Stijepo Kobasica

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Died1944
KnownforSrpski Glas
Prominent member of the
Serb Catholic movement
Stijepo Kobasica
Born1882
Died1944
CitizenshipAustria-Hungary
Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Known forSrpski Glas
Prominent member of the
Serb Catholic movement

Stijepo Kobasica (1882–1944) was a Dalmatian, and later Yugoslavian journalist, author and politician from Dubrovnik.[1] He was the editor of Srpski Glas and a prominent member of the Serb Catholic movement in Dubrovnik.

Kobasica was born at Dubrovnik in 1882,[2] at that time a part of the Kingdom of Dalmatia of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. As a youth Kobasica researched his forebears and determined that they sprang from Serbian Orthodox stock from Herzegovina who had migrated to the coastal area of the Župa (between Dubrovnik and Cavtat in Dalmatia) during the time of Ottoman domination of the interior. Since his family had converted to Roman Catholicism generations before, the young man found himself firmly identifying with both his Serbian ethnic roots as well as his Catholicism.[citation needed] His thinking of this matter was undoubtedly influenced by that of his great grand-uncle, Valtazar Bogišić who was a very prominent Serb Catholic from Cavtat and one of the original proponents of South Slavic unification and independence from the Austro-Hungarian régime. Bogišić died in 1908 when Stijepo was twenty-six years old and already deeply entrenched in politics.

Journalistic career

References

Bibliography

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