After the Croats elected King Coloman of Hungary as King of Croatia 1102, the title of ban acquired the meaning of
viceroy. Bans were appointed by the Hungarian king as his representatives in
Kingdom of Croatia, heads of the
parliament (
sabor) and also as supreme commander of Croatian Army. Croatia was governed by the viceregal ban as a whole from 1102 until 1225, when it was split into two separate regions of
Slavonia and Croatia. Two different bans were occasionally appointed until 1476, when the institution of a single ban was resumed. Most bans were native nobles but some were also of Hungarian ancestry. In the
13th and
14th centuries, the more extensive title of
Duke of Slavonia (meaning all lands of the Kingdom of Croatia and Dalmatia and Slavonian domain) was also granted, mainly to relatives of
Hungarian monarchs or other major noblemen. Most notable bans from this period were
Pavao Šubić and
Peter Berislavić.
Bans of Croatia, Dalmatia and Slavonia Bans of Croatia and Dalmatia From 1225 to 1476, there were parallel Bans of Croatia and Dalmatia and of Slavonia. The following is the list of the former, the latter are listed at the article
Ban of Slavonia. During the period of separate titles of ban, several persons held both titles, which is indicated in the notes. After the death of King
Louis I of Hungary, his daughter
Mary succeeded to the throne, which led to kings
Charles III and
Ladislaus of Naples claiming the
Kingdom of Hungary. A war erupted between forces loyal to Mary, and later to her husband and successor
Sigismund of Luxembourg, and those loyal to Ladislaus. During this time, Sigismund appointed
Nicholas II Garai (who was also
count palatine) the Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia in 1392, Butko Kurjaković in 1394, and then again Garai in the period from 1394 to 1397. Nicholas II Garai was also at the time the Ban of Slavonia, succeeded by Ladislav Grđevački (1402–1404), Paul Besenyő (1404), Pavao Peć (1404–1406),
Hermann II of Celje (1406–1408). Ladislaus in turn appointed his own bans. In 1409, this dynastic struggle was resolved when Ladislaus sold his rights over Dalmatia to the
Republic of Venice.
Bans of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia From 1476 onwards, the titles of Ban of Dalmatia and Croatia, and Ban of Slavonia are again united in the single title of Ban of Croatia, Slavonia and Dalmatia (
banus regnorum Dalmatiae et Croatiae et totius Sclavoniae). == Habsburg-era bans ==