Josip Bratulić
Josip Bratulić (born February 2, 1939) is a Croatian philologist and a historian of literature and culture.[1]
He was born in Sveti Petar u Šumi. He attended a gymnasium in Pazin, graduating in Croatian studies and comparative literature at the Faculty of Philosophy in Zagreb. At the same university he received his master's degree and a doctorate, with a thesis on Croatian Glagolism. He worked as an assistant and research associate at the Old Church Slavonic Institute in Zagreb, and since 1977 he is teaching a course on Old Croatian literature at the Zagreb Faculty of Philosophy. He served as a dean in the period 1991-1993, and since 2000 he is a regular member of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts.[1]
Bratulić participated in the preparation of a large number of cultural and scientific events, such as the exhibition Pisana riječ u Hrvatskoj ("The Written Word in Croatia"), and the development of the ethnopark Glagolitic Alley Roč–Hum together with Želimir Janeš. In the period 1996-2002. he served as the president of Matica hrvatska. His scientific interest is Croatian and Slavic Middle Ages, Croatian Glagolitism, Croatian pre-revival literature and the Croatian cultural peculiarities on the Istrian territory.[1]
Works
- Apokrif o prekrasnom Josipu u hrvatskoj književnosti (1972)
- Istarski razvod (1978)
- Aleja glagoljaša Roč–Hum (1983, 1994)
- Žitja Konstantina i Metodija i druga vrela (1985)
- Istarske književne teme (1987)
- Vinodolski zakon (1988)
- Izazov zavičaja (1990)
- Sjaj baštine (1990)
- Mrvice sa zagrebačkog stola (1994)
- Leksikon hrvatske glagoljice (1995)
- Hrvatska propovijed (1996)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Bratulić, Josip", Croatian Encyclopedia (in Croatian), Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža, 1999–2009, retrieved May 3, 2014
Cultural offices | ||
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Preceded by Vlado Gotovac |
Matica hrvatska 1996–2002 |
President of Succeeded by Igor Zidić |
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