Ilija Garašanin, politician and statesmanVisualizing Family, Gender Relations, and the Body. The Balkans approx. 1860-1950Ana DjordjeviceditorCentre for Southeast European History, University GrazCentre for Information Modelling in the Humanities, University Grazo:vase.1028Muzej Primenjene UmetnostiMuseum of Applied Art10469Public OpinionCommunicationClothingAdornmentDivision of Labor by GenderLaborPersonal NamesIndividuation and MobilityStatus, Role, and PrestigeIndividuation and MobilitySocial StratificationInter-ethnic RelationsCommunityStateGovernment ActivitiesPolitical BehaviorPolitical PartiesPolitical BehaviorSerbiaBelgradeBelgrade20.46513,44.80401PhotographPhotographer1860-1865Anastas NikolovStojanović/KarastoyanovStojanović/Karastoyanov, Anastas NikolovFull-length portrait of seated man in formal attire. His left hand is resting on his knee and his right hand, in which he is holding a pair of gloves, on a decorative table. There is also a top hat lying on the table. In the background a curtain is partially covering a painted canvas backdrop depicting a park.Ilija Garašanin (1821, Garaši – 1874, Grocka) was the son of the businessman Hadži Milutin Savić-Garašanin, a Serbian revolutionary and member of the National Council of Serbia, and of Pauna Loma, the sister of the voivode Arsenije Loma. Ilija Garašanin became a Serbian politician and statesman, serving as Minister of Home Affairs and Prime Minister (1861–1867). He is remembered for having been the first Serbian politician who had a genuine political program, designed to prevent Austrian and Russian influence in Serbia and in the remaining Slav populated parts of the Ottoman Empire. He wrote the Načertanije, a political document which stated the goals of liberating the South Slavs and unifying Serbian territories. His aim was to place Serbia in the ranks of other European states. Photograph kept in Anastas Jovanović's album.Not specifiedCarte de visite10060SerbiaBelgradeManetovic, Edislav. 2006. Ilija Garasanin: Nacertanije and nationalism. In: The Historical Review / La Revue Historique vol. 3. pp. 137-173