Mate Balota

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mate_Balota an entity of type: Thing

Mate Balota (* 28. September 1898; † 17. Februar 1963) war ein jugoslawischer Akademiker, Wissenschaftler und Schriftsteller. rdf:langString
Mijo Mirković (né le 28 septembre 1898 à Rakalj, mort le 17 février 1963 à Zagreb), également connu sous les pseudonymes Miho et Mate Balota, est un poète, romancier et économiste croate. Considéré comme l'un des poètes croates les plus éminents du XXe siècle et souvent appelé le plus grand poète d'Istrie, il s'appelle « le plus grand Istrien après Matija Vlačić de Labin » par . rdf:langString
Mijo Mirković (Croatian pronunciation: [mǐjo mǐːrkɔ̝v̞it͡ɕ]; 28 September 1898 – 17 February 1963), also known by his pen names Miho and Mate Balota, was a prominent Croatian poet, novelist and economist. Considered one of the most prominent Croatian poets of the 20th century and often credited as the greatest Istrian poet, he was called "the greatest Istrian after Labin's Matija Vlačić" by Tone Peruško. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Mate Balota
rdf:langString Mate Balota
rdf:langString Mate Balota
rdf:langString Mijo Mirković
rdf:langString Mijo Mirković
xsd:date 1963-02-17
xsd:date 1898-09-28
xsd:integer 5618782
xsd:integer 1116935071
rdf:langString Mijo Mirkovic Mate Balota signature.svg
rdf:langString Universität Frankfurt am Main
xsd:date 1898-09-28
rdf:langString Mijo Mirković
xsd:date 1963-02-17
rdf:langString Dragi kamen
rdf:langString Tijesna zemlja
rdf:langString Poet, novelist, economist, professor, academician
rdf:langString Mate Balota (* 28. September 1898; † 17. Februar 1963) war ein jugoslawischer Akademiker, Wissenschaftler und Schriftsteller.
rdf:langString Mijo Mirković (né le 28 septembre 1898 à Rakalj, mort le 17 février 1963 à Zagreb), également connu sous les pseudonymes Miho et Mate Balota, est un poète, romancier et économiste croate. Considéré comme l'un des poètes croates les plus éminents du XXe siècle et souvent appelé le plus grand poète d'Istrie, il s'appelle « le plus grand Istrien après Matija Vlačić de Labin » par .
rdf:langString Mijo Mirković (Croatian pronunciation: [mǐjo mǐːrkɔ̝v̞it͡ɕ]; 28 September 1898 – 17 February 1963), also known by his pen names Miho and Mate Balota, was a prominent Croatian poet, novelist and economist. Considered one of the most prominent Croatian poets of the 20th century and often credited as the greatest Istrian poet, he was called "the greatest Istrian after Labin's Matija Vlačić" by Tone Peruško. Mirković was born in Rakalj, southeastern Istria. His family was evacuated to Moravia at the beginning of the Great War. Upon his return to Croatia he worked as a journalist in Pula before moving to Zagreb, where he graduated from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. He later studied economy and social sciences in Berlin and Frankfurt, where he had gone in order to examine the original manuscripts of Matija Vlačić. He obtained his doctorate from the University of Frankfurt in 1922, and subsequently taught in Osijek, Subotica and Belgrade. After World War II, he was a professor at the Faculty of Economics in Zagreb until his death. A member of Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts (JAZU) since 1947, he was its Secretary General from 1958 until 1961, and in 1960 received the Lifetime Achievement Award. Mirković is one of the most appreciated Croatian dialect poets. Beside poetry, he is also known for his narrative and nonfiction books, and for his works on economy. He published many discussions, books and textbooks on the theory of foreign and domestic trade, industrial policy, national economy, history of economy and economics of agriculture, publishing such works as Trade and Domestic Trade Policy (1931), Foreign Trade Policy (1932), Industrial Policy (1936), Agrarian Policy (1940), Economic Structure of Yugoslavia 1918–1941 (1950) and Economic History of Yugoslavia (1958). His best known work of poetry is the collection Dragi kamen, published in Zagreb in 1938 and named after the 1931 poem, which was later published in several more editions. Described as a nostalgic experience of Istria, a meeting named after the book is held in Rakalj since 1968, in Mirković's honour. Among his other books there are Stara Pazinska Gimnazija and Puna je Pula, the latter a monograph in which Mirković combines fiction with documentary work. These realist texts depict life in the Istrian villages, with both the Istrians' happy and tragic moments. His only novel is Tijesna zemlja: roman iz istarskog narodnog života (1946), an economic and social study in which he portrays life in an Istrian village from the second half of the 19th century until the 1940s, following the life of a family through three generations.
rdf:langString Mate Balota
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 20356
rdf:langString Mate Balota

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