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Grga Martić


Fra Grgo Martić (1822 – 30 August 1905), also known as Grga Martić, was a Bosnian Croat friar and writer from Herzegovina.

Martić was born in Rastovača village near Posušje, Eyalet of Bosnia, Ottoman Empire and was educated in Zagreb and Pest. He was ordained on Christmas Day, 1844. He served for three years in Kreševo and Osova.

From 1851-79 he served as a parish priest in Sarajevo. He performed the majority of his life's work in Bosnia, in the Franciscan monastery in Kreševo.

In his early life Martić was a nationalist and romanticist, before switching to a more moderate view. In 1842 he wrote that the language of Herzegovina is a dialect of Serbian; he also wrote "Prođimo se kojekakvih mješarija, nego Srbin Srbima srpski srpstvujmo".

Martić worked as a writer and translator, translating works by Homer and Goethe into the Croatian language. At the time of the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, he was politically active on behalf of the Roman Catholic Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina. In his youth he was a supporter of Illyrian movement. Later he became a supporter of the unification of Bosnia & Herzegovina with Croatia. He opened a school in Kreševo in 1847 and a gymnasium in Sarajevo. His best-known literary work was Osvetnici, an epic about the struggle against Ottoman rule.


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