Božo Biškupić[pronunciation?] (born 26 April 1938 in Mala Mlaka, near Zagreb) is a Croatian politician and lawyer. He served as Minister of Culture of Croatia in the governments of three Croatian Prime Ministers: Zlatko Mateša (1995–2000), Ivo Sanader (2003–2009) and Jadranka Kosor (2009–2010). Therefore his two non-consecutive ministerial terms (1995–2000 and 2003–2010) amount to a total of 11 years and 87 days, the longest tenure of any minister in a Croatian Government since independence in 1991.

Božo Biškupić
Minister of Culture
In office
23 December 2003 – 29 December 2010
Prime MinisterIvo Sanader (2003–2009)
Jadranka Kosor (2003–2009)
Preceded byAntun Vujić
Succeeded byJasen Mesić
In office
7 November 1995 – 27 January 2000
Prime MinisterZlatko Mateša
Preceded byZlatko Vitez
Succeeded byAntun Vujić
Personal details
Born (1938-04-26) 26 April 1938 (age 86)
Mala Mlaka (near Zagreb), Kingdom of Yugoslavia
NationalityCroat
Political partyCroatian Democratic Union
Alma materUniversity of Zagreb
(Faculty of Law)
Awards

Overview edit

Biškupić graduated from the University of Zagreb's Faculty of Law, and later earned a master's degree in museology at postgraduate studies of librarian, documentation and information sciences at University of Zagreb's Faculty of Philosophy. From 1974 to 1980 he worked at a law firm based in Zagreb,[1] and he is also notable for editing publications on visual arts published by the National and University Library.

In 1990 Biškupić joined the Croatian Democratic Union[1] party (HDZ) and in 1992 was appointed assistant to the Minister of Culture. From 1993 to 1995 he served as Deputy Mayor of Zagreb. From November 1995 to January 2000 he served his first term as Minister of Culture, under Prime Minister Zlatko Mateša. After his term ended he ran in the parliamentary elections and was elected to the Croatian parliament three times at the 2000, 2003 and 2007 elections. He was appointed Minister of Culture again in December 2003, under Prime Minister Ivo Sanader, and was confirmed to serve a second term in January 2008 after HDZ won the 2007 elections again.

Personal life edit

Biškupić is married and has a daughter. He speaks English and German[1] and his hobbies include chess and music.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Božo Biškupić Biography". Croatian Government. Archived from the original on 13 September 2008. Retrieved 31 March 2009.

External links edit