Stojan SimićStojan Simić (Boljevci, 25 March 1797 – Belgrade, Principality of Serbia, 10 March 1852) was a Serbian politician and businessman.[1] He was known as a talented speaker and constitutional defender.[2] BiographyEarly political lifeSimić and his younger brother Aleksa Simić were influential in Serbian politics during the first half of the 19th century. Together, they gave financial support for cultural and literary projects.[example needed] Their father, Đorđe Simić, was a captain of the Rasina under Karađorđe during the First Serbian Uprising.[citation needed] As representative of the newly liberated Serbia at Constantinople, Simić transcribed all of the Sultan's edicts (Hatišerif)[clarification needed] relating to Serbia in three languages: Serbian, French, and Turkish. The work he did there served as a basis for the elaboration of the public law of the Principality of Serbia. Simić suggested he fought for "the free will of the people", and objected to autocracy, oligarchy, and authoritarianism.[3] LegacySimić received a golden bull from the Ravanica monastery. He used this in Walachia to assist with the establishment of the Belgrade's Grandes écoles. Simić also had a palace built in the center of Belgrade, which housed the Serbian court from 1842 to 1903, when King Alexander and Queen Draga were assassinated. In 1903, the building was demolished. A new royal palace was built on the same site.[when?] The portrait of Simić by Uroš Knežević[4] is currently in the National Museum of Belgrade. BrotherStojan's brother Aleksa Simić headed the customs administration (as bazrdjanbača[clarification needed]) and performed a variety of functions in the field of culture.[example needed] At the same time, he served as an intermediary between Prince Miloš and the Turkish authorities in Belgrade. Aleksa Simić also participated in the founding of the Gligorije Vozarević bookstore, the first bookstore in Belgrade.[5] This library formed the basis for the National Library of Serbia.[citation needed] The brothers jointly restored the medieval Naupara monastery, built c. 1381, which was demolished by the Turks in 1454, and remained in ruins until 1835.[5] When the restoration was over, the brothers offered the church a bell, sacred books, and other objects necessary for religious ceremonies.[6] References
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