Melko Čingrija

Melko Čingrija (April 1, 1873, Dubrovnik – December 8, 1949, Dubrovnik) was a Serb-Catholic writer and politician.[1]

Melko Čingrija
Acting Governor of the National Bank of Serbia
In office
1934–1935
Preceded byIgnjat J. Bajloni
Succeeded byMilan Radosavljević
Mayor of Dubrovnik
In office
1911–1914
Preceded byPero Čingrija
Succeeded byIvo Celio-Cega
Mayor of Dubrovnik
In office
1918–1920
Preceded byIvo Celio-Cega
Succeeded byOttomar Nonveiller
Personal details
BornApril 1, 1873
Dubrovnik, Dalmatia, Austrian Empire
(now Croatia)
DiedDecember 8, 1949 (age 76)
Dubrovnik, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
(now Croatia)
NationalityCroatian
Occupationpolitician

Life and career

Melko Čingrija was the son of the long-time Dubrovnik mayor, Pero Čingrija.

Until the outbreak of the First World War, he was at the forefront of the struggle for Croatian national and political rights, later through the policy of a new course.[2]

At the beginning of the First World War, he was interned by the Austrian authorities. He signed the May Declaration of the Yugoslav Club in the Imperial Council (May 30, 1917) and the Geneva Declaration (November 9, 1918) on the creation of joint Yugoslav governments, of which he was a member.[3]

In 1920, he turned to the Greater Serbia policy pursued by King Aleksandar Karađorđević and the Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, the Serbian radical Nikola Pašić. 1926, he formally became a member of Pasic's Serbian People's Radical Party. In addition, Čingrija was the vice-governor of the National Bank of Yugoslavia, and he signed the banknotes in Cyrillic.[4]

In 1939, he published the books Dubrovnik and The Croatian Question, in which he advocated for the Serb-Catholic point of view, beauty in the territorial division and that it wasn't necessary to establish the Banovina of Croatia over Zeta Banovina.

Political offices
Preceded by
Pero Čingrija
Mayor of Dubrovnik
1911–1914
Succeeded by
Ivo Celio-Cega
Preceded by
Ivo Celio-Cega
Mayor of Dubrovnik
1918–1920
Succeeded by
Ottomar Nonveiller

References

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