- Janko Drašković
Janko Drašković (
October 20 ,1770 -January 14 ,1856 ) was aCroatia n national reformer, politician and poet.A member of the Drašković family, one of the oldest Croatian noble families, Janko Drašković was born in 1770 in
Zagreb . He lived all his life in theTrakošćan family castle, and he held the noble title of "grof", orcount .Known to be very broadly educated, he was even considered the best-educated person in Croatia at the turn of the 19th century. A lover of literature, he wrote poetry himself, but this is not what makes him a part of Croatian history. As a young man, he embarked upon a military career, but was forced to retire due to health issues.
Janko Drašković’s Croatia was part of Hungary, under Habsburg rule. Because the kingdom was so large, Hungary attempted processes of unification, starting with culture and language, known as
magyarisation . This process became more intense on Croatia in the 1820’s-1830’s: for example, the Hungarian Diet of 1825-27 insisted on Magyar as the official language for Croatia, and in 1827 theSabor act made Magyar a compulsory subject in Croatian secondary schools. As a reaction,Ljudevit Gaj led the creation of a Croatian national movement, called theIllyrian movement , in 1831, that fought for a Croatian political and cultural renewal.Janko Drašković, even though he was already at the age of 62, promptly joined the movement and published in 1832 his “
Dissertation ”, which was considered the political, economic, social and cultural program of the Croatian Illyrian movement. The name of the work is usually contracted, as the full name was "Disertacija iliti razgovor darovan gospodi poklisarom" ("dissertation or a discussion gifted as a message to the gentlemen"), and it was written as a plea to the members of the Croatian Parliament who were to be elected representatives in the joint Hungarian-Croatian Diet in Pressburg (today'sBratislava ).In his pamphlet, Janko Drašković envisioned a “Great Illyria” that would include all the south Slav provinces of the Habsburg Empire, that is, Croatia,
Slavonia ,Dalmatia ,Bosnia and Herzegovina ,Rijeka , and theMilitary Frontier ("Vojna Krajina"). He urged this “great Illyria” to be administratively independent from Hungary, with a “bannus” (ban) responsible directly to the king. If the Habsburg monarchy were to refuse these terms, Janko Drašković recommended that the united Croatian lands should secede.He wrote the Dissertation in the
Štokavian dialect , the language the Illyrian movement adopted instead of theKajkavian dialect of Zagreb because a majority ofCroats and virtually allSerbs spoke it.Drašković also advocated for the adoption of the Štokavian dialect as the official language. The Dissertation was the first political pamphlet published in the Štokavian dialect, and because of this was the model when the Croatian language was standardized later on.Janko Drašković dedicated all his energy to his political activity and to the battle against magyarisation. In 1838, largely due to his contribution, a reading room was founded in Zagreb called the "Ilirska čitaonica", which became the focal meeting point of the 'Illyrians'.
In 1842, he became the first chairperson of the
Matica Hrvatska , the Croatian cultural and publishing society. He was also a member of theCroatian People's Party (up to theRevolutions of 1848 ).He died in Radgona in 1856, while en route to a spa in Germany. Since 1893, his remains rest at the "Illyrian arcade" part of the Zagreb cemetery
Mirogoj .ources
* Robert A. Kann and Zdeněk V. David, "A history of East Central Europe- Volume VI: The peoples of the Eastern Habsburg lands, 1526-1918", (Seattle and London: University of Washington Press, 1984)
* http://francecroatie.fr/Histoire/creation.pdf
* http://www.mdc.hr/trakoscan/eng/2-2povijest.html
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.