Ivo Tartaglia

Ivo Tartaglia
32nd Mayor of Split
In office
1918–1928
Preceded by Josip Smodlaka
Succeeded by Petar Bonetti
Personal details
Born 1880
Split, Yugoslavia
Died 1949
Lepoglava prison, SFRY
Occupation Politician

Dr. Ivo Tartaglia (Croatian pronunciation: [ǐːʋo tartâʎa]; 5 February 1880 – 3 April 1949) was "a committed anti-fascist",[1] a former ban (governor) of the province of Littoral Banovina (Croatian/Serbo-Croat: Primorska banovina),[1] and the 32nd mayor of Split, Yugoslavia (in what is today known as Croatia).

Biography

Tartaglia was born in Split in 1880. He grew up in a noble family with Dalmatian Italian roots.

He was known as a patron, art lover, bibliophile, and collector. On 29 May 1928, the Split Town Hall decided to form the Gallery of Fine Arts, but due to a lack of funds, the Gallery did not open until 1 December 1931 (as the Gallery of Fine Arts of the Coastal Province). Tartaglia's bequest added more than 300 works to the Gallery's holdings.[2]

In June 1948, Tartaglia was put on trial in Split, along with others, on charges of having expressed pro-Mussolini sentiments and otherwise undermining the government of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. (Tartaglia had opposed Mussolini during World War II.) He was sentenced to seven years at hard labor, plus the loss of his civic rights for two years after that, as well as having all of his property confiscated.[1]

Tartaglia died in 1949 at the Lepoglava prison.

Mayor of Split

He was responsible for building the Ličke railways in 1925, which connected peninsular Split to the mainland. At the time, Yugoslavia would not finance the construction of railways. Tartaglia enlisted entrepreneurs and savings banks to support the project. During his incumbency, the zoo opened, airports were expanded and modernized, and a meteorological station was built.

Ban of Littoral Banovina

Tartaglia was the ban of Littoral Banovina from 9 October 1929 to June 1932.[3]

The ban started a series of projects in Littoral Banovina, building hospitals in Biograd, draining wetlands, improvement of agriculture, etc.

Between 1929 and 1932, the ban of Littoral Banovina was based in Split.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Ramet, Sabrina P. (2006). The Three Yugoslavias: state-building and legitimization, 1918–2005. Woodrow Wilson Center Press Series. Indiana University Press. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-253-34656-8. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
  2. "History of the Gallery". Galerija : Umjetnina Split. Split, Croatia: Gallery of Fine Arts. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
  3. Cahoon, Ben (2000). "Croatia". World Statesmen.org. Retrieved 2010-10-06.
Political offices
Preceded by
Josip Smodlaka
Mayor of Split
1918 1928
Succeeded by
Petar Bonetti
Preceded by
post created
Ban of Littoral Banovina
1929 1932
Succeeded by
Josip Jablanović
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