U Bečkom Novom Mjestu: Epilog zrinsko-frankopanskoj tragediji u jednom činu
Antique

U Bečkom Novom Mjestu: Epilog zrinsko-frankopanskoj tragediji u jednom činu

Milan Ogrizović

In Vienna's New Town (1921) is a one-act play – an epilogue to the Zrinski-Frankopan Tragedy. It commemorates the 250th anniversary of the execution of Zrinski and Frankopan in Vienna's New Town in 1671.

Milan Ogrizović (1877–1923), a prolific Croatian playwright, author of Hasanaginica and other successful plays, wrote this short play (a one-act play) for Matica Hrvatska in 1921, precisely on the occasion of the 250th anniversary of the execution of Croatian nobles Peter Zrinski and Fran Krsto Frankopan in Wiener Neustadt (Vienna's New Town). The work was conceived as a patriotic epilogue to the great national tragedy of 1671 and serves as a commemorative piece.

The action takes place in Vienna's New Town and evokes the last moments and the consequences of the execution, focusing on the dignity of the victims, their loyalty to the Croatian idea, and a critique of Viennese absolutism. Like Ogrizović's other historical plays, this one emphasizes national pride, sacrifice, and the future awakening of the Croatian people, typical of the author's right-wing and national-romantic spirit. It is not a complex multi-act play with deep psychology like Hasanaginica, but a special, emotional and rhetorically powerful one-act play intended for theatrical performance on an anniversary.

The work was published in Zagreb in 1921, and was performed at the Croatian National Theatre (directed by Branko Gavella in 1921). It was later staged in Belgrade. Critics see it in the context of Ogrizović's national-historical dramas (Banović Strahinja, Smrt Smail-aga Čengić), where the author uses historical models to strengthen Croatian identity. Today it is considered a minor, special play in the author's oeuvre, but important for understanding the cult of Zrinski and Frankopan in Croatian literature and theatre of the 20th century.

Dimensions
18 x 12.5 cm
Pages
55
Publisher
Matica hrvatska, Zagreb, 1921.
 
Latin alphabet. Paperback.
Language: Croatian.

One copy is available

Condition:Used, very good condition
Specificity of this instance:
Bound
 

Are you interested in another book? You can search the offer using our search engine or browse books by category.

You may also be interested in these titles

Pet stoljeća hrvatske književnosti #72 - Izabrana djela

Pet stoljeća hrvatske književnosti #72 - Izabrana djela

Srđan Tucić, Milan Ogrizović, Andrija Milčinović, P. Petrović Pecija
Zora, 1969.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
3.99
Tri drame: U logoru / Vučjak / Golgota

Tri drame: U logoru / Vučjak / Golgota

Miroslav Krleža

The collection *Three Dramas* brings together three of Krleža's key dramatic texts. Through political conflicts, moral breakdowns, and criticism of social structures, Krleža portrays an individual trapped between ideals, opportunism, and historical upheav

Nakladni zavod Hrvatske, 1947.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
7.26
Drame

Drame

Skender Kulenović

Selected works, 3

Veselin Masleša, 1971.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
7.98
Romeo i Julija

Romeo i Julija

William Shakespeare

The tragedy Romeo and Juliet is one of the most famous works of the famous English writer William Shakespeare and one of the most famous love tragedies in general.

Matica hrvatska, 1950.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
6.72
Četiri i po drame

Četiri i po drame

Almir Bašović

This is a collection that begins with a part of the genocide in Srebrenica, and ends with a monologue of war criminals, in which Bašović opens and closes the cycle of the war curse.

Connectum, 2018.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
7.84
Tirena

Tirena

Marin Držić

Pastoral drama (comedy) in five acts, written in double-rhymed twelve-line stanzas (with eight-line stanzas in the lyrical parts), the oldest preserved play by Držić (premiered in 1548 in Dubrovnik, printed in 1551 in Venice).

Matica hrvatska, 1948.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
7.36