Daniel Vocatius


Daniel Vocatius

Bishop of Muro Lucano
Native name
Daniel Glasnić or Glasnović
ChurchCatholic Church
DioceseMuro Lucano
Appointed9 May 1575
Term endedEarly 1577
PredecessorGiulio Ricci
SuccessorVincenzo Petrolini
Previous post(s)Bishop of Duvno (155175)
Orders
ConsecrationLate 1551 or early 1552
by Bernardino Maffei
Personal details
BornUnknown
DiedEarly 1577
Muro Lucano, Kingdom of Naples
DenominationCatholic

Daniel Vocatius OFM Conv, sometimes Vocensis, Vocacensis or Vocacio (died 1577) was a Croat prelate of the Catholic Church who served as the bishop of Duvno from 1551 to 1575 and the bishop of Muro Lucano from 1575 to his death in 1577.

A native of Split in present-day Croatia, Vocatius was appointed the bishop of Duvno in the Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1551, on the request of the local populace. At the same time, he was given the administration over the neighbouring Diocese of Makarska, which included the territory in the Republic of Venice (present-day Croatia) and the Ottoman Empire (present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina). Vocatius pastored his dioceses and was persecuted by the Ottoman authorities, who caught him and imprisoned him in 1565. After being ransomed by the Bosnian Franciscans, he continued to administer his dioceses from Split and Omiš, but eventually escaped to Spain. In 1575, for his sufferings under the Ottomans and freeing around 500 Catholics of Dalmatia and Herzegovina from the Ottoman captivity, he was given the new Diocese of Muro Lucano in southern Italy, where he died in 1577.