INITIATIVES AND ORGANIZATION OF THE SECOND CATHOLIC CONGRESS (MEETING) IN LJUBLJANA IN 1913 AND DR JANKO ŠIMRAK’S REPORT ON THE RELIGIOUS UNION OF SLAVS Cover Image

POTICAJI I ORGANIZIRANJE II. HRVATSKOG KATOLIČKOG KONGRESA (SASTANAKA) U LJUBLJANI I REFERAT DR. JANKA ŠIMRAKA O VJERSKOM JEDINSTVU SLAVENA (1913. G.)
INITIATIVES AND ORGANIZATION OF THE SECOND CATHOLIC CONGRESS (MEETING) IN LJUBLJANA IN 1913 AND DR JANKO ŠIMRAK’S REPORT ON THE RELIGIOUS UNION OF SLAVS

Author(s): Zlatko Matijević
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, Local History / Microhistory, Politics and religion, Pre-WW I & WW I (1900 -1919), Sociology of Religion
Published by: Hrvatski institut za povijest
Keywords: Second Catholic Congress; Ljubljana; 1913; Janko Šimrak; Religious Union of Slavs;

Summary/Abstract: Members of the Croatian Catholic movement, associated with the weekly Dan which was published in Split (1911), gave the initiative for the organization of the Second Croatian Catholic congress. They thought that the congress should be held in Ljubljana so that the members of the Slovenian Catholic movement could also take part in it. This idea was realized only after the archbishop of Ljubljana, Dr Anton Bonaventura Jeglić invited Catholic bishops from Croatia, Dalmatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina to take part in the Slovenian Catholic meeting which was held in August 1913 in Ljubljana. Participation of Croatian representatives at the Ljubljana meeting was organized by the Croatian Catholic Seniors, an exclusive organization which gathered young secular and clerical intellectuals. The Catholic seniors were in fact the leading force of the Croatian Catholic movement as a whole. Every Croatian representative at the Ljubljana meeting read a report and each of these reports had a certain influence on the further activities of the Croatian Catholic movement. Nevertheless, the report read by Greek Catholic priest Dr Janko Šimrak was especially important and had long term consequences. His report concentrated on relations between the Catholic and the Orthodox Christians in the area of the Balkan peninsula. Šimrak contemplated the possibility of the unification of these two religions which had been separated for almost one thousand years.

  • Issue Year: 33/2001
  • Issue No: 3
  • Page Range: 707-723
  • Page Count: 17
  • Language: Croatian