War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: Occupation and Collaboration

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Stanford University Press, 2002 - History - 842 pages
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This is the long-awaited second part of the author s meticulously researched and scrupulously impartial study of the complicated and anguished history of Yugoslavia during the years of World War II. The previous volume dealt with the Chetniks, the resistance movement formed by officers of the defeated Yugoslav army who came to regard the Communist-led Partisans as their chief enemy, and who reached accords with the occupying powers first with the Italians and then with the Germans. The present volume deals with the rule of the Axis powers in occupied Yugoslavia, along with the role of the other groups that collaborated with them primarily the extremist Croatian nationalist organization known as the Ustashas.

The book begins by briefly describing the establishment of Yugoslavia in 1918 and its internal history during the interwar period. It then discusses the breakup of the state in April 1941, the annexation or occupation of parts of its territory by its neighbors, and the establishment by the Ustashas of the independent state of Croatia as a German-Italian quasi protectorate, focusing on its governmental policies and its problems with the Bosnian Muslims. The book also examines the role of religion during the occupation, the destruction of the Yugoslav Jewish community, and the economic exploitation of Yugoslav territory by the Axis powers. The work concludes by discussing the wartime population losses of the country and the ultimate fate of the collaborationist forces.

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Contents

State of Croatia
488
The Churches During the Occupation and Revolution
511
The Catholic Church in the Independent State
522
The Destruction of the Jewish Community in Yugoslavia
580
Gypsies
608
Control of the Wartime Economy 617 Economic Components
660
Part II
665
Further Economic Consequences of War and Exploitation
699

An ItalianGerman
233
Rule in Croatia 274 The Italian Surrender
294
Internal Problems and Policies
335
The Narrow Popular Base of the Ustasha Regime
351
The Rule of Lawlessness
380
Resistance
412
The Bosnian Muslims
466
Alleged and True Population Losses
718
Excessive Human and Material Losses
744
The End of the Collaborationist Regimes in Yugoslavia
751
End of the Legionnaire Divisions 768 The End of the Slovene
778
Bibliography
789
Index
821
Copyright

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Page 271 - ... 169. As the occupant actually exercises authority, and as the legitimate Government is prevented from exercising its...
Page 271 - But as the right of an occupant in occupied territory is merely a right of administration, he may neither annex it, while the war continues, nor set it up as an independent State, nor divide it (as Germany during the World War divided Belgium l) into two administrative districts for political purposes.
Page 537 - Moslem has said — he should keep silent and not utter such things — that at Ljubinje in a single day 700 schismatics were thrown into their graves. From Mostar and from Capljina a train took six carloads of mothers, young girls and children ten years old to the station at Surmanci. . .they were led up the mountains and the mothers together with their children were thrown alive off the precipices. . .In the town of Mostar itself they have been bound by the hundreds, taken in wagons outside the...
Page 39 - Parties undertake not to tolerate in their respective territories, or aid in any way, activities directed against the territorial integrity or the existing order of the other Contracting Party, or activities of a nature that prejudices the friendly relations between the two countries.

About the author (2002)

The late Jozo Tomasevich was Professor Emeritus of Economics at San Francisco State University. He was the author of War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: The Chetniks (Stanford, 1975) and Peasants, Politics, and Economic Change in Yugoslavia (Stanford, 1955)