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  1. Christoph Frankopan ( Croatian: Krsto Frankopan Brinjski, Hungarian: Frangepán Kristóf; Italian: Cristoforo Frangipani; 1482 – 22 September 1527) was a Croatian count from the noble House of Frankopan. He was born in a dangerous time, which included the fall of Bosnia to the Ottoman Empire and the start of the Hundred Years ...

  2. The Frankopans, along with the Zrinskis, are among the most important and most famous Croatian noble families who, from the 11th to the 17th century, were very closely connected with the history, past and destiny of the Croatian people and Croatia.

    • Dujam I Krčki
  3. Christoph Frankopan ( Croatian: Krsto Frankopan Brinjski, Hungarian: Frangepán Kristóf; Italian: Cristoforo Frangipani; 1482 – 22 September 1527) was a Croatian count from the noble House of Frankopan. He was born in a dangerous time, which included the fall of Bosnia to the Ottoman Empire and the start of the Hundred Years' Croatian-Ottoman War.

  4. 5 de sept. de 2022 · And in a further error, a decision was made not to wait for reinforcement from a 10,000-strong Transylvanian force under John Szapolyai – a rival to Louis and a future Hungarian king – and a 5,000-strong Croatian force under Count Christoph Frankopan.

    • Military History
  5. John Zapolya therefore invited his supporter, ban Cristoph Frankopan, to come to his aid. Siege of Varaždin. Frankopan assembled his 13,000-strong army near Križevci, which according to Croatian historian Rudolf Horvat consisted of 10,000 infantry and 3,000 cavalry.

    • 27 September 1527
    • Varaždin, Kingdom of Croatia
    • Withdrawal of Frankopan's army
  6. Christoph Frankopan von Ozalj, kroatisch Krsto Frankopan Ozaljski, ungarisch Kristóf Frangépan oder auch Christophoro de Frankopan, Frankapan, Frangipani, (* 1482; † 1527) war ein kroatischer Graf aus dem Adelsgeschlecht Frankopan.

  7. Cristoforo Frangipani (Christoph Frankopan) (Croatian: Krsto Frankopan Brinjski, Hungarian: Frangepán Kristóf; 1482 – 22 September 1527) was a Croatian count from the noble House of Frankopan. As a supporter of King John I of Hungary during the succession crisis between John Zápolya and Ferdinand Habsburg, he was named the ban of Croatia ...