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Topic: Milan Obrenovic IV


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In the News (Tue 29 Dec 09)

  
  Milan Obrenović IV - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Milan Obrenović IV was born in exile in Manasija (Marasesci, Wallachia) during a period of the Karađorđević rule in Serbia which began in 1842 with the deposition of Milan's cousin Prince Mihailo (Michael) Obrenović.
Milan's father, Miloš, was the son of Jevrem, the brother of famous Serb Prince, Miloš Obrenović.
In 1897, Milan was appointed commander-in-chief of the Serbian army.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Milan_I   (1008 words)

  
 Milan Obrenovic IV
Milan Obrenovic IV Milan I, born Milan Obrenovich IV, (August 22, 1854 - February 11, 1901), king of Servia, was born at Jassy.
While she was residing at Wiesbaden in 1888, King Milan succeeded in recovering the crown prince, whom he undertook to educate; and in reply to the queen's remonstrances, he exerted considerable pressure upon the metropolitan, and procured a divorce, which was afterwards annulled as illegal.
Fear of a revolution and of King Milan's return led to a compromise, by which in May 1891 the queen was expelled, and Milan was allowed a million francs from the civil list, on condition of not returning to Servia during his son's minority.
www.sciencedaily.com /encyclopedia/milan_obrenovic_iv   (1031 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Servia (Serbia)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Stephen IV Urosch, was willing, in 1323, to unite with Rome and abandon the schism in order to secure the aid of Western Europe against the claims to the throne of his half-brother Vladislav; but this union with Rome was only of short duration.
At last Milan's quarrels with his wife Natalie, the daughter of a Russian colonel, led to the dissolution of the marriage by the metropolitan.
Milan returned to Belgrade, 21 January, 1894, at once assumed control of the administration, did away with the democratic Constitution of 1889 by a coup data, restored that of 1869, and limited the constitutional liberties and the suffrage.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/13732a.htm   (4866 words)

  
 Milan Obrenovic IV - Open Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Milan Obrenovic IV From open-encyclopedia.com - the free encyclopedia.
In 1868, when Milan was only fourteen years of age, Michael Obrenovich was assassinated.
Milan precipitately declared war upon his kinsman Prince Alexander on the November 15th.
open-encyclopedia.com /Milan_I   (998 words)

  
 wikien.info: Main_Page   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Milan (Milano in the Italian language, and Milán in Milanese dialect, from Latin, Mediolanum with the meaning of 'in the middle of the plain') is the main city in northern Italy, and is located in the pla..
Milan Babić (born February 26, 1956 in Kukar, Croatia) was from 1991 to 1995 the leader of the Republic of Serbian Krajina, a largely Serb-populated region which broke away from Croatia following its declaration of independence from Yugoslavia in 1991.
Milan Sufflay (Šufflay in Croatian) (November 9, 1879 - February 18, 1931) was a Croatian historian and politician of Hungarian heritage.
istanbulhotelsguide.info /browse.php?title=M/MI/MIL   (11261 words)

  
 ObrenoviC: Free Encyclopedia Articles at Questia.com Online Library
Milan's son Alexander, king of Serbia, the last ruling Obrenović, was assassinated in 1903; on his death the Karadjordjević dynasty again came into power.
When Prince Milan Obrenovic vetoed Pasics appointment, the Radicals...of a personal regime by King Alexander Obrenovic, lasting from 1897 to 1903, undoubtedly...morally spent, the regime of the last Obrenovic was only a temporary setback in the process...
The assassination of Alexander Obrenovic V and his wife Draga (Darling) was the...rivalry between the Karageorgevich and Obrenovic dynasties who had headed the rebellion...14, 1876, the only son of King Milan (Obrenovic IV) and his wife Nathalia Keshko.
www.questia.com /library/encyclopedia/obrenovic.jsp?l=O&p=1   (1335 words)

  
 The Yugoslavian growth and decline   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
His successor Prince Milan Obrenovic II died a few months later and the Ottomans put his younger brother, Michael Obrenovic III on the throne.
In 1882 Milan Obrenevic IV became Milan I, King of the Serbs.
King Milan started a war with rival Bulgaria (which had claimed som Serbian lands in the failed San Stephano treaty, and aspired lands in which Serbia would also liked to expand, especially Macedonia, parts of which were also wanted by Greece).
www.home.zonnet.nl /gerardvonhebel/yugogrowthanddecline.htm   (1422 words)

  
 Aleksandar Obrenović   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
In 1889 his father, King Milan, abdicated and proclaimed Aleksandar king of Serbia under a regency until he should attain his majority at eighteen years of age.
In 1898 he appointed his father commander-in-chief of the Serbian army, and from that time, or rather from his return to Serbia in 1894 until 1900, ex-king Milan was regarded as the de facto ruler of the country.
Ex-King Milan resigned his post, as did the government; and King Aleksandar had great difficulty in forming a new cabinet.
www.tocatch.info /en/Alexander_Obrenovich.htm   (553 words)

  
 Milan Prince and King of Serbia: Free Encyclopedia Articles at Questia.com Online Library
The Serbian prince Milan was quick to profit from this decision of the principal European states and promoted himself as king of Serbia.
MILAN, prince and king of Serbia (Milan Obrenovic...1854 1901, prince (1868 82) and king (1882 89) of Serbia; grandnephew...Obrenovic as prince.
Milans son Alexander, king of Serbia, the last ruling Obrenovic, was assassinated...
www.questia.com /library/encyclopedia/101258805   (1421 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: List of Serbian monarchs
Conrad IV of Germany becomes titular King of Jerusalem, with Frederick II as regent.
Tsar Stefan Uroš IV Dušan Silni (the mighty) (Цар Стефан Душан Силни) (around 1308-December 20, 1355) was a Serb king (September 8, 1331-1346) and tsar (1346-December 5, 1355).
Events January 7 - Portuguese king Afonso IV sends three men to kill Ines de Castro, beloved of his son prince Pedro - Pedro revolts and incites a civil war April - Philip of Anjou marries Mary of Naples, daughter of Charles of Valois, duke of Calabria, and Mary of Valois Scots defeat...
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/List-of-Serbian-monarchs   (3816 words)

  
 Milan IV --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Succeeding his cousin Prince Michael III of Serbia on July 2, 1868, Milan was dominated during the first years of his reign by a regency that adopted a seemingly liberal constitution in 1869, tried to develop close relations with Austria, and made Milan generally unpopular.
Pope Gregory VII's 11th-century removal of Henry IV from the throne of Germany, one of the episodes of the Investiture Controversy.
Milan is widely regarded as the mecca of Italian commerce, culture, and fashion.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9052645   (596 words)

  
 Milan IV --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - The online encyclopedia you can trust!
After Milan declared war on Bulgaria in 1885 and suffered another major military defeat, Austria extended diplomatic aid and arranged for peace to be concluded on the basis of status quo ante bellum.
Milan's dependence upon Austria aggravated domestic discontent, which he tried to assuage by granting a more liberal constitution in January 1889.
In March, however, Milan was compelled to abdicate in favour of his son Alexander.
www.britannica.com /ebc/article-9052645   (919 words)

  
 Vojska Srbije i Crne Gore   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
In the civilian class of soldiers in Cacak, out of 11 men, three have degrees in economy, one in law, one in civil engineering, one in telecommunications and one is the last year student of the Medical school, whereas the rest have finished secondary or vocational schools.
The "Life and work of General Milan Rastislav Stefanik" exhibition of photographs and documents of the first Czechoslovakian Minister of War, astronomer and politician, opens this evening at 7.00 in the SMAF Central Club in Belgrade.
February 10th 1901 died the former Serbian King Milan Obrenovic IV, under whose rule Serbia was internationally acknowledged.
www.vj.yu /english/en_aktuelno/vesti/februar2004/v0210-e.htm   (432 words)

  
 History of Serbia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Later on, when Dragutin abdicated in favor of his younger brother Milutin (in 1282), the Hungarian king Ladislaus IV gave him lands in northeastern Bosnia, the regions of Srem, Slavonia and Macva, and the city of Belgrade, whilst he managed to conquer and annex lands in northeastern Serbia.
Internal politics revolved largely around the dynastic rivalry between the Obrenovic and Karadjordjevic families, descendants respectively of Miloš Obrenovic, (recognised as hereditary prince in 1829) and Karadjordje (Black George), leader of the 1804 revolt but killed in 1817, allegedly at Miloš's behest,.
After the 1880s the dynastic issue became entwined to some extent with wider diplomatic divisions in Europe, Milan Obrenovic aligning his foreign policy with that of neighbouring Austria-Hungary in return for Habsburg support for his elevation to king.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/H/History-of-Serbia.htm   (3956 words)

  
 From Fairy Tale to Holocaust - The Yids   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
At Berlin, the countries taking part signed a memorandum and unanimously took the decision that Serbia would be internationally recognized only if she proclaimed the equality of all faiths, which meant that she had to admit full rights to the Jews.
The government and Prince Milan Obrenovic IV agreed to fulfil these conditions, but the government was still desirous of outwitting the world public in some way.
Milan Obradovic, a Serb journalist in Bjelovar at the beginning of the century regularly put next to his name the qualification "anti-semite" or "the first public and main leader of the anti-semitic movement in Croatia" and was one of the leading anti-semite Serbs in Croatia.
www.hic.hr /books/from-fairytale/part-01.htm   (1330 words)

  
 Carl Savich | Columns | serbianna.com
Prince Milan Obrenovic IV of Serbia and Prince Nicholas of Montenegro were under extreme domestic pressure to aid the Serbian Orthodox insurgents in Bosnia-Hercegovina.
Milan Obrenovic became prince in 1868 and the king of Serbia in 1882, abdicating in 1889.
Obrenovic opposed a war with the Ottoman Empire because Serbia lacked the military resources for such a conflict.
www.serbianna.com /columns/savich/034.shtml   (18790 words)

  
 THE CENTURIES UNDER TURKISH RULE AND THE REVIVAL OF STATEHOOD
The latter was led by a new Serbian leader, Milos Obrenovic (1783-1860, prince from 1815 to 1839 and again from 1858 to 1860), who made a peace treaty with Grand Vizier Marashli Ali-pasha, after waging several successful battles.
The reign of Milan Obrenovic (Prince 1868-1882, King 1882-1889) is the link between this period and the one following (1878-1918), that is, the period of the existence of the independent democratic state which fought for Serbian and Yugoslav unification.
Disappointed in Russia, Prince Milan turned to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, signing the Secret Convention with them (1881), and the empire was the first to recognize him when he was proclaimed king (1882).
www.suc.org /culture/history/Hist_Serb_Culture/chb_Rados_Ljusic.html   (5489 words)

  
 Serbian Church in History
Patriarch of Pec Arsenije IV Jovanovic-Sakabenta (1728-1737, Yovanovich Shakabenta) prematurely hoped that final freedom could be achieved soon and consequently decided to lead his people to revolt against the Turks.
After Patriarch Arsenije IV Sakabenta migrated to Austria, the Church in Constantinople asserted pressure on the Porte to install mainly Greeks, such as Joanikije Karadza (1739-1746), as Patriarch of Pec.
First step in that direction was achieved by Knez Milos Obrenovic in 1831 when the Patriarchate of Constantinople agreed to recognise Serbian Church autonomy and to remove all Greek bishops that had come into direct conflict with leaders of popular revolts in Serbia.
www.kosovo.com /socheng2.html   (13823 words)

  
 Forum B92 > Koreni srpske nesrece   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
When the rival Obrenovic dynasty returned to power in that year, they secured a new Constitution from the sultan that ended the power of the Council and the Constitutionalist Party for a decade.
Milan led the country into war with Bulgaria in 1885, only to be defeated.
Milan was known to cheat on Queen Nathalie.
www.b92.net /invboard/lofiversion/index.php/t17343.html   (10734 words)

  
 TWENTIETH CENTURY LITERATURE
In contrast to Ducic, another equally important poet was Milan Rakic (1876-1939).
The Time of Death I-IV (1972- 1979) is a great historical novel which transposed, into literary form, the drama of war and the suffering and death of the Serbian people in World War I. Finally, in 1950 The Winter Summer Holiday by Vladan Desnica (1905-1967) came out.
It was the first modern prosaic novel written with themes taken from the last war (set in the coastal hinterlands of Zadar).
suc.suc.org /culture/history/Hist_Serb_Culture/chr/New_Literature.html   (8766 words)

  
 CROATS & SERBS: CHAPTER SEVEN
During the III and IV centuries a very large number of Moorish veterans were settled in the territories on the right bank of the Danube, from the Alps to the Black Sea, regions designated by the Romans as Western and Eastern Illyricum.
With this act a battle to the death was declared between Obrenovic’s party and that of Kara-Djordje, which troubled Serbia’s political life throughout the XIX century.
The dethroned Obrenovic princes and their adherents in Serbia, who were on the Russian side, exploited this factor.
www.magma.ca /~rendic/chapter7.htm   (14536 words)

  
 THE BALKAN PIEDMONT   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Even before it was signed, Serbian Prince Milan had informed Russian diplomats that Serbia requested territorial concessions in Bosnia (the region between Foca and Visegrad in eastern Bosnia), the city of Vidin on the Danube (today's Bulgaria) and all of Old Serbia (the Kosovo vilayet).
At Prince Milan's initiative, his Foreign Minister, Jovan Ristic, concluded an agreement with Count Andrassy, in which Serbia undertook to construct a railway from Belgrade to Nis, and afterwards to establish either a commercial or customs alliance with the Dual Monarchy.
Alexander Obrenovic and his wife Draga Masin were killed in a conspiracy organized by a group of Belgrade officers who were assisted by several political figures from the Liberal party.
www.bglink.com /bgpersonal/batakovic/piedmont.html   (17187 words)

  
 Wikipedia: Cleanup/Leftovers - Open Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
If no more explanation is given a month, I'll move it to Un-cleanable.
Arthur H useless substub French thingy, and all contribs of 193.11.231.58 -- Improved to a marginally useful stub.
I've done some work, but it needs more than I can devote.
open-encyclopedia.com /LO_oep   (2704 words)

  
 VirtualTourist.com - Ankhesenamun's Nis Travelogue - Historic Places in Nis
He consolidated the frontiers of the Empire and imposed a firm organization on the Army and the civil administration.
In the year 313, he issued the Milan Edict, thereby introducing Christianity as the official religion of the Empire.
His son, Musta-bey, however, agreed to sell it after his father's death, so the building was reconstructed and turned into a comfortable residence for the Serbian royal family.
members.virtualtourist.com /m/tt/2f373   (1110 words)

  
 Middle East Open Encyclopedia: Serbo-Bulgarian War   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Therefore, the Austrians induced the Serbians to attack the fledgling Bulgarian state, promising them territorial gains in return for concessions in the West Balkans.
The war offically began when Milan Obrenovic IV declared war on Bulgaria on November 14, 1885.
The Serbians were hoping to have surprise on their side becaus Bulgaria was expecting resistance from the Ottomans to the South.
www.baghdadmuseum.org /ref/index.php?title=Serbo-Bulgarian_War   (450 words)

  
 The Almanach de Chivalry , The International and Royal Council for Orders of Chivalry .
Established by Henry IV in 1608 as the Order of Our Lady of Mount Carmel.
Grand Master: H.R.H. Crown Prince Vittorio Emanuele of Savoy, Prince of Piedmont and Prince of Naples (Vittorio Emanuele IV, Titular King of Italy) (b.
Renewed by King Friedrich Wilhelm IV 1848 and 1849, and once again by King Wilhelm I 1865.
www.almanachdechivalry.com   (8423 words)

  
 Sentencing Judgement Jokic case IT-01-42/1
Dragan Obrenovic, Case No. IT-02-60/2-S, Sentencing Judgement, 10 December 2003.
Geneva Conventions I through IV of August 12, 1949.
Milan Simic, Case No. IT-95-9/2-S, Sentencing Judgement, 17 October 2002.
www.un.org /icty/jokic/trialc/judgement/jok-sj040318e.htm   (8297 words)

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