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Yugoslav Diplomacy and the Greek Coup d’État of 1967
(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies SASA, 2019)
Intensive conversations with members of political parties, closely reading the press, talks with other foreign diplomats, analytical evaluations of many individual events and their contextualization in the wider picture ...
Note on the Fotić Document
(Wiley Blackwell, 2017)
This paper examines the authorship of a portrait of Dragoljub Draža Mihailović, the leader of Yugoslav royalists during the Second World War, published in the earlier issue of The Historian. It establishes that it was ...
The Serbian Minister in London, Mateja Bošković, the Yugoslav Committee, and Serbia's Yugoslav Policy in the Great War, 1914-1916
(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies SASA, 2019)
This paper seeks to examine the outlook of the Serbian Minister in London,
Mateja Mata Bošković, during the first half of the Great War on the South Slav (Yugoslav)
question – a unification of all the Serbs, Croats and ...
Imagining the Serbs. Revisionism in the Recent Historiography of Nineteenth-century Serbian History
(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2012)
The end of the Cold War has brought about a complete change of the political and social context in the world. Consequently, history, as a scholarly discipline, has also undergone a significant transformation. In this broader ...
Apis’s Men: The Black Hand Conspirators after the Great War
(Beograd : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2015)
The activities of Colonel Dragutin Dimitrijević Apis and his clandestine Black Hand organisation in Serbia have long been scrutinised in connection with the assassination of Franz Ferdinand in ...
The Great War and the Kingdom of Yugoslavia: The Legacy of an Enduring Conflict
(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2018)
The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, officially named Yugoslavia after 1929, came into being on the ruins of the Habsburg Empire in 1918 after the immense war efforts and sacrifices endured by Serbia. ...
A Difficult and Silent Return. Italian Exiles from Dalmatia and Yugoslav Zadar/Zara after the Second World War
(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies, Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, 2016)
The aim of this essay is to offer a brief analysis of the political activity of the Italian exiles from Dalmatia after the Second World War and their relations with their motherland and their hometown of Zadar/Zara. Their ...
Alternative Religiosity in Communist Yugoslavia: Migration as a Survival Strategy of the Nazarene Community
(Berlin : DeGruyter Open, 2017)
The Nazarenes were founded by a former Reformed minister Samuel Fröhlich about 1830 in Switzerland, but they soon expanded to Central and Eastern Europe. Because of their pacifist beliefs and refusal to swear and to take ...
Drafting the Constitution of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (1920)
(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies SASA, 2019)
The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes was internationally recognized during the Paris Peace Conference in 1919–20. Even though there was neither a provisional nor a permanent constitution of the newly-formed state, ...
Great Britain, the Soviet Union and the Resistance Movements in Yugoslavia, 1941
(Belgrade : Institute for Balkan Studies SASA, 2019)
During the Second World War a brutal and distinctly complex war was fought in Yugoslavia. It was a mixture of an anti-fascist struggle for liberation as well as an ideological, civil, inter–ethnic and religious war, which ...