Mihailo "Miljko" Radonjić (Serbian Cyrillic: Михаило-Миљко Радоњић; 1770 – 1836) was a Serbian writer, professor at the Belgrade's Grande école and politician-diplomat.[1] Not much is known about him.[1] He was an educated man.[1] During the Serbian Revolution (1804–1813) he was part of the Serbian rebel government,[2] and served as the Minister of Foreign Affairs as part of the Cabinet of Karađorđe Petrović (1811–12).[3] He taught German at Belgrade's Grande école (est. 1808).[3]
After the collapse of the uprising in 1813, he went to Trieste where he lived and worked until 1823 as a teacher at the Jovan Militić School in Trieste. After Trieste, he went to Wallachia (today's Romania) where he engaged in trade. Radonjić was the first Foreign Minister in the modern history of Serbian statehood. He was appointed to that position when the previously appointed Milenko Stojković (from January 11, 1811) refused to enter the Governing State Council and accept the duty of minister.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c Lopičić 2007, p. 70.
- ^ Lopičić 2007, p. 62.
- ^ a b Vasa Čubrilović (1974). Istorija Beograda. Vol. 2. p. 614.
Sources
edit- Lopičić, Đorđe N. (2007). Konzularni odnosi Srbije: (1804-1918). Zavod za udžbenike. ISBN 978-86-17-34399-4.