Petar Plamenac
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Petar Plamenac (Serbian: Петaр Пламенац) was a Montenegrin politician and diplomatic.
Biography
Born into the Boljevići tribe in the Crmnica nahija.
He studied veterinary medicine in Vienna. Initially, he was a secretary at the Ministry of Internal Affairs of Montenegro, where in 1906 he became head of the Department of National Economy, which he had joined in 1902. He then moved to the judicial profession, and then to the diplomatic profession. He was a Montenegrin politician, diplomat, and confidant of King Nicholas. He was the official representative of Montenegro at the Balkan Exhibition in London in 1907. He was the Montenegrin consul in Shkodër from 1907 to 1910, and from 1910 and from 8 October 1912 onwards, Chargé d'Affaires of the Montenegrin embassy in Constantinople. Until Montenegro's annexation by the Ottoman Empire, diplomatic relations between the two countries were severed. He was the civil governor of Shkodër. He acted as a Montenegrin representative in 1913 when the issue of the cession of Medovan Shkodër to the Great Powers was resolved and negotiated with representatives of the international fleet. He was Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Montenegro from 8 May 1913 to 10 September 1915. After leaving this position, he became Deputy Chairman of the National Assembly of Montenegro. Member of the Montenegrin delegation at the signing of the Bucharest Peace Treaty in 1913. In 1916, he emigrated and was a candidate for the Montenegrin Government-in Exile in 1917 and 1918 for the post of Extraordinary Deputy and Minister Potential of the Kingdom of Montenegro in Washington (USA), but he did not receive an offer. Petar Plamenac returned to the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes from emigration in 1924. He was one of the champions of the Montenegrin Party politically. In 1936, he was one of the organizers of the Belvedere demonstrations near Cetinje. During World War II, he was involved in the Green Movement for the Independence of Montenegro as a close political associate of Brigadier Krsto Zrnov Popović. In May 1945, he was sentenced to 10 years in prison, but was quickly pardoned and released. He died in 1954 and was buried in his hometown of Boljevići.
References
Notes
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- ↑ Risto Popović as interim since 17 July 1914, and together with Mirko M. Mijušković since 3 October 1915
