Matija Mesić (Brod na Savi, February 19, 1826 - Zagreb, December 5, 1878) was a Croatian historian, university professor, the first rector of the University of Zagreb.
He graduated philosophy at the Royal Academy of Science in 1844, and theology at the Vienna Pázmáneum in 1848. After being ordained and a short chapel service, he worked as a probationary professor of history and geography at the gymnasium in Zagreb. In the period 1851-1853 he studied history and geography in Vienna and Prague. He received a professorship at the Law Academy in Zagreb in 1854, working as a director of the same institution since 1871.
He participated in the work of Croatian parliament and served as the president of Matica ilirska. He was a full member of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts since 1867. In 1874 he was selected as a full professor of Croatian history at the Faculty of Philosophy.
In the academic year 1874/75 he had the honor to be the first rector of the Royal University of Franz Joseph I in Zagreb. In the opening ceremony, on the October 19th 1874, he held his famous speech in which he warned on the importance of modern university.
In his works he systematically and critically dealt with the period of Croatian history of late Middle Ages in the period of Jagiellon dynasty. A street on Šalata in Zagreb bears his name since 1928.
Cultural offices | ||
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Preceded by Ivan Mažuranić |
President of Matica hrvatska 1872 – 1874 |
Succeeded by Ivan Kukuljević Sakcinski |
Academic offices | ||
Preceded by Office created |
University of Zagreb 1874 – 1875 |
Rector of the Succeeded by Stjepan Spevec |