Stjepan Lice | |
---|---|
Born | 1954 Zagreb, Croatia |
Occupation | Jurist, writer |
Language | Croatian |
Alma mater | Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb [1] |
Period | Short story, prose poem, meditative prose |
Spouse | Ružica Lice [2] |
Children | 3 [2] |
Stjepan Lice is a Croatian jurist, [1] poet, essayist and columnist for Kolo , [3] Glas Koncila , [4] Kana and other Croatian periodicals. [5] [6] Lice is one of the most popular contemporary Croatian Christian writers. [7] [8]
He collaborates with writers (Sonja Tomić, Ivanka Brađašević), historians (Vladimir Lončarević) and other influential Catholic intellectuals. Lice works as a secretary of the Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb. [1] Lice is author of several scientific papers. [9] [10] He is a member of Secular Franciscan Order [11] and collaborator for Croatian Catholic Radio and Radio Maria, [12] as well as for Croatian Catholic Network [13] and member of a Committee of the Croatian Radiotelevision.
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Glas Koncila is a Croatian, Roman Catholic, weekly newspaper published in Zagreb and distributed throughout the country, as well as among Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatian diaspora.
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The Valun tablet is an 11th-century bilingual and digraphic tablet, originally serving the role of a gravestone, found at the graveyard in Valun on the island of Cres, Croatia. It records that under the tablet three generations of one 11th-century Valun family rest in peace: the grandmother, her son and grandson. Today, the Valun tablet is embedded in the wall of Saint Mary in Valun. Its bilinguality is important evidence of the coexistence of two ethnic and linguistic elements: old Romance and newly arrived Croatian.
Josip Lisac (Croatian pronunciation:[jǒsiplǐːsat͡s]; born 23 November 1950), is a Croatian linguist and dialectologist.
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Drago Carlos Pilsel is an Argentine Croatian journalist and human rights activist.
Vladimir Lončarević is a Croatian literary historian, literary theorist, Croatist, essayist and publicist.
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Jelena (Jelka) Brajša was a Croatian humanitarian and social worker, long-term president of the Caritas of the Archdiocese of Zagreb (1966–2005). She helped in establishment of several reception centers and homes for abandoned children, handicapped, old and infirm. She has been working on collecting aid for war victims during the Croatian War of Independence. She was known as "The Angel of Zagreb" and "Croatian Mother Teresa".