Savić Marković Štedimlija (Montenegrin: Савић Марковић Штедимлија; 12 January 1906 – 25 January 1971) was a Montenegrin writer. He studied the history of Croatia and was an associate of the Lexicographic Institute in Zagreb. During his life, he authored more than 20 books and a number of articles, and also worked as a literary critic. Štedimlija is also known as editor-in-chief of publications promoting the Croatian Orthodox Church of the Ustaše regime.
He published his central theory on the origin of the Montenegrins for the first time in his books Red Croatia and Basics of Montenegrin Nationalism from 1937.
He explained in his fringe theory that Montenegrins were descendants of the "Croatian people", who would then have settled the old Montenegrin territory of Red Croatia. In his view, Montenegrin language would therefore have been "but a dialect of Croatian". The final point of that theory resulted in his assertion that the population had gradually been Serbianized over the following centuries. This theory was not Štedimlija's original idea, but its ideological roots go back to the late 19th century in the intellectual history of Croatian irredentism.[4][5]
Selected bibliography
Gorštačka krv: Crna Gora 1918-1928 (Highlander's Blood: Montenegro 1918–1928), Belgrade 1928.
Školovanje crnogorske omladine (Education of Montenegrin Youth), Zagreb 1936.
Rusija i Balkan (Russia and the Balkans), Zagreb 1937.
Crnogorsko pitanje (The Montenegrin Question), Zagreb 1941
Auf dem Balkan (German; In the Balkans), Zagreb 1943.
Verschwörungen gegen den Frieden (German; Conspiracies Against Peace), Zagreb 1944.
Partizani o sebi: izvorni dokumenti o političkom podrijetlu partizana i o njihovom prebacivanju iz inozemstva na području Nezavisne Države Hrvatske (Partisans About Themselves: Original Documents on the Political Origins of the Partisans and Their Transfer to the Territory of the Independent State of Croatia from Abroad), Zagreb 1944.
Deset godina u gulagu (Ten Years in the Gulag), Matica crnogorska, Podgorica 2004.[6]
^Savić Marković Štedimlija, Osnovi crnogorskog nacionalizma, Putovi, Zagreb 1937, p. 38-46,125-127.
^Daniel Grabić, Montenegrizität – Sprache und Kirche im Spiegel des Identitätsdiskurses in der Republik Montenegro, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften, Frankfurt/Main 2010, ISBN978-3-631-61373-3, p. 29-31.