Baltazar Bogišic
Encyclopedia
Valtazar Bogišić is a town in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County of Croatia. It is on the Adriatic seacoast 15 km south of Dubrovnik and is the centre of the Konavle municipality.-History:...

, 7 December 1834 - Rijeka
Rijeka
Rijeka is the principal seaport and the third largest city in Croatia . It is located on Kvarner Bay, an inlet of the Adriatic Sea and has a population of 128,735 inhabitants...

, 24 April 1908) was a Serbian
Serbs
The Serbs are a South Slavic ethnic group of the Balkans and southern Central Europe. Serbs are located mainly in Serbia, Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and form a sizable minority in Croatia, the Republic of Macedonia and Slovenia. Likewise, Serbs are an officially recognized minority in...

  jurist, law historian and ethnologist. In domain of private law
Private law
Private law is that part of a civil law legal system which is part of the jus commune that involves relationships between individuals, such as the law of contracts or torts, as it is called in the common law, and the law of obligations as it is called in civilian legal systems...

 his most notable works are researches on family structure and the unique Montenegrin civil code
Civil code
A civil code is a systematic collection of laws designed to comprehensively deal with the core areas of private law. A jurisdiction that has a civil code generally also has a code of civil procedure...

 from 1888. He is considered to be a pioneer in the area of sociology of law and legal ethnology research. Many of his theoretical remarks were acknowledged or rethought decades after his death.

Early life

Bogišić's family was a prominent merchant family in Cavtat
Cavtat
Cavtat ) is a town in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County of Croatia. It is on the Adriatic seacoast 15 km south of Dubrovnik and is the centre of the Konavle municipality.-History:...

, a small coastal town near Dubrovnik
Dubrovnik
Dubrovnik is a Croatian city on the Adriatic Sea coast, positioned at the terminal end of the Isthmus of Dubrovnik. It is one of the most prominent tourist destinations on the Adriatic, a seaport and the centre of Dubrovnik-Neretva county. Its total population is 42,641...

. His grandfather moved to Cavtat from a nearby inland, from a village called Mrcine in Konavle
Konavle
Konavle is a small region and municipality located southeast of Dubrovnik, Croatia.It is administratively part of the Dubrovnik-Neretva County and forms a municipality with its center at Gruda with a total population of 8,250 people split in 32 villages, in which 96.5% are Croats...

 where the Bogišić's had lived for centuries after accepted Catholic faith in the 15th century.

Bogišić was born in Cavtat
Cavtat
Cavtat ) is a town in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County of Croatia. It is on the Adriatic seacoast 15 km south of Dubrovnik and is the centre of the Konavle municipality.-History:...

 on December, 7 1834. His mother died giving birth to his sister Marija, his only sibling, 2 years later. His father wanted him to continue his family business and thought that prolonged schooling would interfere with that.

When he was 4 years old he was sent to a private girls' school, the only private school in town, because only 6 yearolds could enter a public school. He latter entered state accredited school which he left before graduating. Subsequently, when he was 11 he finished a 2 years nautical school. He was 4–5 years younger than all other graduates.

The most significant person in his childhood was his grandfather Valtazar Bogišić Senior. At the time he was already blind and told him a lot of folk stories as well as about his adventures on the sea, traveling, meeting important people like Miloš Obrenović and authorized his grandson to run his errands and even simple court cases. In his last will his grandfather left Bogišić half of his estate. With no proper formal education, Bogišić was buying a lot of books. When his father didin't give him money he would get it from his grandfather. Among his favorites were the ones by a Serbian reformer Vuk Stefanović Karadžić
Vuk Stefanovic Karadžic
Vuk Stefanović Karadžić was a Serbian philolog and linguist, the major reformer of the Serbian language, and deserves, perhaps, for his collections of songs, fairy tales, and riddles to be called the father of the study of Serbian folklore. He was the author of the first Serbian dictionary...

. Inspired by Vuk, his lifelong model, he started searching for and writing down Serbian folk poems
Serbian epic poetry
Serb epic poetry is a form of epic poetry written by Serbs originating in today's Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia and Montenegro. The main cycles were composed by unknown Serb authors between the 14th and 19th centuries...

.

After a lot of persuasion and a sea accident, his father allowed him to enter 4 year grammar school (Progymnasium) with a condition not to take final exams as a guarantee that he wouldn't obtain necessary documents for further schooling. At that time, Bogišić started learning German on his own. He already spoke Italian as it was, lingua franca of the region, at the time.

In that time Bogišić was acquainted with Dubrovnik's count Niko Pucić (Pozze) the Great. This life long friend convinced him to take final exams despite his father's will and helped him prepare for them. Count Niko Pucić and his brother Medo were the most prominent people in Dubrovnik at the time. They gathered the intellectual elite which formed a cultural movement in Dubrovnik that will disappear in the beginning of the 20th century.

A turning point in Bogišić's life was the death of his father in 1856. Intrigues about the inheritance and family business followed but after 2 years Bogišić managed to get the papers in order and recuperate what the cousins had taken. 1858 he entered Ginnasio Liceale di S. Catterina (Liceo Foscarini) in Venice
Venice
Venice is a city in northern Italy which is renowned for the beauty of its setting, its architecture and its artworks. It is the capital of the Veneto region...

 where he majored in Italian language and literature and got closer to the spirit of Italian national movement.

Academic Education

After graduating in Venice
Venice
Venice is a city in northern Italy which is renowned for the beauty of its setting, its architecture and its artworks. It is the capital of the Veneto region...

, thanks to friends Bogisic got an Austrian scholarship which he denied because it had a condition that he could only study at Austrian universities. During his studies he was involved with patriotic and panslavic circles. He studied philology, philosophy (including history) and law, and the studies also included some modern courses such as political economy. He was reading in Vienna, Berlin, Munich and Paris with many notable professors like Franz Bopp
Franz Bopp
Franz Bopp was a German linguist known for extensive comparative work on Indo-European languages.-Biography:...

, the founder of comparative linguistics, Prussian historian Johann Gustav Droysen
Johann Gustav Droysen
Johann Gustav Droysen was a German historian. His history of Alexander the Great was the first work representing a new school of German historical thought that idealized power held by so-called "great" men...

, Franc Miklošič
Franc Miklošic
Fran Miklošič , was a Slovene philologist.-Biography:Miklošič was born in the small village of Radomerščak near the Lower Styrian town of Ljutomer, then part of the Austrian Empire....

, one of the most famous Slavic philologists, the founder of sociology Lorenz von Stein
Lorenz von Stein
Lorenz von Stein was a German economist, sociologist, and public administration scholar from Eckernförde. As an advisor to Meiji period Japan, his conservative political views influenced the wording of the Constitution of the Empire of Japan.- Biography :Stein was born in the seaside town of Borby...

 and many famous lawyers such as Theodor Mommsen
Theodor Mommsen
Christian Matthias Theodor Mommsen was a German classical scholar, historian, jurist, journalist, politician, archaeologist, and writer generally regarded as the greatest classicist of the 19th century. His work regarding Roman history is still of fundamental importance for contemporary research...

, Rudolf von Jhering
Rudolf von Jhering
Rudolf von Jhering was a German jurist. He is known for his 1872 book Der Kampf ums Recht , as a legal scholar, and as the founder of a modern sociological and historical school of law.Jhering was born in Aurich, Kingdom of Hanover...

 and few notable members of German Historical School of Law
German Historical School
The German Historical School of Law is a 19th century intellectual movement in the study of German law. With Romanticism as its background, it emphasized the historical limitations of the law...

.

He obtained a Phd in Philosophy in Giessen in 1862, defending the thesis entitled "On Causes of Defeat of the Prussian Army in Hussite War". There he strongly referred to the research of historian František Palacký
František Palacký
František Palacký was a Czech historian and politician.-Biography:...

. He obtained a law degree (Rigorosum) in 1865 in Vienna. At the time he was already employed. When he was appointed professor in Odessa he was promoted to Doctor Iuris Honoris Causae.

Vienna

Thanks to the certificate issued by Miklošič stating that "besides being a native speaker of Serbian and Italian (Bogišić) speaks all other Slavic languages", after obtaining a PhD in Giessen, in 1862/63 Bogišić was hired as an administrator of the Slavia Department at the Viennese court library. There however he also administrated the legal department as well as publications from the French Revolution. As an administrator of the Slavia Department, he had the opportunity not only to read important books by Slavic writers but also to meet many of the authors.

In Vienna of the day different organizations were founded gathering members of different peoples from the Empire. Bogišić participated in the foundation of the club named Slovanska beseda which was, at first, gathering all Slavs from around the Empire and was later reorganized into a Czech-club. Upon Bogišić's initiative, a special Slavic library was formed in the club (Slovanska biblioteka) and Bogišić was its first president. At this time, Bogišić supported United Serbian Youth (Ujedinjena omladina srpska), and remained their supporter for the rest of his life. The organization pleaded for real unification of Serbs and Croats into a single Yugoslav nation and not only their formal common political actions, which was the idea of Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia refers to three political entities that existed successively on the western part of the Balkans during most of the 20th century....

, for many Croatian intellectuals. After the founding of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts, Bogišić was one of its most significant writers. The Academy was established in Zagreb as a common scientific institution of south Slavic peoples. The first president was a Croat Franjo Rački
Franjo Racki
Franjo Rački was a Croatian historian, politician and writer. He compiled important collections of old Croatian diplomatic and historical documents, wrote some pioneering historical works, and was a key founder of the Yugoslavian Academy of Sciences and Arts.-Historian:Rački was born in Fužine,...

, and the first secretary a Serb Đuro Daničić.

During his stay in Vienna, he was collecting documents about Dubrovnik's 17th century diplomat - Stjepan Gradić. He continued collecting Serbian epic poetry, which he started in his youth, and in 1863 he spent the holidays in Mostar, listening to the epic poets gathered around the newly built orthodox church. In 1867 he issued a book "Pravni običaji kod Slovena" (Legal customs of the Slavs). He mainly based his work on written sources, but he already started questioning his friends about the legal reasoning of the people in their regions. In 1872 he published a book "Pisani zakoni na slovenskom jugu" (Legal Status in the Slavic South). The idea was for this book to be an introduction to the serial, which was supposed to grasp written antic legal sources from the Slavic South.

Since his youth, Bogišić was very fond of museums. He believed that establishing a Slavic museum (Slovenski Muzeum) would contribute to the presentation of Slavic heritage, and rising consciousness about it, among the Slavs and others. In his publication "Slovenski Muzeum", he responded to the "Slavofobs" of the day, who argued that Slavic peoples have to develop on their own, like Germanic or Romanic nations previously. Here he showed himself to be a panslavist. This, among all Slavs very popular 19th century movement, originating from Poland and Bohemia
Bohemia
Bohemia is a historical region in central Europe, occupying the western two-thirds of the traditional Czech Lands. It is located in the contemporary Czech Republic with its capital in Prague...

, is today a surpassed form of a collective idealization and identification.

In 1867/68, Bogišić was named Councilor for Education in the Austrian Military Frontier
Military Frontier
The Military Frontier was a borderland of Habsburg Austria and later the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, which acted as the cordon sanitaire against incursions from the Ottoman Empire...

. The population there was already used to a high degree of self-governance which is why several attempts to improve the school system failed. Regardless, Austira intended to introduce a stronger school system.

Odessa

After refusing offers from the Universities in Kiev
Kiev
Kiev or Kyiv is the capital and the largest city of Ukraine, located in the north central part of the country on the Dnieper River. The population as of the 2001 census was 2,611,300. However, higher numbers have been cited in the press....

 and Warsaw
Warsaw
Warsaw is the capital and largest city of Poland. It is located on the Vistula River, roughly from the Baltic Sea and from the Carpathian Mountains. Its population in 2010 was estimated at 1,716,855 residents with a greater metropolitan area of 2,631,902 residents, making Warsaw the 10th most...

, he accepted a professorship at the newly established Russian University in Odessa
Odessa University
The I. I. Mechnikov Odessa National University , located in Odessa, Ukraine, is one of the country's major universities. It was founded in 1865, by an edict of Czar Alexander II of Russia, reorganizing the Richelieu Lyceum of Odessa into the new Imperial Novorossiya University. In the Soviet...

. After becoming Russian citizen and a public servant in 1869, he gave his introductory lecture in Odessa in 1870. His most notable success in Odessa was the foundation of the Slavic Library, while as a professor, he didn't have much success because already in 1871 he caused (as it later turned out - orchestrated) mass student protests. Austrian press wrote that Bogišić "being a Serb was called to Odessa only due to panslavic respect" and in reality was not welcomed in Russia. He continued teaching but without the previous enthusiasm. When his request for early retirement was denied, he tried to spend as much time on study trips so he even studied, on sight, legal customs at the Caucasus
Caucasus
The Caucasus, also Caucas or Caucasia , is a geopolitical region at the border of Europe and Asia, and situated between the Black and the Caspian sea...

. He officially remained a professor of the Odessa University but already in 1873, following the orders of the czar, as a Russian subject, he left for Montenegro with a task to codify private law.

Paris and Montenegro

In Montenegro
Montenegro
Montenegro Montenegrin: Crna Gora Црна Гора , meaning "Black Mountain") is a country located in Southeastern Europe. It has a coast on the Adriatic Sea to the south-west and is bordered by Croatia to the west, Bosnia and Herzegovina to the northwest, Serbia to the northeast and Albania to the...

, the newspapers wrote that the new Civil Code had already been written, before Bogišić even got there. Bogišić however persuaded the Montenegro sovereign Nicholas I
Nicholas I of Montenegro
Nikola I Mirkov Petrović-Njegoš was the only king of Montenegro, reigning as king from 1910 to 1918 and as prince from 1860 to 1910. He was also a poet, notably penning "Onamo, 'namo!", a popular song from Montenegro.-Early life:Nikola was born in the village of Njeguši, the ancient home of the...

 to wait and explained that the work on the code will take years. Earlier, Bogišić had prepared and published questionnaires for collecting legal customs. These were translated to several languages and established Bogišić as pioneer of ethnological and sociological legal research. Based on the questionnaires he published a Collection of legal customs of the south Slavs (Zbornik sadašnjih pravnih običaja u južnih Slovena I, Građa u odgovorima iz različnih krajeva slovneskoga juga), in 1874. Bogišić was not satisfied with the questionnaires because they only had around 300 questions about public and private law including the matters of international public law. For the purpose of writing a civil code he prepared a new questionnaire, which had 2000 questions, all of which from the private law domain.

Bogišić's civil code for Montenegro, The General Property Code (Opšti imovinski zakonik), was proclaimed not until 1888. During that time, Bogišić, who was still a Russian professor, established his residence in Paris and engaged in other assignments such as writing a constitution for the Serbian revolutionaries in Herzegovina
Herzegovina
Herzegovina is the southern region of Bosnia and Herzegovina. While there is no official border distinguishing it from the Bosnian region, it is generally accepted that the borders of the region are Croatia to the west, Montenegro to the south, the canton boundaries of the Herzegovina-Neretva...

 and establishing state and legal order in Bulgaria
Bulgaria
Bulgaria , officially the Republic of Bulgaria , is a parliamentary democracy within a unitary constitutional republic in Southeast Europe. The country borders Romania to the north, Serbia and Macedonia to the west, Greece and Turkey to the south, as well as the Black Sea to the east...

 which just gained independence from the Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Empire
The Ottoman EmpireIt was usually referred to as the "Ottoman Empire", the "Turkish Empire", the "Ottoman Caliphate" or more commonly "Turkey" by its contemporaries...

. In 1878 he published his famous collection of folk poems (Narodne pjesme iz starijih, najčešće primorskih zapisa I). He also continued his researches on sociological and historical aspects of family. In the legal matters he insisted on separate codification of family and inheritance law, arguing that family law is not civil law strictu sensu, and that inheritance is a family law institute. That's why he refused to incorporate family and inheritance law into the Montenegrin civil code he wrote, consequently naming it - The General Property Code.

His draft constitution for Herzegovina from 1875, favors basic rights especially the ones referring to equality and is written in the best republican and liberal tradition thus reflecting the spirit of the local people as well as Bogišić's convictions from his youth. The Constitution is paradigmatic for Bogišić's nomotechnics. With a good eye for the social condition and needs, he managed to transform political ideals into a legal text acceptable for a common man. Such method will mark The General Property Code for the Principality of Montenegro which contains a strong idealization of people's legal reasoning. If he had to choose between what is rightful/just and what's in the people's reasoning and legal customs, he always chose the rightful solution.

During his work on the General Property Code, beside the legal customs Bogišić considered well established institutes of Roman Law. That's how Bogišić's Property Code is, at the same time, based on the notion of just, reception of Roman law and people's mind. Bogišić was especially thoughtful about the language of the code, so the actual code is written in a manner better than his other works. Such legal style served as an example for the 19th century legislation in the Kingdom of Serbia
Kingdom of Serbia
The Kingdom of Serbia was created when Prince Milan Obrenović, ruler of the Principality of Serbia, was crowned King in 1882. The Principality of Serbia was ruled by the Karađorđevic dynasty from 1817 onwards . The Principality, suzerain to the Porte, had expelled all Ottoman troops by 1867, de...

. Even in the second half of the 20th century, Belgrade legal school referred to Bogišić's code as its role-model and starting point. In that context, Bogišić's code was written in just the right time, when laws in the kingdom of Serbia were written in pure vernacular as was the case with Bogišić's Code. Most Yugoslav laws, giving they were written in Belgrade in the institutional frameworks previously established in the Kingdom of Serbia, belong to this legal-language tradition.

Final Years

After finalizing his work on the Code, Bogišić was for some time the Minister of Justice in the Principality of Montenegro. Afterward, in 1899 the second and last improved version of the General Property Code was published. He then continued to live in Paris as a retired Russian professor. He lived as prominent citizen in Paris and was often visited by law students from different countries. Especially in those years he often came back to ideas of the United Serbian Youth and prepared a study on Serbo-Croatian controversy. When he left his hometown and Dubrovnik, as a young man, the cultural elite there saw the Dubrovnik heritage as a part of a rising modern Serbian culture. However on turn of the centuries, there were great fights between Serbs and Croats about Dubrovnik's legacy. Considering himself a Serb, Bogišić in those days published his autobiography in the Serbian Annual "Dubrovnik" as well as several articles in the Serbian patriotic paper from Dubrovnik - "Srđ".

Bogišić died in Rijeka, on the way to his hometown Cavtat in 1908.

Legacy and name controversy

According to the testimonies of Bogišić's Parisian friends, Bogisic seriously considered establishing a foundation in Belgrade
Belgrade
Belgrade is the capital and largest city of Serbia. It is located at the confluence of the Sava and Danube rivers, where the Pannonian Plain meets the Balkans. According to official results of Census 2011, the city has a population of 1,639,121. It is one of the 15 largest cities in Europe...

 which would, after his death, take care of his legacy especially the scientific library and archive, and give scholarships to prosperous young lawyers for studying abroad. Bogisic chose the Serbian capital Belgrade
Belgrade
Belgrade is the capital and largest city of Serbia. It is located at the confluence of the Sava and Danube rivers, where the Pannonian Plain meets the Balkans. According to official results of Census 2011, the city has a population of 1,639,121. It is one of the 15 largest cities in Europe...

, fearing that his rich scientific collection might otherwise end up in Austrian hands, who had a hostile attitude toward Slavic culture back in the days before the First World War. At that time, his hometown Cavtat
Cavtat
Cavtat ) is a town in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County of Croatia. It is on the Adriatic seacoast 15 km south of Dubrovnik and is the centre of the Konavle municipality.-History:...

 was a part of Austro-Hungary. Since he eventually died with no last will, his sister Marija, who lived in Cavtat, inherited the whole estate including his scientific library and archive. 18 000 books including many rare antiques; 10 000 letters; various notes; ethnological and numismatic collections were kept in Cavtat in inadequate conditions for years. After the II WW the scientific library and archive was incorporated into Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts, which is today the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts
The Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts is the national academy of Croatia. It was founded in 1866 as the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts , and was known by that name for most of its existence.- History :...

. It was then officially named - Baltazar Bogisic Collection (Zbirka Baltazara Bogišića).
Since Italian was an official language in the area of his birth, Bogišić's birth certificate is written in Italian and Latin language. Carrying his grandfather's name, Bogišić signed all of his works, in all languages, as Valtazar Bogišić and it was the name by which he was recognized by his contemporaries. Since his autobigraphy was first published in the local paper called "Dubrovnik", the editor noted that the usual nickname for Baldassaro (Italian for Valtazar) in Duborvnik is Baldo, and consequently referred to him as such with affection. After his death Croatian authors started occasionally calling him Baltazar Bogisic, taking it for the Croatian version of his name. That's why his archive-memorial in his birthplace Cavtat
Cavtat
Cavtat ) is a town in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County of Croatia. It is on the Adriatic seacoast 15 km south of Dubrovnik and is the centre of the Konavle municipality.-History:...

, today located in Croatia, has Baltazar in its name, although that's not how he ever referred to himself.

Selected books and other separate publications

  • Über die Ursachen der Niederlage des deutschen Heeres im Hussitischen Kriege, Gießen 1862.
  • Slovenski muzeum, Novi Sad 1867.
  • Pravni običaji u Slovena, Zagreb: Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti, 1867. online
  • Oб научной разработке Исторiи Славянского права, St. Peterburg 1870.
  • Pisani zakoni na slovenskom jugu, Zagreb: Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti, 1872. online
  • Разборъ сочинения К.А. Попова "Россия и Сербия", St. Petersburg 1872.
  • Zbornik sadašnjih pravnih običaja u južnih Slovena I, Građa u odgovorima iz različnih krajeva slovneskoga juga, Zagreb: Jugoslavenska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti, 1874.
  • Narodne pjesme iz starijih, najčešće primorskih zapisa I, Beograd: Srpsko učeno društvo, 1878. online
  • Aperçu des travaux sur le droit coutumier en Russie, Paris 1879 (Nouvelle Revue historique de Droit français et étranger) = Osvrt na radnje o običajnom pravu u Rusiji, Beograd 1879.
  • De la forme de inokostina de la familie rurale chez les Serbes et les Croates, 1184 (Revue de droit international et de législation comparée) online= O obliku zvanom inokoština u seoskoj porodici Srba i Hrvata, Beograd 1884.
  • Apropos du Code civil du Monténégro. Quelques mots sur les principes et la méthode adoptés por sa cofection, Paris 1886 = Povodom crnogorskog građanskog zakonika, Beograd 1888.
  • Acta coniurationem Petri a Zrinio et Francisci de Frankopan nec non Francisci Nadasdy illustrantia, 1663–1671, Zagreb 1888.
  • Tehnički termini u zakonodavstvu, Beograd 1887.
  • O porodici i nasljedstvu u pravnoj sistemi, Beograd 1893.
  • Le statut de Raguse, Paris 1894 (Nouvelle revue historique de droit français et étranger).
  • Zbirka slovenskih inkunabula, Dubrovnik 1898.
  • Uputstva za sabiranje pravnih običaja srpskog naroda, Beograd 1900.
  • Liber statorum civitatis Ragusii compositus anno 1272 (with Constantine Jireček), Zagreb 1904.
  • Pravni običaji u Hercegovini, Crnoj Gori i Albaniji, Titograd: Crnogorska akademija nauka i umjetnosti 1984.

Correspondence

  • Valtazar Bogišić i Franjo Rački - Prepiska, Zbornik za istoriju, jezik i književnost srpskog naroda XXV, 1960.
  • Prepiska Stojana Novakovića i Valtazara Bogišića 1842–1915, Zbornik za istoriju, jezik i književnost srpskog naroda XXVIII, 1968.

Editions of General Property Code for Montenegro

  • Opšti imovniski zakonik za knjaževinu Crnu Goru, 1st official ed. 1888, 2nd official ed. 1898, 3rd official ed. 1913.
  • Translations:
    • Codigo general de los bienes de Montenegro, Madrid 1891.
    • Code général des biens pour la Pricnipauté de Monténégro de 1888, Paris 1898.
    • Allgemeines Gesetzbuch über das Vermögen für das Fürstentum Montenegro, Berlin 1893.
    • Codice civile generale pel Principato del Montenegro, Spalato 1900.
    • Общий имущественный Законникъ для Княжество черногорского, St, Petrrsburg 1901.
    • General Property Code for the Principalities of Montenegro, Podgorica 2006.

Collected publications

  • Valtazar Bogišić, Pravne rasprave i članci I, Beograd 1927.
  • Valtazar Bogišić, Izabrana dela i opšti imovinski zakonik, Beograd 1986.
  • Valtazar Bogišić, Izabrana djela I-VIII, Beograd/Podgorica 1999.
  • Valtazar Bogišić, Izabrana djela I-IV, Beograd/Podgorica 2004.

Biographies and selected secondary literature

  • Bogišić's autobiography was published in Kalendar Dubrovnik, Dubrovnik : Srpska Dubrovačka Štamparija A. Pasarića, 1900, 1901, 1902 = Spomenica Valtazara Bogišića, Dubrovnik 1938/1940, 35 ff.
  • Werner Zimmermann, Valtazar Bogišić 1834–1908 - Ein Beitrag zur südslavischen Geistes- und Rechtsgeschichte im 19. Jahrhundert, Wiesbaden 1962.
  • Surja Pupovci, Valtazar Bogišić u svetlu dokumenata iz ruskih arhiva, 1996
  • Surja Pupovci, Valtazar Bogišić, Podgorica 2004.
  • Feodor Demelić, Le Droit contumier des Slaves méridionaux - d'après les recherches de M.V. Bogišić, Paris 1876.
  • R. Dareste, Le nouveau Code Civil du Montenegro, 1888.
  • Karl Dickel, Über das neue bürgerliche Gesetzbuch für Montenegro und die Bedeutung seiner Grundsätze für die Kodifikation im allgemeinen mit Bemerkungen über den neuen Entwurf deutschen bürgerlichen Gesetzbuches, Marburg 1889.
  • Karl Dickel, Études sur le Nouveau Code Civil du Monténégro et sur l'importance des pricnipes suivis par l'auteur de ce code en matiere de codification, 1891.
  • Niko Martinović, Valtazar Bogišić I - Istorija kodifikacije crnogorskog imovinskog prava, Cetinje 1958.
  • Carlos Petit, The Code and the Goats- Western Law in Less-Western Cultural Contexts - On the Code of Property of Montenegro. Zeitschrift Für Neure Rechtgeschichte 1998, 212-224.
  • Miloš Luković, Bogišićev zakonik, Beograd 2009.
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