[333] Gelcich, Balša, 183.
[334] I.e. “the Duchy,” from Herzeg or Herzog.
[335] Ref., in Dipl. Rag., March 20, 1392.
[336] Hitherto it had only struck copper coins, using foreign silver and gold. Gold coins were never struck at Ragusa.
[337] Gelcich, Balša, 200-201.
[338] Gelcich, Balša, 205-306.
[339] Klaić, 274.
[340] Klaić, 278-9; he deduces this from the letter of the Ragusans to Hrvoje, April 8, 1400, in which they state that Ostoja had protested against their detention of the Turkish envoy. See also Pučić, Spomenici, i. 28, and Lucio, De Regno Dalm. et Croat., p. 258.
[341] A few years before, in 1391, they had received part of Canali, with Dolnja Gora and Soko, from the Paulovići, so that now the territory of the Republic extended from the Narenta to the Bocche di Cattaro.
[342] Diplom. Ragus., 91-102.