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  1. Belgrade, Serbia. Nationality. Serb. Political party. Conservatives. Signature. Nikola Hristić ( Sremska Mitrovica, 10 August 1818 – Belgrade, 26 November 1911) was a Serbian politician who served as Prime Minister of Serbia for four terms.

  2. The Second Cabinet of Nikola Hristić was a cabinet of the Kingdom of Serbia from October 3, 1883 to February 19, 1884. King Milan I was facing the Timok Rebellion, so he got Nikola Hristić out of retirement and installed him as the new Prime Minister and as the Minister of Internal Affairs.

  3. Filip Hristić (Serbian Cyrillic: Филип Христић; 27 March 1819, Belgrade – 29 January 1905, Menton, France) was a Serbian politician serving as the Prime Minister of Serbia, Minister of Foreign Affairs, Minister of Education, Governor of National Bank, and ambassador of Serbia in the Ottoman Empire, Austrian Empire, German Empire and United Kingdom.

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    Hristić started his music education at the Serbian Music School in Belgrade (established by St. Mokranjac) and continued his studies in Leipzig (1904–08) where he received instruction in composition from S. Krehl and R. Hofmann, and in conducting from A. Nikisch. Following a brief period of teaching at the Serbian Music School, he spent time in Rom...

    Hristić's oeuvre consists of large-scale though not numerous works: opera The Dusk (1925), ballet The legend of Ohrid (1947), oratorio Resurrection (1912), several orchestral pieces (incidental music for stage), works of sacred music (Liturgy and Opelo (Orthodox Requiem)), concert pieces (Symphonic fantasy for violin and orchestra and The Rhapsody ...

    Cucuk Stana, vocal incidental music, 1907
    Symphonic fantasyfor violin and orchestra, 1908
    Autumn, from mixed choir, 1910
    Resurrection, oratorio, 1912
    Mosusova, Nadežda. “The legend of Ohrid by Stevan Hristić.” The Sound (Zvuk)66, (Sarajevo, 1966): 96–115.
    Stefanović, Dimitrije, ed. The life and work of Stevan Hristić. Belgrade: SASA, 1991.
    Mosusova, Nadežda, ed. Serbian musical stage. Belgrade: SASA, 1995.
    Free scores by Stevan Hristić in the Choral Public Domain Library(ChoralWiki)
  4. Zoran Hristić (Serbian Cyrillic: Зоран Христић; 30 July 1938 — 12 November 2019) was a Serbian composer.He had a freelance artist status for a long time. At the initiative of Dušan Radović in 1979, he was nominated an editor, director and founder of the Concert Studio B. from 1982 to 1989, he was the chief music editor of Radio Belgrade, and then moved on RTVB, later RTS where ...

  5. Oct 2, 2017 · Stevan Hristić (Serbian Cyrillic: Стеван Христић; 19 June 1885 – 21 August 1958) was Serbian composer, conductor, pedagogue, and music writer. A prominent representative of the late romanticist style...

  6. Prime Minister of Serbia. He held the post four terms: First, from December 3, 1867 to 3 July 3, 1868; second, from October 3, 1883 to February 19, 1884; third, from April 27, 1888 to January 19, 1889; and lastly, from October 27, 1894 to July 7, 1895. Prior to becoming prime minister, he he worked as a clerk in the...

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