Stevan Radičević

Stefan Radičević
Стефан Радичевић
Portrait of Radičević by Jovan Popović, c. 1840
Minister of Education
In office
26 June 1840 – 8 September 1842
Preceded byGolub Petrović
Succeeded byPaun Janković
Minister of Justice
In office
26 June 1840 – 8 September 1842
Preceded byGolub Petrović
Succeeded byPaun Janković
Personal details
Died11 March 1871
Belgrade, Principality of Serbia
NationalitySerbian
Occupationpolitician, legal scholar
Military service
Allegiance Principality of Serbia
RankColonel

Stefan Radičević (died 11 March 1871) was a Serbian politician who served as Minister of Education and Minister of Justice in the government of Đorđe Protić, during the reign of Mihailo III from 1840 to 1842.

Biography

A native of Novi Sad, Radičević studied law in Vienna and worked as a legal clerk in Zemun before moving to the newly-autonomous Principality of Serbia, in which he entered government service.[1] In 1835, he assisted Dimitrije Davidović in writing the 1835 Constitution of Serbia and subsequently served as Secretary of the State Council, of which he was also the youngest member. Radičević, a loyalist of the Obrenović dynasty, was a fierce political opponent of Toma Vučić Perišić, whom he publicly denounced a traitor.[2] When Vučić Perišić and the Defenders of the Constitution achieved power in 1842, Radičević, Cvetko Rajović, and Đorđe Protić were exiled. Whilst in exile, Radičević wrote the constitution for the newly-formed government of Serbian Vojvodina. He returned to Serbia upon the restoration of the Obrenović dynasty in 1859 and died in Belgrade in 1871.[1]

In 1841, Radičević was commissioned as a colonel in the Army of the Principality of Serbia.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Milićević, Milan (1888). Pomenik znamenitih ljudi u srpskog naroda novijego doba [Memorial of famous individuals of the Serbian nation] (in Serbian). Slovo ljubve. pp. 587–588.
  2. ^ Popović, Radomir (2012). "Белешка Стефана Радичевића о првој владавини кнеза Милоша" [Note of Stefan Radičević about the First Rule of Prince Miloš]. Мешовита грађа (in Serbian) (33). Belgrade: Istorijski institut.