Lujo Vojnović

This choice of university is indicative of Vojnović's political loyalties for during this period Serbs who were ardently anti-Austrian usually took their degrees at Graz or later Prague instead of at Vienna as had been customary earlier.He spent two years as tutor to Prince Alexander II Karađorđević, accompanying him to St. Petersburg in 1896.Back from Russia in late 1896, Lujo Vojnović became a secretary to Prince Nicholas I of Montenegro.Although Nicholas of Montenegro doggedly continued prosecuting his campaign against Turkish-occupied Scutari, he agreed to send abroad three of his most loyal representatives, Lazar Mijušković, Jovo Popović and Vojnović.Then again in 1918, Vojnović was one of the Yugoslav delegates to the Paris Peace Conference, 1919 where he and his knowledge of history and ethnic distribution in the Balkan peninsula served him in good stead.
Austrian EmpireZagrebFPR Yugoslavia3rd Minister of JusticePrincipality of MontenegroNicholas IPresident of the State CouncilBožo Petrović-NjegošValtazar BogišićSerbian CyrillicDubrovnikIvo VojnovićHouse of VojnovićHerceg NoviKonstantin VojnovićUniversity of ZagrebUniversity of GrazSarajevoTriesteSt. PetersburgPrince Nicholas IMontenegroVaticanKing Peter ISerbiaBulgariaSt. James ConferenceScutariLazar MijuškovićLondon Peace ConferenceTreaty of LondonParis Peace Conference, 1919Project Rastko