the 19th century, several family members became renowned in Croatia as politicians, army leaders, and religious dignitaries.
Juraj II Drašković (1525–1585) was trained for priesthood in Kraków, Vienna, Bologna, and Rome.[3] He made a good career as a religious dignitary, and considerably added to the family fortune. In 1557, he was made bishop of Pécs and, in 1563, of Zagreb. As of 1576, he was the Croatian ban (Viceroy). By the end of his life, he was made a cardinal. He left behind several tractates, as well as a collection of sermons and speeches in manuscript.
Ivan I Drašković, a younger brother of Juraj, was a commander of Croatian and Hungarian forces under the supreme command of Nikola IV Zrinski defending Szigetvár from the Turks in 1566.
Ivan III Drašković (1603–1648). His mother was Éva Istvánffy. He studied philosophy in Graz and law in Bologna.[3] In 1640, he became the Croatian viceroy (ban). He led victorious battles against the Turks, and was particularly concerned with fortifying burgs and Croatian military border fortifications, which is why he was called "defensor Croatiae". At the assembly held in 1646 in the Hungarian town of Pozsony (Požun in Croatian, now Bratislava in Slovakia), he was made the highest Hungarian national dignitary. He was the only Croatian who had this honour during the Habsburgs' rule.
Ivan V Drašković, was Ban of Croatia from 17 February 1732 to his death on 4 January 1733.
Josip Kazimir Drašković, general, was the son of Ban Ivan V Drašković. His marriage to a noblewoman of lower descent hurt his brilliant military career and made it impossible for him to advance as ban.[3] He played a particularly important role in the seven-year war (1756–1763).
Janko Drašković (1770–1856), was a national reformer and politician.[3] He was very broadly educated, and even considered as the best educated person in Croatia at the turn of the 18th century. His best known piece is Disertacija or "Tractate", published in Karlovac in 1832. It was the first political pamphlet written in Štokavian dialect. Disertacija is the political, economic, and cultural programme of the Illyrian movement. In 1842, he gave a programmatic speech on the occasion of Matica ilirska's (the local cultural and publishing society's) establishment, as its first chairman. He dedicated all of his energy to his political activity and to the battle against pro-Hungarians. His Disertacija was translated into German in 1834. He also wrote poetry.
Juraj V Drašković, as Major-General, he fought with Radetzky, and later also with Ban Jelačić.[3] He was an MP, and one among the founders of the then Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts. He started making calotypes already in 1848, his collection being one among the earliest and best preserved of its kind in the country.
Karlo Dragutin Drašković (1873–1900) was an amateur photographer.[3] After finishing high school in Zagreb, he studied law and technology in Budapest. He became engaged in photography in 1892. In 1895, he became a member of the Wiener Camera Club. There are several hundred of his negatives, prints, and slides preserved from the 1894-1899 period. Particularly interesting are those recording fast movements. He was one among the most pronounced 19th-century amateur photographers.
Julijana Drašković (1847–1901), her paintings may today be found mostly in Trakošćan.[3] Along with her brothers Rudolf and Stjepan, and son Karlo, she was also engaged in amateur photography.
Pavičić, Stjepan (1962), "Seobe i naselja u Lici"[Migrations and settlements in Lika], Zbornik za narodni život i običaje: Antropografska istraživanja III (in Croatian), 41: 59–60