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190:, at which the fate of Istria after the war was decided. Data collected by Msgr. Božo Milanović, Zvonimir Brumnić and other Croatian priests were one of the main arguments why Istria belongs to Croatia, (at the time part of Yugoslavia). The borders were agreed by the Paris Peace Agreement in 1947: Trieste went to Italy, Istria passed to Yugoslavia. The main document that was used in Paris by the priests was the
198:("Choir of St. Paul's Priests for Istria") and was signed by President Tomo Banko, Secretary Miro Bulešić, councilors Božo Milanović, Leopold Jurca, Josip Pavlišić, Antun Cukarić and Srećko Štifanić, as well as 48 board members. In the document, the priests showed all the horrors that the Croats, including the priests, endured from the Italians from 1918 up to 1943.
179:) and managed that society for many years; works written by Milanović himself were published by the society. At the end of the 1920s, he lived and worked in Trieste, where he published the last permitted literature and had a prominent role in the Istrian resistance in the joint Slovene-Croatian organization
170:
He had a reputation as a populist. In the early 1920s, he was in Kringa, where he was repeatedly physically attacked by fascists as a declared
Croatian patriot, i.e. an opponent of Italianization; even before the fascists came to power in Italy. In 1922 he was appointed chaplain in Trieste. During
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the elections for the
Italian parliament in 1922, his parish court was set on fire, and Milanović was beaten by the Italian fascists (who were not yet in power in Italy, but were already active in Istria). In 1923 he became the president of the
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During the
Italian fascist administration of Istria, he was one of the few who promoted the rights of the non-Italian population, that is the Croatian and Slovene people, who were threatened with assimilation at best, and persecuted at worst.
183:. At that time of fascism in Istria, Milanović spent part of his time in internment because he printed a Croatian primer with a group of priests and agreed with the pastors to open Croatian schools.
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in 1890 to Jakov and Ana, in a
Croatian peasant family. He attended primary school in his hometown. After five grades of primary school, he enrolled in the first grade of the Croatian classical
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490:
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Milanović was the director of the seminary gymnasium of Pazin from 1947 to 1968; and the director of the
Theological College in Pazin from 1955 to 1965.
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352:
The
Istrian Croatian Clergy and the Diplomatic-Political Struggle for the Unification of Istria with Croatia (1945–1954) // Društvena istraživanja
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135:, Milanović was one of the greatest anti-fascists of Istria. He is credited with decisively contributing to the unification of Istria with
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Božo
Milanović and the ethical implications of his political activity // Nova prisnostnost: časopis za intelektualna i duhovna pitanja
537:
381:
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261:, vol. 1: 1797 - 1882, Pazin, 1967; book 2: 1883 - 1947, Pazin, 1973 (2nd ed. Book 1: (1797 - 1882), Pazin, 1991)
427:, Istarsko književno društvo sv. Ćirila i Metoda u Pazinu-Kršćanska sadašnjost u Zagrebu, Pazin, 1976., str. 6.
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341:, January 2, 2011, p. 21., sublist diplomatic struggle Msgr. Božo Milanović for Croatian Istria (1)
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Maja Polić, Scientific
Conference Mons. Dr. Božo Milanović - traces of a vision, Pazin, 2010. // Rijeka
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Istria in the 20th century: notes and reflections on the time lived, vol. 1: Under
Austria and Italy
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Spomenica hrvatskog svećenstva u Istri
Savezničkoj komisiji za razgraničenje Julijske krajine
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BEZAZLENO GLASILO KOJEGA SU SE BOJALI List »Gore srca« u doba fašizma i komunizma
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Kringa. Otkrivena spomen-ploča mons. Boži Milanoviću. Nastavljač djela biskupa Dobrile
194:. It was brought to Pazin on February 12, 1946. The document was brought there by the
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After Istria passed to Yugoslavia, many (Croatian) Istrian populists (such as
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has not been found. Božo Milanović himself was called an enemy of the state.
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222:), as well as priests, were targeted by the Yugoslavian authorities. Priest
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He had the important role as one of the representatives of Istria at the
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From the "People's Enemy" to a Respectable Interlocutor, Glas Koncila
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Susret: Ivan Grah, župnik iz Ližnjana: Tko su antifašisti u Istri?
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In 1962, he received an honorary doctorate in theology from the
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was brutally killed, and to this day the body of the priest
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Istrian Literary Society of St. Cyril and Methodius in Pazin
361:, sv. XI, no. 3. November 2013, p. 349–364, (Hrčak)
354:, sv. 21, no. 2 (116). April 2012, p. 485-504, (Hamster)
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Jasna Ćurković Nimac, Stipe Tadić and Stipan Trogrlić,
321:, Pazin, 1992; book 2: War and Liberation, Pazin, 1996.
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in Pazin. He was ordained a priest on July 7, 1914, in
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Croatian priest, theologian and politician (1890–1980)
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Istria in the dawn of the national revival: 1797-1860
394:, 3. svibnja 2009. (pristupljeno 22. kolovoza 2015.)
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454:, enciklopedija.hr, pristupljeno 15. veljače 2019.
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327:, Nova Istra 18 (2013), 1/2 (47); p. 284–286.
511:, 7. rujna 2018. (pristupljeno 19. veljače 2020.)
303:, book (3rd ed. Pazin, 1964, 4th ed. Pazin, 1971)
346:, sv. 16, no. March 1, 2011, p. 87-89, (Hamster)
325:Croatian border in northwestern Istria, article
163:. He received his doctorate in Vienna in 1919.
439:, istrapedia.hr, pristupljeno 18. lipnja 2016.
201:In Trieste in 1946, he started the newspaper
123:(October 10, 1890 – December 28, 1980) was a
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548:20th-century Croatian Roman Catholic priests
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114:Priest, theologian, historian, politician
414:, broj 43, 25. listopada 2015., str. 30.
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127:priest, theologian and politician from
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313:My memories: (1900-1976), book, Pazin
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153:Imperial-Royal Great State Gymnasium
259:Croatian National Revival in Istria
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196:Zbor svećenika sv. Pavla za Istru
188:Peace Conference in Paris in 1946
543:20th-century Croatian historians
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40:Monument to Milanović in Pazin
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273:, book (3rd ed. Pazin, 1968)
147:Božo Milanović was born in
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159:. He studied theology in
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307:Our Father, prayer book
301:Experimental Psychology
265:Metaphysical psychology
283:History of Philosophy
295:Revivalist of Istria
291:, book, Pazin, 1970.
285:, book, Pazin, 1970.
279:, book, Pazin, 1969.
267:, book, Pazin, 1968.
255:, book, Pazin, 1967.
249:, book, Pazin, 1960.
213:University of Zagreb
177:Society of St. Mohor
121:Msgr. Božo Milanović
228:Francesco Bonifacio
538:People from Istria
233:Milanović died in
469:www.istrapedia.hr
465:"Bozo Milanovica"
350:Stipan Trogrlić,
337:Stipan Trogrlić,
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84:(1980-12-18)
533:1920 deaths
528:1890 births
101:Nationality
522:Categories
494:Glas Istre
474:2021-02-02
366:References
220:Mate Peteh
203:Gore srca!
94:Yugoslavia
52:1890-10-10
289:Teodiceja
253:Cosmology
143:Biography
277:Ontology
125:Croatian
332:Sources
315:, 1976.
181:Edinost
161:Gorizia
157:Trieste
137:Croatia
70:Croatia
406:G.K.,
271:Ethics
149:Kringa
129:Istria
60:Kringa
235:Pazin
105:Croat
90:Pazin
68:(now
24:Msgr.
79:Died
46:Born
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