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Marko Marulić (Split, August 18, 1450 - Split, January 5, 1524), Croatian poet, apologist and Christian humanist is generally considered the father of vernacular Croatian literature.
Croatian writer, poet of Croatian and Latin verses also humanist and moralist, comes from the distinguished aristocratic family Pečenić. He used to sign books as Marko Marulić Splićanin ("from Split"), Marko Pečenić, Marcus Marulus Spalatensis, or Dalmata. He finished humanist school in Split and graduated law at Padua university. In Split, Marulić practiced law serving as a judge. The central figure of Split humanist circle, Marulić was inspired by the Bible, Antique writers and Christian hagiographies, and produced vast opus in Latin and Croatian languages.
His European fame rested mainly on his works written in Latin which had been published and re-published during 16th and 17th centuries and translated into many languages. De institutione bene vivendi per exempla sanctorum (1498) is a moralist tractate of Biblical inspiration. Evanglistarium (1500) a systematic discourse on ethical principles, and Davidias from 1504 a religious epic which fused Biblical motifs and Antique, Virgilian poetics. However, Marulić's Latin works of devotional and religious provenance, once adored and envied across Europe, shared the destiny that befell the genre in past two centuries: they vanished into oblivion.
In the works written in Croatian language Marulić achieved permanent stature and position that remained uncontested. His central Croatian oeuvre, epic poem Judita (1521), is based on the Biblical tale from a Deuterocanonical Book of Judith, written in Croatian (more specifically, Chakavian dialect). His other works in Croatian are:
In his works he is neither aesthetically nor stylistically superior to the works of his Dubrovnik predecessors. Three puzzling facts tend to raise questions:
The picture of Marko Marulić appears on the 500 kuna banknote.