Apart from more common forms of state aggrandisement, such as official portraiture, grand allegorical compositions and public monuments, ephemeral spectacles have played an important role in the formation of the state’s public image. This article will examine the political imagery created for an unusual patron, and used for an equally seldom discussed function. The objects of this discussion will be the emblematic decoration of banners, created as the main artefacts in a political spectacle devised by Vikentije Jovanovic (1731-1734), the Orthodox archbishop of Karlovci. The spectacle in question was the inauguration ceremony of the Illirian-Rascian regiment he founded in 1735
This article seeks to analyse the most important rhetorical strategy of Ragusan diplomacy, tradition...
The "Illyrian heraldry", as a phenomenon of the invented tradition, encompasses the rolls of arms - ...
Both Moldavia and Wallachia enjoyed a privileged and special status as tributary states of the Ottom...
Apart from more common forms of state aggrandisement, such as official portraiture, grand allegoric...
Previously in the University eprints HAIRST pilot service at http://eprints.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive...
The article discusses the coat of arms of Ivan Tomko Mrnavić as a visual sign of his self-presentati...
Count Tamás Erdődy (1558–1624), Ban of Slavonia and Croatia, one of the leading knights bannerets in...
In seventeenth-century Habsburg-Ottoman diplomatic relations, grand embassies played a crucial role ...
The appearance of the Illyrian Armorial in the late sixteenth century has been linked to Petar Ivelj...
The focus of the article is on the ceremony held on the occasion of crowning Stanisław August Poniat...
The first diplomatic missions from Dubrovnik to the Sublime Porte played an important role in formin...
Public festivities, related strictly to the feudal political system, were a manifestation of power a...
During the rule of the house of Vasa 1523-1654, Sweden saw a vastly increased output of new governme...
Historians of Christian European diplomacy have tended to approach Ottoman diplomatic practice from ...
Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta (1698–1748) was one of the last leaders of the Peć Patriarchate. The...
This article seeks to analyse the most important rhetorical strategy of Ragusan diplomacy, tradition...
The "Illyrian heraldry", as a phenomenon of the invented tradition, encompasses the rolls of arms - ...
Both Moldavia and Wallachia enjoyed a privileged and special status as tributary states of the Ottom...
Apart from more common forms of state aggrandisement, such as official portraiture, grand allegoric...
Previously in the University eprints HAIRST pilot service at http://eprints.st-andrews.ac.uk/archive...
The article discusses the coat of arms of Ivan Tomko Mrnavić as a visual sign of his self-presentati...
Count Tamás Erdődy (1558–1624), Ban of Slavonia and Croatia, one of the leading knights bannerets in...
In seventeenth-century Habsburg-Ottoman diplomatic relations, grand embassies played a crucial role ...
The appearance of the Illyrian Armorial in the late sixteenth century has been linked to Petar Ivelj...
The focus of the article is on the ceremony held on the occasion of crowning Stanisław August Poniat...
The first diplomatic missions from Dubrovnik to the Sublime Porte played an important role in formin...
Public festivities, related strictly to the feudal political system, were a manifestation of power a...
During the rule of the house of Vasa 1523-1654, Sweden saw a vastly increased output of new governme...
Historians of Christian European diplomacy have tended to approach Ottoman diplomatic practice from ...
Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta (1698–1748) was one of the last leaders of the Peć Patriarchate. The...
This article seeks to analyse the most important rhetorical strategy of Ragusan diplomacy, tradition...
The "Illyrian heraldry", as a phenomenon of the invented tradition, encompasses the rolls of arms - ...
Both Moldavia and Wallachia enjoyed a privileged and special status as tributary states of the Ottom...