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'''''Jadranska straža''''' was the official publication of ] organisation. The publication's full title was '''''Jadranska straža – Glasnik udruženja Jadranska straža''''' ({{lit|Adriatic Guard – Gazette of Adriatic Guard Association}}), but it was commonly referred to using the abbreviated title. The first issue was published under the title '''''Jadranska straža - Službeno ilustrovano glasilo Jadranske straže - Centrale u Splitu'''''. The journal was published from January 1923 until April 1941. ''Jadranska straža'' was normally published once a month (except twice as bi-monthly issues in 1925 and 1938) in ], then in the ] (later renamed Yugoslavia). Until 1929, the journal's sole editor was ]. He was joined by ] and ] as co-editors in 1929 and 1930. Živko Vekarić and {{ill|Jakša Ravlić|hr}} joined the editing board in 1930 for a year. Both of them and Alfirević quit the role in 1931. Ravlić edited the journal from 1936 until its final issue.{{sfn|Lovrić|2009|p=358}} '''''Jadranska straža''''' was the official publication of ] organisation. The publication's full title was '''''Jadranska straža – Glasnik udruženja Jadranska straža''''' ({{lit|Adriatic Guard – Gazette of Adriatic Guard Association}}), but it was commonly referred to using the abbreviated title. The first issue was published under the title '''''Jadranska straža - Službeno ilustrovano glasilo Jadranske straže - Centrale u Splitu'''''.{{sfn|Lovrić|2009|p=358}}
''Jadranska straža'' was published from January 1923 until April 1941. ''Jadranska straža'' was normally published once a month (except twice as bi-monthly issues in 1925 and 1938) in ], then in the ] (later renamed Yugoslavia). Until 1929, the journal's sole editor was ]. He was joined by ] and ] as co-editors in 1929 and 1930. Živko Vekarić and {{ill|Jakša Ravlić|hr}} joined the editing board in 1930 for a year. Both of them and Alfirević quit the role in 1931. Ravlić edited the journal from 1936 until its final issue.{{sfn|Lovrić|2009|p=358}}


The journal was published predominantly in ], and the remainder was in ] or rarely in ]. A part of the journal was printed in the ] and a part in the ]. The cover alternated between the two scripts every month.{{sfn|Lovrić|2009|p=358}} Mimicking the practice of other Yugoslav unitarist journals, it was common to apply the ] "pronunciation" to the Latin script texts, and the ] to the Cyrillic script materials.{{sfn|Nielsen|2014|p=146}} The journal was published predominantly in ], and the remainder was in ] or rarely in ]. A part of the journal was printed in the ] and a part in the ]. The cover alternated between the two scripts every month.{{sfn|Lovrić|2009|p=358}} Mimicking the practice of other Yugoslav unitarist journals, it was common to apply the ] "pronunciation" to the Latin script texts, and the ] to the Cyrillic script materials.{{sfn|Nielsen|2014|p=146}}

Revision as of 18:48, 4 January 2025

Academic journal
Jadranska straža
LanguageSerbian, Croatian, Slovenian
Publication details
History1923–1941
PublisherJadranska straža (Kingdom of Yugoslavia)
FrequencyMonthly
ISO 4Find out here
Indexing
CODEN (alt · alt2· JSTOR (alt· LCCN (alt)
MIAR · NLM (alt· Scopus
ISSN1331-6699

Jadranska straža was the official publication of Jadranska straža organisation. The publication's full title was Jadranska straža – Glasnik udruženja Jadranska straža (lit. 'Adriatic Guard – Gazette of Adriatic Guard Association'), but it was commonly referred to using the abbreviated title. The first issue was published under the title Jadranska straža - Službeno ilustrovano glasilo Jadranske straže - Centrale u Splitu.

Jadranska straža was published from January 1923 until April 1941. Jadranska straža was normally published once a month (except twice as bi-monthly issues in 1925 and 1938) in Split, then in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later renamed Yugoslavia). Until 1929, the journal's sole editor was Silvije Alfirević. He was joined by Niko Bartulović and Otokar Lahman as co-editors in 1929 and 1930. Živko Vekarić and Jakša Ravlić [hr] joined the editing board in 1930 for a year. Both of them and Alfirević quit the role in 1931. Ravlić edited the journal from 1936 until its final issue.

The journal was published predominantly in Croatian, and the remainder was in Serbian or rarely in Slovene language. A part of the journal was printed in the Latin and a part in the Cyrillic script. The cover alternated between the two scripts every month. Mimicking the practice of other Yugoslav unitarist journals, it was common to apply the ekavian "pronunciation" to the Latin script texts, and the ijekavian to the Cyrillic script materials.

The journal published all maritime-related material, including literary texts and scientific papers. It also covered current events, as well as topics related to fishing and tourism. The journal published sport news, particularly related to the Gusar Rowing Club and became the official journal of the rowing sport in Yugoslavia. Style and rhetoric of the journal mimicked those of early Italian fascist organisations. The circulation of Jadranska straža was up to 20,000.

References

  1. ^ Lovrić 2009, p. 358.
  2. Nielsen 2014, p. 146.
  3. Lovrić 2009, p. 357.
  4. Lovrić 2009, pp. 363–364.
  5. Machiedo-Mladinić 1992, p. 121.
  6. Nielsen 2014, pp. 146–147.
  7. Nielsen 2014, p. 145.

Sources