Thursday, December 11, 2014

Dusan-Dule Savic

Dusan-Dule Savic was born June 1, 1955 in Ub. He started playing football in the football club ‘’Jedinstvo’’ Ub, then he continued playing in the football club ''Red star''.Two years later, he became a first-team player, in 1974.
When he was a nineteen year old, he made his debut for the Yugoslav representation. He played for the Red Star more than 400 official games and spent six years   in French League 1, two years in ‘’Lille OSC’’, and four years in ‘’AS Cannes’’.
Everybody remembers him as one of the most successful football players, who has ever played for Red Star, and who is remembered for his brave engagements in the field , and his striker’s skills. Also, he was the first player ever to have  his name and surname chanted at the stadium. His magnificent goal in the game vs. Arsenal FC  in London, is the perfect example for a study of a classic volley hit in football games, according by the acknowledgement of the English football experts.  [1]  
Savić performed the role of Red Star's(Crvena zvezda) sporting director from 1998 until 2005 under club president Dragan Džajić.[2]
















[1] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, 29.strana
[2] Wikipedia.com

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Aleksandra Vranes

Aleksandra Vranes  was born on  September 21, 1960 in Belgrade . She graduated, got  her Magister’s degree, and  received her  Ph.D. at the Faculty of Philology in Belgrade.
She published many books:  Serbian Bibliography in periodics  1766-1850, Basics of Bibliography, High Institutional Libraries, Basics of Theory and History of  Bibliography, Ethics in Science and Culture, Bibliography of Desanka Maksimovic’s works, Index and Description of Desanka Maksimovic’s  Manuscript legacy.[1]
Also, she is the author of numerous studies , she participated in conferences in the country and abroad . She has published over fifty papers in journals and conference proceedings. She is the President of the Serbian Library Association.[2]  She is the  Dean at the Faculty of Philology, and Professor at the Department of Library Science and Information Technology at the Faculty of Philology in Belgrade. She is the chief editor of ‘’Javne biblioteke’’, editions ‘’Ubava’’, and many books for children. It was published by the City library, ‘’Bozidar Knezevic’’, Ub).[3]










[1] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, 33.strana
[2] Vikipedija
[3] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, 33.strana

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Bozidar Knezevic

Bozidar Knezevic was born on March 7, 1862 in Ub, where he attended the elementary school. Then he went to grammar school to Belgrade, where he also graduated at Grande Ecole at the Department of History and Language.As history professor, he taught in Uzice, Nis, Cacak, Sabac, and Belgrade.
Bozidar Knezevic was one of the greatest Serbian minds,literarian  historian, and philosopher.[1]
He  lived and worked in extremely tough conditions. He spent the best part of his life in the state's interior , and  he spent  those twenty years in very  difficult conditions. His whole life was marked by extreme poverty , being forced to doing the difficult work to support himself during his studies , and with extremely bad  professor’s position, and also he took care for his family and for his brother's family. He was forced to change his teacher’s  place of work frequently by the order of the educational  authorities from one grammar school to another  ( from Uzice in Niš Cacak , Kragujevac , again in Cacak and Sabac ). What unabled him to build a career and life and to get the necessary recognition of other scientists and thinkers was also the lack of necessary resources for research and translation works. Not only did he he have to accept that fact, but he also had to put up with constant traps from academic circles.[2]
He saw religion as  the base of philosophy and science.
The most significant works of his are: The History Principles, Thoughts, Historian Calender, About the Eastern Nations in general.  He translated the works of English philosophers Bacon, Carlyle, and McCauley.
He died in Belgrade, in February 18, 1905.[3] The city library was named after Bozidar Knezevic.






[1] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, 9.strana
[2] Vikipedija
[3] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, 9.strana

The well-known people of Tamnava area


Many important people, who have played an important part in education, culture, science, sport, and other cultural domains in Serbia deserve to be mentioned. Among them there are well-known philosophers, historians, university professors, play writers, actors, painters, football players…
Svetomir Nikolajevic was born 1844, in the village Radusa near Ub. He attended the elementary school in Valjevo, and high school in Sabac. As a cadet, he studied History and World Literature in Switzerland, Germany, and England.
He had been lecturing at Belgrade’s Grande Ecole for nearly 20 years, and he had been the rector in the time period of 1888-1890.
He published the first Serbian essayistic book: ‘’Listici iz knjizevnosti’’. He could speak many languages: Greek, Latin, German, French,Italian, English, Russian, Koine Greek, and almost each writer whom he based his lecturing on he could read as if he were a native speaker of that language.
He was a member of The Serbian  Fellowship of Educated Men since 1874, and regular member of the Serbian Royal Academy since 1887.[1]
The first reliable data about courses taught at the University of Belgrade, which also covered English literature originate from 1873, when Professor Svetomir Nikolajević introduced sections on Shakespeare and Byron in his lectures. According to him, Shakespeare is a poet to whom psychological truth is the most important goal of dramatic art.
Nikolajević served as the Prime Minister of Serbia from April 3 to 27 October 1894, as the Mayor of Belgrade and as the Minister of Internal Affairs. He was one of the founders of the People's Radical Party and the Society of St. Sava. He was also one of the founders the Masonic lodge "Pobratim". Nikolajević was an early member of the Serbian Red Cross, founded by Vladan Đorđević during the Serbian-Ottoman War (1876-1877).
In politics, Svetomir Nikolajević insisted that preparations for an agreement for a Macedonian settlement should continue in case the Prime Minister Ilija Garašanin was compelled to resign. Following the disappointing turn of events in 1885 (Serbo-Bulgarian War), the Serbian policy toward Macedonia acquired new momentum in 1886, with the establishment of the Society of Saint Sava. Since he was elected as its president, Svetolir Nikolajević was the founder of the society, and  was known for his moderate views of Greek claims in Macedonia. Nikolajević is the first Serbian historian to write about Rigas Feraios.
By the early twentieth century, the first professor of the newly established Department of World Literature in the Belgrade School of Philosophy was Svetomir Nikolajević, later Professor at the School of Philology at the University of Belgrade.
In his Listići iz književnosti (Leaves from Literature), published in two volumes (Belgrade, 1883 and 1888), Nikolajević rendered great services to the study of foreign writers and poets such as Tacitus, Shakespeare, Ludovico Ariosto, Montesquieu, Byron, Luis de Camões and Torquato Tasso. That work was continued by Marko Car when Nikolajević entered politics.
He died in  1922, in Belgrade.[2]




Branislav Petronijevic was born on April 6, 1875, in village Sovljak near Ub. . He attended the elementary school in Ub,  grammar school in Valjevo, and Grande Ecole in Belgrade. He had studied Medicine for three semesters in Vienna, and then he transferred his field  of studies onto Philosophy in Leipzig, where he obtained his Phd Degree. He was a professor at  Belgrade’s Grande Ecole and at University of Belgrade.[3]
We learn more about him in the Collected Papers of Bertrand Russell, Vol. 11:

A man who impressed me, not so much by his ability as by his resolute absorption in philosophy even under the most arduous circumstances, was the only Yugoslav philosopher of our time, whose name was Branislav Petroniević. I met him only once, in the year 1917. The only language we both knew was German and so we had to use it, although it caused people in the streets to look at us with suspicion. The Serbs had recently carried out their heroic retreat before the German invaders, and I was anxious to get a first-hand account of this retreat from him, but he only wanted to expound his doctrine that the number of points in space is finite and can be estimated by considerations derived from the theory of numbers. The consequence of this difference in our interests was a somewhat curious conversation. I said, "Were you in the great retreat?" and he replied, "Yes, but you see the way to calculate the number of points in space is." I said, "Were you on foot?" and he said, "Yes, you see the number must be a prime." I said, "Did you not try to get a horse?" and he said, "I started on a horse, but I fell off, and it should not be difficult to find out what prime." In spite of all my efforts, I could get nothing further from him about anything so trivial as the Great War. I admired his capacity for intellectual detachment from the accidents of his corporeal existence, in which I felt that few ancient Stoics could have rivalled him. After the First War he was employed by the Yugoslav Government to bring out a magnificent edition of the eighteenth-century Yugoslav philosopher Boskovic, but what happened to him after that I do not know.[4]
He should be remembered by his scientific works- he was interested in philosophy, psychology, mathematics, palaeontology, history of science, and promoting of philosophy. He published his works  in three languages, Serbian, German and French.  His major works are:Prinzipien der Metaphysik (Principles of Metaphysics), first published in Heidelberg in 1904. three principal philosophical works, Principi Metafizike (Principles of Metaphysics), O Vrednosti života (About Value of Life), Istorija novije filozofije (History of a Newer Philosophy).[5]
Petronijević was completely devoted to philosophy and science. He spent his life working never accepting any social duties. In essence he espouses the synthetic-deductive philosophy which divides the system of knowledge into three spheres: metaphysical, intermediary and empirical. He considers himself a "born metaphysician" and devotes all his efforts into building of the original system of the spiritualistic objective idealism. In that metaphysical system he introduces the theory of cognition and philosophy of nature. Using this method, he seeks to reconcile the philosophies of Leibnitz and Spinoza. In his self-designated, starting stance of a monopluralist, he connects with the original empirical-rationalist theory of cognition, with his own discrete geometry and philosophy of developing nature. He argues that the universe is evolving from a condition of instability towards one of absolute stability, in which there will be equilibrium in the relation between particular elements or monads and the universal substance which underlies them. This last is the subject of a special division of philosophy, beyond metaphysics, which he calls hypermetaphysics.
Petronijević is a strict finitist in everything. As synthetic philosopher and dialectician he tries to merge primary philosophic doctrines: in gnoseology, empirism and rationalism; in metaphysics, monadology and substantialism; in ontology and methodology, dialectics and metaphysics (in Hegel's sense); science and religion, science and speculation and others. His main philosophic work "Principles of Metaphysics" (I and II) was left undone. He believed, however, that there is a parallel between metaphysics and mathematics. With regard to the method, metaphysics remains physics, and in it lies both their strength and weakness. The motto of the first part of Petronijević's "The Principles of Metaphysics" (published in Hidelberg in 1904) reads: "Exact mathematical notions are a key to the solution of the world's enigma." These metaphysics can be theology as wellthese two sciences are relatedbut they will never be able to give any full answers to the so-called ultimate questions.
Petronijević upheld an ethical theory of transcendental optimism and free will. He devoted a number of studies to aesthetics, particularly in the work of the Serbian poet-prince-bishop Petar II Petrović Njegoš and Leo Tolstoy.
Some 53 original principles, discoveries and innovations were published by him. He considered that the highest level in science he reached in mathematics, especially with his original discrete and finite geometry. Time and space are real forms of the being and the space itself is simultaneous coexistence of real points and the fragments of the being in the time. That geometry mathematicians today consider as unusual, abstruse and not strictly mathematically grounded.[6] It is very important to point out that grammar school in Ub has an honor to be named after Branislav Petronijevic.







[1] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, strana 7.
[2] Wikipedia.com
[3] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, 11.strana.
[4] Wikipedia.com
[5] Znameniti Tamnavci, Zivorad Todorovic, 11.strana.
[6] Wikipedia.com

Tuesday, December 2, 2014



Inn, tavern, or just simply kafana

People like taking pictures in different occasions. Some years ago, while the camera was a rarity, and we did not have many photographers, the pictures were most frequently taken for the purpose of having kept the memories from the military. The ones who could afford themselves going to a spa took pictures in the spa’s park, or next to a photographer’s tools.
Many photographs  are related to a special place in our lives- Inn, tavern, or just simply kafana..[1]  People would put on their finest clothes when going to kafana , because it made no sense at all to be clad in bad clothes, surrounded by others, who were beautifully dressed, all having the same desires, needs and habits. They all were mostly the same and equal. Probably, that was the main reason for taking the pictures with eagerness, so relaxed and light-hearted. They would keep those photographs as dear memories. The atmosphere and good company would make the person smile, and we should not underestimate a good drink.
In the report of County Valjevo in 1858, it was stated that there were 27 kafanas in Ub. Anyway, our devotion to kafanas is still present. And the young have accepted the reasons for going to kafanas with ease.
The photo was taken in May, in the 50’s of the last century, in front of the restaurant’’Promaja’’. Visitors were sitting in the garden. Nowadays, the garden is a hotel terrace ‘’Tamnava.’’The garden was paved with pebbles, which was considered to be very luxurious at that time. The stadium ‘’Jedinstvo’’ had not yet been planned, and at  the place of today’s  pool was a meadow.
  



In front of ''Beges''kafana in the 60's








[1]Lepa Varos Ub, Divni ljudi,Milutin Jovanovic,  strana 119.  I have used Serbian word for tavern, people are familiar with it.

Elementary school in Ub





The first data, about the existence of elementary school in Ub, which is available, for now, comes from 1820. The first teacher was Grigorije Jovanovic, most probably from the village Bogovadja. We can indirectly ascertain from the request sent to the Prince Milos Obrenovic. Jovanovic was working in the elementary school in Ub until 1824, when Dimitrije Ilic came. So, the elementary school in Ub has existed for 180 years.[1] The unique jubilee, that we do not have so often in Serbia. Many generations of teachers have played immeasurable part in educating children in Ub and Tamnava area. The photograph has had special value and has testified how our city looked like, before sixty years. The dominating landscape most certainly are meadows, channels, empty spaces,the  mill, sawmill, and the right side of  the Main street.
























[1] Lepa Varos Ub, Divni ljudi,Milutin Jovanovic, 58. I 60.strana. Given the fact that the book was published few years ago, I should point out that the elementary school has existed for 194 years.

Monday, December 1, 2014

Ub

Ub (Serbian Cyrillic: Уб) is a town and municipality located in the Kolubara District of Serbia. In 2011, the population of the town is 6,164, while population of the municipality is 29,022. The first communities were established at the municipal territory of Ub, according to the historical traces and traces of human civilization discovered in the current settlements of Trlić, Kalinovac, Brgule, originated from the time of Vinča culture, in the period around 5000 BC. In the settlement of Čučuge today there are traces of the Bronze Age.The most probable theory of the origin of the name is from the Latin word "urb", meaning "city". According to legends, the place was built in the reign of Prince Kocelj, and it was named after his brother Slavoljub. Over time, the names shortened to just "Ub".The most important of the cultural and historical monuments of Ub is certainly the church - monastery in the village Dokmir, dating from the fifteenth century. Research suggests that the monastery was restored in 1415, so it is thought that the monastery dates from an earlier period. Also affiliated with the monastery are the nuns of the monastery Žitomislići in Herzegovina, who had fled from the horrors of war in Bosnia in early '90s.The Tamnava area has preserved evidences of earlier styles and ways of life. In the mountain areas were fortresses, monasteries, churches and towers, and it is often difficult to reach such areas, but in the plains, monuments and buildings were often removed, leaving little trace, barely sufficient to preserve some features of the old life. [1]
The river Ub is smaller than the river Tamnava. Its stream is located eastwards from the Vlasic’s top of mountain Beleg, on the same side as Tamnava. Ub’s valley is narrow, surrounded by heavy rocks and steep banks, spreading itself until the village of Gola Glava, and when it overruns the river Jautina, its valley begins to spread. In front of the village  Radusa, the river Ub passes through the gorge, where the valley’s  widening is again in progress. Its right bank is made of calcareous rocks, capes, grains of sand, and steeps, until the confluence with the river Tamnava[2] In the municipality of Ub, there are 37 villages of different position, and mostly agricultural. In the villages in the upper basin of the river, people grow fruits, and in the lower river basin they grow cattle.
Houses
It is hard to tell how the original houses looked like, it is assumed that they were made of mud, planks, and ‘‘čatma’’, which is a Turkish word for wooden house, something like a hut house.The legend says  that the houses were dug up into the ground, or bolstered by the sides of certain hills. These houses were constructed of wood and soil, while the existence of plaster and gypsum was unknown to village people. The roofs of these houses were steep, made of wood, in pyramidal or conical shape, and without chimneys. Hearthstones were placed on the soil, nothing else was added.The names for these types of houses have been preserved as : prizemnice,zemunice, and udzerice, the Turkish words for these types of houses. [3] 



The first theatre in Ub


One of the oldest culture representations is Cultural-Artistic organisation, the theatre ‘’Tamnavac’’. This is, besides others (for example.‘’Jedinstvo’’), the unique institution of our city that serves its purpose. Dilemma existed for a long time, because no exact data could have been found when an Amateur theatre was founded in our city. But, thanks to the persistence of Mr Zdravko Rankovic, the well-known journalist and culture explorer in this town, the precious data  confirmed that the Amateur theatre was founded in far 1873.[4] (Revija ‘’Kolubara’’,mart 1997.)




The first lyceum in Ub
On the Board’s plenary session of the city Ub, on 25 August, 1923 an important decision was made concerning the educational progress of this area. Chairman made a suggestion to the Board on making its decision to take necessary actions for opening a lyceum of two grades in the local town.  The Ministry of Education sent inspector Jovan Kangrga to inspect the building and furniture, where the lyceum was located, and he filed the report on September 18 in 1923.  ‘’Taken into account that the city Ub is a centre of a big and rich area, that is cut  from larger towns due to bad communications, where you can find high schools , and it is  also located very far from them, I think that the two-grade lyceum should be opened temporally, until the Municipality builds a separate edifice for this school.
On the day 21 October 1923, the opening ceremony of the lyceum had been performed, and students attended the lyceum the next day. The lyceum’s official name was: ‘’Kraljevina Srba, Hrvata I Slovenaca PRIVATNA GIMNAZIJA Varosice Uba’’. [5]








[1] Wikipedia.com
[2] Antropogeografija valjevske Tamnave,Ljubomir Pavlovic, 25.strana.
[3] Antropogeografija valjevske Tamnave,Ljubomir Pavlovic, 80.strana.
[4] ) Lepa Varos Ub, Divni ljudi, Milutin Jovanovic, strana 28.
[5] ) Lepa Varos Ub, Divni ljudi,Milutin Jovanovic, strane 39,41.