Ante Biankini

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Ante Biankini
Born(1860-08-31)31 August 1860
Died9 February 1934(1934-02-09) (aged 73)b
Chicago, United States
Alma materUniversity of Vienna
Occupation(s)Politician, physician
RelativesJuraj Biankini (brother)
Petar Luka Biankini (brother)

Ante Biankini (Stari Grad, Hvar. 31 August 1860 – Chicago, 9 February 1934) was a physician, author, criminologist, publisher and Croatian and Yugoslavian politician.[1] [2]He studied medicine at the University of Vienna and graduated in 1886. Biankini worked as a physician in Vienna and native Stari Grad before marrying concert pianist Zlata Albrecht, daughter of Croatian Lithographer and Printer Carl Dragutin Albrecht, and moving to Chicago. In the United States, he worked with surgeon John Benjamin Murphy at the Chicago Mercy Hospital in 1898–1916 as well as at the Columbus Hospital in New York in 1904–1906.[3] Biankini taught at the Northwestern University in 1900–1915. Biankini was a member of the Croatian Fraternal Union. He became engaged in advocacy of political unity of the South Slavs through the Hrvatska zastava (lit. Croatian Flag) and the Jugoslavenska zastava (lit. Yugoslav Flag) journals he funded in 1914–1916 and 1917–1918 respectively. At the First Yugoslav Congress held in Chicago in 1915, Biankini was elected the president of the Yugoslav National Committee in the United States. The following year, he took part in the initiative to raise volunteer troops for the Allies of World War I, specifically for the Salonica front and joined the Yugoslav Committee—an ad-hoc group of politicians and activists advocating unification of the South Slavs living in Austria-Hungary and the Kingdom of Serbia. Biankini discussed the issue of unification of the South Slavs and the need to defend their interests within the framework of the Adriatic question with the President of the United States Woodrow Wilson. Biankini's brother Juraj was the editor of the Zadar-based Narodni list, and a member of the Austro-Hungarian Imperial Council—a signatory of the 1917 May Declaration authored by the Yugoslav Club of the South Slavic council members.[4][5]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Willis, Cecil L; Evans, Thomas David; LaGrange, Randy L (1 May 1999). ""Down home" criminology: The place of indigenous theories of crime". Journal of Criminal Justice. 27 (3): 227–238. doi:10.1016/S0047-2352(98)00061-0. ISSN 0047-2352.
  2. ^ The New Europe: A Weekly Review of Foreign Politics. Constable & Company, Limited. 1919.
  3. ^ History of medicine and surgery and physicians and surgeons of Chicago. 1922.
  4. ^ Stipčević-Despotović, Anđelka (1983). "Biankini, Ante". Croatian Biographical Lexicon, on-line edition (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  5. ^ Domazet, Mladen; Devlahović, Andrea (5 June 2017). "Ante Biankini from Stari Grad and His Emigrant Fate". Prilozi povijesti otoka Hvara (in Croatian). XIII. (1): 185–194. ISSN 0353-0957.