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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Petar_KraljPetar Kralj - Wikipedia

    Petar Kralj ( Serbian Cyrillic: Петар Краљ; 4 April 1941 – 10 November 2011) was a Serbian theater, film and television actor. Biography. Petar Kralj on a 2013 Serbian stamp. Kralj was born in Zagreb to a Serb family from Banija. During World War II his family fled to Syrmia, where he grew up.

  2. Petar Kralj ( Zagreb, 4. april 1941 — Beograd, 10. novembar 2011) bio je srpski glumac . Biografija [ uredi | uredi izvor] Rođen je kao sin jedinac oca Đorđa, profesora istorije u gimnaziji, poreklom sa Banije i majke Stanislave, devojački Kocan, profesorke geografije poljsko-ukrajinskog porekla.

    God.
    Naziv
    2011.
    2011.
    2002-2015.
    Vršačka pozorišna jesen (TV serija)
    2008.
  3. Највише је играо у Атељеу 212 и Народном позоришту. Мала сцена Атељеа 212 данас се, њему у част, зове „Сцена Петар Краљ“ . Био је ожењен бившом балерином Соњом Дивац, а у првом браку са глумицом ...

  4. www.imdb.com › name › nm0469398Petar Kralj - IMDb

    Petar Kralj was born on 4 April 1941 in Zagreb, Croatia, Yugoslavia. He was an actor, known for Underground (1995), Svetozar Markovic (1980) and Kraj dinastije Obrenovic (1995). He was married to Ljiljana Gazdic and Sonja Divac. He died on 10 November 2011 in Belgrade, Serbia.

    • Actor, Music Department
    • April 4, 1941
    • Petar Kralj
    • November 10, 2011
    • Early Life
    • Exile
    • Reign
    • Legacy
    • See Also
    • External Links

    Peter was born in Belgrade on 11 July [O.S. 29 June] 1844. He was the fifth of ten children born to Prince Alexander Karađorđević and his consort, Persida Nenadović. He was the grandson of Karađorđe, the leader of the First Serbian Uprising (1804–1813) and the founder of the Karađorđević dynasty. Peter was not born in the Royal Court, which was und...

    Post-secondary education and Franco-Prussian War

    In 1858, just as the fourteen-year-old Peter was preparing to depart for Geneva to attend high school, his father was forced to abdicate the throne. The Karađorđević dynasty's rivals, the Obrenović dynasty, were reinstated, and an Obrenović prince, Mihailo, claimed the throne. The two dynasties had been vying for power since 1817, when Karađorđe was assassinated on the orders of Miloš Obrenović, the founder of the Obrenović dynasty. Peter left Geneva for Paris in 1861 and enrolled in the Coll...

    Guerrilla activities

    With the outbreak of the Great Eastern Crisis of 1875–78, which erupted after Bosnian Serb rebels in Nevesinje staged a revolt against the Ottoman Empire, Peter returned to the Balkans and fought the Ottomans in northwestern Bosnia. He adopted the nom de guerre of Petar Mrkonjić, and upon reaching the regions of Banija and Kordun in Austria-Hungary, took control of guerrilla unit of about 200 men. He arrived at Bosanska Dubica in August 1875, but received a cold welcome. He discovered that Pr...

    Move to Cetinje

    In 1883, Peter moved to Cetinje, the capital of the second independent Serb state, Montenegro, with the intention of marrying the eldest daughter of Montenegro's ruler, Prince Nicholas. Peter and Ljubica Petrović-Njegoš were married in Cetinje in the summer of 1883. The marriage upset the region's volatile geopolitical balance, causing great unease in the Austro-Hungarian, Russian and Serbian capitals. Belgrade perceived it as a sign of increasing closeness between the Petrović-Njegošand Kara...

    Accession

    The royal couple's murder upset and shocked most of Europe, but many Serbs reacted enthusiastically. Russia immediately recognized the National Assembly's decision declaring Peter the next King of Serbia and expressed satisfaction that the inter-dynastic intrigues which had plagued the country since the early-19th century had been brought to an end. Austria-Hungary declared its neutrality on the matter, but privately, policymakers in Viennaexpressed hope that Peter's accession would have a pl...

    Coronation

    Peter was crowned in St. Michael's Cathedral in Belgrade, on 21 September [O.S. 8 September] 1904. The coronation ceremony, the first in Serbia's modern history,[citation needed] aimed to demonstrate that a new era had begun. The year-long interval between Peter's return to Serbia and his coronation deliberately made the ceremony coincide with the 100th anniversary of the First Serbian Uprising with the hope of giving European statesmen time to come to terms with the palace coup. Nevertheless...

    Foreign affairs

    During the reign of Peter I the Kingdom of Serbia expanded to the south, incorporating much of Sandžak and Kosovo and Metohija in 1912 in the First Balkan War. Serbia temporarily controlled northern parts of Albania, but had to give away those parts to Albania in 1912-1913. In November 1918, shortly before the founding of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in December 1918, Serbia acquired some new territories like Srem, Banat, Bačka and Montenegroand which later became part of the new...

    Three cities in interwar Yugoslavia were named after King Peter I: Mrkonjić Grad in Bosnia-Herzegovina (former Varcar Vakuf), Petrovgrad in Vojvodina (Veliki Bečkerek, now Zrenjanin) and Petrovac na Moru (former Kaštel Lastva) in Montenegro. Dozens of monuments erected in his honor throughout Yugoslavia were destroyed after the communist takeover i...

    Newspaper clippings about Peter I of Serbia in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
  5. Petar Kralj se rodio 4. aprila 1941. godine u Zagrebu, kao sin jedinac oca Đorđa, profesora istorije u gimnaziji, poreklom sa Banije i majke Stanislave, devojački Kocan, profesorke geografije poljsko-ukrajinskog porekla.

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  7. Mar 25, 2023 · Petar Kralj u ulozi advokata Radujkovića, tokom parnice Pašalić - Popadić.-----Lajkujte, zapratite, podelite!-----...

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