Milan Ogrizović Explained

Milan Ogrizović
Birth Date:11 February 1877
Birth Place:Zengg, Austria-Hungary
)
Death Place:Zagreb, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes
Resting Place:Mirogoj Cemetery[1]
Occupation:scholar, author, playwright, politician
Language:Croatian
Alma Mater:University of Zagreb
Notablework:Hasanaginica
Spouse:Ljuba
Children:2 (including)

Milan Ogrizović (in Croatian pronounced as /mǐlan ogrǐːzovit͡ɕ/; February 11, 1877 – August 25, 1923)[1] [2] was a Croatian author, playwright, politician, and academic, serving as a professor and lecturer at the Croatian National Theater. His plays are among the most commonly performed Croatian works.[3]

Biography

Milan Ogrizović was born on February 11, 1877, in Senj, the third son of Ilija Ogrizović, a postal worker, and Franjka . Ogrizović was raised in Zavalje, near Bihać in modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina, by his maternal uncle, a parish priest, who converted him from Eastern Orthodoxy to Catholicism. He completed secondary schooling in Gospić, near his birthplace.

In 1901, Ogrizović completed his principal studies in mathematics and classical philology and, in 1904, received his doctorate in philology, both at the University of Zagreb.[3] Between 1900 and 1906, he taught at the Classical Gymnasium in Zagreb.[3]

Although he wrote in several mediums, Ogrizović is best known in Croatian literature as a playwright.[3] His first play, Breath (Croatian: Dah) inspired by Henrik Ibsen[3] was first performed at the Croatian National Theater in 1901. He became increasingly inspired by local Croatian traditions and national history. His most famous play, Croatian: Hasanaginica (1909), was adapted from a 17th-century folk ballad of the same name from the Dalmatian hinterland,[3] [4] which earned him a Demeter's Award and remained in the National Theater's repertoire for decades.[3] His tetralogy, Year of Love (Croatian: Godina ljubavi), consists of four one-act plays written over several years: Spring Morning (Croatian: Proljetno jutro, 1903), Summer Afternoon (Croatian: Ljetno popodne, 1904), Autumn Evening (Croatian: Jesenje veče, 1903), and Winter Night (Croatian: Zimska noć, 1906).[3]

He served in the Sabor as a member of the nationalist Pure Party of Rights.[3]

Ogrizović and his wife, Ljuba, were close friends of the poet and playwright Fran Galović. Galović's final letter was addressed from the Serbian front to Ogrizović:

Ogrizović died on August 25, 1923. He is buried at Mirogoj Cemetery in Zagreb.[1]

Selected works

References

Citations

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Groblja – O. Graves – O. . Gradska Groblja Zagreb . Zagrebački Holding . 11 November 2023.
  2. Encyclopedia: Ogrizović . Hrvatski jezični portal . 2006 . Znanje i Srce . . 11 November 2023 . Croatian.
  3. Encyclopedia: Ogrizović, Milan. Hrvatska enciklopedija, mrežno izdanje . 2021. Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža . 11 November 2023. Croatian.
  4. Book: Naimark. Norman M.. Case. Holly. Yugoslavia and Its Historians: Understanding the Balkan Wars of the 1990s. 2003. Stanford University Press. 44–45.
  5. Encyclopedia: Milčinović, Andrija. Hrvatska enciklopedija, mrežno izdanje . 2021. Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža . 16 November 2023. Croatian.