Talk:Sava Kovačević

Latest comment: 4 months ago by Editor8778 in topic Clarification needed

Montenegrin Serb

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To those who claim Sava was a Montenegrin Serb: he was never claimed to be anything else but a Montenegrin and was born in a little village near Niksic, thus the chances of him being a Serb are next to none. Maybe his name, SAVA instead of SAVO made you think he was a Serb, but he was not. There are many Montenegrins and Bosnians with the name Sava, but in contrary to the Serbian pronounciation "Saa-va", here its pronounced "Sa-va".

What his birthplace and pronunciation of his name have with his ethnic affiliation? Until 1878 Nikšić was in Herzegovina. And You should keep on mind that Montenegrin is also regional designation. -- Bojan  Talk  19:04, 2 April 2010 (UTC)Reply


"There are many Montenegrins and Bosnians with the name Sava"

Of course many Montenegrins and Bosnians have the name Sava, because many of them are Serbs. Only a Serb would give his child a name after a Serbian Saint. I understand your constant thrive to ethnically cleanse, NATO and UN occupied territories like Bosnia and Kosovo, of Serbs, and you are in need of such lunatic propaganda, but please refrain yourself when editing articles. This is not a political playground. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 178.191.59.241 (talk) 23:22, 29 November 2011 (UTC)Reply
Might be too late but I'm friends with some of his descendants and based on their family's history, he was Montenegrin alright. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 178.148.193.191 (talk) 19:39, 1 July 2016 (UTC)Reply

WikiProject class rating

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This article was automatically assessed because at least one article was rated and this bot brought all the other ratings up to at least that level. BetacommandBot 04:14, 28 August 2007 (UTC)Reply

Disambig

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This article should be primary topic, since those neighborhoods are named after him. -- Bojan  Talk  18:57, 2 April 2010 (UTC)Reply

original song text / lyrics

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It appears that the source of the original song lyrics (http://www.leksikon-yu-mitologije.net/read.php?id=3934) may have 1 word wrong or possibly a variation in lyrics - namely "A nas stari heroj Sava" should probably read "A nas dragi heroj Sava" according to the sang lyrics of an old record found at 2 minutes 4 seconds (2nd repeat) and can be heard on YT here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Skue0ec5Bn8

It is hard to hear but it appears that the word is almost certainly not "stari" but "dragi" or even "pravi", but "dragi" is the most likely case, especially as heard right after 2 minutes and 4 seconds of the mentioned video which contains the sang lyrics. If anyone has a better version of the translation or even the very original text from a book or similar it would be highly appreciated as I really want to know what the word in question is for sure. Perhaps the mentioned version on YT is yet another variation of the lyrics.

Also added to the translation of the song in English is the word "war" which does not appear in the original text at the end (but is somewhat implied), this was done because it rhymes better. I hope that the new adapted version of the translation of the song can stay as I've spent over an hour on it and have full confidence that the meaning, sense and style of the song remains unchanged while at the same time sounding much better. Komandir (talk) 17:42, 4 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

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Clarification needed

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In this below section it is unclear what happened to the first tank, and this also implies that he died during that encounter. He did not die during this encounter but later in the war, on June 13, 1943, while leading a charge during the Battle of Sutjeska.

Owing to his humble background and habit of disdain for the privileges of rank, Kovačević was one of the most popular Partisan commanders. He was famous for his personal courage: one of the well known episodes happened on 20 February 1943 in Ostrožac on the Neretva river when he, with his brigade commissar Dragiša Ivanović, in an unexpected encounter with a group of Italian tanks, managed to climb onto two tanks, Sava on the second and Dragiša on the third of three tanks, to kill their crews and to capture one tank each. His heroic death made him into one of the Partisan icons

Editor8778 (talk) 12:33, 11 June 2024 (UTC)Reply