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Liberal Party (Kingdom of Serbia)

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Liberal Party
Либерална странка
Leader
Founded1883
Dissolved1895
HeadquartersBelgrade
IdeologyLiberalism

The Liberal Party (Template:Lang-sr, LS) was a liberal political party active in the Kingdom of Serbia between 1883 and 1895. It was led by historian Jovan Ristić (1831–1899) and then lawyer Jovan Avakumović (1841–1928).

Background

"Liberals" in Serbia

The "Liberals" (liberali), an opposition group formed in the 1840s, established the Association of Serbian Youth in 1847 (banned in 1851 by the Defenders of the Constitution). These liberals participated in the May Assembly (1–3 May 1848) in Sremski Karlovci and the Petrovdan Assembly (29 June 1848) in Kragujevac. The liberals had an important role in the overthrow of the regime of Prince Aleksandar Karađorđević in 1858, which resulted in the return of the rival Obrenović dynasty. Liberals founded the United Serb Youth. Their ideas were close to those of Jovan Ristić (the later leader of LS). The Liberals were Russophiles and Obrenović-supporters, closely linked with the Serbian Orthodox Church and especially with Metropolitan Mihailo who himself was a liberal. In national politics, they had the aim of liberation of all Serbs. On the political spectrum, the Liberals were between the Conservatives and the Markovićevci (followers of Svetozar Marković, who later founded the People's Radical Party in 1881[1]).

Liberals founded the Society for the Promotion of Serbian Literature (Дружина за помагање српске књижевности) in 1881, then transformed the organization into a political party, the Liberal Party, in 1883.

History

Members

Election results

Election Votes Seats
1884
3 / 174
1886 15
1888 (Mar)
13 / 142
1888 (Nov)
150 / 628
1889 21,874 (12.12%)
15 / 132
1893 (Mar)
64 / 132
1893 (May)
1 / 134
1895
30 / 240

See also

References

Sources

  • Gale Stokes (1990). Politics as Development: The Emergence of Political Parties in Nineteenth Century Serbia. Duke University Press.
  • Popović-Obradović, Olga (2008). Kakva ili kolika država?: Ogledi o političkoj i društvenoj istoriji Srbije XIX–XXI veka (PDF). Vol. 12. Belgrade: Helsinški odbor za ljudska prava. ISBN 978-86-7208-155-8. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help); Invalid |ref=harv (help)
  • Brašić, Miloš N.; Mitrinović, Čedomil (1937). Jugoslovenske narodne skupštine i sabori. Narodna Skupština Kraljevine Jugoslavije.