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1903
- When Alexander was overthrown and the Karadjordjević dynasty, in the person of King Peter I, was restored by the bloody coup d’état of 1903, Pašić finally emerged as the dominant political figure in Serbia.
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Apr 1, 2024 · December 10, 1926, Belgrade (aged 80) Role In: Corfu Declaration. World War I. Nikola Pašić (born December 19 [December 31, New Style], 1845, Zaječar, Serbia—died December 10, 1926, Belgrade) was the prime minister of Serbia (1891–92, 1904–05, 1906–08, 1909–11, 1912–18) and prime minister of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and ...
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
After Marković's death in 1875, Pašić became the leader of the movement and in 1878 was elected to the National Assembly of Serbia, even before the party was formed. In 1880, he made an unprecedented move in the Serbian political scene by forming an opposition deputies' club in the assembly.
Pašić. Nikola Pašić, (born Dec. 31, 1845, Zaječar, Serbia—died Dec. 10, 1926, Belgrade), Serbian and Yugoslav statesman. The editor of a socialist newspaper in Serbia, he was elected in 1878 to the legislature, where he opposed the authoritarian monarchy and advocated a parliamentary democracy.
Although neither man could know it at the time, Tsar Nicholas II’s parting words to Serbian Prime Minister Nikola Pašić on February 2, 1914, with a message for Serbia’s King Peter, foreshadowed...
Nikola Pašić (both: nē´kôlä pä´shĬch), 1845?–1926, Serbian statesman. After studying engineering, he became interested in politics and was elected (1878) to the Serbian parliament. In 1881 he founded the Radical party, which he led for the rest of his life.
Oct 8, 2014 · Selected Bibliography. Citation. Early Years ↑. Nikola Pašić (1845-1926) was born to a shopkeeper and a farmer. He attended Serbian schools in Zaječar, Negotin and Kragujevac. He then studied engineering in Belgrade (1865-67), where he adopted the ideals of the romantic nationalism of the Ujedinjena omladina srpska (United Serbian Youth).
Nov 5, 2022 · (1845–1926) Serbian statesman and a founder of Yugoslavia. Suspicious of Croats on both political and religious grounds, his ideal was a “Greater Serbia”, including much of Croatia and Dalmatia, with Serbs the master race.