Budački castle

The county included the areas around the Kupa and Mrežnica by Karlovac to those around the Korana by Veljun and east beneath Petrova Gora by Vojnić.

The largest belonged to these houses: Banski or Novakovići around Banšćina and Velemerić, Barilovići on the Korana, Dragačići in Trebinja and Otok and Mrzlo Polje, Ivkovići in Peć and Duga Resa, Oršići in Dol and Orehovac and Lipovac (Generalski Stol), Zimići in Zimić near Budački, Tomašići in Belaj, Radinovići in Babina gora, and Tušilovići in Tušilović.

After the fall of Bihać, Juraj Ivanov held out for four[1] more years until, after leaving to purchase food and ammunition, the Turks took it without resistance in 1596,[2]: 96  although the memory of its unusually long defense would live on.

A lithograph published the same year by Valvasor showed it to already be in excellent condition, and in 1699 the military engineer F. Hollstein sketched its floorplan,[2]: 92  reproduced in 1701.

[9]: 161  The castle stood until the beginning of the 19th century, under the command of the Budački division of the Slunj regiment of the Austrian Military Frontier, but then the regional government gave the order for it to be destroyed in 1845.

[16] Following the loss of Budački, they lived exclusively in Šišljavić and the properties in Jeđudovec and Đurđekovec granted to them in 1579 by emperor Rudolf II in 1579.