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Zgodovina za vse

Ljubljana Municipal Elections And Shameless Cartoons


Leto:2022
Publisher(s):Zgodovinsko društvo Celje, Celje
Language(s):slovenščina, angleščina
Type(s) of material:text
Rights:
CC license

This work by Damir Globočnik is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

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Description
On 23 April 1911, women were allowed to vote in person for the first time in the municipal elections in Ljubljana. Incidents occurred at the women’s polling station in the girls’ lycée (an attack on the Ursulines by supporters of the National Progressive Party). On 25 April 1911, the Executive Committee of the Slovene People’s Party issued a statement of protest and declared a political boycott of the Liberal Party. Before the elections, the newspapers Jutro and Slovenski narod published a few cartoons, while Slovenec published small satirical cartoons alongside songs. Most of the cartoons in the Jutro were by Maksim Gaspari. This was the first time in the history of Slovenian newspapers that two opposing political camps waged a political struggle using cartoons.
Metadata (11)
  • identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/11686/58171
    • title
      • Ljubljanske občinske volitve in nesramne karikature
      • Ljubljana Municipal Elections And Shameless Cartoons
    • creator
      • Damir Globočnik
    • subject
      • volitve
      • Ljubljana
      • Jutro
      • Ivan Šusteršič
      • Ivan Štefe
      • karikatura
      • Maksim Gaspari
      • Narodno napredna stranka
      • Slovenska ljudska stranka
      • elections
      • Ljubljana
      • Jutro
      • Ivan Šusteršič
      • Ivan Štefe
      • cartoon
      • National Progressive Party
      • Ivan Štefe
      • Slovenian People’s Party
    • description
      • On 23 April 1911, women were allowed to vote in person for the first time in the municipal elections in Ljubljana. Incidents occurred at the women’s polling station in the girls’ lycée (an attack on the Ursulines by supporters of the National Progressive Party). On 25 April 1911, the Executive Committee of the Slovene People’s Party issued a statement of protest and declared a political boycott of the Liberal Party. Before the elections, the newspapers Jutro and Slovenski narod published a few cartoons, while Slovenec published small satirical cartoons alongside songs. Most of the cartoons in the Jutro were by Maksim Gaspari. This was the first time in the history of Slovenian newspapers that two opposing political camps waged a political struggle using cartoons.
    • publisher
      • Zgodovinsko društvo Celje
    • date
      • 2022
      • 01. 05. 2022
    • type
      • besedilo
    • language
      • Slovenščina
      • Angleščina
    • isPartOf
    • rights
      • license: ccByNcSa