Prilozi za knjizevnost, jezik, istoriju i folklor

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Title: Prilozi za knjizevnost, jezik, istoriju i folklor
ISSN: 0350-6673
eISSN: 2406-0798
First published: 1921
Frequency: annually
Subject: history, archeology and ethnology; language and literature; other humanities
Publisher: Filološki fakultet
Publisher address: Studentski trg 3, 11000 Beograd, Serbia
Homepage
Editor in chief: Zlata Bojović, Serbia
Editorial board: Slobodan Grubačić, Serbia
Giorgio Ziffer,
Milica Jakobiec-Semkowowa,
Tomislav Jovanović, Serbia
Jovanka Kalić-Mijušković, Serbia
Nada Milošević-Ðorđević, Serbia
Dragana Mršević-Radović, Serbia
Johannes Reinhart,
Ðorđe Trifunović, Serbia


Pages

Constantinople Gazette about the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Constantinople Gazette about the annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
The study focuses on the articles about the annexation of Bosna and Herzegovina, in ‘Carigradski glasnik’ (Constantinople gazette). With the aim to work on the awakening of the national consciousness among Serbian people all over the world, Constantinople gazette during the period of annexation crises, through more than five months dedicated a great number of articles to this problem. The corpus of the articles related with this topic consist of more than hundred references, testifying about enormous efforts of the editors to informed Serbian people about the political circumstances, both on the national and international filed, especially reporting about activities of The Serbian Government and Parliament, prominent persons as well as common Serbian people in different countries, and places. Although being far from the center of the events in some way Constantinople gazette is nowadays the first class historical source about abovementioned dramatic period and situation. These articles are not only presentation of events and facts, but moreover alive testimony about Serbian collective attitude and feelings toward annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the precious testimony of past that has not yet been recognized in the full measure. Having in mind this fact in particular, we decided to study and present this extremely important and interesting part of Constantinople gazette. [Projekat Ministarstva nauke Republike Srbije, br. 177014: Srpska nacija - integrativni i dezintegrativni procesi]
Croatian issue and the idea of united Yugoslavian people
Croatian issue and the idea of united Yugoslavian people
Magazine 'Vidici' (Belgrade, June 1938-July 1940) was unofficial organ of Yugoslavian culture club which struggled for unity of Serbians, Croatians and Slovenians under collective Yugoslavian culture. Magazine, as did the club, brought together intellectuals who had Yugoslavian determination, no matter their nationality, and among them were some of the most prominent people of those times: Jovan Erdeljanović, Milan Budimir, Vasilj Popović Vladimir Ćorović, Viktor Novak, Petar Skok, Niko Bartulović and others. They considered meeting points and controversial questions of Serbs and Croatians, following, on one side, attempts to resolve dissidences between those two nations, and on the other side, extreme tendencies which questioned the results of the effort to release tension which threatened being of Yugoslavia. They've punctuated the idea of united Yugoslavian people due to historical progress of Serbs and Croatians and due to complexity of international circumstances which requested centralization of all inner forces for protection of outside dangers.
Darinka Nevenić-Grabovac as a researcher of Aelius Lampridius Cerva
Darinka Nevenić-Grabovac as a researcher of Aelius Lampridius Cerva
Classical philologist Darinka Grabovac dedicated the main part of her work to translat­ing and publishing Ragusean latinists. Besides the opus of Didak Pir and Ruđer Bošković, she especially concentrated on the greatest Ragusean latinist-Ilija Crijević. Her work includes translations of this poet and also analyses his theoretical tract. Her poetic works are Rhetoric and poetic in works of Ilija Crijević and Aelius Lampridius Cervinus (1463-1520). Praelectio in explicationem Propertii. In the other group there is epic work De Epidauro and four „oratio funebris-es“ (to Ivan (Dživo) Gučetić, Junije Sorkočević, Matija Korvin and Pavla Džamanjić). The studies of Darinka Grabovac are significant because they express thorough a point of wiev to Crijevics „oratio funebris-es“ significant persons and their work in the Republic of Ragusa.
Death of Svetozar Pribicevic and its echoes in Yugoslav public opinion
Death of Svetozar Pribicevic and its echoes in Yugoslav public opinion
The article examines the way in which the Yugoslav public reported on the death of the president of the Independent democratic Party Svetozar Pribicevic (1875-1936), leader of the Serbs in Croatia, many years Minister of Internal Affairs and of Education and one of the most controversial political leaders of the Kingdom of SCS/Yugoslavia. Apart from describing Pribicevic last moments spent in exile, the funeral in Prague and the impression that the news of his death left the Serbian and Croatian political circles and people, paying particular attention to a review of some politicians and intellectuals, as Pribicevic like-minded associates and supporters and those of a different political affiliation, Serbs and Croats, to his political action, which at that time published in the Yugoslav press. Most authors agreed with the fact that Pribicevic was an important person, which had considerable influence on historical trends and processes. They recognized a number of stages in his work, sudden twists that he passed from one extreme to another, stressed Pribicevic role in the creation of the Yugoslav state, his impulsiveness, diligence, ideological fanaticism and, in particular, Pribicevic personal honesty and integrity. Opposition newspapers Yugoslav orientation and those who were Croat separatists media difered in that the first brought by contributions that represented the most prominent Serbian politician from Croatia in glowing terms, while others looked through the prism of the exclusive Croatian national, not showing understanding for Pribicevic Yugoslav even in addition to policy support to the Croatian movement and co-operation with him, he began to run in the last period of life. It was only 1968th Pribicevic mortal remains were transferred from Prague to Yugo­slavia, and buried at Belgrade’s New Cemetery. His desire to rest at his birthplace Glavicani near Dvor was not fulfilled. [Projekat Ministarstva nauke Republike Srbije, br. 47027: Srbi i Srbija u jugoslovenskom i međunarodnom kontekstu - unutrašnji razvitak i položaj u evropskoj/svetskoj zajednici]
Debtors and debtor's detention in medieval Serbia
Debtors and debtor's detention in medieval Serbia
This paper deals with destinies and legal status of debtors in medieval Serbia. Lots of people owed money to Dubrovnik merchants. This kind of loan was widespread during Despot reign, and it culminates during Despot Djuradj's reign. Among Serbian towns Novo Brdo had the largest number of debtors, of whom majority were miners who needed loans so as to invest in their business until they found ore. Due to the fact that the payments were often much delayed, the Serbian authorities were frequently involved in solving that problem so as to satisfy both parties, and usually took the side of the debtor. There was some kind of house detention which forced the debtors to pay what they owed. All of this indicates the difficult position of miners in medieval Serbia.
Detestabile scelus Perastinorum - the psychological and social background of the murder of Pompejus de Pasqualibus, the abbot of the St George Abbey near Perast
Detestabile scelus Perastinorum - the psychological and social background of the murder of Pompejus de Pasqualibus, the abbot of the St George Abbey near Perast
The St George Abbey was founded on an island near Perast by the Benedictine Monastic Order by the beginning of the 11th century. From the mid-13th century, the community of Kotor had the right of patronage over the abbey, which allowed the patriciate of Kotor to elect abbots as well as have a say in numerous monastery affairs, including propriety rights. Therefore, on November the 2nd 1530, Minor Council of Kotor named Pompejus de Pasqualibus, a nobleman from Kotor, the abbot of the St George Abbey. After the official consent from Rome and Venice, father Pompejus took over the abbey. Soon after, a gruesome crime took place on the island, a crime unseen in the history of the Kotor church. On the Feast of the Invention of the Holy Cross, May 3rd 1535, a group of Perast locals, armed with sticks and daggers, broke into the abbey and killed abbot Pasqualibus at the altar as he was saying Pater Noster. Nikola Krošić, the chaplain of the St George Abbey, and a few others tried to stop the murderers, but to no avail. The killers went on to humiliate the body of the deceased by throwing it out of the church and dumping it into a nearby pit, which added to the resentment, especially among the patriciates of Kotor. Three days later, on the Feast of the Ascension, the bishop of Kotor, Luka Bizanti, publicly excommunicated the killers and their men in the cathedral, while Pope Paul III forbade all service at the church where the crime had been committed. The interdict wasn’t recalled until 1546. In the decree of excommunication, Bishop Luka Bizanti emphasized the fact that father Pompejus hadn’t said or done anything to provoke the killers. What are the reasons of such an outpour of mass anger among dozens of Perast locals? Around that time, for several decades, Perast, a village founded on St George’s fief, started to improve its economy as a result of the expansion of ship-building and trading. More and more inhabitants of Perast started to sail and take part in the trade, especially on the rye and salt market. They had the support of the Venetian authorities, which caused envy among the inhabitants of Kotor, who considered Perast a part of their district. The tendency to achieve a full emancipation from the community of Kotor included church interests as well. After a gradual weakening of church life on the island, the St George church took on the role of a parish church under the patronage of Kotor. Perast locals were evidently dissatisfied with the idea of their parish priest being a noble Pasqualibus of Kotor, whose descent and position were representative of everything they despised and fought against. The motive of the murder was a trivial one - father Pompejus refused to hold service at the St Church on the Feast of the Holy Cross, which deeply insulted the people of Perast. The exceedingly long process of turning the Benedictine abbey into a parish church and a sepulchral chapel of Perast reached its peak on November the 17th1634 with the edict of the Venetian Senate taking the right of patronage away from the community of Kotor. From then on, ius patronatus belonged to the Venetian Senate, while the choice of the abbot, the parish priest of Perast in fact, was left to the locals.
Die Modelle des Kampfes in den Gedichten über die Freischärler
Die Modelle des Kampfes in den Gedichten über die Freischärler
U radu se predstavljaju sižejni modeli koji u osnovi imaju formu borbe (suprotstavljanja) junaka i družine, počev od oblikovanja čete, preko modela četovanja, sve do modela megdana hajduka i u skoka.Važno je napomenuti da ovde pod "medijatorom" ne podrazumevamo "totemsku hipostazu mitskog junaka" odnosno posredničke funkcije koje obavljaju "kulturni junaci" u tumačenju E. M. Meletinskog.

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