The critical edition of the collected works of Primož Trubar has hitherto encompassed most of his not entirely translated texts (catechisms, dogmatic and canon-law works, and songbooks). The translation of Psalms by Trubar has also been published. The editor-in-chief DDr Igor Grdina has formulated transliterating principles congruent with the current publishing practice, and were later accepted in all other editions.
C.02 Editorial board of a national monograph
COBISS.SI-ID: 121661184The "Autohagiography" - Biography of Protopop Avvakum - is one of the key texts of the waning era of the older Russian literature. The area of study of the older Russian literature, for many years completely neglected in Slovenia, has achieved an important affirmation in the monograph by mag. Neža Zajc; the work is significantly enriching the Slovenian humanistic studies. This is also proved by its acceptance in the Russian Federation.
C.02 Editorial board of a national monograph
COBISS.SI-ID: 248116224The treatise addresses the hitherto overlooked chapter in the history of the First World War in Slovenia. After the outbreak of hostilities in the summer of 1914, the authorities in all belligerent countries faced the difficult questions of morality of the mobilized men. The war enthusiasm which marked the summer 1914 was only a transitory phenomenon. The interpretation of the meaning of suffering and sacrifice by the Catholic Church was extremely significant for the uplifting of morale and morality of soldiers on the front (and their families in the interior).
B.04 Guest lecture
COBISS.SI-ID: 30634797The treatise analyses the war enthusiasm as an extremely significant phenomenon in the first half of the 20th century; it enabled the introduction of emergency measures that emerged in parallel to war preparations after the Sarajevo assassination. The war enthusiasm was predominantly the phenomenon of the urban population, whose lives were strongly affected by modernization processes. Due to their in traditional rhythm of life, people in the countryside retained a critical distance to the war.
B.04 Guest lecture
COBISS.SI-ID: 31142957The lecture reached into the second half of the 19th century when the Tripple Alliance was formed at the heart of Europe between Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy. Despite the unresolved issues between the Kingdom of Savoy and the Habsburg Monarchy, the two states became allies because of the pragmatic polity of the Roman "Parliamentary dictator" Agostino Depretis. Shifts in the views of the European powers after 1900 shook the alliance between the official Rome and Vienna.
B.04 Guest lecture
COBISS.SI-ID: 31142701