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・ Vlado & Isolda
・ Vlado Badžim
・ Vlado Bagat
・ Vlado Bojović
・ Vlado Bozinovski
・ Vlado Brinovec
・ Vlado Bučkovski
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Vlado Gotovac
・ Vlado Ilievski
・ Vlado Ivanov
・ Vlado Jagodić
・ Vlado Janevski
・ Vlado Jeknić
・ Vlado Jovanovski
・ Vlado Kalember
・ Vlado Kasalo
・ Vlado Komšić
・ Vlado Kotur
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・ Vlado Kreslin
・ Vlado Kristl
・ Vlado Lemić


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Vlado Gotovac : ウィキペディア英語版
Vlado Gotovac

Vladimir "Vlado" Gotovac (18 September 1930 – 7 December 2000) was a Croatian poet and politician.

Vladimir Gotovac was known as a very talented poet but was also stigmatized as a Croatian nationalist in socialist Yugoslavia. In many of his interviews Gotovac expressed the frustration of not having the types of freedom afforded to those living under more democratic regimes.
==Early activism==

In the late 1960s, Gotovac joined the Croatian movement demanding political and economic reform, which eventually led to the Croatian Spring in the early 1970s. Unlike the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia, the Croatian Spring wasn't violently quashed by military use, although it resulted the period known as “the silent republic”, alluding to the Yugoslav government’s tremendous skill in suppressing any opposition or criticism.
Before being arrested in 1971 Gotovac became the editor-in-chief of ''Hrvatski Tjednik'' ("The Croatian Weekly"), which historian Marcus Tanner explains, “was a real phenomenon – a mass-circulation newspaper with an enormous audience that went way beyond the confines of the Communist Party and made a national reputation.”〔Tanner, 196〕

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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