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dr. sc. Tonija Andrić
University of Split, Faculty of Philosophy
E-mail: tonija@ffst.hr
Publications
Personal website
Tonija Andrić was born on April 20, 1981 in Split, where she attended elementary school and high school. Since 1999 she has been studying at the Department for History of Croatian Studies at the University of Zagreb where she graduated in 2005 and achieved a Ph. D in 2014. more Since 2008 she has been employed at the Department for History of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Split, since 2016 as a research fellow and professor assistant, and since 2017 as a head of the Department for History. She spent the summer semester of academic year 2009/2010 at the University of Vienna (Austria) as an OEÄD scholar. So far, she has worked on several scientific projects funded by Ministry of Science and Education and the Croatian Science Foundation. She has published one book and several scientific and professional papers, and has participated in the work of several domestic and international scientific conferences. The areas of her scientific interest are social and economic history of Split and Dalmatia in a high and late Middle Ages. close
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Dr. Ante Bećir
Croatian institute of history
E-mail: ante.becir@gmail.com
Publications
Ante Bećir was born on October 23, 1995 in Split. In 2019, he graduated History at the Faculty of Croatian Studies under the mentorship of Assistant Professor Tomislav Popić, PhD, as the best student of the final year. He defended his PhD in History in September 2022 more at the Catholic University of Croatia with the topic "Nobility of Late Medieval Trogir: Political Community, Factions and the Conflict Dynamics", under the mentorship of Associate Professor Ivan Majnarić, PhD. Since June 2023, he is employed as a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Department of Medieval History of the Croatian Institute of History. In 2022, he published the book Acta et reformationes consiliorum civitatis Tragurii (saec. XIII-XV), in the edition of the Croatian Institute of History (co-author: Tomislav Popić). So far, he has published a large number of scientific papers, that is, participated in a large number of scientific conferences in Croatia and abroad. His scientific and research interests are focused on the social, cultural and political history of Eastern Adriatic cities and their hinterlands in the (late) Middle Ages, on the publication of medieval primary sources of Eastern Adriatic cities, that is, on modern and contemporary perceptions of the Middle Ages. He is the Recipient of the Rector's Award for individual scientific work for the academic year 2017/2018 at the University of Zagreb. He is a member of Matica hrvatska and the National Committee for Historical Sciences. close
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dr. sc. Ante Birin
Croatian institute of history
E-mail: ante.birin@gmail.com
Publications (2)
Born in 1973 in Zagreb, where he completed his secondary education. In 1996, he graduated History and Archaeology from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb. more During his studies, he won several international grants and had the opportunity to participate in Convegni di studio sulla Magna Grecia, with the topic of “Corinto e l'Occidente,” at Taranto (October 7-11, 1994) and a seminar on Etruscology and Italic history titled “Public and Private Life of the Etruscans and other Italic Peoples” at the Universita per stranieri in Perugia (July 3-14, 2000). In 2001, he obtained an MA degree from the Department of History, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, with a thesis titled “Statut grada Skradina” [Statute of the city of Skradin] (supervisor: Tomislav Raukar). In 2006, he defended his doctoral dissertation “Knez Nelipac i hrvatski velikaški rod Nelipčića” [Count Nelipac and the Croatian noble kindred of Nelipčić] (supervisor: Tomislav Raukar). Since 1998, he has been working as a junior researcher at the Croatian Institute of History, with a permanent position at the Department of Medieval History since 2008. In 2014, he became a senior researcher, and in 2012 a docent. Since 2007, he has been teaching at the University Centre for Croatian Studies, University of Zagreb, with a course on Croatian Cultural and Political History of the Middle Ages. Since 2009, he has been a member of the editorial board of Povijesni prilozi. In 2002, he was awarded the Silver Distinction of Matica Hrvatska for his book Statut grada Skradina [Statute of the City of Skradin]. He has organized various scholarly conferences. close
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dr. sc. Danijela Doblanović Šuran
Juraj Dobrila University of Pula, Department of Humanities
E-mail: danijela.doblanovic@gmail.com
Publications
Born in 1981 in Pula, where she completed her secondary education. In 2004, she graduated Croatian Philology and History from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Pula. more In November 2013, she defended her doctoral dissertation at the University of Zagreb, titled “Demografska slika župe Svetvinčenat od početka 17. do početka 19. stoljeća” [Demography of the Svetvinčenat parish from the early 17th until the early 19th century] (supervisor: Nenad Vekarić). Since 2009, she has been working as an assistant at the Department of History, Juraj Dobrila University in Pula. Her research interests include the early modern period in Istria, especially historical demography. She is a member of the editorial board of Histria (journal of the Istrian Historical Society). close
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d.i.a. Ivana Haničar Buljan
Institute of Art History
E-mail: ihanicar@ipu.hr
Publications
Born in 1970 in Osijek. In 1996, she graduated from the Faculty of Architecture, University of Zagreb. Currently enrolled in a doctoral programme of Architectural Heritage, preparing her dissertation on the opus of architect Stjepan Planić. more Since 1996, she has been working at the Institute of Art History in Zagreb as an associated researcher in the field of architecture. Since 2011, she has been an assistant to the Head of the Institute of Art History. Participated in various field projects of architectural documentation of historical buildings, held under the auspice of the Institute. As an associated researcher, she has coproduced various conservationist evaluations. Since 2014, she has participated in the following projects: “Research and Documentation of the Urban Core of Osijek’s Fort for the Needs of Urban-Conservationist Evaluation”; “Urban-Conservationist Evaluation of the Ground Floors of Public Spaces in Osijek’s Fort, with a Proposal of Conservation Guidelines” (since 2014); Castle of Eugene of Savoy in Bilje (2013-2014); the Great Bridge in Osijek (2012-2013). She has co-authored two books (with Ratko Vučetić): Nuštar: Dvorac Khuen-Belassy, arhitektonska, povijesno – umjetnička, restauratorska istraživanja [Nuštar – The Khuen-Belassy castle: Research in architecture, art history, and restoration] and Darda: Dvorac Esterhazy, Povijesno-građevinski razvoj, valorizacija i prijedlog konzervatorskih smjernica [Carda – Eszterhazy castle: Historical-architectural evolution, evaluation, and proposal for conservation guidelines]. Since 2002, she has coordinated the Architectural Heritage section at the Architects’ Association Zagreb. Since 2008, she is a member of the editorial board of Kvartal and in 2008 she was the guest editor of Život umjetnosti (82/2008). Since 2002, she has been licensed by the Croatian Ministry of Culture for working on the protection and conservation of cultural goods (research and documentation, as well as production of concepts, main and construction projects for immovable heritage). Member of the Architects’ Association Zagreb. close
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dr. sc. Marija Karbić
Croatian institute of history
E-mail: mkarbic@isp.hr
Publications
Born in Zagreb in 1961. She got her master degree in history at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, in 1996. At the same faculty, she defended her M. phil. dissertation in 2001 and her doctoral thesis in 2005. more During her post-graduate studies in 1997, she attended Dubrovnik Workshop of Medieval Studies. She has been working at the Croatian Institute of History since 1997 (at its Department of History of Slavonia, Syrmia and Baranya since 2007). She was promoted to the rank of research adviser in 2018. From 2014 she is the president of the Scholarly Council of the Croatian Institute of History, and since 2017 a member of its Managing Board. She participated in several projects, for example in the projects financed by the Ministry of Science, Education and Sports of RC Sources, Studies and Manuals for Croatian History from the 7th to the 19th Century (1995-2006), Croatian Noble Kindreds, Their Estates and Castles (2002-2006), and Slavonia, Syrmia and Baranya from the Late Antiquity to the Ottoman Period (2007-2013), as well as in international projects Nobility in medieval and early modern central Europe: A comparative study in social structure (principal researcher: János M. Bak, CEU, Budapest, Hungary, 1996-1999) and Comparing Nobilities in Medieval Europe: Centar and Peripheries in the process of Europeanization (1000-1500) (principal researcher: Cosmin Popa-Gorjanu, University of Alba Iulia, Romania, 2009-2011). From 2015 till 2019, she participated in the research projects financed by Croatian Science Foundation (CSF) Cities of the Croatian Middle Ages: Urban Elites and Urban Space (URBES) (as an associate) and Sources, Manuals and Studies for Croatian History from the end of the Middle Ages till the End of the Long 19th Century (as a consultant). Since 2020, she has been participated in the project Development and Heritage of the Military Orders in Croatia (milOrd) financed by CSF. She participated as external teaching associate in teaching on University level (at Centre for Croatian Studies and Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of University of Zagreb, and Catholic University of Croatia). Since 1997, she is an external collaborator of The Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. She is a member of the Editorial board of the scholarly journals Scrinia Slavonica (since 2016) and Godišnjak Njemačke zajednice (since 2010), and several scholarly association (the Croatian National Committee of Historical Sciences; The Croatian History Society; MECERN; The Association for the Research of Women History Klio; Hagiotheca; Matrix Croatica). She participated in organisation of several scholarly conferences (such as international conference Between Three Seas: Borders, Migrations, Connections. Third Biennial Conference of the Medieval Central Europe Research Network, Zagreb, 2018). In her scholarly work, she deals in the first place with the history of the nobility and urban settlements of the Sava and Drava interamnium in the Middle Ages, with particular attention awarded to the family history and gender history. She is the author of the book Plemićki rod Borića bana [The noble kindred of Borić ban] (Slavonski Brod: Department of the History of Slavonia, Syrmia, and Baranya, 2013) and co-author (with Damir Karbić) of The Laws and Customs of Medieval Croatia and Slavonia: A Guide to the Extant Sources (ed. Martyn Rady) (London: UCL School of Slavonic and East European Studies, 2013). close
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Ivan Majnarić
Catholic University of Croatia
E-mail: ivan.majnaric@unicath.hr
Publications
Personal website
Ivan Majnarić was born on 12 May 1980 in Zagreb, Croatia. He graduated in 2002 from the University of Zagreb with the degree in history (2002), and from the same University earned his MPhil degree in History (2007) and Phd degree in History (2012) with the thesis on Croatian nobility in the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries. više He was employed in the at the Croatian State Archive (2004-06), the Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography (2006-12), and the Catholic University of Croatia (from 2012) with the academic title Associate Professor (2018).
His main research interests include medieval Croatian Church, intellectual and social history, as well as publication of archival sources and biobibliographical entries. He has published two monographs, many book chapters and articles in periodical journals, and coedited several volumes. zatvori
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dr. sc. Dušan Mlacović
University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
E-mail: dusan.mlacovic@ff.uni-lj.si
Publications
Born in 1966 in Celje (Slovenia). In 1992, he graduated History and Philosophy from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana. From 1993-1999, he was a junior researcher at the History Department, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana. more In 1997, he obtained his MA degree and in 2006 his doctoral degree from the same university. From 2003-2005, he worked at the Research Centre Bistra Ptuj as an independent researcher and project coordinator, and since 2007, he has been a docent at the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana (History Department), with courses on medieval history (History of South-eastern Europe in the Middle Ages and General Medieval History). He has participated in the following projects: “Inscription of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Ptuj” in the UNESCO programme “Masterpieces of the Oral and Intangible Heritage of Humanity” (2006-2008); “ADHOC” (Interreg III B Cadses) as the project coordinator and head of a working group of ADHOC’s project partner (2006-2008); “Sm@rt Region” (Interreg III B Cadses) as the project coordinator of the leading project partner (SRC Bistra Ptuj) (2004-2005); “Positioning the Urban Elite in Slovenian Towns in the Context of Social and Economic Trends and Processes (13th-16th Centuries)” (2008-2010); and “Political and Legal History of Women in Slovenia: Man and Nature in Pre-Modern Slovenia (ARSS) (2009-2011). In 2008, he published the monograph Plemstvo i otok: pad i uspon rapskoga plemstva [Nobility and the Island: The fall and rise of Rab’s nobility] (Slovenian ed. 2008; Italian ed. 2012). Assistant to the editor-in-chief of Zgodovinski časopis – Historical Review (since 2007) and a member of the editorial board of Povijesni prilozi (since 2012). close
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dr. sc. Marija Mogorović Crljenko
Juraj Dobrila University of Pula, Department for Humanities
E-mail: mmogorov@unipu.hr
Publications
Marija Mogorović Crljenko (Zagreb, 1975) is Associated Professor at the Department of History, Faculty of Humanities, Juraj Dobrila University of Pula. After primary and secondary school n Rovinj, she graduated in History and Croatian Language and Literature at the Faculty of Humanities in Pula (1999). She earned her MSc (2005) and PhD (2010) degrees in History at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb. more In 1995, 1996, 1997, and 1998 she participated in the Medievalist Workshop in Dubrovnik. She worked as teacher of history in Elementary school Rivarela at Novigrad, then as a teacher of Croatian language and history at the Pazin Collegium (Classical Grammar School) and she worked in Historical museum of Istria. Since 2000 she has been employed at the Faculty of Humanities in Pula as an assistant, at 2013 as assistsant professor and from 2018 as associated professor. Since 2000 she keeps courses and workgroups from Medieval and Early Modern Period (Auxiliary historical sciences, Istrian family in Medieval and Early Modern Period; Women in the East Adriatic communes in Medieval and Early Modern Period, Research of history and Research of early modern history).
Her research focuses on social history and the history of everyday life especially on women, marriage, and the family in the medieval and early modern East Adriatic Coast, especially Istria. She is one of the initiators and organizers of the International Scientific Conference Istrian History Biennale (since 2003) about everyday life on the Adriatic Area. She has organized eight symposiums (IHB), and is currently working on the organization of the ninth. Besides the mentioned she has actively participated in the organization of II. Congress of Croatian historians in Pula (2004.) and 15th Annual Mediterranean Studies Congress (Pula, Croatia, 2012.). She was head of international scientific-research Croatian-Slovenian project Patterns of domestic violence. Case studies of patterns of domestic violence in early modern Istria and parts of present day Slovenia (2018-2019). She has also taken part in the following projects: Towns and Cities of the Croatian Middle Ages: Urban Elites and Urban Space, project supported by Croatian Science Foundation no. IP-2014-09-7235. (Head of project: dr. sc. Irena Benyovsky Latin) (2014.-2019.); Medieval Istria: An Area of Community and Opposition (6th-16th Centuries) (2010-2012) (Head of project: Dr. Ivan Jurković ) ; Elite and Marginal Groups in Istria (16th-18th Centuries) (2007-2010) (Head of project: Dr. Miroslav Bertoša); Eastern Istria and Northern Liburnia in Antiquity (2000-2006) (Head of project: Dr. Robert Matijašić) ; Across the Religious Divide: Women`s Properties in the Wider Mediterranean (ca. 1300-1800) (project coordinators: Jutta Gisela Sperling and Shona Kelly Wray) (2008-2010). She has also taken part on the project of European Researchers' Night (2018-2019).
She has published two books independently: Druga strana Braka. Nasilje i ilegitimnost u Porečkoj biskupiji u prvoj polovici 17. stoljeća [The other side of marriage – violence and illegitimacy in marriage and extramarital affairs in Diocese of Poreč in the first half of the 17th century], Zagreb: Srednja Europa, 2012; Nepoznati svijet istarskih žena: položaj i uloga žene u istarskim komunalnim društvima : primjer Novigrada u 15. i 16. stoljeću [The Unknown World of Istrian Women: Woman’s Position and Role in Istrian Commune Societies, example of Novigrad in the 15th and 16th Centuries], Zagreb: Srednja Europa, 2006 and two books with co-authors: Matična knjiga krštenih župe Umag (1483.-1643.) [The Register of Baptisms in the Parish of Umag (1483-1643)], Pazin: Državni arhiv u Pazinu, 2019. (with Danijela Doblanović Šuran); Vrijeme ženidbe i ritam poroda. Dubrovnik i njegova okolica od 17. do 19. stoljeća [Marriage patterns and the family reproduction process (Dubrovnik and vicinity from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century)], Dubrovnik: Zavod za povijesne znanosti HAZU u Dubrovniku 2000 (co-author with Nenad Vekarić, Irena Benyovsky, Tatjana Buklijaš, Maurizio Levak, Nikša Lučić, Jakša Primorac).
She is the editor in chief of the conference papers of Istrian History Biennale. She is also the member of the Scientific Committee of journal Historica. Revue pro historii a přίbuzné vědy of Faculty of Humanities at University of Ostrava. She participates in national and international scientific conferences and publishes in national and international journals and conference proceedings. She speaks English, Italian as well as Latin. She is member of the Croatian National Board of Historical Sciences, of the Society for Croatian History and of the Matrix Croatica. She is open to new ideas and technology and likes team work. close
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dr. sc. Zrinka Nikolić Jakus
University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
E-mail: zrinknik@gmail.com
Publications
Born in 1973 in Zagreb. In 1996, she graduated from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb. In 1997, she obtained her MA degree and in 2004 her PhD degree from the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University in Budapest. more In 1993, 1994, and 1997 she participated in the Medievalist Workshop in Dubrovnik. In 2004, she received the award of the Association of University Teachers and Researchers in Zagreb for young scholars and artists for a scholarly article published in 2003/2004. Since 1988, she has been working as an associate professor at the History Department, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, with courses on medieval history. She has participated in the following research projects: “Monumenta mediaevalia varia” (2007-2013); “Croatia and Central Europe in the Middle Ages” (2002-2005); Fundamental Documents of Croatian History (1998-2002); “Comparing Nobilities in Medieval Europe: Centar and Peripheries in the Process of Europeanization (1000-1500),” project coordinator: Cosmin Popa-Gorjanu, University of Alba Iulia, Romania (since 2009); “Women in Croatia: Cultural History,” project coordinator: Andrea Feldman, Women’s Info Centre – Vlado Gotovac Institute (2000-2002); “Nobility in Medieval and Early Modern Central Europe: A Comparative Study in Social Structure” (project coordinator: János M. Bak), Central European University, Budapest (1997-1999). Member of the editorial boards of Povijesni prilozi (since 2009) and Publications Zavoda za Hrvatsku povijest (since 2010). Organizer of the international conference “Hagiography: Historiography, Sources, and Methods” (Dubrovnik, 2005). Publishes extensively in Croatian and international journals and conference proceedings. Author of the monograph Rođaci i bližnji. Dalmatinsko gradsko plemstvo u ranom srednjem vijeku [Kin and kindred: Dalmatian urban nobility in the early medieval period] and handbook Uvod u studij povijesti. Historiografski praktikum [Introduction to historical studies: A historiographical practicum]. Editor of the first volume, dedicated to the early Middle Ages (550-1150) in the series Povijest Hrvata [History of the Croats] published by Matica Hrvatska. Her research interests include the history of elites, family history, women and children, as well as everyday life in the Middle Ages. close
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dr. sc. Zrinka Pešorda Vardić, project secretary
Croatian institute of history
E-mail: zrinka.pesorda@zg.t-com.hr
Publications
Zrinka Pešorda Vardić is senior research associate at the Department of Medieval History of the Croatian Institute of History. She was born in 1974 in Stuttgart, Germany. She received her BA in History in 1997 from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Zagreb. She holds an MA in History (2002) and PhD in History (2006), also from the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences of the Zagreb University. more She is affiliated to the Croatian Institute of History since 1998. Since 2019 she has been the Head of the Department of Medieval History at the Croatian Institute of History.
From 2009 to 2020 she has been Assistant Editor and a member of the editorial board of the journal Povijesni prilozi (Historical Contributions), and since 2020 she has been Editor-In-Chief of the same journal. Since 2005 she has been the member of the editorial board of the journal Review of Croatian History, published by the Croatian Institute of History. She is a member of several professional associations (Croatian National Committee for Historical Sciences, Hagiotheca, and Matrix croatica - Department of History). From 2010 to 2012 she served as the vice-president of the Croatian National Committee for Historical Sciences.
Her main field of research is the history of the Middle Ages. She explored the themes of social and religious history of the medieval Dubrovnik, studied the relationship of Dubrovnik with the Hungarian kingdom, and recent has been dealing with the problems of late medieval citizenry and citizenship.
In 2012 she has been awarded with the National Science Awards of the Republic of Croatia - Annual Science Award for the Humanities for the book U predvorju vlasti. Dubrovački antunini u kasnom srednjem vijeku (On the Threshold of Power: The Antunini of Dubrovnik in the Late Middle Ages). close
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dr. sc. Gordan Ravančić
Croatian institute of history
E-mail: gordan@isp.hr
Publications
Born in 1972 in Zagreb, where he completed his secondary education. In 1996, he graduated History from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb. In 1997, he obtained his MA degree from the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University in Budapest. more In 1999, he obtained another MA degree from the History Department, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, with a thesis titled Život u krčmama u kasnosrednjovjekovnom Dubrovniku [Life in the taverns of late medieval Dubrovnik] and in 2006 he defended his doctoral dissertation titled Kuga u Dubrovniku 1348-1349 [Plague in Dubrovnik, 1348-1349]. He took part in the Medievalist Workshop in Dubrovnik in 1993, 1994, 1995, 1997, and 1998. Since 1998, he has been working as a senior researcher at the Croatian Institute of History, Department of Medieval History. Since 2011, he has been an assistant to the Head of the Croatian Institute of History. He has participated in a number of research project related to the institute, including “Cities and Towns of the Croatian Middle Ages: Social Structure, Topography, and Urban Life” (2007-2013) and “Settlements and Socio-Political Communities in Medieval Croatia” (2002-2006). Presidency member of the Croatian National Committee for Historical Research since 2010 and of the Executional Board of the Society for Croatian Economic and Ecological History. He has organized several scholarly conferences and round tables, such as the Congress of Croatian Historians in Zagreb (2012). From 1998-2013, he lectured at the University Centre of Croatian Studies, University of Zagreb, with courses on Croatian medieval history and the use of computers in historical research. Since 2011, he has been teaching the latter course at the Croatian Catholic University. He has participated in a number of Croatian and international scholarly conferences on the topic of social history and Croatian Middle Ages. Author of several primary- and secondary-school textbooks, as well as two monographs on medieval Dubrovnik: Vrijeme umiranja – Crna smrt u Dubrovniku 1348-1349 [The time for dying: Black Death in Dubrovnik, 1348-1349] (2010) and Život u krčmama u srednjovjekovnom Dubrovniku [Life in the taverns of medieval Dubrovnik] (Zagreb: Croatian Institute of History, 2001). close
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dr. Ratko Vučetić
Institute of Art History
E-mail: rvucetic@ipu.hr
Publications
Born in 1965 in Zagreb. In 1996, he graduated Art History and Ethnology from the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb, with a thesis titled “Prilog urbanističkom razvoju Krapine” [On the urban development of Krapina]. more In 2002, he obtained his MA degree from the same university with a thesis titled “Prostorna struktura srednjovjekovnih gradskih naselja u Hrvatskom zagorju i njihov razvoj do Prvog svjetskog rata” [Spacial structure of medieval urban settlements in Hrvatsko Zagorje and their evolution before World War I] (supervisor: Ivo Maroević) and in 2005, he defended his doctoral dissertation titled “Prostorni razvoj privilegiranih srednjovjekovnih gradova u sjeverozapadnoj Hrvatskoj do 18. stoljeća” [Spacial development of privileged medieval towns in north-western Croatia before the 18th century]. Since 1997, he has been working at the Institute of Art History in Zagreb as a senior researcher. He has been participating in various projects of the institute, including “The Artistic Topography of Croatia” and “Architectural Heritage, 16th-19th Centuries” (project coordinator: Katarina Horvat-Levaj), as well as the international project “A Museum without borders: Baroque Art” (an expertise of the external defence ring of Osijek’s Fort) (2011/2012); “A Study on the Historical Development of the Bastion of Križevci’s Fort” (2011); “A Conservationist Study of the Esterházy Castle in Darda” (2011); and “A Conservationist Study of the Khuen-Belassy Castle in Nuštar” (2010/2011). His research interests include architectural heritage, special organization, evolution of urban settlements, and architecture in continental Croatia. Member of the editorial board of Kvartal. close
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