Talk:Great Antonio
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Apparantly he was illiterate (according to one of the links posted.) I guess that that might be an appropriate thing for a "trivia" section, perhaps? RandomGuy
and the legend lives on...
Anyone knows for sure if he was Siberian or Serbian?
It is confusing...
He was born in Yugoslavia, and there are more Baricevic (Serbo-Croatian version of the name) than Barysevich (Siberian version of the name)...
He has once jokingly said to be Italian... which is most likely NOT true
The reason why I don't think he was Croatian, even though he was born in present-day Croatia, is because he has said that his family was Siberian, (and Siberian being close in pronounciation/spelling to Serbian, I thought that what he might have meant is Serbian) and because he was in a concentration camp during WW2
Supporting the Serbian theory:
- He was born in Yugoslavia
- His name Baricevic is a Serbo-Croatian name...and is more frequent than the Siberian version of it (Barysevich)
- He might have meant Serbian when he said Siberian
He was in a concentration camp, most Serbs of Croatia were murdered and put in concentration camps by the Ustase (Croatian nationalists) during that time
Horrible things are suspected to have happened to him back there
Supporting the Siberian theory:
- He has said to be from a Siberian family
(He might have meant Serbian)
- There is a Siberian name Barysevich
I think it is more likely that he was of Serbian origin, and when he said siberian he meant serbian...
althought both theories are possible...
Where did u get the info that he was born in Veli Losinj, Croatia?
There's no Barysevich in Croatia... I've checked the phone book, but yet a lot of Baricevic...
1)He's Baričević (or even "Barić"), Barišević or Barišić. This surname could appear only among Croats. Its roots is "Barić" or "Bariša" or "Bare". "Barić" again, had roots in "Bare". Bare/Bariša/Bartul/Bartuo is Croat form of Bartholomew. There are no Serbs with such name neither with such surname.
2)Second, his name is "Antonio", "Antun" or "Anton". Serbs do not give such names to their children. Croats do give such names.
In fact, name Ante, Antun, Antun, Antonio, Toni, Tonći, Tonči, Tonko (all derivatives of Anthony) is one of the names with the biggest frequency among Croats.
3)Third, there is no Serbo-Croatian names. Such names never existed.
4)Fourth, fact that someone was in concentration camp means nothing.
Maybe Great Antonio was in concentration camp Banjica or Sajmište in Serbia, where all Jewish population from Serbia was exterminated?
Or, if you're pulling "ustase" theory, do you want to say that he was the watchtower guard?
Have you ever knew how many Croats ended in concentration camps and died there (because of political reasons)? Most famous case was world famous sculptor Ivan Meštrović. If you gonna say that you don't know who he is, his sculpture is in front of UN building. Kubura 07:48, 17 July 2006 (UTC)