Svetislav Cvijanović

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Svetislav Cvijanović (Županja, Slavonia, Austria-Hungary, 1877 - Belgrade, Serbia, Yugoslavia, 1961) was one of Belgrade's most prominent Serbian booksellers and publishers,[1] and a great patron of writers of the first half of the 20th century.[2] Publishers Svetislav B. Cvijanović, Gaetz Kohn (Geca Kon) and Gavrilo Dimitrijević were the three largest booksellers and publishers in Belgrade during that period.[3]

Cvijanović and his Belgrade publishing house were noted for printing the first works of war poet Milutin Bojić, Nobel-laureate Ivo Andrić,[4] Pavle Popović, Isidora Sekulić,[5] and other internationally-acclaimed writers and poets.

In 1928, he wrote a book of poetry entitled Granice (Borders)[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Bibliotekar". Društvo bibliotekara N.R. Srbije. November 28, 1962 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Biggins, Michael; Crayne, Janet (July 16, 2019). Publishing in Yugoslavia's Successor States. Routledge. ISBN 9781317957058 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Petrović, Goran (September 1, 2020). At the Lucky Hand: aka The Sixty-Nine Drawers. Deep Vellum Publishing. ISBN 9781646050154 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ Popović, Radovan (November 28, 1988). Ivo Andrić: A Writer's Life. Zadužbina Ive Andrića. ISBN 9788674130360 – via Google Books.
  5. ^ "Hrvatski biografski leksikon". hbl.lzmk.hr.
  6. ^ Stefanović, Svetislav (November 28, 1928). Granice. S. B. Cvijanović. OCLC 437759178 – via Open WorldCat.