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Research, Inventory and Cataloguing Documents of the Criminal Court Registers
Lamenta Criminalia post terraemotum,
Diversi e possesso de Criminale
and Criminalia
in the State Archives of Dubrovnik involving Jewish litigants (1667–1808)
Vesna Miović
Born 1961 in Dubrovnik, Croatia, graduated from Oriental studies (Turkish, Arab and Persian languages) at the Faculty of Arts in Sarajevo. She obtained her PhD from the University of Zagreb in 1996 with the subject Relations at the Ottoman-Ragusan border (1667–1806). She is working at the Institute for Historical Sciences in Dubrovnik of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, with her main focus to the Ottoman-Ragusan relations and the history of Ragusan Jews. Her scientific work is based on researching the archives of the State Archives of Dubrovnik.
The most recent book publication of Vesna Miović is a comprehensive monography (560 pages) on Jewish families of Dubrovnik (Ragusa) in the period between 1549 and 1940 (original title in Croatian language: Židovski rodovi u Dubrovniku (1549-1940). It was issued by the Institute for historical sciences in Dubrovnik as a part of special series on residents of Dubrovnik and its surroundings.
A significant part of the research was facilitated and based on the findings of the Research, Inventory and Cataloguing Documents of the Criminal Court Registers in Dubrovnik project. The case study also proves why such cataloguing is of vital importance for research of Jewish civilization. The book is available in (specialized) bookstores and online.
Ivan Čerešnješ
Born 1945 in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, graduated at the Faculty of Architecture and Urban Planning in Sarajevo, working as an architect and civil engineer until emigration to Israel in 1996. He was the president of the Jewish Community of Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1992–1995. He was awarded the Légion d’honneur, French highest order, in 1994 for humanitarian activities during the Bosnian war. Since 1997 he is working at the Centre for Jewish Art of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, Israel and has obtained his MA in 1997. He is engaged in documentation of the Jewish immovable and movable cultural, historical and religious heritage in Eastern Europe and the countries of the former Yugoslavia.