- Ivo Vojnović
Ivo Vojnović also "Conte Iván de Vojnovich" (
October 9 ,1857 -August 30 ,1929 ) was a writer fromDubrovnik . He is often nicknamed "The last great Dubrovnik writer."Ivo descends from the Vojnović house, the
Užice count s in theOttoman Empire . His ancestors Miloš and Vojin in 1699 handed overTrebinje andPopovo to theVenetian Republic , also attaining nobility and abandoningSerbian Orthodoxy in favor ofRoman Catholicism .Vojnović was born in
Dubrovnik as the second son of Count Constantin de Vojnovich (1832-1903) and María de Serraglí (1836-1922) on9 October 1857 in Dubrovnik, theHabsburg Monarchy . He inherited Catholic Christian faith from his mother and not from his Eastern Orthodox father (born Kosta Vojnović). The city of his birth and its rich history had an important influence on his later literary work. Most of his childhood however he spent inSplit actually, where he met withVuk Stefanović Karadžić . As a young man he moved toZagreb where he attended theUniversity of Zagreb (Faculty of Law).Until 1884 he served as a trainee of the "Kings official desk" in Zagreb. After that he continued his judicial career in
Križevci ,Bjelovar ,Zadar ,Dubrovnik . His career as a judicial official ended when he was fired from the office inSupetar on the island ofBrač . He then started to work in theCroatian National Theatre inZagreb , where he worked for four years. In 1911 he became a professional writer and decided to travel aroundItaly , his literary sympathy and ideal.Vojnović entered literature in 1880 when
August Šenoa 's "Vienac" published hisshort story "Geranijum" under thepseudonym "Sergej P".Matica hrvatska under the leadership ofIvan Kukuljević Sakcinski also published hisnovel 's "Perom i olovkom" in (1884) and "Ksanta" (1888) under the same pseudonym.Vojnović was the author of dramas of naturalistic cut, inspired by the literary and patriotic traditions of the
Republic of Ragusa . He is best known for his "Dubrovačka trilogija" ("Dubrovnik Trilogy", 1902 in Zagreb) - a trilogy in which he describes the fall of the Dubrovnik Republic. Some of his other known works are: "Death of the Mother of the Jugović" (1906) and "Resurrection of Lazarus" (1913). Also he is the author of psychological dramas like: "Lady of the Sunflower" (1912), and of pieces such as: "Dance of Masks in the Attic" (1922) which reflect the influence Pirandello's theater on Vojnović. In 1914 upon his return to Dubrovnik during the politically fabricated mass-arrests acrossAustria-Hungary of Serb activists in the wake ofWWI , Ivo was arrested too. After the war ended he moved toBelgrade ,in 1924, he was elected into theSerbian Academy of Sciences and Arts . where he in 1929 died completelyblind and heavily stricken by sickness.
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