Tadić

Tadić (Serbian Cyrillic: Тадић, pronounced [tǎdiːtɕ, tǎːditɕ]) is a Croatian and Serbian surname, a patronymic and diminutive of the masculine given name Tadija. It may refer to:

  • Boris Tadić (born 1958), Serb politician, former President of Serbia
  • Duško Tadić (born 1955), a Bosnian Serb politician and the first individual to be tried by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
  • Dušan Tadić (born 1988), Serbian footballer
  • Josip Tadić (born 1987), Croatian football player
  • Ljuba Tadić (1929–2005), Serbian actor
  • Ljubomir Tadić (1925–2013), Serbian philosopher
  • Marko Tadić (born 1953), Croatian mathematician
  • Miroslav Tadić (musician), Serbian guitarist
  • Milka Tadić, Montenegrin activist and magazine editor
  • Ognjen Tadić (born 1974), Serb politician, former chairman of the House of Peoples of Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Željko Tadić (born 1974), Montenegrin footballer
Surname list
This page lists people with the surname Tadić.
If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name(s) to the link.


Anthropology

Tadić brotherhood in Piva

In Piva, a historical tribe of Old Herzegovina (now western Montenegro), there was a brotherhood (bratstvo) named Tadić. This brotherhood was one of the largest and oldest brotherhoods of Piva.[1] Blagojević 1971 recorded 45 houses of Tadić in Piva.[1] They have for long lived in Smriječno (in Plužine), where they are mainly concentrated, while one or two houses exist in Potprisoje, Donja Brezna and Stabna, which they settled later.[2] The brotherhood has the slava (patron saint veneration) of Jovanjdan (John the Baptist).[3] It belongs to the family tree of the old brotherhood of Branilović,[3] one of two family trees in Piva from which many Pivan families descend from according to tradition;[4] the Branilović either left or was absorbed by other families.[5] A knez Jovan Tadić is mentioned in a 1673 document from the Piva Monastery, as one of the witnesses regarding the bequest of Bare on Jezerce to the monastery.[3] According to one story, 17th-century hajduk Bajo Pivljanin's mother was a Tadić.[6] Families descending from the brotherhood are widespread in former Yugoslavia. Former President of Serbia, Boris Tadić, is a descendant of the brotherhood.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b Blagojević 1971, p. 420.
  2. ^ Blagojević 1971, pp. 420–421.
  3. ^ a b c Blagojević 1971, p. 421.
  4. ^ Blagojević 1971, p. 429.
  5. ^ Blagojević 1971, p. 428.
  6. ^ Istorijsko društvo SR Crne Gore (2007). "Bajo Pivljanin - prilozi za biografiju". Istorijski zapisi. Vol. 80. Istorijski institut SR Crne Gore. p. 248.
  7. ^ Jevtić, Ž.; Tušup, J. (2010-07-09). "Bratstvo Tadića čeka predsednika". Blic.

Sources

  • Blagojević, Obren (1971). "Пива". Editions Speciales. 443. SANU.
  • Tomić, Svetozar (1949) [1946]. Piva i Pivljani. SAN.

Further reading

  • Радивоје М. Тадић. Генеалогија пивског братства Тадић и друга братства презимена Тадић.

External links

  • "Tadići" (in Serbian). Tadići.rs.