Gordana Đilas
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Gordana Đilas
Gordana Đilas ( sr-Cyrl, Гордана Ђилас; born 23 December 1958) is a Serbian poet, librarian and bibliographer. Biography Gordana Đilas graduated from “Dušan Vasiljev” Secondary School in Kikinda and attended the Faculty of Philosophy in Novi Sad, where she graduated in Yugoslav and World Literature in 1982. In 2011, she earned a master's degree at the Faculty of Philology in Belgrade, in Librarianship and Information Sciences. She worked on gathering material for the Srpski biografski rečnik (Serbian Biographical Dictionary) (1984). She taught Serbian Language and Literature at “Đorđe Bešlin” Secondary School, in Тitel (1985/1986), and at the School of Chemistry in Novi Sad (1986/1987), after which she worked for the Matica Srpska Publishing Company (1987/1989). The Matica Srpska Library She has been working at the Matica Srpska Library since 1989, in the Department for Cataloguing and Bibliographic Work, and as of 1992, she is Head of the Heritage Co ...
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Nakovo
Nakovo ( sr-cyr, Наково) is a village located in the Kikinda municipality of the North Banat District of Serbia, in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina. It is situated near the border with Romania. The population of the village numbers 2,419 inhabitants, of whom 2,301 (95.12%) are ethnic Serbs. Name Its name originates from Count Nako, who founded the village in 1784. In Serbian, the village is known as ''Nakovo'' or Наково, in Croatian as ''Nakovo'', in Hungarian as ''Nákófalva'', and in German as ''Nakodorf''. History In the Middle Ages, a village by the name of Szollos (Seleš, Szőllős, Seleuš, Sellesch) existed on the location of present-day Nakovo. During Ottoman rule (16th-17th century), Seleš was populated by ethnic Serbs. By the first half of the 18th century, the village no longer existed and the area was an uninhabited heath. In 1782, the area came under the possession of the Nako brothers, Greek traders from Macedonia. In order to provide a l ...
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University Of Novi Sad
The University of Novi Sad ( sr-Cyrl-Latn, Универзитет у Новом Саду, Univerzitet u Novom Sadu; ) is a public university in Novi Sad, Serbia. Alongside nationally prestigious University of Belgrade, University of Novi Sad is one of the most important educational and research institutions in Serbia and South Eastern Europe and the flagship institution of higher education in Vojvodina province. The University of Novi Sad, with almost 50,000 students and more than 5,000 employees, is one of the largest educational and research centers in Central Europe. It belongs to the group of comprehensive universities, which are characterized by providing nearly all fields of science and higher education. It is composed of 14 faculties and three scientific institutes located in four university cities - Novi Sad, Sombor, Subotica and Zrenjanin. History The foundations of higher education in Vojvodina can be traced back to 1740, with the establishment of the ''Collegium V ...
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Dimitrije Kirilović
Dimitrije (Serbian Cyrillic: Димитрије) is a masculine given name. Dimitrije is a Serbian variant of a Greek name Demetrius. It may refer to: * Dimitrije, Serbian Patriarch (1846–1930) of the Serbian Orthodox Church * Dimitrije Avramović (1815–1855), Serbian painter * Dimitrije Banjac (born 1976), Serbian actor and comedian * Dimitrije Bašičević (1921–1987), Yugoslavian artist, curator and art critic * Dimitrije Bjelica (born 1935), Serbian (formerly Yugoslav) chess FIDE Master * Dimitrije Bogdanović (1930–1986), Serbian historian * Dimitrije Bratoglic (1765–1831), Serbian painter, merchant and sometime spy * Dimitrije Dimitri Davidovic (born 1944), Belgian former football player and manager * Dimitrije Davidović (1789–1838), secretary to Miloš Obrenović I, Prince of Serbia, Minister of Education of the Principality of Serbia, writer, journalist, publisher, historian, diplomatist, and founder of modern Serbian journalism and publishing * Dimitrije Dimit ...
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Žarko Vasiljević
Žarko ( sr-cyr, Жарко, ) is a South Slavs, South Slavic male given name used in former Yugoslavia. It Serbian name, originated in Serbia and is used predominantly by ethnic Serbs. It may refer to: *Žarko (nobleman), a 14th-century Serbian nobleman *Zarko Jukic (born 1993), Danish basketballer *Žarko Paspalj, Yugoslav/Serbian basketballer *Žarko Obradović, Serbian politician *Žarko Čabarkapa, Serbian retired basketballer *Žarko Korać, Serbian psychologist and politician *Žarko Lazetić, Serbian retired footballer *Žarko Petan, Slovenian writer, essayist, screenwriter, and theatre and film director *Žarko Varajić, retired Yugoslav basketballer *Žarko Odžakov, retired Yugoslav and Australian footballer *Žarko Olarević *Žarko Laušević *Žarko Marković (footballer) (born 1987), Serbian footballer *Žarko Marković (handballer) (born 1986), Montenegrin-Qatari handball player *Žarko Tomašević *Žarko Đurović *Žarko Potočnjak *Žarko Bulajić *Žarko Zečevi ...
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Aleksandar Sandić
Aleksandar Sandić (Veliki Beckerek, Austrian Empire, today's Zrenjanin, Serbia, 14 May 1836 - Novi Sad, then Habsburg Monarchy, today's Serbia, 15 April 1908) was a Serbian historian, cultural worker and politician. He was an elected member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Serbian Royal Academy in 1897. Biography He was educated at Veliki Bečerek and Timișoara and studied law and Slavonic philology in Vienna with Franz Miklosich as a scholarship holder of Matica srpska, between 1857 and 1861. In Vienna, he met Vuk Stefanović Karadžić and became his secretary and energetic advocate for his language reform. In 1861 Sandić became a teacher of the Serbian language and literature at the Karlovci Gymnasium. In 1862 he joined the editorial board of the radical Viennese newspaper ''Ost und West,'' which tried to bridge the German world with the Slavic world. He worked as an assistant editor to Imbre Tkalec and after his departure, Sandić also worked as an editor for the ...
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Milan Savić (author)
Milan Savić ( ; 1845 in Turska Kanjiža, Austrian Empire – 21 February 1930 in Belgrade, Kingdom of Yugoslavia) was a Serbian polymath: physician writer, historian, philosopher, medical doctor, geographer, literary critic and translator of Goethe's "Faust" in Serbian. Savić was a president of Matica srpska (1896–1911). Biography His generation was fighting the Turks for independence, but the cultivators of Serb literature have not been idle either. He was one among the former and the latter. A graduate from the University of Vienna's prestigious School of Medicine in 1867 and philosophy and medicine in Leipzig in 1876 with exceptional Rigorosum honours. In 1876, he obtained the title of Doctor of Philosophy in Leipzig. Енциклопедија Новог Сада. Књига 24, Род-Сер. Нови Сад: Новосадски клуб "Добра вест". 2004. стр. 143—145. He lends his services as a medical doctor in the Serbian–Ottoman War (1 ...
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Milutin Jakšić
Milutin () is a Serbian masculine given name of Slavic origin. The name may refer to: *Stephen Uroš II Milutin of Serbia (1253–1321), king of Serbia *Milutin Bojić (1892–1917), poet *Milutin Ivković (1906–1943), footballer *Milutin Milanković (1879–1958), Serbian scientist *Milutin Mrkonjić (1942-2021), politician *Milutin Šoškić (born 1937-2022), former Serbian goalkeeper See also * *Milutinović *Milutinovac Milutinovac is a village in the municipality of Kladovo, Serbia , image_flag = Flag of Serbia.svg , national_motto = , image_coat = Coat of arms of Serbia.svg , national_anthem = () , image_map ... {{given name Slavic masculine given names Serbian masculine given names Masculine given names ...
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Mileta Jakšić
Mileta Jakšić (Serbian Cyrillic alphabet, Serbian Cyrillic: Милета Јакшић; 29 March 1863 – 8 November 1935) was a Serbian poet. He had a great love of nature which is reflected in all his works. Biography Mileta Jakšić was born on 29 March 1863 in Srpska Crnja in Banat. He was the nephew of one of the best-known Serbian poets of the 19th century, Djura Jakšić (1832-1878). He was the son of Jovan and Emilija Jakšić; his grandfather Dionisije and his father Jovan were parish priests of Srpska Crnja. At the age of seven Mileta's mother died. In 1879 Jakšić went to Novi Sad, where he was enabled to attend gymnasium. After an interval of private study in Osijek he went in 1889 to the Theological College in Sremski Karlovci and in 1893 he went to Vienna, where he fell under the influence of Vatroslav Jagić and Jakob Minor and others. On the completion of his university course in philology he returned home, was for three years rector of the Serbian Orthodox Semi ...
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Jovan Jovanović Zmaj
Jovan Jovanović Zmaj ( sr-Cyrl, Јован Јовановић Змаj, pronounced ; 24 November 1833 – 1 June 1904) was a Serbian poet, translator and physician. Jovanović worked as a physician; he wrote in many poetry genres, including Love poetry, love, lyric poetry, lyric, patriotic, political poetry, political, and youth, but he remains best known for his children's poetry. His nursery rhymes have entered the Serbian national consciousness and people sing them to their children without knowing who wrote them. Jovanović also translated the works of some of the great poets, such as Russians Lermontov and Pushkin, Germans Goethe and Heinrich Heine, Heine, and the American Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Longfellow. Jovanović's nickname ''Zmaj'' or ''Змај'' (Slavic dragon, dragon) derives from the May Assembly, 3 May 1848 assembly. Biography Zmaj was born in Novi Sad, which was then part of Bács-Bodrog County, Batsch-Bodrog County (Kingdom of Hungary, Austrian Empire; ...
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Borislav Mihajlović Mihiz
Borislav "Mihiz" Mihajlović ( sr-cyr, Борислав Михајловић Михиз; 17 October 1922 – 15 December 1997) was a Serbian writer and literary critic. He was one of the leaders of the Committee for the Protection of Artistic Freedom. A street in Dorćol Dorćol ( sr-Cyrl, Дорћол; ) is an affluent urban neighborhood of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of Stari Grad. Located along the right bank of the Danube, Dorćol is the oldest surviving neighbo ... is named after him. Selected works * ''Pesme'', 1947 * ''Ogledi'', 1951 * ''Od istog čitaoca'', 1956 * ''Srpski pesnici između dva rata'', 1956 * ''Književni razgovori'', 1971 * ''Izdajnici'', 1986 * ''Portreti'', 1988 * ''Autobiografija o drugima'', 1990 * ''Autobiografija o drugima – druga knjiga'', 1993 * ''Banović Strahinja'', drama * ''Komanant Sajler'', drama * ''Kraljević Marko'', drama * ''Optuženi Pera Todorović'', drama ;Screenplays * ''Koresp ...
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Jovan Subotić
Jovan Subotić (30 January 1817 – 16 January 1886) was a Serbian lawyer, writer, politician and academic. Biography Jovan Subotić was born at Dobrinci in Srem on 30 January 1817. After completing his high school (gymnasium) education in Sremski Karlovci and Szeged, Segedin, he proceeded in 1833 to the University of Pest (now the University of Budapest). He was among the most popular students of his time and served as president of the Serbian Students' Union. Before going to the university he had published some verses, and while still at the university put forth a book of collected poems under the title of Lira in 1837, and in 1843 another volume of poems entitled Bosilj. In 1840 he left the University of Pest with two doctorate degrees, one in philosophy (1836) and another in jurisprudence (1840). He then settled in Pest, Hungary, Pest where he opened a law practice; and began contributing regularly to ''Srbski Narodni list''. The ''Serbski letopis'', later renamed ''Letopis ...
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