Milan Kujundžić Aberdar

Serbian philosopher and politician (1842–1893) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Milan Kujundžić Aberdar (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Кујунџић Абердар; 1842–1893) was a Serbian poet,[1] philosopher[2] and politician.

Preceded byĐorđe Pavlović
Succeeded byĐorđe Pavlović
Preceded bySima Nestorović
Succeeded byĐorđe Pavlović
Quick facts President of the National Assembly of Serbia, Preceded by ...
Milan Kujundžić Aberdar
Милан Кујунџић Абердар
President of the National Assembly of Serbia
In office
19 September 1885  23 September 1885
Preceded byĐorđe Pavlović
Succeeded byĐorđe Pavlović
In office
6 May 1884  16 June 1884
Preceded bySima Nestorović
Succeeded byĐorđe Pavlović
In office
25 November 1882  31 December 1882
Preceded byAleksa Popović
Succeeded bySima Nestorović
Minister of Education
In office
4 April 1886  13 June 1887
Preceded byStevan D. Popović
Succeeded byAlimpije Vasiljević
Personal details
BornJanićije Kujundzić Aberdar
1842 (1842)
Died1893 (aged 5051)
Occupationpoet, philosopher and politician
Known for
one the first 16 academicians of the Serbian Royal Academy
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Biography

He was born in Belgrade and given the name Janićije but later he changed it to Milan.[3] His pseudonym Aberdar came from his collected poems.[4]

He studied at the gymnasium in Belgrade and Pančevo, and enrolled the legal faculty of the Belgrade Lyceum. With the Turkish bombardment of Belgrade in 1862, he stopped his studies and joined the Serbian army.

After that, he received a scholarship from the Serbian government to study philosophy in Vienna, Munich, Paris, and London. Before finishing his studies at Oxford, in 1866 he was back in Serbia, recalled by the Minister of Education, to take over the Department of Philosophy at the Grandes écoles.[4]

He was a professor of philosophy at Belgrade's Grandes écoles, Secretary of the Serbian Learned Society (from 1873 to 1882), President of the National Assembly (from 1880 to 1885),[4] Minister of Education (1886-1887), envoy of Rome, Youth Editor of Srbadije and poet.

King Milan Obrenović appointed him on 5 April 1887 the first 16 academicians of the Serbian Royal Academy, among them was Milan Kujundžić Aberdar.

He participated in the Serbian-Turkish wars of 1876–1878, and for that reason, he was promoted to Major, and later to Lieutenant-Colonel. Among the many decorations he received, the most significant are: the medal of the regeneration of the Serbian kingdom, the Order of the Cross of Takovo III degree, the Order of the White Eagle III degree, and the Order of the Cross of Takovo IV degree with swords.[4]

Works

  • Kratki pregled harmonije u svetu (A Short Outline of the Harmonies in the World)[5]
  • Filozofija u Srba (Philosophy Among Serbs)
  • Šta je i koliko u naš urađeno na lođici? (What and How Much Was Done in Logic in Our Country?)[6]
  • Ide li svet na bolje ili na gore? (Is the world going for better or for worse?)
  • Filozofska i društveno-politička shvatanja (Philosophical and Sociopolitical Conceptions)[7]

See also

References

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