Fabris Antun: SRĐ list za kniževnost i nauku. 1903 g

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SRĐ list za kniževnost i nauku. 1903 g

Fabris Antun

Summary

Antun Fabris: SRĐ list for literature and science. 1902 II ANNUAL No. 1-24 No. 2, 4, 5, 8, 9, 11 are missing At the beginning of 1902, the Srđ and Serbian Dubrovnik Library was founded. The paper was published by the Srpska Dubrovnik Printing House of Antun Pasarić, and the addition to its name was a paper for literature and science. The launch of the magazine was announced by a proclamation on the cover of the last issue of the Dubrovnik newspaper for the year 1901, in issue 56 of December 29. The proclamation was signed by professor Luko Zore as the main associate and Antun Fabris as the owner and editor.

The initiators decided to give the magazine an exclusively Serbian orientation, and to print it in Latin and Cyrillic script. They emphasized the desire for Srđ to become the literary magazine of all Serbs on the coast. In just over six years, 135 issues of 14 cm x 22 cm format were printed with an oeuvre of 6,378 pages. It is printed in Latin and Cyrillic, thus following the Slovenian tradition. The ratio of the two scripts was approximately 74% Latin and 26% Cyrillic. It was called a list for literature and science, but literary material prevailed (around 70% in favor of it). After Fabris' death, the owner, publisher and responsible editor was professor Miho Vacchetti, and after him Kristo Dominković. After the temporary shutdown announced in the Dubrovnik magazine and its relaunch, the responsible editor was Professor Antonije Vučetić, who lowered the price from 12 to 10 crowns, and the price for abroad was 15 francs in gold. The last article published in Srđ was a review of the newspaper Tršćanski Lloyd.

Franciscan Kalist Tadin wrote about 230 pages of the magazine with philosophical and literary discussions. Apart from Vučetić, Milan P. Jovanović, Walter contributed significantly to the magazine. bar Ljubibratić, Petar Kolendić, Antun Vuletić, Vid Vuletić Vukasović, Filip Kulišić, Radomir Kr. Orlinski, Kosta St. Pavlović, Vicko Tripković Podnopoljski, anonymous Marinko, etc. Scientific and literary contributions from Dubrovnik's scientific and literary heritage and contributions from world literature and science were published in the journal. About a hundred literary contributions from a total of sixty authors from world literature, from antiquity to modern times, were published. On the pages of Srđ, more than 60 translators sent translated contributions to the Editorial Board, the most of which were contributed by Antun Krespi, Arsen Wenzelides and Večanski. Contributions came from all South Slavic regions, as well as from abroad. Only 11.61% of contributions came from Serbia, so it is wrong to conclude that the magazine was a tool in the hands of Greater Serbian politics. Soon, the original idea of ​​a purely Serbian oriented magazine was abandoned, so the magazine also published works by Croatian writers.

 

 

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