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The Zamagna received patrician status in 1172.[1] According to Ragusan sources, the family had moved to Ragusa from Zahumlje (Chelmo), and had once hailed from Apulia in southern Italy.(Zamagna, di Chelmo Balislavo. ixiti di Puglia, venuti 1172)[2] The name of the progenitor of the family, Balislavo, shows a Slavic origin.[3]
The aristocracy was known as nobili and was given to the following members of the family in 10 November, 1 and 16 December 1817, for Luko, Marijana, Matija, Frano Matej, and Matej, after the fall of the Republic at the hands of the Austrian Empire.
^Posebna izdanja. Jugoslavenska Akademya Znanosti i Umjetnosti. Centar za Znanstveni. 1911. ... koje da potječu iz slavenskih krajeva: „Alesio" iz Zete (ali se dodaje: starinom iz Napulja), „Branize" iz Zadra, „Bubagnia" iz Bosne (ali se dodaje: starinom iz Pulje), „Balislavo" iz Zahumlja, „Beno" iz Cavtata (ali se dodaje: starinom iz Pulje), ...
Sources
Adelslexikon des österreichischen Kaisertums 1804-1918 p,212 (4758-4759-4760), Peter Frank-Döfering
Der Adel in Kärnten, Krain und Dalmatien" J.Siebmacher großes Wappenbuch Band 29 Dalmatiner Adel, page 23 and 90.
Heinrich Graf Džamanjić, k u k LinSchiffLt YG Pula, Gefürstete Grafschaf Görz u. Gradiska Küstenland mit Triest, High-Life-Almanach : Adressbuch der Gesellschaft Wiens und der österreichischen Kronländer.1913, p. 151
Nikola Zamanjić, k k BezObKmsr = Zadar, Königreich Dalmatien, High-Life-Almanach : Adressbuch der Gesellschaft Wiens und der österreichischen Kronländer.1913, p. 389