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-  2017 

Ante Biankini from Stari Grad and His Emigrant Fate

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Abstract:

Sa?etak Ante Biankini was born in Stari Grad on the island of Hvar on August 31, 1860 in the family of ship-owners, whose fortune was a result of maritime trade with salted fish and wine throughout the Mediterranean. Already as a medical student in Vienna, he engaged in socio-political issues. After his studies, he returned to his native Stari Grad and became active in the local political life, when he was elected to the municipal administration as a member of the People's Party. However, after the schism within the party at the regional level, he went into opposition and became instrumental in the affirmation of the Party of Rights’ politics in Stari Grad. For several years he worked as a doctor in Stari Grad, but in 1898 he permanently settled in Chicago with his wife Zlata. Shortly thereafter he started working as a surgeon in Chicago and New York, and later taught as an assistant professor at Northwestern University Medical School (1909 - 1914). This is his most productive scientific and literary period. In addition to surgery, he deals with issues of alcoholism, death penalty and euthanasia. In addition to scientific work, Biankini was actively involved in social life of Croatian immigrants in the United States and from the very beginning of life in Chicago he is involved in the Croatian transnational politics. He left Stari Grad as a member of Party of Rights, whose political convictions in a foreign world has taken on ever stronger anti-Austrian character. He became editor of “Croatian flag” (which he renamed the “Yugoslav flag” in 1917), published numerous articles, at home and abroad. Toward the end of his life in 1931, in Zagreb daily “Novosti” he emphasizes the struggle being waged between patriotic journalism and one poisoned by alien propaganda, which says a lot about how he understood the importance and role of the media. He was particularly politically engaged on the eve of the First World War, acting as President of the Yugoslav National Committee in the US since 1915, and as president of the Yugoslav National Council in Washington since 1916. He was a member of the Yugoslav Committee in London since 1916. His long-time friendship with Woodrow Wilson has yet to be further documented, i.e. this relationship has to be understood with the detailed historical reconstruction, and thus adequate historical significance of possible impacts against the evident and decisive attitude of the United States against the Italian pretensions on our coast, given his former political engagement have to be evaluated. His work "American Yugoslavs and

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