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  2. Mak Dizdar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mak_Dizdar

    Mehmedalija "Mak" Dizdar (17 October 1917 – 14 July 1971) was a Bosnian poet. His poetry combined influences from the Bosnian Christian culture, Islamic mysticism and cultural remains of medieval Bosnia, and especially the stećci. His works Kameni spavač (Stone Sleeper) and Modra rijeka (Blue River) are probably the most important Bosnian ...

  3. Zenica massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zenica_massacre

    Part of the memorial monument with inscribed names of the victims. In order to remember the people killed after the crime of 19 April 1993, city square in Zenica became known as Stone Sleeper [] (translation of Kameni spavač, name of Mak Dizdar's work); it is a memorial park with large curved memorial sculpture with names of killed Zenicans, one fountain and memorial plate referring to Dizdar.

  4. Literature of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Literature_of_Bosnia_and...

    The most important representatives of modern literature are writers such as Ivo Andrić, Meša Selimović, Branko Ćopić, poets such as Mak Dizdar, Aleksa Šantić, Antun Branko Šimić, essayists such as Hamdija Kreševljaković, and present-day contemporaries such as poet Marko Vešović, playwright Abdulah Sidran, novelists Aleksandar Hemon ...

  5. Hamid Dizdar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamid_Dizdar

    Hamid Dizdar (22 February 1907 – 17 July 1967) was a Bosnian writer and poet. His younger brother Mak Dizdar was also a prominent poet. Hamid Dizdar was born to a Muslim family in Stolac , Bosnia and Herzegovina , de facto part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, but de jure in the Ottoman Empire until the following year. [ 1 ]

  6. Bosniak National Awakening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bosniak_National_Awakening

    The Bosniak National Awakening (Bosnian:Bošnjačko narodno prosvjetiteljstvo), also known as the Bosniak Revival (Bosnian:Bošnjači preporod) or Bosniak Renaissance (Bosnian:Bošnjača renesansa), is a period in history of the Bosniak people in which the Bosniaks and their intellectual front gathered together to stop the assimilation of their culture, language, people and country during the ...

  7. Talk:Mak Dizdar/Archive 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Mak_Dizdar/Archive_1

    There are so many Dizdars in Bosnia and Balkans, because it was very common title which became a surname at the end of 19th century. I can just advise you, that your obsession with genetics of Bosniaks is really, and I mean that, is really ridiculous thing. That is why I asked you about Adam and Eve.

  8. Milorad Pejić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milorad_Pejić

    Tuzla, SFR Yugoslavia. Education. University of Sarajevo. Luleå University of Technology. Occupation. Poet. Known for. Poetry. Milorad Pejić (1960 in Tuzla, Bosnia and Herzegovina, former Yugoslavia) is a Bosnian poet who resides in Sweden.

  9. Humac tablet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humac_tablet

    Humac tablet. The Humac tablet (Serbo-Croatian: Хумачка плоча, Хумска плоча / Humačka ploča, Humska ploča) is an Old Slavic epigraph in Bosnian Cyrillic script [1] [2] in the form of a stone tablet, believed to be variously dated to between the 10th and 12th century, being one of the oldest Serbo-Croatian preserved inscriptions.