Antonije Ristić-Pljakić

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Antonije Ristić-Pljakić (Serbian Cyrillic: Антоније Ристић-Пљакић) was Karađorđe's duke[clarification needed] and son-in-law. He was from Kamenica in Šumadija. He died in 1832.

At the beginning of the First Serbian Uprising, during the conquest of Rudnik on February 27 and 28, 1804, Antonije killed the caravan museli (Turkish chief of police for Kraljevo) at Pljakovo after which he was nicknamed Pljakić.

Antonije Ristić, nicknamed Pljakić, married in 1806 Karađorđević's eldest daughter Savka Karađorđević, with whom he had four sons and one daughter. As the Duke of Karanovac in 1813, he was also the commander-in-chief of the reserves and the duke over the nahijas of Požega, Pazar, Kruševac and one of Hadži-Prodan's Old Vlach principalities.

In Karanovac, in the very trench named after him, he had a house in which he lived until the collapse of the First Serbian Uprising and the transition to Austria, and then to Russia, where he settled and later died on his way back to Serbia.[1]

Sources[edit]

  • Marinko Paunović (1998). Srbi: biografije znamenitih : A-Š. Emka. p. 221. ISBN 9788685205040. АНТОНИЈЕ РИСТИЋ ПЉАКИЋ ВОЈВОДА
  • Aleksa Jovanović (1937). Spomenica dvadesetogodišnjice oslobodjenja Južne Srbije, 1912-1937. Južna Srbija. p. 231.
  • Konstantin N. Nenadović (1884). Život i dela velikog Đorđa Petrovića Karađorđa Vrhovnog Vožda, oslobodioca i Vladara Srbije i život njegovi Vojvoda i junaka: kao gradivo za Srbsku Istoriju od godine 1804 do 1813 i na dalje.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Pljakin šanac..." Kraljevo.com. Archived from the original on 17 March 2019. Retrieved 1 December 2019.