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341:, who was unable to bear children. Prince Mihailo and Katarina became lovers. Katarina did not bother to conceal her contempt for Princess Julia, and openly flaunted her affair with the prince. Mihailo wished to divorce his wife and marry Katarina, especially as Julia had her own lover, Duke Karl von
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Sometime after her father's death, Katarina and her mother were invited by the latter's first cousin, Prince
Mihailo to live at the royal court. Since September 1860, he had assumed rule as Serbia's leader for the second time, having been deposed in 1842 after a three-year reign. He was unhappily
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General
Blaznavac died in April 1873, and she married secondly her cousin, Mihailo Bogicević (1843–1899). They left Serbia and commenced a vagabond existence, living in various places throughout the Austro-Hungarian empire; however, they later returned to Belgrade, where he served as
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from 4 April 1886 to 4 February 1887. She fell in love with a friend of her son, Vojislav, who was 18 years younger than her. She subsequently left her husband for her young lover, and she received financial support from her son as well as her wealthy half-sister, Simeona
384:(16 May 1824- 5 April 1873), who served as Serbia's Minister of War and who was instrumental in securing the succession to the Serbian throne for Katarina's 14-year-old cousin Milan after commanding the Army to back the young Prince. The general, who acted as Milan's
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372:, who were the Obrenović's dynastic rivals to the Serbian throne; though it was never proven. Prince Mihailo was killed outright, Katarina was merely wounded, but her mother, after having bravely fought with her armed assailants, was also shot dead.
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https://www.genealogics.org/relationship.php?altprimarypersonID=I00001556&savedpersonID=I00035286&secondpersonID=I00035261&maxrels=10&disallowspouses=1&generations=8&tree=LEO&primarypersonID=I00001556
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Katarina's hopes to become
Princess consort never came to fruition. On 10 June 1868, while she, Prince Mihailo, and her mother were taking a stroll through
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Years later, when Prince Milan became King of Serbia, she acted as the first lady of the court due to his separation from his consort, Natalie.
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park near the royal country residence, assassins shot and killed her lover and mother, and left her wounded. That same year (1868) she married
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Katarina married twice. Prior to her first marriage, she was the
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Voices in the shadows: women and verbal art in Serbia and Bosnia
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Voices in the shadows: women and verbal art in Serbia and Bosnia
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park near
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and tools are available to assist in formatting, such as
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526:. Budapest: Central European University Press
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508:. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press.
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