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・ Steve Anderson (director)
・ Steve Anderson (footballer, born 1946)
・ Steve Anderson (karate)
・ Stevan Dimitrijević
・ Stevan Dohanos
・ Stevan Eldred-Grigg
・ Stevan Faddy
・ Stevan Harnad
・ Stevan Horvat
・ Stevan Hristić
・ Stevan J. Korda
・ Stevan Jackson
・ Stevan Javellana
・ Stevan Jelovac
・ Stevan Jovetić
Stevan K. Pavlowitch
・ Stevan Karadžić
・ Stevan Knežević
・ Stevan Knićanin
・ Stevan Kovačević
・ Stevan Kragujević
・ Stevan Larner
・ Stevan Lieberman
・ Stevan Lukačević
・ Stevan Luković
・ Stevan M. Luković
・ Stevan Marković
・ Stevan Marković (bodyguard)
・ Stevan Marković (footballer)
・ Stevan Marković (politician)


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Stevan K. Pavlowitch : ウィキペディア英語版
Stevan K. Pavlowitch

Stevan K. Pavlowitch ((セルビア語:Stevan K. Pavlović, Стеван К. Павловић); born 1933) is the emeritus professor of Balkan history at the University of Southampton and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society, specializing in history, international relations, and current affairs.
==Biography==
Stevan Kosta Pavlowitch was born in Belgrade in 1933. His family members had a long history as diplomats in the service of Serbia's Karađorđević dynasty. His great-grandfather Kosta Pavlović was the first mayor of Niš following its liberation from the Ottoman Turks in 1878, as well as the head of the Belgrade branch of Serbian Prime Minister Jovan Ristić's Liberal Party. Pavlowitch's grandfather, also named Stevan K. Pavlović, was an influential lawyer, interpreter and diplomat who served as an assistant to Serbia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, governed the 77th District of Rotary International, headed the Serbian–French Friendship Society and was awarded the Legion of Honour by the French Government. Pavlowitch's father Kosta St. Pavlović was a historian and writer who served as a diplomat prior to the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941.
Pavlowitch began his schooling in Bucharest, where his father was stationed as a diplomat. Just before Yugoslavia's occupation by Germany, Italy and Hungary, Pavlowitch and his parents left the country via Nikšić airport and sought refuge in London, accompanied by Dušan Simović, Momčilo Ninčić, Miloš Trifunović, Draško Stojković, Slobodan Jovanović, and their families. Jovanović was cousins with Pavlowitch's father. Jovanović and Pavlowitch's family remained friends in exile. When Jovanović died in December 1958, he was buried on the Pavlowitch family's burial plot in London.
Exiled, Pavlowitch studied history in Paris and the School of Slavonic and Yugoslav Studies at King's College in London.〔 From 1958 to 1965, Pavlowitch worked as a journalist〔 and was stationed in Belgium and Italy.〔 In 1965, he joined the staff of the University of Southampton and in 1997 became the emeritus professor of Balkan history.〔"Pavlowitch, Stevan K." The Writers Directory. Ed. Lisa Kumar. 29th ed. Vol. 2. Detroit: St. James Press, 2012.〕 He is currently the emeritus professor of Balkan history at the University of Southampton and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.gold.ac.uk/csb/eab/s-pavlowitch/ )
Pavlowitch was a contributor for the 1992 Radio Television of Serbia documentary series entitled ''Yugoslavia in War 1941–1945''.

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