Mihailo Ristić (diplomat)

Mihailo and Pravda had a son, Andrija "Andra" Ristić, a lawyer, who graduated from high school in Paris and the Faculty of Law in Belgrade, where he received his doctorate (1936).

He graduated in 1886 with a degree in Jurisprudence, and after that he spent a post-graduate year studying in Paris at the School of Political Science.

[1] In a letter from Constantinople, Ristić expressed his doubts regarding the new administration and the preservation of Serbian heritage and assets in Turkey: "We are in places from which we can see a little further than others, with completely selfless eyes, and for that we should be afraid...

"[4] Although the young king Aleksandar Obrenović staged a coup d'état in January 1894, which led to the fall of the Serbian government and a change in politics.

As the Serbian consul in Rome in March 1915, he began negotiations with the Italian government about "Arbania (Albania) and Serbia's access to the Adriatic Sea.