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  1. Gavrilo Princip was born on July 25, 1894, in the remote village of Obljaj, located in the mountainous region of western Bosnia. He was the second of nine children born to Petar and Marija Princip. His family, like many in the region, led a humble existence as peasant farmers, struggling to make ends meet in the harsh rural landscape.

  2. 29 de jun. de 2015 · Many Serbs regard Gavrilo Princip, a Bosnian Serb, as a pan-Slavic hero, with the shot he fired in Sarajevo on June 28, 1914 marking the death knell for centuries of foreign occupation over the ...

  3. 7 de ene. de 2014 · Les gendarmes austro-hongrois arrêtant Ferdinand Behr après l'assassinat de L'archiduc François-Ferdinand d'Autriche à Sarajevo en 1914. Description Gavrilo Princip captured in Sarajevo 1914.jpg. English: This picture is often said to depict the arrest of Gavrilo Princip, although several scholars say that it depicts the arrest of Ferdinand ...

  4. Gavrilo Princip (srb. Гаврило Принцип ; * 25. júl 1894 , Obljaj – † 28. apríl 1918 , Pevnosť Terezín ) bol bosnianskosrbský nacionalista, ktorý zavraždil rakúskeho arcivojvodu Františka Ferdinanda a jeho ženu grófku Sofiu v Sarajeve 28. júna , 1914 , čo vyvolalo rakúsky zásah voči Srbsku , ktorý neskôr vyústil do 1. svetovej vojny .

  5. Gavrilo Princip (Гаврило Принцип), srbski revolucionar in atentator, * 25. julij 1894, Obljaj pri Grahovem, † 28. april 1918, Terezin, Češka . Rodil se je očetu Petru in materi Mariji (rojena Špiro). Princip je bil bosanski Srb in član Mlade Bosne, ki je iskal konec avstro-ogrske oblasti v Bosni in Hercegovini.

  6. 3 de ene. de 2022 · Gavrilo Princip read in a small newspaper clipping in Belgrade in early 1914 that Archduke Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austro-Hungarian empire, would be visiting Bosnia-Herzegonia. For Princip, the Archduke was the symbol of everything he was fighting against. Together with five other conspirators, Princip plotted to assassinate Ferdinand ...

  7. 3 de jul. de 2014 · Photo: Getty) Gavrilo Princip was not the best-trained of assassins, or the best-equipped, nor was he the most ruthless. But he was, perhaps, the luckiest, shooting dead Archduke Franz Ferdinand through a series of strokes of serendipity and fortune. It was the rest of the world’s bad luck that his actions triggered the first global conflict.