翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ KRSK
・ KRSL
・ KRSL (AM)
・ KRSL-FM
・ Krsmanići
・ Krsmanović
・ KRSN
・ Krsna Solo
・ Krsnik (vampire hunter)
・ Krsno Polje
・ KRSP-FM
・ KRSQ
・ KRSR
・ KRSS
・ KRST
Krsta Cicvarić
・ Krsta Kovačević
・ Krstac
・ Krstac (Lučani)
・ Krstac (Sjenica)
・ Krstac (Čajniče)
・ Krstarica
・ Krstač
・ Krstača
・ Krstače
・ Krste Crvenkovski
・ Krste Misirkov
・ Krste Velkoski
・ Krstec (Prilep)
・ Krstenica


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Krsta Cicvarić : ウィキペディア英語版
Krsta Cicvarić

Krsta Cicvarić ((セルビア語:Крста Цицварић)) (September 14, 1879 – October 31, 1944) was a Serbian political activist and an anarcho-syndicalist. He was also a journalist. He was shot on October 31, 1944 by Josip Broz Tito's partisans after the battle of Belgrade.
==Life==
Cicvarić was born on September 14, 1879 in the village of Nikojevići, near Užice, then part of the Principality of Serbia.
He attended the Gymnasium in Užice. Because of the confrontations with his professor Nastas Petrović, a member of the People's Radical Party, who claimed Cicvarić's political views to be "demonic", he dropped out of the Užice Gymnasium.
He soon left the city altogether and moved to Belgrade where he completed the Gymnasium and enrolled at the University of Belgrade's Faculty of Philosophy. Subsequently, he enrolled in the University of Vienna, but decided to leave the studies and return to Serbia where he became a journalist and anarchist activist.
Cicvarić was arrested and imprisoned several times for his writings. He founded anarchist newspapers ''Hleb i sloboda'' (Bread and Freedom) and ''Radnička borba'' (Worker's Struggle) in 1905 and 1907, respectively. He was drafted and fought in the Serbian Army during the Balkan Wars. He was drafted again in World War I, and surrendered, becoming a prisoner of war of the Austria-Hungarian Empire. After the first world war, he became an independent publisher and editor of ''Beogradski dnevnik'' (Belgrade Daily). His journalistic writing style in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was inflammatory, and his scandalous articles were criticized by many, so much that he was even compared with the influential American newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst.〔 During these years, he was also a strong critic of the Soviet communism. He spent the final years of his life living in Belgrade, almost completely blind. However, after the Belgrade Offensive of 1944 in World War II, the Yugoslav communists accused him of being the co-editor of the collaborationist newspaper ''Balkan''.
Cicvarić was shot without trial during the night between October 30 and 31, 1944. His burial site remains unknown.

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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