Palmotić's notable works include: •
Pavlimir, drama. Narratives connected with the founding of Dubrovnik inspired his Pavlimir. This is a sort of Ragusan "Aeneid," Pavlimir corresponding to Aeneas. He comes from abroad, founds the city of Dubrovnik, marries the beautiful Margareta, whom he discovers there, and becomes otac slovenskog naroda (the father of the Slavonic people). • •
Captislava, drama. The main character is the daughter of the King of Captat (
Cavtat or
Epidaurum). She is in love with the Hungarian prince, Gradimir, but the father wants her to marry a Serbian prince. A nymph helps her in this cabal, and she elopes with the Hungarian prince, while her sister marries the Serbian prince. Chief roles are played by ghosts and nymphs. •
Bisernica, drama. It is virtually the continuation of the Captislava, and almost all important roles are played by
vilenice (nymphs) and
vilenici (dragons). •
Danica, drama. A dramatized episode from Ariosto's "Orlando Furioso" (IV-VI), transplanted and acclimatized to the Bosnian and Ragusan soil. Danica is the enslaved daughter of the Bosnian king, Ostoja. She was saved by the Ragusan knight Matijas, who later became the ban of Croatia. Some motifs of this play are akin to Shakespeare's comedy
Much Ado About Nothing. •
Christiade ("dedicated to the queen Cristina from Sweden", ) A copy is found in the
Vatican Library. •
Atalanta, opera with music by Lambert Courtoys the Younger (1629) In addition to his four important dramas (
Pavlimir,
Danica,
Bisernica and
Captislava) in which Palmotta celebrated the exploits of Slavic heroes, he wrote several imitations based on Latin and Italian sources. Thus the material for his Allina was taken from Ariosto, and for the Armida from Tasso. The mythological play Atalanta is based on Ovid's "Metamorphoses" (bk. X). ==Annotations==