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Between 1400 and 1878, the majority of Southern Slavic peoples endured several centuries of Ottoman rule. In the nineteenth century there was a movement among both the Croats and the Serbs to set aside regional, ethnic, religious, and cultural differences in order to work together toward the liberation of all the Southern Slavs from the Ottoman yoke. These volumes explore how the masterpieces of two leading poets among the Croats and Serbs - Ivan Mazuranic (1814-1890) and Petar II Petrovic Njegos (1813-1851), who was Prince-Bishop of Montenegro from 1830-1851 - dealt with the Southern Slavs' relationship to Islam in their greatest poetic works, The Death of Smail-agha Cengic and The Mountain Wreath, respectively.
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The Author: Zdenko Zlatar is Reader in Slavic History at the University of Sydney where he has taught Russian, East European, and modern European history since 1979. He is Vice President of the Commission internationale des études historiques slaves in Paris. He is the author of four other books including
The Slavic Epic: Gundulic's Osman (Peter Lang, 1995), which together with the two volumes of
The Poetics of Slavdom forms Zlatar's Slavic epic trilogy.