Vikentije Ljuština

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Vikentije Ljuština (Medak, Lika, 6 February 1761 – Vršac, 18 April 1805) was a Serbian writer, philologist, educator and archimandrite.[1]

The first page of the book Gramatika italijanskaja (1794)

His real name was Vasilije Ljuština, born in the Lika region on 6 February 1761 to Serbian parents.[2] In the monastery of Gomirje (Gorski Kotar) he became a monk. He was a priest in the Serbian Orthodox Church in Trieste from 1781 until 1789,[3] and thereafter in Sopron until 1795. In 1796, he went to Serbia to the Mesić Monastery, where he, as archimandrite led the monastery until he died.[4]

In Vienna in 1794 Ljuština printed in Cyrillic in Slavoserbian a 506-page Italian grammar for the use of Illyrian youth (radi upotreblenia illyriceskije junosti).[5][6] While he was the archimandrite of the Mesić monastery, he wrote a historical monograph covering the period from 1225 to 1797.[7]

In 1790 he founded a gymnasium in Vršac.

References

  1. ^ Rudić, Srđan; Biagini, Antonello (2015-04-01). Serbian-Italian Relations: History and Modern Times : Collection of Works. The Institute of History, Belgrade / Sapienza University of Rome, Research center CEMAS. ISBN 9788677431099.
  2. ^ "Ljuština, Vikentije | Hrvatska enciklopedija". www.enciklopedija.hr. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  3. ^ Rudić, Srđan; Biagini, Antonello (2015-04-01). Serbian-Italian Relations: History and Modern Times : Collection of Works. The Institute of History, Belgrade / Sapienza University of Rome, Research center CEMAS. ISBN 9788677431099.
  4. ^ "Ljuština, Vikentije | Hrvatska enciklopedija". www.enciklopedija.hr. Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  5. ^ Fine, John V. A. (Jr ) (2010-02-05). When Ethnicity Did Not Matter in the Balkans: A Study of Identity in Pre-Nationalist Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in the Medieval and Early-Modern Periods. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 9780472025602.
  6. ^ Costantini, Lionello (1976). Slavo ecclesiastico e volgare nella Grammatika italianskaja di Vikentije Ljuština: Lionello Costantini (in Russian). Licosa Ed.
  7. ^ "Manastir Mesić jedan od najstarijih u Banatu". www.topsrbija.com. Retrieved 2019-08-27.