Nada Klaić: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Fixed citation anchors
 
(37 intermediate revisions by 21 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Croatian historian, linguist, translator}}
{{Refimprove|date=October 2009}}
[[Image:Nada Klaić.jpg|thumb|right|Nada Klaić]]
[[Image:Nada Klaić.jpg|thumb|right|Nada Klaić]]

'''Nada Klaić''' ([[Zagreb]], 21 July 1920 – 2 August 1988, Zagreb<ref>{{harvnb|Talan|Treskanica|2009|p=371}}</ref>) was a [[Croatia]]n [[historian]]. She was an influential and controversial Croatian [[Medievalism|medievalist]] of the 20th century.
'''Nada Klaić''' (21 July 1920 – 2 August 1988{{sfn|Talan|Treskanica|2009|p=371}}) was a Croatian [[historian]]. She was a Croatian [[Medievalism|medievalist]] of the 20th century.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} A substantial part of the work was devoted to criticism of medieval sources.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}


==Academic career==
==Academic career==
Nada Klaić, university professor and a prominent Croatian medievalist, graduated at the [[Faculty of Philosophy, Zagreb|Faculty of Philosophy]] of the [[University of Zagreb]], the same faculty where she was involved in teaching for 45 years. She started her teaching and scientific career at the Faculty's Department of History in 1943 to become a full professor of the Croatian medieval history in 1969. This position she held until her death in 1988. Parallelly she taught several years at the Faculty of Philosophy in Zadar.
Nada Klaić was born in [[Zagreb]], the granddaughter of the historian [[Vjekoslav Klaić]] and sister of landscape architect [[Smiljan Klaić]].{{sfn|Talan|Treskanica|2009|p=371}} She was a university professor and a prominent Croatian medievalist, graduated at the [[Faculty of Philosophy, Zagreb|Faculty of Philosophy]] of the [[University of Zagreb]], the same faculty where she was involved in teaching for 45 years.{{sfn|Talan|Treskanica|2009|p=371}} She started her teaching and scientific career at the faculty's Department of History in 1943,{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} to become a full professor of the Croatian medieval history in 1969.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}{{sfn|Talan|Treskanica|2009|p=371}} This position she held until her death in 1988.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}


Since 1946, when she took her doctor's degree with the thesis Political and Social System of Slavonia during the Arpáds' Rule, she spent several decades engaged in researching Croatian medieval history. Nada Klaić gathered the results of her extensive analytical investigations, published first in journals and proceedings, and monographs and surveys of Croatian history.
From 1946, when she took her doctor's degree with the thesis ''Političko i društveno uređenje Slavonije za Arpadovića'' (Political and Social Organization of [[Slavonia]] under the [[Árpád dynasty]]),{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}{{sfn|Talan|Treskanica|2009|p=371}} she spent several decades engaged in researching Croatian medieval history. Nada Klaić gathered the results of her extensive analytical investigations, published first in journals and proceedings, and monographs and surveys of Croatian history.{{sfn|Talan|Treskanica|2009|p=371}} She died in her home city of Zagreb.


==Historical studies==
==Historical studies==
She researched the period from the arrival of the [[Slavic peoples|Slavs]] (see [[Migration Period]]) until the 19th century.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} Under the early influence of M. Barada, Lj. Hauptmann, [[Bogo Grafenauer|B. Grafenauer]] and J. Šidak, she contributed to the Croatian [[Medievalism]] by writing papers about social history.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} The book ''History of the [[Yugoslavia|Yugoslav]] Peoples II'' (1959) includes her comprehensive overview of the history of Croatia in the [[Early Modern Times]], including elements of economic and social history.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}


She paid special attention to the history of cities, as shown by several studies and books: ''[[Zadar]] in the Middle Ages until 1409'' (with Ivo Petricioli, 1976), ''[[Zagreb]] in the Middle Ages'' (1982), ''Notes on [[Vukovar]] in the Middle Ages'' (1983), ''[[Trogir]] in the Middle Ages: Public Life of the City and its Inhabitants'' (1985), ''[[Koprivnica]] in the Middle Ages'' (1987).{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}
She was born in [[Zagreb]] as the granddaughter of the historian [[Vjekoslav Klaić]]. In 1943 she graduated history from the [[University in Zagreb]], where she was hired as a university instructor in the same year. In 1946 Klaić got her Ph.D. with the thesis ''Political and Social Organization of [[Slavonia]] under the [[Árpád dynasty]]''. In 1954 she became a private assistant professor; in 1968 she became a professor of the [[history of Croatia]].


She authored numerous works regarding revolts and social conflicts, which she collected in the book ''Social Turmoil and [[Croatian and Slovenian peasant revolt|Revolts]] in Croatia in the 16th and 17th Centuries'' (1976).{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} She described the role of specific nobles in the books ''The Last Dukes of [[Celje]] in the [[Lands of the Crown of St. Stephen]]'' (1982) and ''[[Medvedgrad]] and its Masters'' (1987).{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}
She researched the period from the arrival of the [[Slavic peoples|Slavs]] (see [[Migration Period]]) until the 19th century. She contributed to the Croatian [[Medievalism]] by writing papers about social history. The book ''History of the [[Yugoslavia|Yugoslav]] Peoples II'' (1959) includes her comprehensive overview of the history of Croatia in the [[Early Modern Times]], including elements of economic and social history.


Much of her work is the analysis and publication of historical sources.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} Relying partly on the contributions of earlier historians, she analyzed the entire Croatian diplomatic material of the [[Early Middle Ages]] (''Diplomatic Analysis of the Documents from the [[Medieval Croatian state (disambiguation)|Age of Croatian Rulers of Croat Descent]]'', 1965, 1966–67), questioning its authenticity.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} Along with the anonymous [[Split (city)|Split]] chronicle called ''[[Historia Salonitana maior]]'' (1967), Klaić published several sources translated from Latin for the needs of students (''Sources for Croatian History before 1526'', 1972).{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}
She paid special attention to the history of cities, as shown by several studies and books: ''[[Zadar]] in the Middle Ages until 1409'' (with Ivo Petricioli, 1976), ''[[Zagreb]] in the Middle Ages'' (1982), ''Notes on [[Vukovar]] in the Middle Ages'' (1983), ''[[Trogir]] in the Middle Ages: Public Life of the City and its Inhabitants'' (1985), ''[[Koprivnica]] in the Middle Ages'' (1987).


She provided a comprehensive and original concept of the early medieval development of the Croatian lands in the book ''History of the [[Croats]] in the [[Early Middle Ages]]'' (1971), while she collected her writings about numerous problems of the later period in the book ''History of the Croats in the [[High Middle Ages]]'' (1976).{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} Her posthumously published books are ''[[History of Bosnia and Herzegovina (958–1463)|Medieval Bosnia]]: Political Status of Bosnian Rulers before the Coronation of [[Tvrtko I of Bosnia|Tvrtko]] in 1377'' (1989) and ''History of the Croats in the Middle Ages'' (1990).{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}
She wrote numerous studies about revolts and social conflicts, which she collected in the book ''Social Turmoil and [[Croatian and Slovenian peasant revolt|Revolts]] in Croatia in the 16th and 17th Centuries'' (1976). She described the role of specific nobles in the books ''The Last Dukes of [[Celje]] in the [[Lands of the Crown of St. Stephen]]'' (1982) and ''[[Medvedgrad]] and its Masters'' (1987).

A large part of her work is the analysis and publication of sources. Relying partly on the contributions of earlier historians, she analyzed the entire Croatian diplomatic material of the [[Early Middle Ages]] (''Diplomatic Analysis of the Documents from the [[Medieval Croatian state|Age of Croatian Rulers of Croat Descent]]'', 1965, 1966–67), questioning its authenticity. Along with the anonymous [[Split (city)|Split]] chronicle called ''[[Historia Salonitana maior]]'' (1967), Klaić published several sources translated from Latin for the needs of students (''Sources for Croatian History before 1526'', 1972).

She provided a comprehensive and original concept of the early medieval development of the Croatian lands in the book ''History of the [[Croats]] in the [[Early Middle Ages]]'' (1971), while she collected her writings about numerous problems of the later period in the book ''History of the Croats in the [[High Middle Ages]]'' (1976). Her posthumously published books are ''[[History of Bosnia and Herzegovina (958–1463)|Medieval Bosnia]]: Political Status of Bosnian Rulers before the Coronation of [[Tvrtko I of Bosnia|Tvrtko]] in 1377'' (1989) and ''History of the Croats in the Middle Ages'' (1990).


==Influence==
==Influence==
Klaić was one of the most prominent Croatian and Yugoslavian medievalist in the 20th century. Some of her achievements are the innovative and modern approach to Croatian history (especially for the Middle Ages), which helped release it from the [[romantic nationalism]] of the 19th century,{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} and the revaluation of older historical sources.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} However, a substantial portion of her views and conclusions are controversial and the work provoked strong reactions in historiography.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}} For example, that the document [[Pacta conventa (Croatia)|Pacta conventa]] is a forgery probably made in the 14th century,<ref name="Antoljak-1995">{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/65458?lang=en|language=Croatian|title=Milan Sufflay kao paleograf i diplomatičar|first=Stjepan|last=Antoljak|pages=144–45|journal=Arhivski Vjesnik|number=38|date=November 1995|issn=0570-9008|publisher=[[Croatian State Archives]]|accessdate=2012-05-10}}</ref> her "lack of opinion" over the matter of 1102 in a 1959 article disputing Croatian writer Oleg Mandić's earlier work on the matter,<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.historiografija.hr/hz/1960/HZ_13_27_KLAIC.pdf|language=Croatian|title=O. Mandić, "Pacta conventa" i "dvanaest" hrvatskih bratstava.|last=Klaić|first=Nada|journal=Historical Journal|publisher=Croatian Historical Society|issn=0351-2193|volume=XI-XII|year=1958–59|pages=165–206|accessdate=10 May 2012}}</ref> and her view on the Croatian migration and old homeland in the 7th century, as well other topics of the early Croatian history.{{sfn|Majnarić|2009}}
{{Original research|section|date=August 2010}}
Nada Klaić was the most influential Croatian medievalist in the 20th century. Some of her achievements are the innovation and general modernization of the approach to Croatian history (especially for the Middle Ages), which helped release it from the [[romantic nationalism]] of the 19th century; the foundation of a modern [[interdisciplinarity|interdisciplinary]] approach to Croatian history, combining [[archaeology]], [[palaeography]], [[economic history]], [[history of art]] and [[cultural history]]; the revaluation of older historical sources; and the dissolution of many myths reflecting the political function of Croatian [[historiography]] in the 19th century.


Klaić was highly critical about the work by some scholars like [[Ferdo Šišić]] (which she dismissed as poorly analysed), or Lj. Hauptmann (regarding the thesis of Croats migration from [[White Croatia]] and the Iranian-Caucasian theory of the origin of early Croats).{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|p=146-49}} Her firm assumptions on the origin and early homeland of Croats based on Margetić's thesis whereby the Croats arrived to Dalmatia in the late 8th or early 9th century, although Margetić emphasized it was only an assumption, which he later reportedly rejected.{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|p=155}} The German and Austrian scholars H. Kunstmann, J. Herrmann, R. Werner and O. Kronsteiner loose considerations on Slavs were especially influential on her viewpoints.{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|p=150, 155}}{{sfn|Heršak|Nikšić|2007|p=261}}
She was often in the public eye for her controversial theories such as her refusal to acknowledge the first Croatian printing press in [[Kosinj]] ([[Lika]]), or the theory that the Croats originally migrated from [[Carantania]].{{Citation needed|date=March 2009}}


Klaić posited that there was no Slavic migration from North to South, but rather from South to North, as the Slavs were indigenous to the Balkan, therefore was no migration of the so-called [[White Croats]] from the White Croatia in [[Carantania]].{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|pp=147, 150}} She supported the thesis by H. Kunstmann that Slavs did not have their own tribal names, and their names should be traced to the Illyrian, Greek and Byzantine cultural milieu.{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|pp=150, 153}} She believed the Croats were Slavs in the Avar Khaganate ruled by the Avars, and as such firmly considered that Croatian state organization and titles [[župa]]n and [[Ban (title)|ban]] were of Avar origin.{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|pp=150-54}} She thought the discovered graves which dated from before the 9th century belonged to the Avars, not Croats,{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|p=152}} and that the Avars lived in Dalmatia.{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|pp=150-53}}
She thought that the document [[Pacta conventa (Croatia)|Pacta conventa]] is a forgery probably made in the 14th century.<ref name="Antoljak-1995">{{cite journal | url = http://hrcak.srce.hr/65458?lang=en | language = Croatian | title = Milan Sufflay kao paleograf i diplomatičar | first = Stjepan | last = Antoljak | pages = 144&ndash;145 | journal = Arhivski vjesnik | number = 38 |date=November 1995 | issn = 0570-9008 | publisher = [[Croatian State Archives]] | accessdate = 2012-05-10}}</ref> She elaborated her "lack of opinion" over the matter of 1102 in a 1959 article disputing the Croatian writer [[Oleg Mandić]]'s earlier work on the matter.<ref>{{cite journal | url = http://www.historiografija.hr/hz/1960/HZ_13_27_KLAIC.pdf | language = Croatian | title = O. Mandić, "Pacta conventa" i "dvanaest" hrvatskih bratstava. | last = Klaić | first = Nada | journal = Historical Journal | publisher = Croatian Historical Society | issn = 0351-2193 | volume = XI-XII | year = 1958–59 | pages = 165&ndash;206 | accessdate = 2012-05-10}}</ref>


This and other views, such as the Gothic administrative origin of [[Liburnia]] and the existence of Avarian ''županijska Liburnia'', ''banska Liburnia'' and ''županijska [[Istria]]'',{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|p=152}} as well her constant consideration of incompetence of the archaeologists in the absence of proof for her theories,{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|p=152, 163}} were criticized and dismissed by modern scholars like N. Budak and [[Peter Štih|P. Štih]] as lacking bases in reliable evidence and sources.{{sfn|Marčinko|2000|pp=162-63}} [[Miroslav Brandt]] criticised Klaić as a protégé of socialist Yugoslavia in her approach to Croatian historiography.<ref name="Brandt">{{cite book|first=Miroslav|last=Brandt|title=Život sa suvremenicima - političke uspomene i svjetonazor|trans-title=Living with contemporaries – political memories and worldview|language=Croatian|publisher=Naklada Pavičić|place=Zagreb|year=1996|isbn=953-6308-22-3}}</ref>{{sfn|Heršak|Nikšić|2007|p=261}}<ref name="Brandt"/>
[[Miroslav Brandt]] claimed that Croatian historiography in the times of socialist Yugoslavia was consciously reduced at national minimalism and reduced at solely orientation towards criticist historiography, towards fight against alleged myths in Croatian historiography, with Nada Klaić as representant. Brandt claimed that Nada Klaić was protégé of Communist authorities, only because of their perception that her work has destructive effects on national pride of Croats.<ref>Miroslav Brandt: Život sa suvremenicima - političke uspomene i svjetonazor, Naklada Pavičić, Zagreb, 1996, ISBN 953-6308-22-3</ref>

===Dispute with Dominik Mandić===
Nada Klaić was involved in a dispute with the Croatian historian [[Dominik Mandić]] and her approach to the [[medieval Croatian state|early medieval Croatian history]] in the 1960s. The dispute was covert because Mandić was an anticommunist emigrant. Nada Klaić had the advantage of a modern scientific and multidisciplinary approach and a well-founded critical analysis of historical sources, while Mandić made stronger analyses of church history (a crucial aspect of the [[Middle Ages]]).

Two aspects stand out in this wide dispute. Firstly, the superior modern approach of Nada Klaić positively influenced the Croatian historiography as a whole. Secondly, the background of the dispute was a clash between two equally non-scientific positions, the one overplaying (Mandić) and the other downplaying (Klaić) the Croatian aspect, neither of which has managed to become the foundation of Bosnian medieval studies. After Mandić's weakly founded claims (e.g. on the North African origin of [[Vlachs]]), Nada Klaić made even weaker claims (e.g. on [[Croats#Genetics|the arrival of the Croats]] from [[Slovenia]]/[[Carantania]]).

Modern Croatian historiography dealing with Bosnia and Herzegovina, exemplified in the works of [[Pejo Ćošković]], [[Mladen Ančić]], [[Franjo Šanjek]], and [[Pavao Anđelić]], mostly accepts the multidisciplinary approach of Nada Klaić, amended with more recent scientific discoveries, but it refutes her national reductionism caused by the communist ideology trying to remove the Croatian aspect of the history of Bosnia and Hum.


==Works==
==Works==
Line 63: Line 53:


== References ==
== References ==
<references/>


==Sources==
===Notes===
{{reflist|2}}
*{{cite journal

| url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/93463?lang=en
===Sources===
| title=Nada Klaić (1920.-1988.)
*{{citation |url=http://hbl.lzmk.hr/clanak.aspx?id=213 |first=Ivan |last=Majnarić |title=Nada Klaić |work=[[Croatian Biographical Lexicon]] |year=2009 |publisher=[[Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža]] |language=Croatian |accessdate=24 April 2014}}
| journal=Pro tempore
*{{cite journal |url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/93463?lang=en |title=Nada Klaić (1920.-1988.) |journal=Pro Tempore |issue=6–7 |date=October 2009 |last1=Talan |first1=Andreja |last2=Treskanica |first2=Stefan |pages=370–375 |language=Croatian |format=PDF |accessdate=1 December 2014}}
| issue=6–7
*{{citation |last=Marčinko |first=Mato |chapter=Podrijetlo i dolazak Hrvata (Pretpostavke i osvrti te njihove kritike) |trans-chapter=The origin and arrival of Croats (Assumptions and reviews, and their critics) |title=Indoiransko podrijetlo Hrvata |trans-title=Indo-Iranian origin of Croats |year=2000 |language=Croatian |publisher=Naklada Jurčić |isbn=953-6462-33-8}}
| date=October 2009
*{{citation |first1=Emil |last1=Heršak |first2=Boris |last2=Nikšić |date=2007 |title=Hrvatska etnogeneza: pregled komponentnih etapa i interpretacija (s naglaskom na euroazijske/nomadske sadržaje) |trans-title=Croatian Ethnogenesis: A Review of Component Stages and Interpretations (with Emphasis on Eurasian/Nomadic Elements) |url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=28729&lang=en |language=Croatian |journal=Migration and Ethnic Themes |volume=23 |issue=3}}
| last1=Talan
| first1=Andreja
| last2=Treskanica
| first2=Stefan
| pages=370–375
| language=Croatian
| format=PDF
| accessdate=1 December 2014
| ref=harv}}


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://info.hazu.hr/en/library/special/memo_klaic Nada Klaić (Zagreb 1920-1988)]
*[http://info.hazu.hr/en/library/special/memo_klaic Nada Klaić (Zagreb 1920-1988)]


{{Authority control|VIAF=71410641}}
{{Authority control}}


{{Persondata <!-- Metadata: see [[Wikipedia:Persondata]]. -->
| NAME = Klaic, Nada
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES =
| SHORT DESCRIPTION = Croatian historian
| DATE OF BIRTH = 21 July 1920
| PLACE OF BIRTH =
| DATE OF DEATH = 2 August 1988
| PLACE OF DEATH =
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Klaic, Nada}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Klaic, Nada}}
[[Category:1920 births]]
[[Category:1920 births]]
[[Category:1988 deaths]]
[[Category:1988 deaths]]
[[Category:Croatian historians]]
[[Category:Yugoslav historians]]
[[Category:Croatian translators]]
[[Category:Yugoslav translators]]
[[Category:Croatian medievalists]]
[[Category:Medievalists]]
[[Category:Latin–Croatian translators]]
[[Category:Latin–Croatian translators]]
[[Category:Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb alumni]]
[[Category:Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Zagreb alumni]]
[[Category:University of Zagreb faculty]]
[[Category:Academic staff of the University of Zagreb]]
[[Category:People from Zagreb]]
[[Category:Burials at Mirogoj Cemetery]]
[[Category:Burials at Mirogoj Cemetery]]
[[Category:20th-century translators]]
[[Category:Women medievalists]]
[[Category:Yugoslav historians]]
[[Category:20th-century women writers]]
[[Category:Yugoslav translators]]

Latest revision as of 13:27, 26 October 2023

Nada Klaić

Nada Klaić (21 July 1920 – 2 August 1988[1]) was a Croatian historian. She was a Croatian medievalist of the 20th century.[2] A substantial part of the work was devoted to criticism of medieval sources.[2]

Academic career[edit]

Nada Klaić was born in Zagreb, the granddaughter of the historian Vjekoslav Klaić and sister of landscape architect Smiljan Klaić.[1] She was a university professor and a prominent Croatian medievalist, graduated at the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Zagreb, the same faculty where she was involved in teaching for 45 years.[1] She started her teaching and scientific career at the faculty's Department of History in 1943,[2] to become a full professor of the Croatian medieval history in 1969.[2][1] This position she held until her death in 1988.[2]

From 1946, when she took her doctor's degree with the thesis Političko i društveno uređenje Slavonije za Arpadovića (Political and Social Organization of Slavonia under the Árpád dynasty),[2][1] she spent several decades engaged in researching Croatian medieval history. Nada Klaić gathered the results of her extensive analytical investigations, published first in journals and proceedings, and monographs and surveys of Croatian history.[1] She died in her home city of Zagreb.

Historical studies[edit]

She researched the period from the arrival of the Slavs (see Migration Period) until the 19th century.[2] Under the early influence of M. Barada, Lj. Hauptmann, B. Grafenauer and J. Šidak, she contributed to the Croatian Medievalism by writing papers about social history.[2] The book History of the Yugoslav Peoples II (1959) includes her comprehensive overview of the history of Croatia in the Early Modern Times, including elements of economic and social history.[2]

She paid special attention to the history of cities, as shown by several studies and books: Zadar in the Middle Ages until 1409 (with Ivo Petricioli, 1976), Zagreb in the Middle Ages (1982), Notes on Vukovar in the Middle Ages (1983), Trogir in the Middle Ages: Public Life of the City and its Inhabitants (1985), Koprivnica in the Middle Ages (1987).[2]

She authored numerous works regarding revolts and social conflicts, which she collected in the book Social Turmoil and Revolts in Croatia in the 16th and 17th Centuries (1976).[2] She described the role of specific nobles in the books The Last Dukes of Celje in the Lands of the Crown of St. Stephen (1982) and Medvedgrad and its Masters (1987).[2]

Much of her work is the analysis and publication of historical sources.[2] Relying partly on the contributions of earlier historians, she analyzed the entire Croatian diplomatic material of the Early Middle Ages (Diplomatic Analysis of the Documents from the Age of Croatian Rulers of Croat Descent, 1965, 1966–67), questioning its authenticity.[2] Along with the anonymous Split chronicle called Historia Salonitana maior (1967), Klaić published several sources translated from Latin for the needs of students (Sources for Croatian History before 1526, 1972).[2]

She provided a comprehensive and original concept of the early medieval development of the Croatian lands in the book History of the Croats in the Early Middle Ages (1971), while she collected her writings about numerous problems of the later period in the book History of the Croats in the High Middle Ages (1976).[2] Her posthumously published books are Medieval Bosnia: Political Status of Bosnian Rulers before the Coronation of Tvrtko in 1377 (1989) and History of the Croats in the Middle Ages (1990).[2]

Influence[edit]

Klaić was one of the most prominent Croatian and Yugoslavian medievalist in the 20th century. Some of her achievements are the innovative and modern approach to Croatian history (especially for the Middle Ages), which helped release it from the romantic nationalism of the 19th century,[2] and the revaluation of older historical sources.[2] However, a substantial portion of her views and conclusions are controversial and the work provoked strong reactions in historiography.[2] For example, that the document Pacta conventa is a forgery probably made in the 14th century,[3] her "lack of opinion" over the matter of 1102 in a 1959 article disputing Croatian writer Oleg Mandić's earlier work on the matter,[4] and her view on the Croatian migration and old homeland in the 7th century, as well other topics of the early Croatian history.[2]

Klaić was highly critical about the work by some scholars like Ferdo Šišić (which she dismissed as poorly analysed), or Lj. Hauptmann (regarding the thesis of Croats migration from White Croatia and the Iranian-Caucasian theory of the origin of early Croats).[5] Her firm assumptions on the origin and early homeland of Croats based on Margetić's thesis whereby the Croats arrived to Dalmatia in the late 8th or early 9th century, although Margetić emphasized it was only an assumption, which he later reportedly rejected.[6] The German and Austrian scholars H. Kunstmann, J. Herrmann, R. Werner and O. Kronsteiner loose considerations on Slavs were especially influential on her viewpoints.[7][8]

Klaić posited that there was no Slavic migration from North to South, but rather from South to North, as the Slavs were indigenous to the Balkan, therefore was no migration of the so-called White Croats from the White Croatia in Carantania.[9] She supported the thesis by H. Kunstmann that Slavs did not have their own tribal names, and their names should be traced to the Illyrian, Greek and Byzantine cultural milieu.[10] She believed the Croats were Slavs in the Avar Khaganate ruled by the Avars, and as such firmly considered that Croatian state organization and titles župan and ban were of Avar origin.[11] She thought the discovered graves which dated from before the 9th century belonged to the Avars, not Croats,[12] and that the Avars lived in Dalmatia.[13]

This and other views, such as the Gothic administrative origin of Liburnia and the existence of Avarian županijska Liburnia, banska Liburnia and županijska Istria,[12] as well her constant consideration of incompetence of the archaeologists in the absence of proof for her theories,[14] were criticized and dismissed by modern scholars like N. Budak and P. Štih as lacking bases in reliable evidence and sources.[15] Miroslav Brandt criticised Klaić as a protégé of socialist Yugoslavia in her approach to Croatian historiography.[16][8][16]

Works[edit]

  • Političko i društveno uređenje Slavonije za Arpadovića (Political and Social Organization of Slavonia under the Árpád dynasty, 1946)
  • Text in Historija naroda Jugoslavije II (History of the Yugoslav Peoples II, 1959)
  • Diplomatička analiza isprava iz doba hrvatskih narodnih vladara (Diplomatic Analysis of the Documents from the Age of Croatian Rulers of Croat Descent, 1965, 1966–67)
  • Povijest Hrvata u ranom srednjem vijeku (History of the Croats in the Early Middle Ages, 1971)
  • Povijest Hrvata u razvijenom srednjem vijeku (History of the Croats in the High Middle Ages, 1976)
  • Društvena previranja i bune u Hrvatskoj u XVI i XVII stoljeću (Social Turmoil and Revolts in Croatia in the 16th and 17th Centuries, 1976)
  • Zadar u srednjem vijeku do 1409. (Zadar in the Middle Ages until 1409, 1976)
  • Zagreb u srednjem vijeku (Zagreb in the Middle Ages, 1982)
  • Zadnji knezi Celjski v deželah Sv. Krone (in Slovenian, The Last Dukes of Celje in the Lands of the Crown of St. Stephen, 1982)
  • Crtice o Vukovaru u srednjem vijeku (Notes on Vukovar in the Middle Ages, 1983)
  • Trogir u srednjem vijeku: javni život grada i njegovih ljudi (Trogir in the Middle Ages: Public Life of the City and its Inhabitants, 1985)
  • Koprivnica u srednjem vijeku (Koprivnica in the Middle Ages, 1987)
  • Medvedgrad i njegovi gospodari (Medvedgrad and its Masters, 1987)

Published posthumously:

  • Srednjovjekovna Bosna: politički položaj bosanskih vladara do Tvrtkove krunidbe, 1377. g. (Medieval Bosnia: Political Status of Bosnian Rulers before the Coronation of Tvrtko in 1377, 1989)
  • Povijest Hrvata u srednjem vijeku (History of the Croats in the Middle Ages, 1990)

Translations[edit]

From Latin to Croatian:

  • Historia Salonitana maior (1967)
  • Izvori za hrvatsku povijest do 1526. godine (Sources for Croatian History before 1526, 1972)

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Talan & Treskanica 2009, p. 371.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Majnarić 2009.
  3. ^ Antoljak, Stjepan (November 1995). "Milan Sufflay kao paleograf i diplomatičar". Arhivski Vjesnik (in Croatian) (38). Croatian State Archives: 144–45. ISSN 0570-9008. Retrieved 2012-05-10.
  4. ^ Klaić, Nada (1958–59). "O. Mandić, "Pacta conventa" i "dvanaest" hrvatskih bratstava" (PDF). Historical Journal (in Croatian). XI–XII. Croatian Historical Society: 165–206. ISSN 0351-2193. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
  5. ^ Marčinko 2000, p. 146-49.
  6. ^ Marčinko 2000, p. 155.
  7. ^ Marčinko 2000, p. 150, 155.
  8. ^ a b Heršak & Nikšić 2007, p. 261.
  9. ^ Marčinko 2000, pp. 147, 150.
  10. ^ Marčinko 2000, pp. 150, 153.
  11. ^ Marčinko 2000, pp. 150–54.
  12. ^ a b Marčinko 2000, p. 152.
  13. ^ Marčinko 2000, pp. 150–53.
  14. ^ Marčinko 2000, p. 152, 163.
  15. ^ Marčinko 2000, pp. 162–63.
  16. ^ a b Brandt, Miroslav (1996). Život sa suvremenicima - političke uspomene i svjetonazor [Living with contemporaries – political memories and worldview] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Naklada Pavičić. ISBN 953-6308-22-3.

Sources[edit]

External links[edit]