Balkan "Propaganda Wars" in the Late 19th Century : Participant and Interpreter : Historian Slobodan Jovanović
Поглавље у монографији (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
Slobodan Jovanović (1869–1958) was a renowned Serbian scholar and
statesman, political philosopher, lawyer, historian, literary critic and writer,
professor of public and constitutional law. He was president of the Royal
Serbian Academy, rector of Belgrade University, dean of Belgrade University’s
Law School, and president of the Serbian Cultural Club, a leading Serbian
political and cultural organization in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia on the eve of
the Second World War. He died in 1958 in London, where he had served as
prime minister an deputy prime minister of the Yugoslav government-in-exile
during the Second World War. In post-war Yugoslavia, in a political trial in
absentia held in 1946, he was sentenced to twenty years’ hard labour,
confiscation of property and deprivation of civil rights. He was exonerated by a
Serbian court in 2007. As a young diplomat, Slobodan Jovanović worked in the Ministry of
Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Serbia at the time of an ...intense propaganda
war fought in the Balkans by the great powers and the Balkan states with the aim
to resolve the Macedonian question as a part of the Eastern Question, in the
context of the division of the possessions of the Ottoman Empire. It was the war
of all against all, “a bitter, life-or-death war, all means permitted”, as it was
described in the report of the diplomat Mihailo G. Ristić, Slobodan’s brother-in law.
Since Jovanović directly took part in and eye-witnessed the events in the
Balkan “propaganda wars” in the late 19th century, and at the same time he was
an objective and critical historian, it is important to shed light on his first-hand
account of this period in the history of the Balkans.
Кључне речи:
Slobodan Jovanović / Ministry of Foreign Affairs / Macedonian question / Kingdom of Serbia / Ottoman Empire / “propaganda wars” / Ecumenical Patriarchate / Bulgarian Exarchate / Constantinople / Skopje / Pobedonostsev / Milan M. Bogićević / Stojan Novaković / Austria-HungaryИзвор:
The Balkans in the Age of New Imperialism and Beyond : Proceedings of the session held at the 12th International Congress of South-East European Studies (Bucharest, 2-6 September 2019), 2021, 109-128Издавач:
- Brǎila : Editura Istros a Muzeului Brǎilei "Carol I"
Институција/група
Балканолошки институт САНУ / Institute for Balkan Studies SASATY - CHAP AU - Milosavljević, Boris PY - 2021 UR - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/14956 AB - Slobodan Jovanović (1869–1958) was a renowned Serbian scholar and statesman, political philosopher, lawyer, historian, literary critic and writer, professor of public and constitutional law. He was president of the Royal Serbian Academy, rector of Belgrade University, dean of Belgrade University’s Law School, and president of the Serbian Cultural Club, a leading Serbian political and cultural organization in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia on the eve of the Second World War. He died in 1958 in London, where he had served as prime minister an deputy prime minister of the Yugoslav government-in-exile during the Second World War. In post-war Yugoslavia, in a political trial in absentia held in 1946, he was sentenced to twenty years’ hard labour, confiscation of property and deprivation of civil rights. He was exonerated by a Serbian court in 2007. As a young diplomat, Slobodan Jovanović worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Serbia at the time of an intense propaganda war fought in the Balkans by the great powers and the Balkan states with the aim to resolve the Macedonian question as a part of the Eastern Question, in the context of the division of the possessions of the Ottoman Empire. It was the war of all against all, “a bitter, life-or-death war, all means permitted”, as it was described in the report of the diplomat Mihailo G. Ristić, Slobodan’s brother-in law. Since Jovanović directly took part in and eye-witnessed the events in the Balkan “propaganda wars” in the late 19th century, and at the same time he was an objective and critical historian, it is important to shed light on his first-hand account of this period in the history of the Balkans. PB - Brǎila : Editura Istros a Muzeului Brǎilei "Carol I" T2 - The Balkans in the Age of New Imperialism and Beyond : Proceedings of the session held at the 12th International Congress of South-East European Studies (Bucharest, 2-6 September 2019) T1 - Balkan "Propaganda Wars" in the Late 19th Century : Participant and Interpreter : Historian Slobodan Jovanović SP - 109 EP - 128 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_14956 ER -
@inbook{ author = "Milosavljević, Boris", year = "2021", abstract = "Slobodan Jovanović (1869–1958) was a renowned Serbian scholar and statesman, political philosopher, lawyer, historian, literary critic and writer, professor of public and constitutional law. He was president of the Royal Serbian Academy, rector of Belgrade University, dean of Belgrade University’s Law School, and president of the Serbian Cultural Club, a leading Serbian political and cultural organization in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia on the eve of the Second World War. He died in 1958 in London, where he had served as prime minister an deputy prime minister of the Yugoslav government-in-exile during the Second World War. In post-war Yugoslavia, in a political trial in absentia held in 1946, he was sentenced to twenty years’ hard labour, confiscation of property and deprivation of civil rights. He was exonerated by a Serbian court in 2007. As a young diplomat, Slobodan Jovanović worked in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Serbia at the time of an intense propaganda war fought in the Balkans by the great powers and the Balkan states with the aim to resolve the Macedonian question as a part of the Eastern Question, in the context of the division of the possessions of the Ottoman Empire. It was the war of all against all, “a bitter, life-or-death war, all means permitted”, as it was described in the report of the diplomat Mihailo G. Ristić, Slobodan’s brother-in law. Since Jovanović directly took part in and eye-witnessed the events in the Balkan “propaganda wars” in the late 19th century, and at the same time he was an objective and critical historian, it is important to shed light on his first-hand account of this period in the history of the Balkans.", publisher = "Brǎila : Editura Istros a Muzeului Brǎilei "Carol I"", journal = "The Balkans in the Age of New Imperialism and Beyond : Proceedings of the session held at the 12th International Congress of South-East European Studies (Bucharest, 2-6 September 2019)", booktitle = "Balkan "Propaganda Wars" in the Late 19th Century : Participant and Interpreter : Historian Slobodan Jovanović", pages = "109-128", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_14956" }
Milosavljević, B.. (2021). Balkan "Propaganda Wars" in the Late 19th Century : Participant and Interpreter : Historian Slobodan Jovanović. in The Balkans in the Age of New Imperialism and Beyond : Proceedings of the session held at the 12th International Congress of South-East European Studies (Bucharest, 2-6 September 2019) Brǎila : Editura Istros a Muzeului Brǎilei "Carol I"., 109-128. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_14956
Milosavljević B. Balkan "Propaganda Wars" in the Late 19th Century : Participant and Interpreter : Historian Slobodan Jovanović. in The Balkans in the Age of New Imperialism and Beyond : Proceedings of the session held at the 12th International Congress of South-East European Studies (Bucharest, 2-6 September 2019). 2021;:109-128. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_14956 .
Milosavljević, Boris, "Balkan "Propaganda Wars" in the Late 19th Century : Participant and Interpreter : Historian Slobodan Jovanović" in The Balkans in the Age of New Imperialism and Beyond : Proceedings of the session held at the 12th International Congress of South-East European Studies (Bucharest, 2-6 September 2019) (2021):109-128, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_14956 .