Cuvalo, Ante – Historical Dictionary of BiH

Historical Dictionary of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Lanham, Md., Scarecrow, 1997. lvi 355p. (European Historical Dictionaries, no.25). $45.00. ISBN 0-8108-3344-1

     This historical dictionary is a welcome reference source among the numerous new works about the region’s history and political situation. Cuvalo’s work conforms to the standard arrangement of titles in the series–a lengthy introduction, a detailed chronology, and an extensive bibliography in addition to the encyclopedic entries themselves. The bulk of the text is concerned with persons, Historical Dictionary of Bosnia and Herzegovinaevents, and places in Bosnia. The entries cover more than 200 pages and provide an excellent background (especially for recent history), and include entries for Westerners who have made an impact on Bosnian history (e.g., Cyrus Vance, General MacKenzie). Entries for broad terms (economy, literature, political parties) are as much as seven pages in length. The bibliography, almost 100 pages long, is a well-organized collection of articles and monographs published in the last few decades; it is especially worthwhile for undergraduates who will rely on these primarily English-language sources. There is no comparable reference source. Highly recommended for all libraries. I. Tomlianovich, Dickinson College CHOICE, March 1998 Vol.35 No. 7

     

     Historical Dictionary of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Ante Cuvalo. Scarecrow Press. Lanham, MD and London 1997.lv + 353 pp. ISBN 0 81083 344 1 342 1. 42.75.European Historical Dictionaries series, no. 25. UK distribution by Shelwing Ltd, Folkestone. Keywords Bosnia and Herzegovina, History/ LCSH Bosnia and Herzegovina – history – dictionaries

      Who was it who said a country with no history is a happy country, or words to that effect? Whoever it was, he certainly knew what he was talking about. Bosnia-Herzegovina has suffered too much history, and who can be sure it is not about to suffer a lot more? But, apart from the assassination of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand in Sarajevo at the end of June 1914, the spark which ignited the First World War, but which in fact could have happened anywhere in Europe although the odds were that it would take place somewhere in the Balkans, not much of Bosnian history has directly impinged on Western Europe until December 1995, when NATO forces moved into Bosnia to enforce the Dayton peace accord. It could be said that Bosnia was less known and even further away than Czechoslovakia was at the time of the Munich crisis 50 years earlier.

     General histories of Bosnia in English are in short supply Even Noel Malcom’s (1994) authoritative work Bosnia: A Short History, a narrative history in 16 chronological and thematic chapters, now needs updating in the light of events in the last five years. So, Cuvalo’s Historical Dictionary, which brings the story down to February 1997, undoubtedly fills a gap.

     Like other titles in Scarecrow’s admirable European Historical Dictionaries series, it presents informative entries, of varying and appropriate length, on crucial events, on the influential leaders who initiate and/or profit from these events, on political institutions, and on significant locations like Mostar or Sarajevo. Inevitably, the emphasis is on the current situation and the recent past, but that is not to say earlier historical periods are neglected, there being sufficient entries to put the present into its equally eventful historical context. Economic, social, cultural, and religious affairs are also covered. As the series editor, Jon Woronoff, points out in his foreword, these only make sense when read in conjunction with other entries delving into earlier periods. Attitudes everywhere have deep roots and nowhere deeper than in the Balkans. It is here, of course, that the dictionary arrangement is in danger of collapsing but Cuvalo liberally sprinkles his pages with (qv)s to avert possible confusion. In any event he includes a 50-page Introduction dealing with Bosnia-Herzegovina’s territory, population and name, its physical features and climate, and a long historical survey from prehistory, through the medieval period and the Ottoman conquest, the Austro-Hungarian period 1878-1918, to the creation of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes at the Versailles Peace Conference (surprisingly, there is no entry for Versailles), World War II, and the turbulent history of post-war Yugoslavia. A 45-page chronology, 38 pages of which are devoted to events since 1990, help to keep track of who’s who and when through all this.

     A massive bibliography (pp. 255-353), of items in Western and Balkan languages, is arranged in 19 sub-divided form and thematic categories, including encyclopedias and handbooks, bibliographies, travel and description, regional histories, and histories of Bosnia-Herzegovina.

     Following previous comments in these columns on the standard of Scarecrow’s maps, it is pleasing to report that the four included here, Medieval Bosnia, After The Congress of Berlin 1878, After 1945, and After The Dayton Peace Accord November 1995, all have the appearance of having been specially drawn for this Dictionary, and not simply a job lot of illegible, scaled-down maps lifted from other books and atlases.

     In better, that is more substantially funded, times no doubt these historical dictionaries would be on standing order for all decent reference collections; but times being what they are… Alan Day Editor-Compiler, Walford’s Guide RR/98/51Area studies/Reference Reviews 12/1 [1998] 42-43.

     ANTE CUVALO, Historical Dictionary of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Lanham, Md., Scarecrow, 1997. lvi 355p. (European Historical Dictionaries, no.25). $45.00. ISBN 0-8108-3344-1

     Although this useful handbook is designated as an historical dictionary, it is actually much more. About one-half of the pages in this volume are devoted to entries for historical terms, persons, and events that are centrally relevant to the history of Bosnia and Herzegovina. The other half of the book contains materials that will be of great use to anyone studying these countries [sic]. After a brief introduction, the author provides a 50-page chronology of major events in the history of Bosnia and Herzegovina and maps relevant to this chronology. Prior to the entries of historical terms, an overview of the geography, religious orientation, and history of this region is given. Following the entries for the historical terms, Cuvalo has compiled a multilingual bibliography of Bosnia and Herzegovina that also includes regional histories and other works relevant to that history.

     This work delivers much more than the title indicates. It will be of use for anyone doing research on Bosnia and Herzegovina during any time period. ROBERT H. BURGER American Reference Books Annual (ARBA), Vol. 30, 1999/Area Studies / Europe/

     CUVALO’S BOOK RECOGNIZED Ante Cuvalo’s book, Historical Dictionary of Bosnia and Herzegovina, was selected by CHOICE magazine as an Outstanding Academic Book(OAB) of 1998. CHOICE – Current Review for Academic Libraries, a monthly published by the Association of College and Research Libraries, is the leading book review periodical used by academic librarians and the scholarly community at large. The first OAB list selected by CHOICE was published in 1965.

     The 1998 Outstanding Academic Books list was published in the January 1999 issue of CHOICE (Vol. 36, No.5). Its
editorial, among others, states: “The 1998 list of Outstanding Academic Books follows in the same honorable tradition. The 623 titles on the list were carefully selected by the CHOICE editorial staff as among the most outstanding of the 6,500-plus new titles (excluding Web resources) reviewed during the previous year. Representing roughly 9 percent of the titles reviewed by CHOICE in 1998, and less than 3 percent of the titles submitted for review, this year’s OAB finalists are truly the ‘best of the best.’ CHOICE salutes the authors and publishers of these outstanding works and congratulates them on their achievement.”

     Historical Dictionary of Bosnia and Herzegovina ($ 45.00 ) can be order from the author. Tel/Fax (708) 895-5531 or e-mail: cuv@netzero.com

Croatian Language Adviser

Croatian Language Adviser

     Croatian Language Adviser published by the Institute of Croatian Language and Linguistics, Skolske novine and Pergamena is the work of 12 authors. The aim of this book, which has 1666 pages, is to try to solve all language problems on all language levels, from accentuation and orthography to morphological, lexical and syntactical problems. The book consists of two main parts. In the first part the authors give theoretical explanation of various problems on all language levels and explain the theoretical conception and practical solutions of the Adviser.

     The second part of the Adviser is a dictionary that has 81000 entries. It deals with all words which can present a problem for Croatian speakers, i.e. words that have orthographic problems, e.g. rendgen (not rentgen or rengen), potpredsjednik (not podpredsjednik), Madjar (better than Madzar); lexical problems e.g. words of foreign origin which can be replaced by Croatian words: informacija – obavijest, paginacija – obrojcivanje, oficir – casnik; words which do not belong to standard Croatian uslov (this sing means “must be replaced by”) uvjet, preduzetnik poduzetnik etc.; words which can be accentuated in more than one way, words which have some morphological problems e.g. kabel plural kabeli (not kablovi), Podravka dativ Podravci (if it is an enterprise) and Podravki (if it is a woman form Podravina) and syntactic problems.

     This book is very useful for all writing in standard Croatian, especially translators, writers, reporters, editors etc. It doesn’t require any specific linguistic education from its users.

     Order from Institute of Croatian Language and Linguistics, Strossmayerov trg 2, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia. Tel. 385-1-481-6215, 481-6217, 481-6218; Fax 481-6216; E-mail: ihjj@jezikoslov.ihjj.hr

Cosic, Stjepan – Dubrovnik After the Fall of the Republic

Dubrovnik nakon pada Republike (1808- 1848)/Dubrovnik after the Fall of the Republic (1808-1848). Zagreb-Dubrovnik: Zavod za povijesne znanosti HAZU u Dubrovniku, 1999. pp. 402. ISBN 953-154-317-8.

      Summary History of Dubrovnik 1808-1848: discontinuity and transformation

      The first half of the nineteenth century is characterized by radical social changes which marked the beginning of the history of modem bourgeois era. After exhausting Napoleonic campaigns, and despite restoration and absolutism, much of Europe witnessed the strengthening of the basic democratic tenets founded on legal equality and the proclaimed goals of the bourgeois society. Democratic processes established during the revolutionary movements of the 20’s and 30’s, culminated in the general European unrest of 1848. Technological and industrial revolution, population explosion, Dubrovnik after the Fall of the Republicand the growth of agricultural industry contributed to social changes, accompanied by a major shift in political theory and practice. The principle of monarchist legality was gradually replaced by various forms of conservativism. On the other hand, all the political streams striving toward reforms were founded on the liberal political philosophy. Lastly, the development and strengthening of national consciousness in the liberal context, demanded, with its integrational power, abolition of territorial and ethnic dismemberment, constructing at the same time the framework of European power struggles.

     The Dubrovnik area, and Croatian lands in general, did not experience these processes as intensely as did most of the Western Europe. Nevertheless, the territory of the former Republic did witness reverberating effects of the global events, but in social terms, Dubrovnik was not yet ready to undergo internal political reforms. The overall European climate of change crept to the borders of the Republic, followed by repercussions of the Napoleonic wars. Rapid change of political and economic structure as well as the discontinuity in development resulting from these processes, engendered the loss of political autonomy, economic breakdown, and the dissolution of the old social structure, demarcating thus fundamentally new guidelines of Dubrovnik’s history in the first half of the nineteenth century.

     Periodization of Dubrovnik’s history following the fall of the Republic is conditioned by a series of institutional and political changes. The 1808 French abolition of the Dubrovnik Republic should be recognized as a historical turning- point. Formally speaking, it marked the disappearance of a social, political, and economic structure which kept struggling over the centuries for its maintenance in the traditional world of the Ancient regime. Dramatical period of French administration experienced two phases. The first, 1808-1809, when new government was established, even though the fate of the abolished Republic still seemed uncertain. The second phase, from 1809 to 1814, saw the annexation of the Dubrovnik area, and its becoming part of the Illyrian provinces. It was then, for the first time, that basic tenets of the bourgeois legislative were being partially introduced, which formally marked the discontinuity of the ancient aristocratic regime. This process was underlined by the complete economic paralysis resulting from the devastation of the commercial fleet, the chief element of Ragusan economic power. The profound social schism provoked the disappearance of the patricians almost overnight, together with old wealthy families whose social status was closely linked to the welfare of the Republic.

     The significance of the occurring changes can clearly be seen only in the light of the fact that in the course of the century, the territory of the Republic witnessed the shaping of an original social system with most distinctive features. Therefore, as with the fall of the Republic we are not exclusively dealing with the abolishment of sovereignty and aristocratic pattern of government, which, in part, continued to exist, but also with the folding of a whole social system bearing centuries-old attributes and tradition, so Dubrovnik-like and different from the neighboring lands. It is this perspective that contributes to the better understanding of all the details related to the political history and mentality of the nineteenth-century Dubrovnik society.

     Administrative experiments, incompleteness of the introduced social reforms, alongside myriad imposed taxes and a disastrous economic situation, were reasons enough to stir popular discontent of all the Dubrovnik classes against the French government. Contrarily, a fairly short six-year French rule, on account of its social accomplishments, remained deeply rooted in the minds of all the Dubrovnik’s social strata.

     The hope of the restoration of the Republic still present in the minds of the nobility and few citizens during the abortive anti-French uprising in 1813/1814, was brutally disillusioned by Austrian steps undertaken over its two-year temporary rule – Intendance (1814-1816). International political situation offered no ground for the Republic’s restoration, and Dubrovnik was yet unable to bear the new integrational idea, and create a real social force capable of its enforcement. Austrian rule was formally established by the resolutions of the Vienna Congress of 1815, and reinforced between the years 1817 and 1822. Being center of one of the districts of the Dalmatian Kingdom, Dubrovnik entered the long-lasting alliance with the Habsburg Monarchy. During the period of absolutism, the old order folded at once. Some patricians fled, while the remaining accepted the reality of the bourgeois society. The latter amalgamated with the well-to-do business-minded commoners, and lived on the land earnings, government and military service. Thus, the patricians were formally losing its noble status symbols, which were strictly determined by the Statutes and other laws of the abolished Republic. An identical process can be traced with Antunini and Lazarini, as the social code with these two most distinguished non-noble groups was directly related to the existence of the aristocratic system.

     Losing its previous position, the Catholic church was also experiencing a crisis. Dubrovnik archbishopric lost most of its estate during the French rule. Following the church reorganization in 1828, the Austrian authorities definitely transferred most of the church properties to the state. Ston bishopric was abolished, and Dubrovnik church district was no longer governed by an archbishop. By losing its formal status, Dubrovnik archbishopric came under the authority of the Dalmatian Metropolitan in Zadar.

     Finding itself on the outskirts of the new political and industrial landscape, the recently shaped citizen substratum advanced slowly due to the devastated economy and lack of capital. Nobility still owned the bulk of land, but with the dawn of the 19th century, citizens, and even peasants, who earned their capital in trade and shipping, emerged as landowners. The latter amassed their property by buying feudal rights from the nobility during the period of the abolition of the fideikomis institution (I811 – 1817). These new owners and businessmen, in line with the city intelligence, created a colorful substratum of the modern bourgeoisie. The rest of the urban society consisted of small- scale tradesmen, artisans, mariners, fishermen, manual workers, and the city paupers. In the smaller urban centers of the Dubrovnik district, Cavtat, Orebic, and partly Ston and Slano, as well as the City itself, there already existed groups of ship owners and business-minded men. In spite
of the anti-maritime Austrian policy, they continued with commercial pursuits in the Adriatic and Mediterranean. Thus, Dubrovnik’s shipping industry managed to preserve the basis for quicker development which was to take place in the second half of the century. Being dependent upon the conditions of the maritime market, sea-oriented businessmen tended to shift their capital in land, inheriting thus the classical landowner-tenant relationship, the latter being landless peasants. Therefore, land ownership still represented a major social problem. Introduction of the Austrian General Public Law in 1816 implied derogation of all the laws of the former Republic, apart from the issue of feudal rights which remained unsolved, and was, in practice, approached as a private legal matter on the administrative and not judicial level. This generated long-term tension in the relationship between the landowners and peasants, since the latter represented the vast majority of population.

     For fear of political dissatisfaction and resurgence of republican traditions, Austrian exertion of authority proved to be much milder in the Dubrovnik area than elsewhere in Dalmatia. In addition to advocating antiquated land ownership relations characteristic of Dubrovnik, Habsburg Monarchy aimed to win over the remainder of the patricians, old middle-class families, and peasantry by introducing a number of stimulating government measures and privileges so as to pacify the area (retirement pensions and state sinecures were granted, no liability to tax payment and military service). The City resumed its significance in the political, administrative, and strategic sense. In this respect, the District Office, civil administrator’s office, Municipal Office, inferior court, and high school were all seated in Dubrovnik. Strong military forces were also stationed there, the army having seized, reconstructed, and rebuilt all the French fortifications, notably Fort Imp rial. Several consular representatives added to the political weight of the City, particularly those of Russia and England who took most active part in diplomatic affairs.

     In addition to the production of oil and wine, modest economic results were achieved owing to the revival of the maritime commerce, and trade with the Turkish hinterland. No relation can be established between the existence of several manufacturing workshops in Dubrovnik, and the course of industrialization in Western Europe. Dubrovnik, like the rest of Dalmatia, had built its prosperity on the trade and shipping industry. Agricultural production was insufficient, and no major improvements could have been attained under the new government either, due to the absence of the basic elements of development: natural resources, capital, and market. Governmental economic measures were highly restrictive and unenterprising. On account of the antiquated Austrian mercantilist policy characterized by high taxes and export orientation through the Danube basin, south Croatian lands remained completely isolated. A series of epidemics and crop failures, plus the imposition of land tax in 1842 were to exacerbate the already gloomy prospects. It was the gradual restoration of shipping and transit commerce during the 1840’s and further that enabled Dubrovnik to maintain its central position among the Dalmatian cities.

     In the light of romanticism, the politically active population envisaged the abolition of the Republic as something ideal, contributing thus to the escape from the stem absolutistic reality. This idea, however, could not have been materialized in its integrational sense, and was subsequently replaced by contemporary forms of ethnic and national identification. Political, economic, and social lethargy engendered by the isolation and absolutistic centralism, was interrupted by occasional cultural events, such as Martecchini’s edition of Gundulic’s work, alongside other Ragusan poets who wrote in Croatian and Italian languages during the 20’s and 30’s. Publishing results were crowned by the 1841 encyclopedic edition Galleria degli Ragusei illustri. Owing to its remarkable tradition, Dubrovnik succeeded in maintaining its leading cultural and political position in Croatian terms, as it nested some of the foremost artistic and intellectual minds of the period.

     Noteworthy linguistic tradition, and Dubrovnik’s consciousness regarding the cultural integrity of the Croatian littoral, provided most favorable conditions for the spread of the Illyrian movement in Dubrovnik, and its interaction with Zagreb. The authority of old Ragusan literature and linguistic heritage were built into the very foundations of the Croat National Revival. Relationship between Dubrovnik and Zagreb was further strengthened by myriad personal contacts, correspondence, and visits by the leading figures of the Revival. The Dubrovnik circle of Croat Illyrians, notwithstanding the omnipresence of the obscure and general Slavic political idea, had most clear views of the national interests. Contributing to the Revival journals, notably to Danica and Zora dalmatinska, a number of Dubrovnik Illyrians and later advocates of the national movement promoted their ideas. The clear political view of the Dubrovnik Revival circle manifested in its determination to grasp the imperative need for the integration of the Croatian lands, and gradual recognition of the Croat name. A similar attitude was expressed in 1848 by none other than the officials of the municipal authority of the Dubrovnik area. Due to the social circumstances in the absolutistic period, many features of the political life began to manifest after the proclamation of the Constitution in 1848. The upheavals of 1848 were the result of political and social fermentation over the preceding decades, and Dubrovnik’s experience should, therefore, be primarily viewed in the sequence of the changes initiated by the 1808 fall of the Republic. Dissolution of absolutism was greeted in both Dalmatia and Dubrovnik with enthusiasm, for it was closely related to the problem of integration with Croatia, and liberal political forces emerged with the issues of land ownership and citizens’ rights. The articulation of national consciousness was one of the major developments of the 1848 revolutions, that triggered thus the publishing of two new journals generally covering democratic and national topics. Democracy and nationhood became the central concern of the future political relations.

     There were a number of reasons for the population of eastern Herzegovina to migrate to Dubrovnik: relatively open borders, possibility of gaining citizenship, poverty, and epidemic diseases. Straining to expand its influence over the Ottoman territory, Austria, for the first time, yielded to a variety of Dubrovnik-bound Orthodox immigrants, who, during the first half of the century, assimilated their own confessional integrity to a pronounced Serb national feeling. A parallel process of Croat national integration, notably in culture and literature and within the Illyrian framework, opened the issue of national relations. Although other parts of Croatia witnessed no national rivalries in 1848, Dubrovnik was experiencing the first complex ideological forms of national differentiation. The spread of Karadzic’s idea of the “linguistic Serbhood”, pro-Serbian propaganda of the Russian consul to Dubrovnik and the Orthodox priest in the City parish, as well as the financial prosperity of the Orthodox newcomers – tradesmen and businessmen – vastly contributed to the process of national differentiation in this area.

     The year 1848 saw the establishment of two National Revival circles in Dubrovnik. The ideology of the Croat circle of Dubrovnik Illyrians, all of whom belonged to the city intelligence and aristocracy, was best exhibited in the Dubrovnik’s papers Rimembranze delta settimana and L’Avvenire, founded that very year. C
ontrary to the former mainly culturo-linguistic contents, and owing to constitutionality and freedom of press, these journals opened their pages to the political demands of the Dubrovnik populists. The articles in L’Avvenire, in particular, converged with the all-Croat wants for integrity. Devoid of ethnic basis, but fanned by great many outside factors, the Serb national program found its stalwarts among several ideologists of the “Serbo-Catholic” idea. In the initial phase, the “Serb Catholics” were unable to make clear distinction between the Serb and Slavic idea in their intent to spread it in Dubrovnik and Dalmatia. Being governed by pragmatism and political goals of the Serbs in Habsburg monarchy, advocates of the “Serbo- Catholic” idea sup- ported the unity of Dalmatia with Croatia. Later, however, acting as instruments of great Serbian ideology, they held Dubrovnik to be Serbian and not Croatian. Being inconsistent, multi-character and highly dependant, the group of “Catholic Serbs” had no major influence in Dubrovnik, particularly not in the early phase.

     Disregarding the negative consequences which, after all, resulted from the overall historical processes, the first decades of the Austrian rule witnessed the reinforcement of the cultural and political bond between Dubrovnik and Croatian lands. A positive, yet latent dimension of the Austrian annexation kept hovering during the longtime process of national and territorial integration of the Croat people, perceptible both in time of the Illyrian movement in the first half of the century, and later, over the period of intense political struggle. The entire history of Dubrovnik is thus experienced as a major ideological backup of the pronounced Croat political aspirations, and an indispensable source of the culturo-historical heritage, the City being viewed as one of the centers of the Croat National Revival.

Busic, Julienne Eden – Lovers and Madmen

     Lovers and Madmen is dominated by two central themes: politics and love. Julienne Busic’s memoirs take the reader through the events which shaped her life with Croatian dissident husband, Zvonko — assassination attempts, threats from the Yugoslav secret police, flights from country to country, enforced poverty and deprivation — and characterize the love which led to the greatest sacrifice of all: a sentence of life in prison for the political hijacking of a TWA jet.

     Less than twenty years after that desperate act, Yugoslavia broke apart in a spasm of war and Croatia is now an independent state. The message contained in the leaflets thrown during the hijacking served as a prophesy of this disintegration and the vicious Serbian aggression, first in Croatia and Bosnia, and most recently in Albanian populated Kosovo. Julienne Busic served thirteen years in prison and was released on parole in 1989. Zvonko Busic is still incarcerated, almost 25 years later, in a maximum-security federal prison in Leavenworth, Kansas.

     To buy this book go to: Amazon.com

Anzulovic, Branimir – Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide

Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide. New York: New York University Press, 1999. $24.95 Cloth

     In the 1990s Serbs brought death and destruction to Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kosovo, and international condemnation, economic ruin, and a surge of lawlessness to themselves. Heavenly Serbia searches for the causes behind their brutal and futile drives for a Greater Serbia. How did the Serbs rationalize, and rally support for, their Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocidegenocidal activity?

     Heavenly Serbia traces Serbia’s expansionist impulses to Serbian national mythology. The dominant myth–that of “Heavenly Serbia”–appeared soon after the Battle of Kosovo in 1389. It attributed the Serbs’ defeat by the Turks and the loss of the medieval Serbian state to the Serbs’ preference for moral salvation over military victory. By emphasizing their commitment to the heavenly kingdom and promising an eventual restoration of the Serbian empire, this myth helped the Serbs to bear their centuries-long domination by a foreign power. Though they ultimately shed the Turkish yoke and regained statehood in the nineteenth century, the Serbs, according to Anzulovic, retained this central myth in the form of feelings of superiority to their neighbors, and a sense of destiny ordaining them to become the dominant power in the Balkans. The myth has been perpetuated by political and religious leaders, historians, novelists, and artists, and has found acceptance abroad as well. Heavenly Serbia shows how the pre-Christian Slavic pagan religion, the identification of church, state, and nation, Ottoman rule and the long interruption of statehood, the Romanticist glorification of the nation-state, and a wide range of Serbian religious, mythical, and literary representations resulted in an aggressive nationalist ideology which has triumphed in the late twentieth century and marginalized those Serbs who strive for the establishment of a civil society.

Andric, Miro – Croatia's Undersea World

     Croatia’s Undersea World.Croatia's Undersea WorldZagreb: Car Herc, 1999. 278 p. Price $ 49.95. Order from: Car Herc, Strmeckoga 6a, 10090 Zagreb, Croatia, Tel/Fax 385 1 348 3097, E-Mail: miro.andric@zg.tel.hr

     This unique book contains more than 700 photographs taken in more than 150 Croatia’s undersea locations. Miro Andirc’s camera captured more than 400 known and less known species, however there is also a significant number of the species spotted for the first time.

     The scientific and popular style, and colorful design make it a beautiful gist to a nature lover, and the same time the artistic photographs of the author document the heritage of Croatia’s undersea realm. The book is also a pledge for preserving and bestowing the forthcoming generations with Croatia’s undersea heritage.

Juraj Julije Klovic

Giorgio Giulio Clovio
Michelangelo of the Miniature

     (Croatia 1498-Rome 1578)

     Marjana Vucic

     American Croatian Review, Year V, No. 1 and 2, June 1998, p. 51-52.

     This year marks the 500th anniversary of Klovic’s birth. He is recognized as the most important illuminator of the 16th century. He was known as the Michelangelo of Miniature Art. Although much of his inspiration came from Raphael and Michelangelo, he developed his own visual language, brilliantly translating their monumental forms of work on the smallest scale.

     Klovic, educated in his native Croatia, came to Italy at the age of 18 to study art. He began his training in Venice and spent several years there in the service of Cardinal Domenico Grimani and the Cardinal’s nephew Marino Grimani. During this period, Klovic visited Rome, where he met Giulio Romano and studied with him. This stay in Rome, as well as his experience with the art collections of the Grimani, which included many works by northern artists, notably Durer, strongly influenced his artistic development. In 1523, Klovic left Venice to work at the court of Louis II, the king of Bohemia and Hungary-Croatia, and his wife Mary of Austria, the sister of Emperor Charles V. Works he executed there may include illustrations in a missal (1525; Zagreb Cathedral, Treasury) made for Simone Erdody, Bishop of Zagreb, depicting leaves with scenes of the Virgin and Christ, landscape medallions and richly decorated borders of putty with garlands. He is known to have painted a picture of the Death of Lucretia for the Queen Mary and a Judgement of Paris, both works untraced. His stay at the court ended with the Turkish invasion and the death of King Louis in 1526.

     Klovic returned to Rome, where he was taken into the service of Cardinal Lorenzo Campeggi (1474-1539). He resumed contact with Giulio Romano, and according to Vasari, studied the works of Michelangelo. During the following year he was taken prisoner by the troops of Charles V, a traumatic experience that led to his decision to join a monastery. On his release from prison he moved to Mantua, where he entered the Benedictine Abbey of St. Ruffino, taking the name Giulio probably in honor of his teacher. With the help of Grimani, who had become a Cardinal in 1527, Clovio obtained papal dispensation to leave the monastery, although he remained a priest. References to Michelangelo include nude figures taken from those on the Sistine Chapel ceiling. Klovic’s figures are lively and graceful with an appealing sensuality. His work the Book of Hours, known as the Farnese Hours and generally acknowledged as his masterpiece, was completed for Cardinal Campeggi in 1546. It contains 26 miniatures illustrating biblical scenes, including the Death of Uriah the Hittite, the Crossing of the Red Sea, the Circumcision, and Flight into Egypt.

     Klovic accompanied Cardinal Alessandro Farnese to Florence in 1551 and remained there until 1553. For the Duke of Florence, Cosimo I de Medici, he executed small paintings on parchment, a Crucifixion with St. Mary Magdalene, in the Florence Uffizi. He returned to Rome in 1553, when he probably executed the Towneley Lectionary (London) also Commissioned by Cardinal Farnese. The miniatures for this manuscript, which include a Last Judgement and a dramatic Resurrection, again exhibit a mixture of Roman influences but have a greater spiritual intensity, reflecting the Counter Reformation. It has been suggested that they also show interest in Flemish art.

     In 1561 Klovic returned to Rome again to the household of Cardinal Farnese in the Palazzo della Cancelleria. During his periods of residence in Rome, Klovic had access to many important writers and artists and he became an influential figure in artistic life there. His friends included Michelangelo, Giorgio Vasari, Annibal Caro, and Vittoria Colonna. He was an early supporter of El Greco and in 1570 persuaded Cardinal Farnese to give the young artist lodgings in the Palazzo. El Greco’s striking portrait of Clovio (1571; Naples, Capodimonte) shows him holding the Farnese Hours and indicating the miniature of the Creation of the Sun and Moon. Klovic’s likeness, with that of Michelangelo and Raphael, is also included in El Greco’s painting of Christ Driving the Money-changers form the Temple (Minneapolis, MN). Late works by him include three miniatures, the Holy Family with a Knight, the Holy Family with St. Elizabeth, and David and Goliath (Paris, Mus. Marmottan). Among his finest surviving drawings are the Entombment (Chicago Art Inst.) and the Conversion of St. Paul, Crucifixion and Lamentation (London B.M.) Variants of the Entombment (Paris, Louvre) include a cortege of Michelangelesque male nudes, and a number of drawings copied from Michelangelo also survive (Windsor Castle; Royal Lib.).

     Klovic died in Rome on January 3, 1578 and was buried in St. Pietro in Vincoli, Rome. An inventory made after his death indicates that his collection included works by Bruegel and Titian. His drawings were left to Cardinal Farnese.

     Klovic’s Letter on Behalf of El Greco

     The memorable letter of 1570 from Julije Klovic to Cardinal Farnese, describes in a few words the situation of El Greco at that time. Cardinal Farnese was in Viterbo and that is where the letter is being addressed:

     To Cardinal Farnese, in Viterbo

     November 16 [1570] 

     A young man from the island of Candia has arrived in Rome, a disciple of Tiziano, who, in my judgment, is among those excellent in painting. Among other things, he has done a portrait of himself that has caused the astonishment of the Roman painters. I would like to put him under Your Excellency’s protection. He does not need anything else to live but a room in the Farnese palace for a short while until he finds better accommodations. Therefore, I beg you to write to Mr. Ludovico, your housekeeper, to provide him with a room in the upper quarters of said palace. Your Excellency will do a good deed and I would be much obliged. I kiss with reverence your hands, and remain Your Excellency’s humble servant.

     Don Julio Clovio (Julije Klovic)

     Julije Klovic in the Eyes of His Contemporaries

     Vasari, the famous contemporary writer, calls him: “il maraviglioso,” “il piccolo Michelangnolo,” and “il principe dei miniatori.”

     Lomazzo speaks of him as “il mirabile,” “l’unico.”

     Lanzi, even: “il restauratore delle arti.” 

     Zani: “il Raffaello dei Miniatori.”

     Rosnini: “insuperato miraculoso.”

     Nagler referring to his productions says, ” Alles hat ein rafaelisches gepräge.”

     In short, the universal testimony is that he was the most famous miniaturist of his time, and his time was that of the most famous artists of the modern world.

     From John W. Bradley. The Life and Works of Giorgio Giulio Clovio. Amsterdam, G. W. Hissink, 1971. Reprint of t
he 1891 Edition. 

     

Posted in Art

The Croatian Diaspora in the U.S.A. on the Eve of the Third Millennium

“The Croatian Diaspora in the U.S.A. on the Eve of the Third Millennium”

A symposium held at St. Xavier University, Chicago, April 17, 1999

 
 
Welcoming Remarks by Ante Čuvalo – President of the ACS
 
On behalf of the Association for Croatian Studies (ACS), I would like to welcome all of you, especially our guests from outside the Chicago area, to the first symposium of the ACS. Your interest, sacrifices, and participation are greatly appreciated.
 
I would also like to express our deep thanks to St. Xavier University and its entire community for allowing us to gather at this distinguished learning institution.  Special thanks to the Department of History and Political science and the Department of Sociology and Anthropology for sponsoring this event.  Dr. John Gutowski was our contact-person with the University, I thank him for enthusiastically supporting the symposium and for being a good friend.  Everyone I encountered at this institution has made me feel at home, and I am grateful for their friendliness and help.
 
Friends and colleagues,
We are not only at the end of the 20th Century and of the 2nd Millennium, but we are living through a very exciting and challenging period of history.  Within only the last ten years, the Soviet empire has imploded and the communist system with it.  A new realignment of the world order has taken place.  The bipolar world has vanished and a number of new independent states have emerged from under the rubble of communism.  But, the falling of the Berlin Wall has also unleashed new violence, wars, and suffering for many, including the people of Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and now Kosovo.  Furthermore, the old system has fallen apart but the earlier ruling elite is still alive and doing well.  This elite is trying to reinvent itself, but in many cases it is the same old mentality and habits in a new wrapping.
 
Today, there are many questions to be asked about the world as a whole.  Just to mention a few: how can we balance the growing globalization with the multiplication of independent nation states? Will the architects of the global free market and global civil society bring about a global meltdown and chaos or prosperity and peace for all?  How will the increasing power of the nongovernmental organizations and social movements at the international level affect the present role of the nation state?  Are we marching toward a clash of civilizations or toward a more harmonious and humane “global village”, or, at least, “global city”?  What will be the future and the role of racial, ethnic, and religious diasporas around the globe? Does globalization imply homogenization, or a colorful world of free individuals, groups, and peoples, or a world of intolerance?  But our task today is not global. We are here to take a closer look at an ethnic group, namely Croatians, in this country and see it from within and analyze its relations to the homeland.  Although our focus is on Croatian diaspora in the US, our discussions can not be isolated from recent events in Southeastern Europe.
 
Furthermore, we are here today to meet people, share our views, and to hear those of others.  We are here not to start a political movement, to raise funds, or to change the world.  It is time to look at ourselves, at our own problems and virtues. The Association for Croatian Studies is a scholarly organization and its task is to raise issues, to ask questions, to analyze, and make suggestions to those willing to hear them.  By doing that, we hope to make a positive contribution to the Croatian community at large.
 
Welcome and may all of you have a fruitful and enjoyable day.