Giuriceo was born in Krk.[1][2] After finishing studies, he was ordained a priest in Trieste on 18 October 1801.[1][2][3] Afterward, he lectured philosophy and served as a perfect at the episcopal seminary. From 1819 to 1827, Giuriceo lectured theology and served as a house chaplain and a secretary to the archbishop of Gorizia. From 1827 to 1830, he was an advisor for religious matters to the regional Dalmatian government.[1]
Giuriceo was selected to become the bishop of Dubrovnik on 1 November 1829. Pope Pius VIII confirmed his appointment on 5 July 1830.[3] He was consecrated at the cathedral in Gorizia on 21 November 1830 by the archbishop of Gorizia Joseph Walland.[3] He was installed in Dubrovnik in 1831.[1] Thus, he became the first bishop of Dubrovnik after the archdiocese was relegated to the status of a diocese and ceased to be a metropolitan seat in 1828.[4] Giuriceo had the task of establishing the church administration after a long period of sede vacante and adjusting the church's life to the new post-republican era.[5]
Giuriceo resided in the Pile neighbourhood of Dubrovnik.[6] He negotiated the transfer of the episcopal seat to the Sorkočević Palace, which served as the municipal court at the time.[5] He is best known for renewing the public festivity of Saint Blaise, the patron of Dubrovnik in 1836, together with poet Antun Kazančić. The public celebrations were forbidden by the French and Austrian authorities.[7]
Giuriceo also met with the Jesuits, and the order was first re-established on 27 February 1841. Vincenzo Basile and his two associates met the bishop, who asked them to stay in Dubrovnik for pastoral work. However, the Jesuits couldn't stay in Dubrovnik and left the city on 24 March 1841. Giuriceo decided to invite the Jesuits to Dubrovnik. However, he died soon after.[8]
On 30 September 1839, Pope Gregory XVI gave the apostolic administration over the Diocese of Treibnje Mrkan, located in the Ottoman Empire, to the bishops of Dubrovnik. On 20 June 1840, Giuriceo appointed Vidoje Maslać, a parish priest of Dubrave near Neum, his special vicar for Trebinje-Mrkan. He was unable to make an official visitation to the diocese.[4]
He died at his residence in Pile, Dubrovnik[6] and is buried in the crypt of the Jesuit Church of St. Ignatius.[1][4]
Krešić, Milenko (2012). Don Vidoje Maslać i Trebinjsko-mrkanska biskupija (1795.-1862.) [Fr. Vidoje Maslać and the Diocese of Trebinje-Mrkan] (in Croatian). Trebinje: Župni ured Trebinje. ISBN978-9539864277.
Viđen, Ivan (2018). Biskupska palača u Dubrovniku [The episcopal palace in Dubrovnik] (in Croatian). Dubrovnik: Dubrovačka biskupija. ISBN9789537700102.
Journals
Miklobušec, Valentin (2005). "Drugi dolazak isusovaca u sjevernu Hrvatsku (I. dio)" [The second coming of Jesuits to northern Croatia (I part)]. Obnovljeni život (in Croatian). 2 (60): 171–193.
Dračevac, Ante (1998). "Giuriceo, Antun (Juriceo)". Hrvatski biografski leksikon (in Croatian). Leksikografski zavod Miroslav Krleža. Retrieved 27 February 2022.