Jovan Gavrilović was a Serbian historian, politician, statesman, and public figure. He was the first President of the Serbian Learned Society, the forerunner of the Serbian Academy of Arts and Sciences.Also, Gavrilović was the moral compass of a fallen Serbian king and the benefactor of the Teachers' Association. During the fifty years of his life in Serbia's capital, he was a government official, diplomat, prince's deputy, a people's benefactor and more. A monument erected in his honor, today adorns Belgrade's most beautiful park, Kalemegdan.
Biography
It cannot be said that Jovan Gavrilović had a difficult life. He was born in the family of a wealthy merchant Trivun Gavrilović in Vukovar, in 1796. In addition to material wealth, the Gavrilović family disposed of those intangible, spiritual and intellectual ones, and Trivun Gavrilović gladly boasted that he provided his children with a good education, that is six others besides Jovan. Jovan started his education in Vukovar, and continued at the Evangelical Lyceum in Bratislava, Pécs, Sremski Karlovci, Szeged, and Belgrade's Velika skola. He studied "law and state sciences" and was trained in jobs that he would deal with in different circumstances in the Principality of Serbia.These educational wanderings led him to master Latin, Slovak, Hungarian, Romanian, German, and French very early, languages that opened doors to the world of philosophy. He read Cicero, respected Voltaire, but he was under the influence of Kant. Tall, always well dressed in the latest and most expensive clothes, a connoisseur of fine art, he was the most sought after groom of Vukovar and Srem, but he always fled into the world of books and correspondence with Serbian intellectuals of that time. Although his father's intention was to have him become the successor of the family trade business, Jovan devoted himself to the path of a "free scientist" in the search for the meaning of life.
Gavrilović also loved to travel. Thus, in this case, it led him to Belgrade in 1829. Belgrade at the time was a "mecca" for Serbian scholars who gladly came to Serbia, bringing the Age of Enlightenment to it. An additional impetus, of course, was the fact that Vuk Karadžić, a friend of Gavrilović, stayed with him in Belgrade during those years, with whom he collaborated over many years. He also collaborated with Felix Philipp Kanitz when he came to do research in 1858 in Serbia. Unlike Vukovar, where he could not get a state job because of his civic background, Gavrilović was well received in Belgrade. Belgrade remained his home for the next five decades with three interruptions - during his short stay in Kragujevac, where he was deliberately deployed because he was known to dislike staying in smaller towns; then during his diplomatic service in Constantinople until 1833; and during his stay in Bucharest, in the same diplomatic capacity, in 1836. Upon returning to Belgrade, Gavrilović became one of the most prominent figures and princes of trust. During the following decades, he was Minister of Finance, State Advisor, Head of the Business and Trade School and one of the founders and President of the Serbian Learned Society.He wrote the Rečnik, Geografisko-Statistični Srbije in Belgrade in 1846. His loyalty to the state and the crown was also proven on 10 June 1868 when he became the head of state, sharing the three-person regency, with Milivoje Blaznavac and Jovan Ristić, which took care of the newly elected prince Milan Obrenović, without any compensation.This, of course, was his most difficult role. Young Milan was a sensitive, restless, and complete opposite of the well-settled and wise Gavrilović who was chosen to be his mentor and moral compass. In his attempts to please a young man who grew up in a conflict-ridden family, Gavrilović encountered obstacles of every kind. From the staff of the court and the officers trying to smear and corrupt the boy in every way to other deputies, politicians, and Obrenović himself, who had their own plans to make the boy a "real man" and a real master. This environment drove Gavrilović out of despair, and the young prince, naturally agile, always found a way to disappoint him further. Still, the mannerisms and charm that the young prince was known for maybe evidence that Gavrilović's influence was not in vain.
Volunteer work
And it was precisely in his enlightenment that his greatest passion lay. In addition to philosophy, he studied history, especially the history of the First Serbian Uprising of which he had some recollection. Wealthy and knowledgeable, he did not hesitate to share his wealth and knowledge with others. It is thus recorded that, in addition to Vuk Karadžić, he also assisted Djura Daničić financially and wholeheartedly advocated for the reform of the Serbian language. He respected and appreciated the ideas of Dositej Obradović and made friends with Lukijan Mušicki, and in every way tried to help the development of higher education in the young Serbian state. He was a benefactor of the Teachers' Association since its inception. With a testament, he left his entire estate of 250,000 dinars in gold precisely to this endowment to establish a fund from which financial aid was paid for orphaned teachers and widows, and pensions for impoverished teachers. Jovan Gavrilović died in Belgrade in 1877. After the relocation of the old Tašmajdan Cemetery, his earthly remains were with great respect transferred to Novo groblje in Belgrade. Gavrilović was a great benefactor of the Teachers' Association of the Kingdom of Serbia. In July 1893, this association erected a modest monument, a bust on a stone plinth, made by sculptor Petar Ubavkić, in a beautiful spot on Belgrade's Kalemegdan.