Age, Biography and Wiki
Dušan Pirjevec was born on 20 March, 1921 in Slovenia, is a Slovenian academic. Discover Dušan Pirjevec's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 56 years old?
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56 years old |
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Pisces |
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20 March 1921 |
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20 March |
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Date of death |
4 August, 1977 |
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Slovenia
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We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 20 March.
He is a member of famous academic with the age 56 years old group.
Dušan Pirjevec Height, Weight & Measurements
At 56 years old, Dušan Pirjevec height not available right now. We will update Dušan Pirjevec's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Dušan Pirjevec Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Dušan Pirjevec worth at the age of 56 years old? Dušan Pirjevec’s income source is mostly from being a successful academic . He is from Slovenia. We have estimated Dušan Pirjevec's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2024 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
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academic |
Dušan Pirjevec Social Network
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Timeline
Dušan Pirjevec, known by his nom de guerre Ahac (20 March 1921 – 4 August 1977), was a Slovenian Partisan, literary historian and philosopher.
He was one of the most influential public intellectuals in post–World War II Slovenia.
Dušan Pirjevec was born in Solkan, which was then a suburb of the Italian town of Gorizia.
His birthplace is now located in the Slovenian town of Nova Gorica.
His father was the literary historian Avgust Pirjevec from Gorizia; his mother, Iva née Mozetič, came from a wealthy merchant family from Solkan.
Dušan attended the Ljubljana Technical High School, and in 1939 he enrolled in the University of Zagreb, where he studied agronomy.
In 1940, he joined the Communist Party of Yugoslavia.
Already in his teenage years, Pirjevec developed an interest in literature, especially in the French poètes maudits.
In the years before World War II, he published several articles under different pseudonyms in the distinguished liberal-progressive literary journal Ljubljanski zvon.
Together with the young poet Karel Destovnik Kajuh, he was the co-editor of the radical magazine Svobodna mladina ("The Free Youth").
In the early 1940s, he took part of the "Conflict on the Literary Left", a polemics involving the critical Croatian left-wing writer Miroslav Krleža against the Communist Party's ideological hardliners around Boris Ziherl and Edvard Kardelj.
In the polemics, was largely evolving around the relation between personal artistic freedom and collective revolutionary engagement, Pirjevec defended Krleža's insistence on artistic freedom, trying to show that it is not in conflict with a Marxist Leninist position.
Soon after the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941, Pirjevec joined the Partisan resistance in the Liberation Front of the Slovenian People, adopting the battle name Ahac, by which he remained known for the rest of his life.
In late 1941, he was involved in the fight against the Italian Fascist occupation regime in the so-called Province of Ljubljana.
He chose the fighting name Ahac (Agathius).
He was also involved in an internal enquiry over the massacre of a group of Romani people in the region of White Carniola in 1942, but was acquitted.
In 1943, he was sent to organize the resistance fight to the Slovenian Littoral and to Friulian Slovenia in Italy, and in 1944 to southern Carinthia.
After the end of the War, Pirjevec was placed in the propaganda units of the newly established communist regime in Slovenia.
His sister, Ivica Pirjevec, later became an anti-Nazi agitator and was captured and killed by the Nazis in 1944 (a street in the Ljubljana neighbourhood of Tacen in the Šmarna Gora District bears her name).
Soon after Dušan's birth, the family moved to Ljubljana, in what was then the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, where his father worked as the chief librarian of the National Research Library.
Between 1945 and 1947, he worked as the editor of the daily newspaper Ljudska pravica (People's Justice), the main communist newspaper in Slovenia.
There, he met the literary critic Bojan Štih, who introduced him to contemporary trends in literature.
In 1947, Pirjevec became the chairman of the Agitprop section at the University of Ljubljana.
During this period, he became a close personal friend with Vitomil Zupan, with whom he engaged in several provocations of what they saw as the "reactionary and petit bourgeoise" cultural scene in Ljubljana.
In summer 1948, he was arrested and trialed in a show trial for numerous severe crimes, such as subversive activity, immoral acts and rape.
Unlike his close personal friend who was arrested and accused of the same crimes in the same trial, Pirjevec was sentenced to a relatively mild sentence of two years in prison.
He was released already after half a year, and put on probation.
He was excluded from the Communist Party and stripped of all his war honours.
Between 1948 and 1952, Pirjevec studied French language and comparative literature at the University of Ljubljana under the supervision of the famous literary historian Anton Ocvirk.
Between 1952 and 1961, he was employed as a clerk at the Institute for Literature of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, later rising to the position of personal assistant to the Institute's president Josip Vidmar.
In 1958, Pirjevec became an assistant at the Department for Comparative Literature of the University of Ljubljana.
In 1959, he was actively involved the so-called "Slodnjak affair", when the conservative-minded literary historian Anton Slodnjak was dismissed from his post of professor of Slovene literature for having published an anthology of Slovene literature in Germany, which included several authors who were not well viewed by the communist regime.
The same year, Pirjevec was admitted again to the Communist Party.
Between 1961 and 1962, Pirjevec started a long polemic with the Serbian writer Dobrica Ćosić regarding the cultural policies in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
In contrast to Ćosić, who argued for a more unified and centralized cultural policy in Yugoslavia, Pirjevec defended the cultural autonomy of the single republics in the Yugoslav federation.
The polemic gave Pirjevec a high degree of public visibility.
In a highly controversial memoir published posthumously in 1990, fellow fighter and famous essayist Jože Javoršek even accused Pirjevec of burning war prisoners alive.
The choice was highly symbolic: since the late 16th, Saint Agathius was venerated in the Slovene Lands as the patron saint against Turkish invasions, and in the 17th century he was also venerated as the saint protector of Carniola.
His talent in organization was spotted by the communist leader Aleš Bebler who secured Pirjevec's promotion to the rank of political commissar in the military units active in Lower Carniola.
During this time, he became notorious for his bellicosity and brutal treatment of opponents.