As a little boy, his father died so he was raised by his uncle, a priest from Pag, who taught him how to read and write. He attended the municipal school in the town of Pag. After 1590 he studied at the Illyric College in Loreto near Ancona, in the Papal States (in modern Italy), managed by the Jesuits.
As a gifted and industrious pupil, he was sent to further studies in Rome in 1593, where he joined the Society of Jesuits in 1595. He made a priest in 1606.
Bartul Kašić lived in Dubrovnik from 1609 to 1612.In 1612/13, disguised as a merchant, he went on a mission to the Ottoman provinces of Bosnia, Central Serbia and eastern Slavonia which he reported to the pope. From 1614 to 1618 he was the Croatian confessor in Loreto.
He went on his second mission in 1618/19. In old age, he described both missions in his incomplete autobiography. His second stay in Dubrovnik lasted from 1620 to 1633. Then he returned to Rome, where he spent the rest of his life.
It qualified Kašić for further work in the area of Croatian language.
He published Institutionum linguae illyricae libri duo ("The Structure of the Illyrian Language in Two Books") in Rome in 1604. It was the first Slavic language grammar.
In almost 200 pages and two parts ("books"), he provided the basic information on the Croatian language and explained the Croatian morphology in great detail.
In 1622, Kašić started translating the New Testament into the local Slavic vernacular – more precisely, the dialect of Dubrovnik.
In 1625, he was in charge of translating the entire Bible.
Ritual rimski covering more than 400 pages, was the most famous Kašić's work, which was used by all Croatian dioceses and archdioceses except for the one in Zagreb, which also accepted it in the 19th century.
The King James Version, which has had a profound impact on English, was published in 1611, two decades before Kašić's translation. It has 12,143 different words.
Kašić's Croatian translation, even incomplete (some parts of the Old Testament are missing), has around 20,000 different words – more than the English version and even more than the original Bible!
Bartul Kašić died in Rome in 1650 at the age of 75.
He was signed as Bartul Kašić from Pag ( Bartul Kašić Pažanin ).
Our School got its name after that great man more than 25 years ago.
Our eTwinning School logo
Our School logo
Where is Zadar?
Meet Zadar, Croatia surrounded by 4 NPs
Zadar in the map on the Adriatic coast
Zadar and its cultural values
Osnovna škola Bartula Kašića Zadar, Croatia
Our School in Zadar, Croatia
Meet Croatia via postage stamps
Happy Easter in 2016
Carnival time in Zadar School
Christmas in 2013
Greetings to the Sun in 12 months
Our School from inside & our School activities
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Extra school activities:
Eco activities: I want a tree
More than two dozens of olive trees on the right-side of Zadar School put us among unique Schools in the Adriatic coast
pupils School backyard built for the Eco group of extra school activities
Ms Dujić & her team of pupils design successfully eco souvenirs all the year long!
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Memento Vukovar in 2014
Pupils and their mentor, Mr Marin who's done a lot for School promotion
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Pupils' as young, successful journalists & their mentor Ms Lisica
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Maths evening
...and Mrs Marin as their mentor
Our sport results of Mr Veselinović are exceptional!
More to see on our web-site..
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A Day of Pink T-shirts...Stop the violence!
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Extra School activities in town in 2011
Extra School activities in town in 2015
...... and much more...
Follow all our activities on our
School web-site:
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School eTwinning successes
Winners in 2013. with ' Our Political Party'
Presentation of the First Prize nominated Project in October 2013 in Stockholm:
Our Political Party
our Project team - 10 awarded pupils, aged 14
the award to School Project co-founder
one from the pupils' awards - to Lavinia M., 14
School successes in 2011 with 7 EQLs
Vilnius WEB 2.0 in education - professional development in education
'Princess Amalia' in Zadar Theatre House in 2011 - a play inspired by eTwinning Project : King of my castle
eTwinning Conference in March 2011 and Croatian team - professional development
(Budapest, Hungary)
(Budapest, Hungary)
The first eTwinning Conference in Zagreb in 2011 and COMET award to School eTwinning Project: European Chain Reaction 2010
Pupils' animated video clip of 'Šuma Striborova' for the sake of ERASMUS+KA2 Project in 2015 ' Flip & Movie '
European Day of Languages at School
Comenius 2009-2011 and Iceland meeting
Comenius week in 2011
Comenius meeting in Poland
Meet French Comenius meeting
Thank you, Mr Milan Utković, the ICT teacher-advisor, for helping us organise online meetings with eTwinning partnering Schools for several times!
Romanian International online Symposium in 2011 entitled as: All in the world is Maths, a presentation based on eTwinning Project: Mathematicomix
Online meeting on eTwinning Project: London Olympics 2012
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