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- Stefano_Zannowich abstract "Stefano Zannowich (Serbian: Стефан Зановић/Stefan Zanović, (Montenegro, 18 February 1751–Amsterdam, 25 May 1786), called Hanibal, was a Serbian writer and adventurer. He wrote in Italian, French, Latin and German. He was a pen pal of Gluck, Pietro Metastasio, Voltaire, Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Catherine the Great, and Frederick William II of Prussia, to whom he dedicated a book of French verses translated from Italian, \"L'Alcoran des Princes Destinés au Trone\". Giacomo Casanova mentions Stefano Zannovich, who \"paid a visit to Vienna under the alias of Prince Castriotto d'Albanie. Under pressure of the authorities, he left at the end of July 1784\" for Poland and later for the Netherlands (United Provinces). He was born in Montenegro to the Paštrovići near Budva, Venetian Albania (now Montenegro), and committed suicide in an Amsterdam jail. His father was Antun \"Budaljanin\", a wealthy merchant, and he had a brother named Primislav. He claimed descendance from Skanderbeg.".
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageID "48744966".
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageLength "3415".
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageOutDegree "24".
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageRevisionID "705380527".
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Amsterdam.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Budva.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Category:1751_births.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Category:1786_deaths.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Category:18th-century_Serbian_people.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_Budva.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Category:Republic_of_Venice_people.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Category:Serbian_writers.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Category:Venetian_Slavs.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Catherine_the_Great.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Christoph_Willibald_Gluck.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Frederick_William_II_of_Prussia.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Giacomo_Casanova.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Jean-Jacques_Rousseau.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Jean_le_Rond_dAlembert.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Montenegro.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Paštrovići.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Pen_pal.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Pietro_Metastasio.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Skanderbeg.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Venetian_Albania.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Vienna.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLink Voltaire.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageWikiLinkText "Stefano Zannowich".
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_book.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-sr.
- Stefano_Zannowich wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Stefano_Zannowich subject Category:1751_births.
- Stefano_Zannowich subject Category:1786_deaths.
- Stefano_Zannowich subject Category:18th-century_Serbian_people.
- Stefano_Zannowich subject Category:People_from_Budva.
- Stefano_Zannowich subject Category:Republic_of_Venice_people.
- Stefano_Zannowich subject Category:Serbian_writers.
- Stefano_Zannowich subject Category:Venetian_Slavs.
- Stefano_Zannowich hypernym Writer.
- Stefano_Zannowich type Person.
- Stefano_Zannowich comment "Stefano Zannowich (Serbian: Стефан Зановић/Stefan Zanović, (Montenegro, 18 February 1751–Amsterdam, 25 May 1786), called Hanibal, was a Serbian writer and adventurer. He wrote in Italian, French, Latin and German. He was a pen pal of Gluck, Pietro Metastasio, Voltaire, Jean le Rond d'Alembert, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Catherine the Great, and Frederick William II of Prussia, to whom he dedicated a book of French verses translated from Italian, \"L'Alcoran des Princes Destinés au Trone\".".
- Stefano_Zannowich label "Stefano Zannowich".
- Stefano_Zannowich sameAs Q3498002.
- Stefano_Zannowich sameAs Stefano_Zannowich.
- Stefano_Zannowich sameAs Q3498002.
- Stefano_Zannowich wasDerivedFrom Stefano_Zannowich?oldid=705380527.
- Stefano_Zannowich isPrimaryTopicOf Stefano_Zannowich.