Bilino Polje, is historic areal andpolje, located near town ofZenica, inBosnia and Hezegovina. Today, Bilino Polje represents an urban area of the town, and it is one of its main local communal self-governing units orBosnian:Mjesna zajednica.
Among other Bosnianžupas,Bored župa orBrod župa, which includes"Bilina poila", is mentioned in the charters. The place refers to one part of the town of Zenica, today known as Bilino Polje.[1] The “Confessio” (abjuration) was signed at Bilino Polje by seven priors of theBosnian Church in this field, on 8 April 1203. The same document was brought toBuda, in 30 April byGiovanni da Casamari andKulin and two abbots, where it was examined byEmeric, King of Hungary, and the high clergy.[2][3]Confessio records that a group ofBogomil leaders renouncedpatareni's teachings beforeInnocent III's court chaplain John of Casamaris (Giovanni da Casamari).[1] Bosniankrstjani's presence in the Zenica area and its status as a seat of the Bosnian Church is supported by written documents, but also by engravings which illuminate the church's hierarchy.[1][4][5][6][7][8]
Bilino Polje Stadium is the home football stadium of Bosnian Premier League football club NK Čelik from the city of Zenica in Bosnia and Herzegovina and one of two stadiums of the national football team of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is also sometimes used for the Bosnia and Herzegovina national rugby union team as well.[9][10]
^abcGlamočanin, Fidreta (12 April 1980)."Zenica : 35 godina u slobodi" [Zenica : 35 years in the freedom].Naša riječ (in Serbo-Croatian): 4. Archived from the original on 7 December 2020. Retrieved7 December 2020.
^Loos, M. (1974).Dualist Heresy in the Middle Ages (Vol. 10 ed.). ACADEMIA Publishing House of Czechoslovak Academy of Science / Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 162, 163, 164, 165.ISBN9789024716739. Retrieved15 April 2017.