[103] Klaić, Geschichte Bosniens.
[104] Klaić, op. cit., cap. vi.
[105] A treaty between Ragusa and Taddeo, Count of Montefeltro and Podestà of Ravenna and Cervia, 1216-1238 (Mon. spect. Hist. Slav. Mer., vol. i. doc. 49, pp. 35, 36; also in other documents of that collection between 1204 and 1226).
[106] Resti, who erroneously records the date as 1202.
[107] Mon. Slav. Mer., vol. i. p. 40.
[108] Pisani, op. cit., vii.
[109] Op. cit., p. 29.
[110] Venice had received the same prohibition from the Pope.
[111] That it was not absolutely free is proved by the Doge Jacopo Ziepolo’s Promissiom, dated March 6, 1229, which says: “And we are to receive the tributes of Cherso and Ossero, as well as of the country of Arbe and Ragusa” (Cod. Marc. DLI., class viii. Ital., quoted by Romanin).
[112] Binzola Bodazza is always alluded to in this connection as one person, but in other documents, especially in the Reformationes, we find the names Binzola and Bodazza as those of two separate noble families.