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  2. Morea Banićević - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morea_Banićević

    Morea Banićević was born in Rijeka and graduated from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences in Rijeka, majoring in Croatian and English language. Over the years, she has written a number of novels for children and young adults, which are being published in Croatia and abroad.. [1]

  3. Marko Marulić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marko_Marulić

    Fališevac, Dunja; Nemec, Krešimir; Novaković, Darko (2000), Leksikon hrvatskih pisaca (in Croatian), Zagreb: Školska knjiga d.d, ISBN 953-0-61107-2 Mirko Tomasović (1999), Marko Marulić Marul : monografija (in Croatian, English, French, German, and Italian), Zagreb-Split: Erasmus naklada – Književni krug Split, Marulianum – Zavod za ...

  4. Marija Braut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marija_Braut

    Biography. Mary Braut was born on 7 August 1929 in Celje. Her family moved to Zagreb in 1941. After finishing high school in 1949, she enrolled at the Zagreb Faculty of Architecture. As a young girl, she danced and sang in the National Folk Dance Ensemble of Croatia LADO where she met her husband Sead Saračević.

  5. Jurica Pavičić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jurica_Pavičić

    Jurica Pavičić (born 2 November 1965 in Split) is a writer, columnist and film critic.. Pavičić's screenplay for Witnesses (Svjedoci), Vinko Brešan's 2003 film, won the Golden Arena for Best Screenplay in the 2003 Pula Film Festival.

  6. Irena Lukšić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irena_Lukšić

    Irena Lukšić (March 10, 1953 - March 11, 2019, Duga Resa) was a Croatian writer, translator, scholar and editor. She was born in a middle-class family, her mother Zora was en economist, and her father Zdenko an administrative lawyer. In her town of birth she completed her primary and secondary education, and she graduated in Comparative ...

  7. Enver Čolaković - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enver_Čolaković

    Enver Čolaković. Enver Čolaković (27 May 1913 – 18 August 1976) was a Bosnian novelist, poet and translator, best known for his 1944 novel The Legend of Ali-Pasha. During the later stages of World War II he served as a cultural attaché to the Independent State of Croatia embassy in Budapest. After the war he spent the rest of his life in ...

  8. Interliber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interliber

    zv.hr. The Interliber - International Book and Teaching Appliances Fair (Croatian: Interliber - Međunarodni sajam knjiga i učila) is the largest Croatian trade fair for books and teaching appliances. It is held annually in mid-November at the Zagreb Fair grounds in Zagreb, Croatia. Representatives from book publishing and multimedia companies ...

  9. Nikola Andrić - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nikola_Andrić

    Andrić was born in Vukovar in 1867. [1] After obtaining a degree in Romance and Slavic studies in Vienna and Paris, he received his PhD in 1897 in Vienna. At the invitation of Stjepan Miletić, he became a dramaturge at the Croatian National Theatre in Zagreb (1894–1898, 1901–1907). In 1898, together with Miletić he founded the Acting ...