Gligorije Trlajić (Serbian Cyrillic: Глигорије Трлајић; Mol, Bačka, Hapsburg Monarchy, 25 January 1766 – Harkov, then part of Imperial Russia, 28 September 1811[1]) was a Serbian writer, poet, polyglot and professor of law at the universities of St. Petersburg and Kharkiv (Harkov).[2]
He is also known as Gregor Terlaic in German encyclopedias.
^Skerlić, Jovan (1909). Srpska književnost u XVIII veku (in Serbian). Srpska Kraljevska Akademija.
^Reiter, Norbert (1983). Nationalbewegungen auf dem Balkan (in German). Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-447-02238-5.
Gligorije (Serbian: Глигорије) is a masculine given name. It may refer to: Gligorije Elezović (1879–1960), Serbian historian GligorijeTrlajić (1766–1811)...
was the patron of Matica Srpska, a literary and cultural society GligorijeTrlajić (1766–1811), writer, poet, polyglot and professor of law at the universities...
was the patron of Matica Srpska, a literary and cultural society GligorijeTrlajic (1766–1811), writer, poet, polyglot and professor of law at the universities...
his honour Andrej Dudrovich Atanasije Stojković Teodor Filipović GligorijeTrlajić Sava Petrović Đorđe Koritar Karazin Vasily Nazarovich // Great Soviet...
Serbian writer and one of the first professors at Kharkiv University. GligorijeTrlajić, Serbian writer, poet, polyglot and professor of law at the universities...
Vasily Karazin, founder of Kharkov University Atanasije Stojković GligorijeTrlajic Teodor Filipović (also known as Božidar Grujović) "University Presidents"...
Vienna and who were proficient in Slavonic-Serbian. Among them were GligorijeTrlajić and Stefan Vujanovski who, after the death of Prince Dmitry Mikhailovich...