Stefan von Novaković

[3] When Kurzböck died, von Novaković, at the instigation of Metropolitan Stefan (Stratimirović), bought from Kurzböck's widow Katharina the entire estate,[4] including the former Serbian court printing house, the monopoly rights and the entire inventory of books from 1770, and from 1792 to 1795 some 70 more Serbian books were printed, mostly by important authors such as Dositej Obradović, Jovan Rajić, Meletius Smotrytsky, Uroš Nestorović, Stefan Vujanovski, Pavel Kengelac, Avram Mrazović,[5] Vikentije Ljuština[6] and others.

Among them[9]Stefan Vujanovski who, after the death of Prince Dmitry Mikhailovich Golitsyn the Younger in Russia, returned to Vienna to find employment at the Serbian/Cyrillic court printing press.

[13][circular reference] The "Serbskija novini povsednevnija", an irregularly issued newspaper (from March to December 1791), edited by Markides Pulja of Vienna, was also printed by Kurzböck press.

[1] In addition to a journal and a booklet of commercial content in the Serbian language, he also anonymously issued -- "Dissertatio brevis et sincera auctoris Hungari de genta serba perperam Rasciana dicta ejusque meritis ac fatis in Hungaria cum appendice privi niorum eidem genti elargitorum".

[20] The Latin text was translated into German -- "Kurzgefasste Abhandlung über die Verdienste und Schicksale der serbischen aber racischen Nation in Hungarn, mit einem Anhange der derselben verliehenen Privilegien" (Concise treatise on the merits and destinies of the Serbian nation in Hungary, with an addition of the privileges conferred on them) and published.