fbpx
Wikipedia

Mate Balota

Mijo Mirković (Croatian pronunciation: [mǐjo mǐːrkɔ̝v̞it͡ɕ]; 28 September 1898 – 17 February 1963), also known by his pen names Miho and Mate Balota, was a prominent Croatian poet, novelist and economist. Considered one of the most prominent Croatian poets of the 20th century and often credited as the greatest Istrian poet, he was called "the greatest Istrian after Labin's Matija Vlačić" by Tone Peruško.[1]

Mijo Mirković
Mijo Mirković (Mate Balota)
Born(1898-09-28)28 September 1898
Rakalj, Austrian Littoral, Austria-Hungary
Died17 February 1963(1963-02-17) (aged 64)
Zagreb, SR Croatia, SFR Yugoslavia
Pen nameMate Balota
OccupationPoet, novelist, economist, professor, academician
Alma materUniversity of Zagreb
Universität Frankfurt am Main (Ph.D.)
Notable worksDragi kamen
Tijesna zemlja
Signature

Mirković was born in Rakalj, southeastern Istria. His family was evacuated to Moravia at the beginning of the Great War. Upon his return to Croatia he worked as a journalist in Pula before moving to Zagreb, where he graduated from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. He later studied economy and social sciences in Berlin and Frankfurt, where he had gone in order to examine the original manuscripts of Matija Vlačić. He obtained his doctorate from the University of Frankfurt in 1922, and subsequently taught in Osijek, Subotica and Belgrade. After World War II, he was a professor at the Faculty of Economics in Zagreb until his death. A member of Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts (JAZU) since 1947, he was its Secretary General from 1958 until 1961, and in 1960 received the Lifetime Achievement Award.

Mirković is one of the most appreciated Croatian dialect poets.[2] Beside poetry, he is also known for his narrative and nonfiction books, and for his works on economy. He published many discussions, books and textbooks on the theory of foreign and domestic trade, industrial policy, national economy, history of economy and economics of agriculture, publishing such works as Trade and Domestic Trade Policy (1931), Foreign Trade Policy (1932), Industrial Policy (1936), Agrarian Policy (1940), Economic Structure of Yugoslavia 1918–1941 (1950) and Economic History of Yugoslavia (1958).[3][4]

His best known work of poetry is the collection Dragi kamen, published in Zagreb in 1938 and named after the 1931 poem,[5] which was later published in several more editions. Described as a nostalgic experience of Istria, a meeting named after the book is held in Rakalj since 1968, in Mirković's honour.[3][4] Among his other books there are Stara Pazinska Gimnazija and Puna je Pula, the latter a monograph in which Mirković combines fiction with documentary work. These realist texts depict life in the Istrian villages, with both the Istrians' happy and tragic moments.[3][6] His only novel is Tijesna zemlja: roman iz istarskog narodnog života (1946), an economic and social study in which he portrays life in an Istrian village from the second half of the 19th century until the 1940s, following the life of a family through three generations.[3][4]

Early life edit

Mijo Mirković was born in Rakalj, Istria, on the Kvarner Gulf, which at the time was part of the Austro-hungarian empire. He attended the elementary school founded by his father, Ante Mirković-Gaspić, in his native village. Before his ninth birthday, Mirković was already working as a helper-machinist in ships transporting stones from Rakalj to Ancona.[6] He later worked in the local mines, in a print shop and on a railroad.[6]

 
Young Mirković with his mother Marija and sisters in Moravia

Mirković attended the high school Veliku državnu gimnaziju u Pazinu ("Royal Great State Gymnasium") in Pazin, and later in Zabreh, in the Czech Republic. His family had been evacuated to Moravia following the outbreak of World War I.[4][7][3]

He later came back to Istria, working as a journalist and an editor for the Pula newspaper Hrvatski list.[4][3][7] Mirković was in Pula at the time of the collapse of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy.[4]

Starting from 1919 he studied philosophy and Slavonic studies in Zagreb and Belgrade. He later studied economics and humanities in Berlin and Frankfurt am Main, where in 1922[8] he received his doctorate in economics with a thesis titled O glavnom razlogu gospodarske zaostalosti slavenskih naroda ("on the main reason for the economic backwardness of the Slavic peoples").[4][7][3] The dissertation is kept at the Frankfurt University Library.[9]

Mirković had decided to go study in Frankfurt, because there were stored the manuscripts of Vlačić (Flacius), who he considered the "greatest Istrian of all time."[6] His studies of Vlačić's manuscripts in Frankfurt later resulted in his extensive and well-documented work on the reformer.[6] In the interwar period he worked as a substitute professor in several places throughout former Yugoslavia, including the Trade Academy in Osijek and the Maritime Academy in Bakar. He taught at the Subotica Law School (1928–39) and at the Belgrade School of Economics.[3][4] Mirković also visited many European universities and scientific cultural centers.[4][7][3]

 
Ante Mirković, father of Balota

The 1930s were an extremely fruitful decade for Mirković. At this time he intensively studied the life and the works of Matija Vlačić Ilirik, publishing Flacius (1938); Matija Vlačić (1957); Matija Vlačić Ilirik (1960). A monograph resulting from these studies, Matija Vlačić-Ilirik I–II was published posthumously.[3][4] Mirkovic's interest in Labin native Flacius reportedly dated back to his childhood, and it might have been transmitted to him by his mother, who was originally from Skitača, in the Labinština.[6]

In 1938 he published one of his best known works, the Chakavian collection of poems Dragi kamen (literally, "Dear Rock" and also "Precious Stone"). This collection has a "native theme and strong social tone, with a nostalgic experience of Istria."[3]

During the Second World War he completed his only novel Tight Country: A Novel from Istrian Folk Life, or Tijesna zemlja. Roman iz istarskog narodnog života (1946). He united documentary and fiction works in his Puna je Pula (1954). Another well known book by Mirković is Stara Pazinska Gimnazija (1950). Mirković's verist works depict life in the Istrian villages, with the Istrians' happy, sad and tragic moments.

Mirković participated to the Paris Peace Conference, and thus contributed to the annexation of Istria to Croatia.[4][3][7] From 1957 until his death he was full professor at the Faculty of Economics in Zagreb.[4][7][3] In 1960, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award.[3][10] Starting from 1947 he was a full member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, where he was Secretary General from 1958 until 1961.

Mirković published a large number of university textbooks and works on economy, including Ekonomsku historiju Jugoslavije (1958).[4] He was one of the most prolific writers on economy between the two world wars.[4] He published works on economy history and discussions in the field of foreign and domestic trade theory, agrarian economics, and industrial policy. Such works include Trgovina i unutrašnja trgovinska politika ("Trade and Domestic Trade Policy"), 1931; Spoljna trgovinska politika ("Foreign Trade Policy"), 1932; Industrijska politika ("Industrial Policy"), 1936; Agrarna politika ("Agrarian Policy"), 1940; Ekonomska struktura Jugoslavije 1918–1941 ("Economic Structure of 1918–1941 Yugoslavia"), 1950; Ekonomika agrara FNRJ ("Economics of Agriculture of the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia"), 1950; Seljaci u kapitalizmu ("Peasants and Capitalism"), 1952; Ekonomska historija Jugoslavije ("Economic History of Yugoslavia"), 1958; Uvod u ekonomiku Jugoslavije ("Introduction to the Economy of Yugoslavia"), 1959.[3]

Mirković was particularly fond of Labin and its people, possibly due to the fact that his grandmother, Martina, was from nearby Labin.[6]

He died in Zagreb and was buried in Rakalj. His funeral in Rakalj "went into memory as the largest spontaneous funeral Istria had ever seen," with reportedly eight thousands people coming from all parts of the Kvarner and Istria.[6]

Poetry edit

 
Bust of Mirković in Žminj

Mirković wrote his first poem, Kuraj ("Courage"), about the courage of fishermen at sea at 9. In high school he founded the magazine Nada - Hope, in which he also published his poems.[6]

Mirković is considered one of the leading Croatian poets of the 20th century, is often credited as the greatest poet from Istria, and has been described as the most prominent Istrian of all times, with Tone Peruško crediting him as the second greatest Istrian after Matija Vlačić Ilirik.[1]

His poetry influenced the following generation of poets. He published a total of 50 poems of uniform quality. With his poetry, "he anticipated and touched on important ideological problems and existential doubts of the contemporary intellectual."[4]

The South Istrian Chakavian of his poetry has been described as musical and somewhat archaic. In his songs he has his most unstable verse, which in places is completely free. The rhythm of poetry "often follows the rhythm of folk songs."[4] The "relation to verse, versification and metrics is unpredictable," and the verse is markedly free, as is "the relation to language and its grammatical and orthographic laws, regardless of whether it is written in a dialect or a book-standard." His poems treat urban themes.[4] His collection of poems "became a cult book of Istrian Croats due to its great popularity."[3] Mirković is credited with having expressed in poetry and journalism "the voice of the [common] people of Istria."[6] He is one of the most appreciated Croatian dialect poets.[2]

Prose edit

His novel and indirect autobiographical work Tijesna zemlja: roman iz istarskog narodnog života (1946) polarizes the critics to this day.[3][4] It is a socioeconomic study of Istrian villages in the second half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century. In this book he portrays life in an Istrian village, from 1870 until 1941. The novel follows the life of a family through three generations. The narrator speaks in Croatian, while the characters communicate in the dialect of southeastern Istria.[6]

Mirković's feuilleton and travel books, so far "an insufficiently valued part of his oeuvre",[4] confirm him as one of the most prominent Croatian writers in the middle course of the Croatian literature.[4] The thematic of his travelogues is somewhat complementary to Mirković's work in other genres. The thematic framework of his work consists of "social peasant misery, love themes, betrayal and the destinies of emigrants," as well as "travel, the sea, the world of childhood [...] ideological choice and commitment."[4] His other notable works of prose include Proza i poezija ("Poetry and Prose"), 1959, the drama Smrtni grijeh ("Mortal Sin"), 1964, Selected Works (with N. Pavić, P.Ljubić and Drago Gervais in the edition Five Centuries of Croatian Literature, 1973) and a selection from the work Na crvenoj istarskoj zemlji ("On the Red Istrian Land"), 1979.

Legacy edit

Today, there is a street or square dedicated to Balota in most towns of the Kvarner and Istria, and in cities such as Rijeka, Zadar and Pula. The Faculty of Economics and Tourism "Dr. Mijo Mirković" in Pula owes its name to Mirković.[4] Rijeka's Mijo Mirković School of Economics is named after him.[11]

The scientific conference Susreti na dragom kamenu ("Encounters on a Precious Stone") is held every year in Mirković's honour in his native Rakalj.[3][4] The historic KSI Mate Balota in Zagreb is named after him.[12] Jadrolinija's MF Mate Balota, mostly sailing around Zadar, is named after him.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Miroslav Bertoša. "Peruško, Tone (audio file on the bottom of the page)". Istrapedia. Archived from the original on 5 February 2021. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  2. ^ a b Brücke (in Italian). Ministry of Culture. 2008. p. 3.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r "Mirković, Mijo". Croatian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 21 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Biletić, Boris Domagoj. "Mirković, Mijo (Miho, pseud. Mate Balota)". Istrian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 27 September 2015. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  5. ^ "Susreti na dragom kamenu". Istrian Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 22 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Mirković, Mijo (Miho, pseud. Mate Balota)". Istrianet. Archived from the original on 4 July 2013. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Mijo Mirković". Faculty of Economics & Business, University of Zagreb. Archived from the original on 22 March 2021. Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  8. ^ Ante Kadic; Ante Kadić (1960). Contemporary Croatian Literature. Mouton. p. 63.
  9. ^ Glavni uzroci gospodarske zaostalosti slavenskih naroda. Moderna Vremena. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  10. ^ "Državne nagrade za znanstvenoistraživački rad za 1960. godinu". Republic of Croatia. Archived from the original on 22 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  11. ^ "Ekonomska škola Mije Mirkovića Rijeka (official website)". Ekonomska škola Mije Mirkovića Rijeka. Archived from the original on 22 March 2021. Retrieved 21 March 2021.
  12. ^ Boltižar, Matija (31 March 2019). "FOTO: GASI SE 154 KVADRATA ISTRE U ZAGREBU Klubu studenata Istre nakon više od 50 godina prijeti izbacivanje iz kultnog prostora u Ilici 13". Jutarnji list. Archived from the original on 22 March 2021. Retrieved 22 March 2021.

Sources edit

  • M. Franičević, Mate Balota, u: Izabrana djela (Pavić, Balota, Ljubić, Gervais), PSHK, 105, Zagreb, 1973
  • A.-T. Mirković, Bibliografija Mije Mirkovića – Mate Balote (1918.–1988.), Susreti na dragom kamenu, 1988 (1990)
  • B. Biletić (editor), Književno djelo Mate Balote, Zagreb 1998;
  • B. Biletić (editor), Mate Balota – Živi glas hrvatske Istre (Izbor iz djela), Vinkovci 1999;
  • Zbornik radova o Miji Mirkoviću – Mati Baloti, Kastav 1999;
  • A.-T. Mirković, Bibliografija Mije Mirkovića – Mate Balote (1989.–2001.), Spinčići , 2001, 22;
  • B. Rudež (editor), Mijo Mirković: hommage uz 100. obljetnicu rođenja, Zagreb 2001.
  • Istria on the Internet, Prominent Istrians - Mate Balota - https://www.istrianet.org/istria/illustri/mirkovic/index.htm
  • Biografija (in Croatian)
  • Biletić, Boris Domagoj. "Mirković, Mijo (Mate Balota)". Istrapedia (in Croatian). Istria County. Retrieved 5 March 2011.

mate, balota, mijo, mirković, croatian, pronunciation, mǐjo, mǐːrkɔ, september, 1898, february, 1963, also, known, names, miho, prominent, croatian, poet, novelist, economist, considered, most, prominent, croatian, poets, 20th, century, often, credited, greate. Mijo Mirkovic Croatian pronunciation mǐjo mǐːrkɔ v it ɕ 28 September 1898 17 February 1963 also known by his pen names Miho and Mate Balota was a prominent Croatian poet novelist and economist Considered one of the most prominent Croatian poets of the 20th century and often credited as the greatest Istrian poet he was called the greatest Istrian after Labin s Matija Vlacic by Tone Perusko 1 Mijo MirkovicMijo Mirkovic Mate Balota Born 1898 09 28 28 September 1898Rakalj Austrian Littoral Austria HungaryDied17 February 1963 1963 02 17 aged 64 Zagreb SR Croatia SFR YugoslaviaPen nameMate BalotaOccupationPoet novelist economist professor academicianAlma materUniversity of ZagrebUniversitat Frankfurt am Main Ph D Notable worksDragi kamenTijesna zemljaSignatureMirkovic was born in Rakalj southeastern Istria His family was evacuated to Moravia at the beginning of the Great War Upon his return to Croatia he worked as a journalist in Pula before moving to Zagreb where he graduated from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences He later studied economy and social sciences in Berlin and Frankfurt where he had gone in order to examine the original manuscripts of Matija Vlacic He obtained his doctorate from the University of Frankfurt in 1922 and subsequently taught in Osijek Subotica and Belgrade After World War II he was a professor at the Faculty of Economics in Zagreb until his death A member of Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts JAZU since 1947 he was its Secretary General from 1958 until 1961 and in 1960 received the Lifetime Achievement Award Mirkovic is one of the most appreciated Croatian dialect poets 2 Beside poetry he is also known for his narrative and nonfiction books and for his works on economy He published many discussions books and textbooks on the theory of foreign and domestic trade industrial policy national economy history of economy and economics of agriculture publishing such works as Trade and Domestic Trade Policy 1931 Foreign Trade Policy 1932 Industrial Policy 1936 Agrarian Policy 1940 Economic Structure of Yugoslavia 1918 1941 1950 and Economic History of Yugoslavia 1958 3 4 His best known work of poetry is the collection Dragi kamen published in Zagreb in 1938 and named after the 1931 poem 5 which was later published in several more editions Described as a nostalgic experience of Istria a meeting named after the book is held in Rakalj since 1968 in Mirkovic s honour 3 4 Among his other books there are Stara Pazinska Gimnazija and Puna je Pula the latter a monograph in which Mirkovic combines fiction with documentary work These realist texts depict life in the Istrian villages with both the Istrians happy and tragic moments 3 6 His only novel is Tijesna zemlja roman iz istarskog narodnog zivota 1946 an economic and social study in which he portrays life in an Istrian village from the second half of the 19th century until the 1940s following the life of a family through three generations 3 4 Contents 1 Early life 2 Poetry 3 Prose 4 Legacy 5 References 6 SourcesEarly life editMijo Mirkovic was born in Rakalj Istria on the Kvarner Gulf which at the time was part of the Austro hungarian empire He attended the elementary school founded by his father Ante Mirkovic Gaspic in his native village Before his ninth birthday Mirkovic was already working as a helper machinist in ships transporting stones from Rakalj to Ancona 6 He later worked in the local mines in a print shop and on a railroad 6 nbsp Young Mirkovic with his mother Marija and sisters in MoraviaMirkovic attended the high school Veliku drzavnu gimnaziju u Pazinu Royal Great State Gymnasium in Pazin and later in Zabreh in the Czech Republic His family had been evacuated to Moravia following the outbreak of World War I 4 7 3 He later came back to Istria working as a journalist and an editor for the Pula newspaper Hrvatski list 4 3 7 Mirkovic was in Pula at the time of the collapse of the Austro Hungarian Monarchy 4 Starting from 1919 he studied philosophy and Slavonic studies in Zagreb and Belgrade He later studied economics and humanities in Berlin and Frankfurt am Main where in 1922 8 he received his doctorate in economics with a thesis titled O glavnom razlogu gospodarske zaostalosti slavenskih naroda on the main reason for the economic backwardness of the Slavic peoples 4 7 3 The dissertation is kept at the Frankfurt University Library 9 Mirkovic had decided to go study in Frankfurt because there were stored the manuscripts of Vlacic Flacius who he considered the greatest Istrian of all time 6 His studies of Vlacic s manuscripts in Frankfurt later resulted in his extensive and well documented work on the reformer 6 In the interwar period he worked as a substitute professor in several places throughout former Yugoslavia including the Trade Academy in Osijek and the Maritime Academy in Bakar He taught at the Subotica Law School 1928 39 and at the Belgrade School of Economics 3 4 Mirkovic also visited many European universities and scientific cultural centers 4 7 3 nbsp Ante Mirkovic father of BalotaThe 1930s were an extremely fruitful decade for Mirkovic At this time he intensively studied the life and the works of Matija Vlacic Ilirik publishing Flacius 1938 Matija Vlacic 1957 Matija Vlacic Ilirik 1960 A monograph resulting from these studies Matija Vlacic Ilirik I II was published posthumously 3 4 Mirkovic s interest in Labin native Flacius reportedly dated back to his childhood and it might have been transmitted to him by his mother who was originally from Skitaca in the Labinstina 6 In 1938 he published one of his best known works the Chakavian collection of poems Dragi kamen literally Dear Rock and also Precious Stone This collection has a native theme and strong social tone with a nostalgic experience of Istria 3 During the Second World War he completed his only novel Tight Country A Novel from Istrian Folk Life or Tijesna zemlja Roman iz istarskog narodnog zivota 1946 He united documentary and fiction works in his Puna je Pula 1954 Another well known book by Mirkovic is Stara Pazinska Gimnazija 1950 Mirkovic s verist works depict life in the Istrian villages with the Istrians happy sad and tragic moments Mirkovic participated to the Paris Peace Conference and thus contributed to the annexation of Istria to Croatia 4 3 7 From 1957 until his death he was full professor at the Faculty of Economics in Zagreb 4 7 3 In 1960 he received the Lifetime Achievement Award 3 10 Starting from 1947 he was a full member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts where he was Secretary General from 1958 until 1961 Mirkovic published a large number of university textbooks and works on economy including Ekonomsku historiju Jugoslavije 1958 4 He was one of the most prolific writers on economy between the two world wars 4 He published works on economy history and discussions in the field of foreign and domestic trade theory agrarian economics and industrial policy Such works include Trgovina i unutrasnja trgovinska politika Trade and Domestic Trade Policy 1931 Spoljna trgovinska politika Foreign Trade Policy 1932 Industrijska politika Industrial Policy 1936 Agrarna politika Agrarian Policy 1940 Ekonomska struktura Jugoslavije 1918 1941 Economic Structure of 1918 1941 Yugoslavia 1950 Ekonomika agrara FNRJ Economics of Agriculture of the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia 1950 Seljaci u kapitalizmu Peasants and Capitalism 1952 Ekonomska historija Jugoslavije Economic History of Yugoslavia 1958 Uvod u ekonomiku Jugoslavije Introduction to the Economy of Yugoslavia 1959 3 Mirkovic was particularly fond of Labin and its people possibly due to the fact that his grandmother Martina was from nearby Labin 6 He died in Zagreb and was buried in Rakalj His funeral in Rakalj went into memory as the largest spontaneous funeral Istria had ever seen with reportedly eight thousands people coming from all parts of the Kvarner and Istria 6 Poetry edit nbsp Bust of Mirkovic in ZminjMirkovic wrote his first poem Kuraj Courage about the courage of fishermen at sea at 9 In high school he founded the magazine Nada Hope in which he also published his poems 6 Mirkovic is considered one of the leading Croatian poets of the 20th century is often credited as the greatest poet from Istria and has been described as the most prominent Istrian of all times with Tone Perusko crediting him as the second greatest Istrian after Matija Vlacic Ilirik 1 His poetry influenced the following generation of poets He published a total of 50 poems of uniform quality With his poetry he anticipated and touched on important ideological problems and existential doubts of the contemporary intellectual 4 The South Istrian Chakavian of his poetry has been described as musical and somewhat archaic In his songs he has his most unstable verse which in places is completely free The rhythm of poetry often follows the rhythm of folk songs 4 The relation to verse versification and metrics is unpredictable and the verse is markedly free as is the relation to language and its grammatical and orthographic laws regardless of whether it is written in a dialect or a book standard His poems treat urban themes 4 His collection of poems became a cult book of Istrian Croats due to its great popularity 3 Mirkovic is credited with having expressed in poetry and journalism the voice of the common people of Istria 6 He is one of the most appreciated Croatian dialect poets 2 Prose editHis novel and indirect autobiographical work Tijesna zemlja roman iz istarskog narodnog zivota 1946 polarizes the critics to this day 3 4 It is a socioeconomic study of Istrian villages in the second half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century In this book he portrays life in an Istrian village from 1870 until 1941 The novel follows the life of a family through three generations The narrator speaks in Croatian while the characters communicate in the dialect of southeastern Istria 6 Mirkovic s feuilleton and travel books so far an insufficiently valued part of his oeuvre 4 confirm him as one of the most prominent Croatian writers in the middle course of the Croatian literature 4 The thematic of his travelogues is somewhat complementary to Mirkovic s work in other genres The thematic framework of his work consists of social peasant misery love themes betrayal and the destinies of emigrants as well as travel the sea the world of childhood ideological choice and commitment 4 His other notable works of prose include Proza i poezija Poetry and Prose 1959 the drama Smrtni grijeh Mortal Sin 1964 Selected Works with N Pavic P Ljubic and Drago Gervais in the edition Five Centuries of Croatian Literature 1973 and a selection from the work Na crvenoj istarskoj zemlji On the Red Istrian Land 1979 Legacy editToday there is a street or square dedicated to Balota in most towns of the Kvarner and Istria and in cities such as Rijeka Zadar and Pula The Faculty of Economics and Tourism Dr Mijo Mirkovic in Pula owes its name to Mirkovic 4 Rijeka s Mijo Mirkovic School of Economics is named after him 11 The scientific conference Susreti na dragom kamenu Encounters on a Precious Stone is held every year in Mirkovic s honour in his native Rakalj 3 4 The historic KSI Mate Balota in Zagreb is named after him 12 Jadrolinija s MF Mate Balota mostly sailing around Zadar is named after him References edit a b Miroslav Bertosa Perusko Tone audio file on the bottom of the page Istrapedia Archived from the original on 5 February 2021 Retrieved 22 January 2021 a b Brucke in Italian Ministry of Culture 2008 p 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Mirkovic Mijo Croatian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 21 March 2021 Retrieved 21 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Biletic Boris Domagoj Mirkovic Mijo Miho pseud Mate Balota Istrian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 27 September 2015 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Susreti na dragom kamenu Istrian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 22 March 2021 Retrieved 21 March 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k Mirkovic Mijo Miho pseud Mate Balota Istrianet Archived from the original on 4 July 2013 Retrieved 21 March 2021 a b c d e f Mijo Mirkovic Faculty of Economics amp Business University of Zagreb Archived from the original on 22 March 2021 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Ante Kadic Ante Kadic 1960 Contemporary Croatian Literature Mouton p 63 Glavni uzroci gospodarske zaostalosti slavenskih naroda Moderna Vremena Retrieved 21 March 2021 Drzavne nagrade za znanstvenoistrazivacki rad za 1960 godinu Republic of Croatia Archived from the original on 22 March 2021 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Ekonomska skola Mije Mirkovica Rijeka official website Ekonomska skola Mije Mirkovica Rijeka Archived from the original on 22 March 2021 Retrieved 21 March 2021 Boltizar Matija 31 March 2019 FOTO GASI SE 154 KVADRATA ISTRE U ZAGREBU Klubu studenata Istre nakon vise od 50 godina prijeti izbacivanje iz kultnog prostora u Ilici 13 Jutarnji list Archived from the original on 22 March 2021 Retrieved 22 March 2021 Sources editM Franicevic Mate Balota u Izabrana djela Pavic Balota Ljubic Gervais PSHK 105 Zagreb 1973 A T Mirkovic Bibliografija Mije Mirkovica Mate Balote 1918 1988 Susreti na dragom kamenu 1988 1990 B Biletic editor Knjizevno djelo Mate Balote Zagreb 1998 B Biletic editor Mate Balota Zivi glas hrvatske Istre Izbor iz djela Vinkovci 1999 Zbornik radova o Miji Mirkovicu Mati Baloti Kastav 1999 A T Mirkovic Bibliografija Mije Mirkovica Mate Balote 1989 2001 Spincici 2001 22 B Rudez editor Mijo Mirkovic hommage uz 100 obljetnicu rođenja Zagreb 2001 Istria on the Internet Prominent Istrians Mate Balota https www istrianet org istria illustri mirkovic index htm Biografija in Croatian Biletic Boris Domagoj Mirkovic Mijo Mate Balota Istrapedia in Croatian Istria County Retrieved 5 March 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mate Balota amp oldid 1216638987, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.