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Pages in category "Yugoslav Partisans members" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 366 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
In 1942 Partisan detachments officially merged into the People's Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Yugoslavia (NOV i POJ) with an estimated 236,000 soldiers in December 1942. [ 55 ] Partisan numbers from Serbia would be diminished until 1943 when the Partisan movement gained upswing by spreading the fight against the axis. [ 56 ]
Yugoslav Partisans members ... Partisan–Chetnik War (1941–1945) ... Secret print shop of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia;
Tito (far right) and members of the Supreme Headquarters in front of the Tito's cave in Drvar on 14 May 1944, days before Operation Rösselsprung. The Supreme Headquarters was created in June 1941 by the Central Committee of the Yugoslav Communist Party after the German-led Axis invasion of Yugoslavia of 6 April 1941.
The 1st Army of the Yugoslav Partisans was a Partisan army that operated in Yugoslavia during the last months of the Second World War.. The Army was created on 1 January 1945, along with the 2nd and 3rd Armies, when Chief Commander Marshal Josip Broz Tito converted the guerilla National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Yugoslavia in a more regular Yugoslav Army.
The People's Front of Yugoslavia was renamed the Socialist Alliance of Working People of Yugoslavia in 1953 The Socialist Alliance of Working People of Yugoslavia (SSRNJ), known before 1953 as the People's Front of Yugoslavia (NFJ), was the largest and most influential mass organization in SFR Yugoslavia from August 1945 through 1990. [ 1 ]
Kingdom of Yugoslavia was a multi-party state (1918–1929, 1931–1941) and a one-party state under a royal dictatorship (1929–1931). Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was a Marxist–Leninist one-party state (1945–1948), a Titoist one-party state (1948-1990), and also a multi-party state for short period before the state ...
This report also gives the national, social, and party composition of the division. According to the national structure, the majority of fighters in the division were Serbs, and besides them, there were 159 Croats and five members of other nationalities in the division: 2 Slovenes, 1 Jew, 1 Muslim and 1 Russian. Most Croats, 118 of them, were ...