Cincar-Marko

[1][2] Due to an uncertain incident with the Turks, Cincar Marko's family had to flee to north Serbia where they settled in Valjevo where they were engaged in trade.

Earlier that year Cincar Marko accompanied Milenko Stojković and Milan Obrenović to Bucharest, in a diplomatic mission to the Danube command of the Russian army.

[6] After the crushing of the insurrection in 1813, Cincar Marko fled with other Serbian leaders across the Sava River to the Habsburg Empire.

When the Second Serbian Uprising started in 1815, Cincar Marko returned to Serbia and took part in the Battle of Dublje in which he was wounded.

Cincar Marko's grandson was General Dimitrije Cincar-Marković (1849–1903), chief of staff of the Serbian army, the Prime Minister (1902/3), senator (member of the Upper House – Senat), and his great-grandson was dr Aleksandar Cincar-Marković (1889–1947), diplomat and cabinet minister in interwar Yugoslavia.