Lojze Bukovac
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Lojze Bukovac
Lojze is a given name. Notable people with the name include: *Lojze Bratuž (1902–1937), Slovene choirmaster and composer, killed by Italian Fascist squads *Lojze Grozde, Slovenian student murdered by partisans during World War II *Lojze Kovačič (1928–2004), Slovene writer *Lojze Krakar (1926–1995), Slovene poet, translator, editor, literary historian, and essayist *Lojze Logar (born 1944), Slovenian painter, graphic artist and professor *Lojze Peterle (born 1948), Slovenian politician *Lojze Slak (1932–2011), Slovenian musician *Lojze Spazzapan (1889–1958), Italian painter from the Slovene community in Italy *Lojze Ude (1896–1982), Slovenian lawyer, journalist and historian *Lojze Zupanc (1906–1973), Slovene writer, poet, playwright and journalist See also *Loje *Loze (other) Loze may refer to: People * Henri-Auguste Lozé, French politician Settlements * Lože, Laško, Slovenia * Loze, Tarn-et-Garonne, Occitanie, France * Lože, Vipava, Slovenia Mo ...
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Lojze Bratuž
Lojze Bratuž, Italianization, Italianized name ''Luigi Bertossi'', (February 17, 1902 – February 16, 1937) was a Slovenes, Slovene choirmaster and composer from Gorizia who was killed by Italian Fascism, Italian Fascist squads. He is regarded as a martyr of the Anti-fascism, anti-Fascist struggle of the Slovene population in the Slovene Littoral region during Kingdom of Italy, Italian rule. Biography Bratuž was born in a Slovene language, Slovene-speaking family in the town of Gorizia, then the center of the Austro-Hungarian County of Gorizia and Gradisca. He was educated in the town's Slovene schools and chose a career in music. After the Slovene Littoral and the adjacent regions of Inner Carniola were annexed to the Kingdom of Italy (1861–1946), Kingdom of Italy under the Treaty of Rapallo, 1920, Treaty of Rapallo in 1920, Bratuž remained loyal to his Slovene origins and resisted the forced Fascist italianization, Italianization of the region, which was populated by a Sl ...
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Lojze Grozde
Lojze Grozde (27 May 1923 – 1 January 1943) was a Slovenian student who was murdered by Partisans during World War II. His death is recognised as martyrdom by the Catholic Church. He was beatified on 13 June 2010. Early life Grozde was born on 27 May 1923 in the village of Zgornje Vodale near Mokronog in Lower Carniola, Slovenia. He was an illegitimate child. When he was four years old, his mother married France Kovač. His stepfather chased Grozde away whenever he wanted to see his mother. Later, because Grozde was a good pupil, the stepfather became friendlier towards him, and so he remained at the house and his aunt took care of him. She saw to his schooling and sent him to a school in Ljubljana, where she was working as a servant. Some benefactors helped her support her nephew. He stayed at the Marijanišče boarding school and attended the Classical Secondary School (''Klasična gimnazija'') in Ljubljana. There he was a good student, and he also found time to write p ...
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Lojze Kovačič
Lojze Kovačič (9 November 1928 – 1 May 2004) was a Slovene writer. His novel ''The Newcomers'' ( sl, Prišleki) is often considered one of the most important Slovene novels of the 20th century and has been translated into German, French, Spanish, English and Dutch. Kovačič was born to a Slovene father and a German mother in Basel, Switzerland in 1928. When his patriotic father refused Swiss citizenship, his family was expelled from Switzerland in 1938 and moved first to rural Lower Carniola and then to Ljubljana, just at the outbreak of the Second World War. His father's death in 1944 shifted the burden of supporting the family onto Lojze. At the end of the war, the mere fact that they were half German made them suspicious and the whole family apart from Lojze were deported. Lojze remained despite frequent confrontations with the authorities. In 1962 he graduated in Slavic and Germanic Studies from the Faculty of Education of the University of Ljubljana. He found employme ...
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Lojze Krakar
Lojze Krakar (21 February 1926 – 24 December 1995) was a Slovene poet, translator, editor, literary historian, and essayist. He also wrote poetry for children. Krakar was born in Semič in White Carniola in 1926. He studied Slavic languages and literature at the University of Ljubljana and graduated in 1954 and obtained a doctorate from the Frankfurt Goethe University in 1970. He worked as a lecturer, editor, and translator. In 1963 he won the Prešeren Foundation Award for his poetry collection ''Cvet pelina'' (The Flower of the Woodworm). In 1977 he was awarded the Grand Prešeren Award for his poetry collection ''Nekje tam čisto na robu'' (Somewhere There Right on the Edge) He won the Levstik Award The Levstik Award ( sl, Levstikova nagrada) is a literary award in Slovenia awarded for achievements in children's literature. It has been bestowed since 1949 by the Mladinska Knjiga Publishing House, making it the first literary award established ... twice, in 1962 for his ...
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Lojze Logar
Lojze Logar (30 July 1944 in Mežica – 12 October 2014 in Izola) was a Slovenian Painting, painter, graphic artist and professor, a 1987 Prešeren Fund Award and 1994 Jakopič Award laureate. References

Slovenian painters Slovenian male painters 1944 births 2014 deaths Jakopič Award laureates People from the Municipality of Mežica {{Slovenia-painter-stub ...
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