Humac tablet


The Humac tablet is an Old Slavic :wikt:epigraph|epigraph in Cyrillic script in the form of a stone tablet, believed to be variously dated to between the 10th and 12th century, being one of the oldest Bosnian preserved inscriptions.
It is the oldest Cyrillic epigraph found in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was found in the village of Humac in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is kept at the museum of the Franciscan monastery in Humac. It was first noted by a French diplomat at the Bosnia Vilayet.
There is disagreement over the dating; Yugoslav epigrapher and historian Marko Vego dated it to the end of the 10th or the beginning of the 11th century; linguist Jovan Deretić to the 10th or 11th century; historian Dimitrije Bogdanović to the 12th century.
The text of the tablet tells about the act of raising a church dedicated to the Archangel Michael by Krsmir and his wife Pavica. The tablet is quadrangle in shape, and the inscription is carved in form of a quadrangle in Cyrillic script among which five Glagolitic letters occur.
It is regarded part of the Bosnian literary history.

Text

Original text
Modern Cyrillic rendering У име отца и сина и светаго духа. А се црки арханђела Михаила, а зида ју Крсмир, син Бретов, жупи урун, и жена јега Павица
Romanized text ✚ U ime oca i sna i stago dha. A se cki ađla Mila, a zida ju u Kьrsmirь sinь Bretь? župi urunь? i žna jega Pavica.
Modernized Serbo-CroatianU ime oca i sina i svetoga duha. Ovo je crkva arhanđela Mihajla, a zida je Krsmir sin Bretov, u župi Urun i žena njegova Pavica.
English translationIn the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit. This is the church of the Archangel Michael, built by Krsmir, the son of Bret... and his wife Pavica.

Transliteration and the interpretation of the text differs among Slavicists and paleographers.