Milan Savić (author)

Milan Savić (Serbian: Милан Савић German: Emil Szavitz; 1845, Turska Kanjiža, Austrian Empire[1] - 21 February 1930, Belgrade, Kingdom of Yugoslavia) was a Serbian writer, literary critic, president of Matica srpska (1896-1911) and translator of Goethe's "Faust" in Serbian. He was the father of Anica Savić Rebac.

His generation were fighting the Turks in a legitimate warfare for independence, but the cultivators of Serb literature have not been idle either. He was one among the former and the latter. A graduate from the University of Vienna's prestigious School of Medicine in 1867 and philosophy and medicine in Leipzig in 1876 with exceptional Rigorosum honors. He lend his services as a medical doctor in the Russo-Turkish War of 1876 and the Serbo-Bulgarian War of 1885. Among the institutions of national culture, the stage had received praiseworthy attention, that classical dramatic work of the West are acted in the Serbian idiom on the stages of Belgrade, Novi Sad, and Kragujevac. Not only Schiller's "Mary Stuart" and "Don Carlos", Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" and "Othello", but Goethe's "Faust" in the Serb theater of Novi Sad was produced. The translator, in the metre of the original, was from the pen of this Serbian physician and literary critic.

Works

References

  1. Прилике из мога живота, Библиотека Хоризонти Нови Сад, Сербиа, Милан Савић, Миливој Ненин, Зорица Хацић, Академска књига, 2009, стр. 17.
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