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・ Andrija Fuderer
・ Andrija Gerić
・ Andrija Hebrang
・ Andrija Hebrang (father)
・ Andrija Hebrang (son)
・ Andrija Jankovic
・ Andrija Jukic
・ Andrija Kaluđerović
・ Andrija Kačić Miošić
・ Andrija Konc
・ Andrija Ljudevit Adamić
・ Andrija Lompar
・ Andrija Luković
・ Andrija Majdevac
・ Andrija Mandić
Andrija Maurović
・ Andrija Milošević
・ Andrija Mohorovičić
・ Andrija Mutafelija
・ Andrija Novakovich
・ Andrija Novosel
・ Andrija Paltašić
・ Andrija Panic
・ Andrija Pavlović
・ Andrija Popović
・ Andrija Prlainović
・ Andrija Puharich
・ Andrija Radović
・ Andrija Radulović
・ Andrija Ratković


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Andrija Maurović : ウィキペディア英語版
Andrija Maurović

Andrija Maurović (29 March 1901 – 2 September 1981) was a renowned comic book author, often called the father of Croatian and Yugoslav comics.
==Biography==
Maurović was born in the village of Muo (part of Kotor) in Boka Kotorska in present-day Montenegro (at the time in Austria-Hungary) to a family of Slovene-Montenegrin origin.〔Mladen Hanzlovsky, Andrija Maurović - Portret kroz zaboravljeni razgovor, 1976, Zagreb〕 After a short sojourn to Kraków in Poland, he moved with his Croatian family to the nearby city of Dubrovnik where he attended elementary and secondary school.
Following the recommendation of the writer Ivo Vojnović, he enrolled at the Academy of Arts in Zagreb. Soon, he got into conflicts regarding norms and rules, since the academy prevented students of any work during their studies. At that time he started illustrating books, weekly and daily newspapers, and also graphic institutions, booksellers and editors, particularly for St. Kugli. As the best students, particularly in drawing, he dropped his first academic year. Being extremely busy with the work he liked, he did not take his academic fiasco tragically. Working on illustrations, caricatures, posters and graphic design, he became one of the best, and his work appeared in the editions of papers and magazines like ''Jutarnji list'', ''Novosti'', ''Koprive'', ''Ženski svijet'', ''Kulisa''.
In 1935, he created his first comic ''Vjerenica Mača'', which was published in the Zagreb newspaper Novosti. In the same year Maurović co-launched Oko, the first Yugoslav comics magazine.
Maurović collaborated with many eminent Croatian writers and screenplay writers, such as ''Franjo Fuis''. He also drew his illustrations based on literary models of epic world writers and novelists like Alex Tolstoy, Zane Grey, August Šenoa, Jack London, B. Traven, Max Brand, and H. G. Wells.
It is difficult to describe the total number of his professions and activities. He was a painter of seascapes and apocalyptic scenes, caricaturist, illustrator, preacher and comic strip sketcher. He lived life of his own and created a great number of impressive comic strip heroes and personalities (like ''Dan'', ''Old Tom-cat'', ''Radoslav''). His works are part of the Sudac Collection.
Being in all the world encyclopaedias and publications on comics, he has earned his eminent place in the art of world comics. Numerous editions and reprints of his best works, numerous awards and prizes he has received, the reputation that he achieved is comparable with the achievements and fame of the greatest names and creators of cartoons in the world.
In 1949 the 9th Chess Olympiad management requisitioned a new style of chessmen. Andrija Maurović a chess player was contracted to design the Dubrovnik chess set.〔(1950 Dubrovnik chess set details )〕 The pieces were made in the workshop of master craftsman, Jakovljevič, in Zagreb.〔(GM Pirc – 1950 Dubrovnik chess set )〕
Andrija Maurović died in Zagreb, and was buried in the Mirogoj cemetery. The comic strip club in Kotor bears his name.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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