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Alexander I of Yugoslavia

Alexander I (Serbian Cyrillic: Александар I Карађорђевић, romanizedAleksandar I Karađorđević, pronounced [aleksǎːndar př̩ʋiː karad͡ʑǒːrd͡ʑeʋit͡ɕ])[1] (16 December 1888 [O.S. 4 December] – 9 October 1934), also known as Alexander the Unifier,[2][3] was the prince regent of the Kingdom of Serbia from 1914 and later the King of Yugoslavia from 1921 to 1934 (prior to 1929 the state was known as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes). He was assassinated by the Bulgarian Vlado Chernozemski of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization, during a 1934 state visit to France.[4] Having sat on the throne for 13 years, he is the longest-reigning monarch of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.

Alexander I
King of Yugoslavia
Reign3 October 1929 – 9 October 1934
SuccessorPeter II
King of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Reign16 August 1921 – 3 October 1929
PredecessorPeter I
Prince Regent of Serbia and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Reign24 June 1914 – 16 August 1921
MonarchPeter I
Born(1888-12-16)16 December 1888
Cetinje Royal Palace, Cetinje, Montenegro
Died9 October 1934(1934-10-09) (aged 45)
Marseille, France
Burial
Oplenac, Topola, Serbia
Spouse
(m. 1922)
Issue
Names
Alexander Karađorđević
HouseKarađorđević
FatherPeter I of Serbia
MotherZorka of Montenegro
ReligionSerbian Orthodox
Signature
Military career
Allegiance Kingdom of Serbia
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Years of service1904–21
(end of active service)
RankField Marshal
UnitRoyal Yugoslav Army

Early life

Alexander Karađorđević was born on 16 December 1888 in the Principality of Montenegro as the fourth child (second son) of Peter Karađorđević (son of Prince Alexander of Serbia who thirty years earlier in 1858 was forced to abdicate and surrender power in Serbia to the rival House of Obrenović) and Princess Zorka of Montenegro (eldest daughter of Prince Nicholas of Montenegro). Despite enjoying support from the Russian Empire, at the time of Alexander's birth and early childhood, the House of Karađorđević was in political exile, with family members scattered all over Europe, unable to return to Serbia.[5]

Serbia had recently been transformed from a principality into a kingdom under the Obrenovićs, who ruled with strong support from Austria-Hungary. The antagonism between the two rival royal houses was such, that, after the assassination of Prince Mihailo Obrenović in 1868 (an event Karađorđevićs were suspected of taking part in), the Obrenovićs resorted to making constitutional changes, specifically proclaiming the Karađorđevićs banned from entering Serbia and stripping them of their civic rights.

Alexander was two when his mother, Princess Zorka, died in 1890 from complications while giving birth to his younger brother, Andrew, who died 23 days later.

Alexander spent his childhood in Montenegro. In 1894, his widower father took the four children, including Alexander, to Geneva where the young man completed his elementary education.[citation needed] Alongside his older brother George, he continued his schooling at the imperial Page Corps in St Petersburg, Russian Empire. The British historian Robert Seton-Watson described Alexander as becoming a Russophile during his time in St. Petersburg, feeling much gratitude for the willingness of the Emperor Nicholas II to give him a refuge, where he was treated with much honor and respect.[citation needed][6]

As a page, Alexander was described as hard-working and determined while also being a "loner" who kept to himself and rarely showed his feelings.[7] Being a Karađorđević led to Alexander being invited by Nicholas II to dinner at the Winter Palace, where he was the guest of honor at meals hosted by the Russian imperial family, which was a great honor for a prince from Serbia's deposed princely family.[citation needed][7]

During his time in St. Petersburg, Alexander visited the Alexander Nevsky Monastery, where the abbot gave Alexander an icon of Prince Alexander Nevsky and guided him to the grave of Marshal Alexander Suvorov.[8] After his visit to the monastery, Alexander expressed the wish to be a great general like Marshal Suvorov or Prince Alexander Nevsky, saying he wanted to be commanding either a great army or a great armada when he was a man.[9]

In 1903, while young George and Alexander were in school,[citation needed] a slew of conspirators pulled off a bloody coup d'état in the Kingdom of Serbia known as the May Overthrow in which King Alexander and Queen Draga were murdered and dismembered. The House of Karađorđević thus retook the Serbian throne after forty-five years and Alexander's 58-year-old father became king of Serbia, prompting George's and Alexander's return to Serbia to continue their studies. After Alexander's 15th birthday, King Peter had Alexander enlisted into the Royal Serbian Army as a private with instructions to his officers to only promote his son if he proved worthy.[7] On 25 March 1909, Alexander was suddenly recalled to Belgrade by his father with no explanation offered other than that he had an important announcement for his son.[citation needed][10]

Becoming crown prince

 
Queen Maria with two of her children, Tomislav and Andrej

A key event for Prince Alexander occurred on 27 March 1909 when his older brother, Crown Prince George, publicly renounced his claim to the throne after strong pressure from political circles in Serbia. Many in Serbia, including powerful political and military figures such as Prime Minister Nikola Pašić, as well as high-ranking officers Dragutin "Apis" Dimitrijević and Petar Živković, who did not appreciate the young man's impulsive nature and unstable, incident-prone personality, had long regarded George as unfit to rule. They believed that Prince Alexander had the makings of a fine sovereign.[citation needed] Prince Alexander donated a large sum of money to the Black Hand-oriented journal Pijemont (Piedmont)[11] (founded in August 1911).

George killed his servant Kolaković by kicking him in the stomach, which served as the final straw. The death caused a huge scandal amongst the Serbian public as well as in the Austro-Hungarian press, which reported extensively on it, and 21-year-old Prince George was forced into renouncing his claim to the throne.

In 1910, Crown Prince Alexander nearly died from stomach typhus[citation needed] and was left with stomach problems for the rest of his life. In the run-up to the First Balkan War of 1912–1913, Alexander played the role of a diplomat, visiting Sofia to meet Tsar Ferdinand of Bulgaria for secret talks for a Balkan League, which was intended to drive the Ottomans out of the Balkans.[12] Both Bulgaria and Serbia had rival claims to the Ottoman region of Macedonia, and the talks with Ferdinand were difficult. Together with Tsar Ferdinand's son, Crown Prince Boris (the future Tsar Boris III of Bulgaria), Alexander traveled to Saint Petersburg to see the Russian Emperor Nicholas II to ask for Russian mediation on certain points that were dividing the Serbs and Bulgarians.[12] In March 1912, Serbia and Bulgaria signed a defensive alliance that was later (May 1912) joined by Greece.[12]

Balkan wars and World War I

 
A wartime postcard of Alexander

In March 1912, Alexander had a meeting with ten senior military commanders. They all agreed to end all internal conflicts in the army and fully commit to realizing national goals, which allowed space for consolidation before the two successive Balkan wars.[13]

In the First Balkan War in 1912, as commander of the First Army, Crown Prince Alexander fought victorious battles in Kumanovo and Bitola. One of Alexander's most cherished moments came when he drove the Ottomans out of Kosovo and on 28 October 1912 led the Serb Army on a review on the Field of Blackbirds.[9] The Field of Blackbirds was where the Serbs under Prince Lazar had been defeated in a legendary battle by the Ottoman Sultan Murad I on 28 June 1389 and is regarded by the Serbs as holy ground. It was a great honor for him to pay his respects to the Serbs who had fallen in that earlier battle.[9] In the aftermath of the First Balkan War, disputes emerged among the victors over control of Macedonia, and Serbia and Greece signed an alliance against Bulgaria. Later in 1913, during the Second Balkan War, Alexander commanded the Serb Army at the Battle of Bregalnica against the Bulgarians.[14]

After the Ottoman withdrawal from Skopje (most of whom had left after the Albanian revolt of 1912), Prince Alexander was met with flowers by the local people. He stopped and asked a seven-year-old girl, Vaska Zoicheva, "What are you?" (Montenegrin: Shto si ti?) When she replied "Bulgarian!" (Blgarka!), the prince slapped her and said "You are not Bulgarian. Fuck your father!" (Montenegrin: Niyesi ti Blgarka, oca ti yebem!).[15] This news of the event spread quickly around Bulgaria. In 1920 and 1921, Serbian authorities searched for the girl's father, Danail Zoichev, and offered him money to renounce the event as fictional, but he refused.[16][17][18][19]

In the aftermath of the Second Balkan War, Prince Alexander took sides in the complicated power struggle over how Macedonia should be administered. In this, Alexander bested Colonel Dragutin Dimitrijević "Apis" and in the wake of this, Alexander's father, King Peter, agreed to hand over royal powers to his son. Though Colonel Dimitrijević was the mastermind of the 1903 coup that had restored the House of Karađorđević to the Serbian throne, Alexander distrusted him, regarding his attempts to set himself up as a "kingmaker" and to have the Serbian Army be a "state within the state" existing outside of civilian control as a major threat.[20]

Additionally, Alexander saw Dimitrijević as an irresponsible intriguer who having betrayed one king might always betray another. In January 1914, the Serbian prime minister Nikola Pašić sent a letter to the Emperor Nicholas II in which King Peter expressed a desire for his son to marry one of the daughters of Nicholas.[21][22] Nicholas in his reply stated that his daughters would not be forced into arranged marriages, but noted Alexander on his most recent trips to St. Petersburg had during dinners at the Winter Palace kept giving loving looks at the Grand Duchess Tatiana, leading him to guess that it was her whom Alexander wanted to marry. On 24 June 1914, Alexander became regent of Serbia.

 
Prince Regent Alexander on the Macedonian front in 1916.

On 24 July 1914, Alexander was one of the first Serbian officials to see the Austrian ultimatum containing terms deliberately written to inspire rejection.[23] Turning to Russia for help, Alexander was advised to help the ultimatum as much as he could.[24] Alexander was late to say he "went as far as an independent could" to accept the ultimatum, as Serbia accepted all of the terms except for the one demanding that Austrian police officers investigating the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand could operate on Serbian soil with the powers of arrest, which would have been the effective end of Serbia as an independent state.[24] As expected, the Austrians declared war on Serbia, and Alexander threw himself into preparing his nation's defense.[24] In a letter to King Nicholas of Montenegro, Alexander wrote: "God has willed yet again that the Serbian people should give their lives for Serbs everywhere ... I pray for the support of my dear and wise forefathers".[25]

At the outbreak of World War I he was the nominal supreme commander of the Serbian army; true command was in the hands of the Chief of Staff of Supreme Headquarters, a position held by Stepa Stepanović (during the mobilisation), Radomir Putnik (1914–1915), Petar Bojović (1916–1917) and Živojin Mišić (1918). The Serbian army distinguished itself in the battles at Cer and at the Drina (the Battle of Kolubara) in 1914, scoring victories against the invading Austro-Hungarian forces and evicting them from the country.[26]

The British historian Max Hastings described the Royal Serbian Army in 1914 as the toughest army in Europe and also the most egalitarian with none of the distinctions of rank that characterized the other European armies, exemplified by how the Serb Army was the only army in Europe where officers would shake hands with the other ranks.[26] However, the Serbian Army suffered major shortages of equipment with a third of the men called up in August 1914 having no rifles or ammunition and new recruits being advised to bring their own boots and clothing as there were no uniforms for them.[26] Alexander ordered the Serbian police to conduct searches of houses all over Serbia to see if there were any rifles and ammunition to be seized for the army.[26]

 
Regent Alexander and Raymond Poincaré in 1916

In 1915, the Serbian army was attacked on several fronts by the allied forces of Germany and Austria-Hungary, suffering heavy losses. On 7 October 1915 an Austro-German army group under the command of Field Marshal August von Mackensen invaded Serbia and after encountering fierce resistance took Belgrade on 9 October.[27] On 14 October 1915, Bulgaria invaded Serbia and on 16 October the Bulgarians took Niš, severing the railroad that linked Serbia to Salonika in Greece.[27] Being attacked from the north by the Austrians and the Germans and from the south by the Bulgarians, the Serbs by 25 November 1915 had been forced into the Kosovo region.[27]

The massacres committed by the Austrians in 1914 when they invaded Serbia twice caused enormous panic and hundreds of thousands of Serbs fled their homes to escape the Austrians, which greatly delayed the movement of the Serb Army.[27] Field Marshal Radomir Putnik persuaded Crown Prince Alexander and King Peter that it was better to keep the Serb Army intact to one day liberate Serbia rather to stand and fight in Kosovo as many Serb officers wanted.[27]

 
Regent Alexander with high officers watching military positions during battle of Kaymakchalan in 1916
 
Regent Alexander I visits wounded on the Macedonian Front in 1917

The Serbian Army withdrew through the gorges of Montenegro and northern Albania to the Greek island of Corfu, where it was reorganized. The march across the Prokletije ("accursed") mountains was a harrowing one as the Serb Army together with a mass of refugees had to cross mountains that rose to 3,000 feet high in the middle of winter with the average daily temperature being −20° while battling the hostile Albanian tribes with the armies of Austria, Germany and Bulgaria in pursuit.[28] Many Serbs died along the way as one Serb soldier wrote in his diary how the refugees rested by the side of the road were: "Immobilized by the snow their heads rest to their breasts. The white snowflakes dance around them while the alpine winds whistle their songs of death. The heads of horses and oxen which have fallen protrude from the snow".[27]

As the Serbs braved the icy winds and snowdrifts, the only consolation for Alexander was that the winter weather was also delaying the German, Austrian and Bulgarian armies under the command of von Mackensen that were pursuing his army.[27] Alexander repeatedly exposed himself to danger during the march to the sea while his health declined.[25] Upon reaching the sea, the surviving Serbs who numbered about 140,000 were rescued by British and French ships, which took them to Corfu.[28]

In September 1915, the Royal Serbian Army was estimated to have the strength of about 420,000 men, of whom 94,000 had been killed or wounded while another 174,000 had been captured or were missing during the fall campaign in 1915 and the subsequent retreat to the sea.[28] The losses taken by Serb civilians during the autumn campaign in 1915 together with the retreat to the sea have never been calculated, but are estimated to be massive. [28] The situation was further worsened by the outbreak of a typhus and relapsing fever epidemic which ravaged the country in 1915. Serb losses as a percentage of the population were the greatest of any belligerent in the war.[28]

 
The Royal Palace, residence of Regent Alexander (1918–1922)

The surviving Serb soldiers were ultimately taken to Thessaloniki to join the Armées alliées en Orient. In the fall of 1916, Alexander's long-standing dispute with the Black Hand group came to a head, when Colonel Dimitrijević began to criticize his leadership.[20] Suspecting a threat to the throne, Alexander promptly had officers who were members of the Black Hand arrested in December 1916 and tried for insubordination; after their convictions, Dimitrijević and several other Black Hand leaders were executed by firing squad on 23 June 1917.[20]

At the same time, the Serbian government-in-exile led by Prime Minister Nikola Pašić was in contact with the Yugoslav Committee, a group of anti-Habsburg Croats and Slovenes led by Ante Trumbić who talked about creating a new nation to be called Yugoslavia which would unite all of the South Slav peoples into one state.[29] In June 1917, the Corfu Declaration was signed by Pašić and Trumbić promising Yugoslavia after the war.[30]

Alexander seems to have been dubious about the plans for Yugoslavia, as throughout the war, he spoke in terms of liberating Serbia.[30] The introduction of the 14 Points by the American President Woodrow Wilson in January 1918 increased Alexander's doubts about Yugoslavia as Point 10 spoke of "substantial autonomy" in the Austrian Empire after the war, not breaking it up.[31] Not willing to antagonise Wilson, Alexander favored a "greater Serbia" that saw the Serbs annex certain provinces of the Austrian Empire.[30] Though the Crown Prince declared in a speech during a visit to Britain that he was "fighting for Yugoslav unity in a Yugoslav state", when he addressed his own soldiers he stated he was fighting for "the reestablishment of Serbia, our dear homeland".[31]

In a sign of the trouble to come, Trumbić demanded to have the right to speak for the South Slavs living under Austrian rule, a demand that Alexander rejected under the grounds that the Serb government represented the South Slavs.[31] After the army was regrouped and reinforced, it achieved a decisive victory on the Macedonian Front, at Kajmakcalan. The Serbian army carried out a major part in the final Allied breakthrough on the Macedonian Front in the autumn of 1918. The debate whatever the Serbian Army was fighting for Yugoslavia or Serbia resolved itself in October–November 1918 as the Austrian Empire collapsed, leaving the Royal Serbian Army to move into the vacuum.[32]

The Italians had ambitions to annex Dalmatia, Istria and much of Slovenia, leading the Croats and the Slovenes to prefer living with their fellow Slavs.[33] On 1 December 1918, the National Council asked Alexander to declare Serbia united with the former Austrian provinces of Bosnia, Croatia and Slovenia on the basis of the Corfu declaration.[33] Serbia had been devastated by the war, and 1 out of every 5 Serbs who were alive in 1914 were dead by 1918.[34] Much of Alexander's time in the immediate post-war years was to be taken up with reconstruction.

King of Yugoslavia

 
Regent Alexander I visiting Sarajevo for the first time in 1920.

On 1 December 1918, in a prearranged set piece, Alexander, as Prince Regent, received a delegation of the People's Council of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, an address was read out by one of the delegation, and Alexander made an address in acceptance. This was considered to be the birth of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. One of Alexander's first acts as Prince Regent of the new kingdom was to declare his support for the widespread demand for land reform, stating: "In our free state there can and will be only free landowners".[35]

On 25 February 1919, Alexander signed a land reform decree breaking up all feudal estates over the size of 100 cadastral yokes with compensation to be paid for the former landowners except for those who belonged to the House of Habsburg and the other ruling families of enemy states in the Great War.[35] Under the land reform decree some two million hectares of land was handed over to a half million peasant households, though the implementation was very slow, taking 15 years before land reform was complete.[35]

In both Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, the majority of the landlords who lost land were Muslims while the majority of their former tenants who received the land were Christians, and in both places land reform was seen as an attack on the political and economic power of the Muslim gentry.[35] In Croatia, Slovenia, and Vojvodina, the majority of the landlords who lost their land were Austrian or Hungarian nobility who usually did not reside in those places, meaning that however much they might have resented the loss of their land it did not have the sort of political repercussions it did in Macedonia and in Bosnia where the Albanian and Bosnian Muslim landlords lived.[35]

 
Regent Alexander at the opening ceremony of the first Ljubljana Fair at Slovenia in 1920.

On August 16, 1921, upon the death of his father, Alexander ascended to the throne of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which from its inception was colloquially known both in the Kingdom and the rest of Europe alike as Yugoslavia. The historian Brigit Farley described Alexander as something of a cipher to historians as he was a taciturn and reserved man who loathed to express his feelings either in person or in writing.[36] As Alexander kept no diary or wrote no memoirs, Farley wrote that any biography of Alexander could easily be titled "In search of King Alexander" as he remains an elusive and enigmatic figure.[36]

The British historian R.W. Seton-Watson, who knew Alexander well, called him a soldiery man most comfortable in a military milieu who was very quiet and surprisingly modest for a king.[37] Seton-Watson described Alexander as having an "autocratic" personality, a man who was first and foremost a soldier who spent "six of his formative years" in the Serbian Army, which left him with a "military outlook which unfitted him to deal with the delicate problems of constitutional government and which made compromise hard for him".[38]

Seton-Watson wrote that Alexander "...was very courageous, though not ever a man of strong physique or robust health. He had a strong fixity of purpose, great devotion to duty, powers of sustained work. He had great charm and simplicity of manner. He was accessible and very open to opinions-though he rarely acted on them, and though occasionally he reacted with positive violence, as in the case of the Slovene Zerjav who fainted in his presence."[39]

One of the things that historians can be certain about Alexander was his belief in keeping Yugoslavia as a unitary state and his consistent opposition to federalism, which he believed would lead to the break-up of Yugoslavia and perhaps his own assassination.[40] In turn, Alexander's opposition to federalism related to his belief that in a federalised Yugoslavia, the prečani Serbs would be discriminated against by the Croats and Bosnian Muslims, once telling a Serb Orthodox priest that federalism would be "stabbing the Serbs in the back".[41]

 
The wedding of King Alexander I and Princess Maria of Romania in 1922.

As a Karađorđević, Alexander was very conscious of the long blood-feud between the Houses of Obrenović and Karađorđević that had disfigured Serb politics in the 19th century and that the 1903 coup d'état that finally brought down the Obrenovićs and led to the Karađorđevićs regaining the throne had happened because the last Obrenović king, Alexander, was widely viewed as too subservient to Austria-Hungary and as having betrayed Serb interests.[42] Because of the frequent changes in loyalty in the Royal Serbian Army in the 19th century between the feuding royal families, Alexander was never entirely convinced that the Serb-dominated officer corps of the Royal Yugoslav Army were completely loyal to him, and always had the fear if he was seen to be betraying Serbdom as the last Obrenović king was, he too might be overthrown and killed.[42]

 
King Alexander I in 1926, Élysée Palace, Paris, France.

On 8 June 1922, he married Princess Maria of Romania, who was a daughter of Ferdinand I of Romania. They had three sons: Crown Prince Peter, and Princes Tomislav and Andrej. He was said to have wished to marry Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia, a cousin of his wife and the second daughter of Tsar Nicholas II, and was distraught by her untimely death in the Russian Civil War. The Russophile Alexander was horrified by the murders of the House of Romanov-including the Grand Duchess Tatiana-and during his reign was very hostile towards the Soviet Union, welcoming Russian emigres to Belgrade.[43]

The lavish royal wedding to Princess Maria of Romania was intended to cement the alliance with Romania, a fellow "victor nation" in World War I which like Yugoslavia had territorial disputes with the defeated nations like Hungary and Bulgaria.[44] For Alexander, the royal wedding was especially satisfactory as most of the royal families of Europe attended, which showed that the House of Karađorđević, a family of peasant origins who were disliked for slaughtering the rival House of Obrenović in 1903, were finally accepted by the rest of European royalty.[44]

 
King Alexander I in the uniform of Admiral of the Navy on Adriatic 1930, oil on canvas, work of Ivan Vavpotič, National Museum of Slovenia.

In foreign policy, Alexander favored maintaining the international system created in 1918–19, and in 1921 Yugoslavia joined the Little Entente with Czechoslovakia and Romania to guard against Hungary. Hungary refused to accept the Treaty of Trianon and made territorial claims against all three states of the Little Entente.[45]

In 1921, a war veteran and communist Spasoje Stejić Baćo attempted to assassinate king Alexander by throwing a bomb at his carriage. The bomb was thrown from a balcony and it got stuck in the telephone wires and it ended up wounding several bystanders.[46]

The principal enemy of Yugoslavia in the 1920s was Fascist Italy, which wanted much of what is now modern Slovenia and Croatia.[45] The origins of the Italo-Yugoslav dispute concerned the Italian contention that they had been "cheated" out of what they had been promised in the secret Treaty of London in 1915 at the Paris peace conference in 1919. It was largely out of the fear of Italy that Alexander in 1927 signed a treaty of alliance with France, which therefore became Yugoslavia's principal ally.[47] In fact, Alexander I and Benito Mussolini were arch-rivals.

Starting in 1926, an alliance of the Serb Democrats led by Svetozar Pribićević and the Croat Peasant Party led by Stjepan Radić had systematically obstructed the skupština to press for federalism for Yugoslavia, filibustering and filing nonsensical motions to prevent the government from passing any bills.[48] In response to obstructionism from the opposition parties, in June 1928, one frustrated deputy from Montenegro took out his handgun and shot Radić on the floor of the skupština.[48] The charismatic Radić, the "uncrowned king of Croatia", had inspired intense devotion in Croatia and his assassination was seen as a sort of Serb declaration of war.[49] The assassination pushed Yugoslavia to the brink of civil war and led Alexander to consider the "amputation" of Croatia as preferable to federalism.[49]

Alexander mused to Pribićević that: "We cannot stay together with the Croats. Since we cannot, it would be better to separate. The best way to be to effect a peaceful separation like Sweden and Norway did".[48] When Pribićević protested that this would be an act of "treason", Alexander told him he would think some more about what to do.[48] Alexander appointed the Slovene Catholic priest, Father Anton Korošec prime minister with one mandate, namely to stop the slide towards civil war.[49] On 1 December 1928, the lavish celebrations of the 10th anniversary of the founding of the triune Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes that the government organized led to rioting that left 10 dead in Zagreb.[49]

 
A report published by the Belgrade daily Politika on King Alexander's visit to Valandovo following an earthquake in March 1931.

In response to the political crisis triggered by the assassination of Stjepan Radić, King Alexander abolished the Constitution on 6 January 1929, prorogued the Parliament and introduced a personal dictatorship (the so-called "January 6th Dictatorship", Šestojanuarska diktatura). One of the first acts of the new regime was to carry out a purge of the civil service with one-third of the civil service being fired by May 1929 in an attempt to address popular complaints about rampant corruption in the bureaucracy.[49] He also changed the name of the country to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and changed the internal divisions from the 33 oblasts to nine new banovinas on 3 October. Of the banovinas, only one had a Slovene majority, two had Croat majorities and the rest had Serb majorities, which especially angered the Bosnian Muslims who were in a minority in every banovine.[50]

The way in which the banovinas were based on new borders that did not correspond to the historical regional borders led to much resentment, especially in Bosnia and Croatia.[50] The banovinas were named after the topography of Yugoslavia rather than the historical names in a bid to weaken regional loyalties, being governed by bans appointed by the King.[49] In the same month, he tried to banish by decree the use of Serbian Cyrillic to promote the exclusive use of the Latin alphabet in Yugoslavia.[51]

Alexander replaced the three regional flags for the triune Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes with a single flag for the entire country, brought in a single legal code for his realm, imposed a single fiscal code so all of his subjects would pay the same tax rate, and a Yugoslav Agrarian Bank was created by merging all of the regional agrarian banks into one.[49] Alexander tried to promote a sense of Yugoslav identity by always taking his vacations in Slovenia, naming his second son after a Croat king, and being a godfather to a Bosnian Muslim child.[52] Alexander had once fraternised frequently with ordinary people, being known for his habit of making unannounced visits to various villages all over Yugoslavia to chat with ordinary people but after the proclamation of the royal dictatorship, his social circle consisted of a few generals and courtiers, causing the King to lose touch with his subjects.[53]

 
King Alexander salutes war veterans from the palace window at Belgrade in 1931.

Within Serbia, the royal dictatorship for the first time made Alexander into an unpopular figure.[54] The British historian Richard Crampton wrote many Serbs "...were alienated by the attempt, albeit unsuccessful, to lessen the Serbian domination on which, to add insult to injury, many of the faults of the previous system were blamed. Alexander had implicitly made the Serbs, the most reliable proponents of centralism, the villains of the Vidovdan piece".[54] The royal dictatorship was seen in Croatia as merely a form of Serbian domination, and one result was a marked upswing in support for fascistic Ustashe, which advocated winning Croat independence via violence.[55]

By 1931, the Ustashe was waging a terrorist campaign of bombings, assassinations and sabotage, which at least in part explained Alexander's reluctance to engage with ordinary people as he done in the past out of the fear of assassination.[55] On 14 February 1931, Alexander visited Zagreb, and the men of the Turnopolje district, who for centuries always provided a mounted honour guard for any royal visitor to Zagreb, failed to show up, a snub that shown how unpopular Alexander had become in Croatia.[55] On 19 February 1931, the Croat historian Milan Šufflay was murdered by police agents, becoming an international cause célèbre with Albert Einstein and Heinrich Mann leading a campaign to pressure Alexander to prosecute Šufflay's killers.[55]

The Great Depression was especially severe in predominantly rural Yugoslavia as it caused deflation leading to a collapse in price of agricultural products.[55] The Croat politician Ante Trumbić summed up the feelings of many when he gave a speech in early 1931 stating: "We are in a crisis, an economic, financial and moral crisis. There is no material or moral credit in the country. Nobody believes anything anymore!"[55] However, Alexander remain unperturbed, stating in an interview with the press: "Yugoslav politics will never again be driven by narrow religious, regional or national interests".[56] In response to pressure from Yugoslavia's allies, especially France and Czechoslovakia, led Alexander to decide to lessen the royal dictatorship by bringing in a new constitution which allowed the skupština to meet again.[56]

 
Pirot kilim at the balcony on the occasion of the festivities of 11 November 1930.

In 1931, Alexander decreed a new Constitution which transferred executive power to the King. Elections were to be by universal male suffrage. The provision for a secret ballot was dropped and pressure on public employees to vote for the governing party was to be a feature of all elections held under Alexander's constitution. Furthermore, the King would appoint half of the upper house directly, and legislation could become law with the approval of one of the houses alone if it were also approved by the King. The 1931 constitution kept Yugoslavia as a unitary state, which enraged the non-Serbian peoples who demanded a federation and saw Alexander's royal dictatorship as thinly disguised Serbian domination.[56] In the elections for the skupština in December 1931 – January 1932, the call of the opposition parties to boycott the vote were widely heeded, a sign of popular dissatisfaction with the new constitution.[54]

In response to the impoverishment of the countryside caused by the Great Depression, Alexander reaffirmed in a speech the right of every peasant family to a minimum amount of land that could not be seized by a bank in the event of a debt default. In 1932 he issued a decree suspending all debt payments by farmers to the banks for six months and forbade any more foreclosures by the banks against farmers.[57] Alexander's measures preventing the banks to foreclose on farmers who were unable to pay their loans saved many peasants from being ruined and prevented economic distress in the countryside from turning political, but in the long run, his policies did not solve the economic problems of the rural areas.[57]

The losses taken by the banks and their inability to foreclose on farmers who had delinquent loans made the banks unwilling to make new loans to the farmers.[57] As Yugoslav agriculture, especially in the southern parts of the country was backward, the farmers needed loans to modernise their farms, but the unwillingness of the banks to lend to the farmers made modernisation of the farms impossible in the 1930s.[57]

 
Suvobor Palace on Lake Bled, one of the royal residences

In September 1932, Alexander's friend, the Croat politician Ante Trumbić gave an interview with The Manchester Guardian newspaper, where he stated that life for ordinary Croats was better when they were part of the Austrian empire and stated that perhaps the Croats would be better off if they broke away from Yugoslavia to form their own state.[58] For Alexander, who always respected and liked Trumbić to see his former friend come very close to embracing Croat separatism was a painful blow.[58] On 7 November 1932, Trumbić and Vladko Maček of the Croat Peasant Party issued the so-called Zagreb Points, which demanded a new constitution which would turn Yugoslavia into a federation, and stated that the Croats would otherwise demand independence.[58]

Alexander had Maček imprisoned without charges, but the issuing of the Zagreb Points inspired the other peoples to issue similar declarations with the Slovenes issuing the Ljubljana Points, the Bosnian Muslims issuing the Sarajevo Points and the Magyars issuing the Novi Sad points.[58] The emergence of a multi-ethnic opposition movement embracing the non-Serb peoples threatened to break the country apart and forced Alexander to ease the level of repression as his ministers warned him that he could not imprison the entire country.[58]

In Macedonia, the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organisation was continuing its long-running guerrilla struggle while in Croatia the security situation had further deteriorated by 1932.[59] By the end of 1932, the Ustashe had blown up hundreds of trains and assassinated hundreds of government officials.[59] The often violent response of the mainly-Serb gendarmes to Ustashe terrorism fuelled more support for the Ustashe.[59] To many, it appeared that Yugoslavia was sliding into the civil war that Alexander's "self-coup" of January 1929 was supposed to prevent.[59]

 
King Alexander I of Yugoslavia and Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the first president of Republic of Turkey, in 1933.

Starting in 1933, Alexander had become worried about Nazi Germany. In March 1933, the French minister in Belgrade, Paul-Émile Naggiar, told Alexander that France was seriously worried about the stability of Yugoslavia and warned that the King could not continue to rule in face of opposition from the majority of his subjects and that Paris viewed that Alexander was starting to become a liability for France.[60] Naggiar predicted the new regime in Germany was going to challenge the international order created by the Treaty of Versailles sooner or later and that France needed Yugoslavia to be stable and strong, which led Naggiar to advise the King to adopt federalism for his realm.[60]

However, one point of agreement of Alexander with Mussolini was his fear of Anschluss which would make Germany a direct neighbour of Yugoslavia. Alexander had no desire to have Germany as a neighbour, which led him to support the continuation of Austrian independence.[61] Despite his distaste for communism, the King gave support, albeit in a very cautious and hesitant way, to the plans of French Foreign Minister Louis Barthou to bring the Soviet Union into a front meant to contain Germany.[61] In 1933–34, Alexander become the proponent of a Balkan Pact, which would unite Yugoslavia, Greece, Romania and Turkey.[47]

Although the Balkan Pact was directed primarily against Italy and its allies (Hungary, Albania and Bulgaria), Alexander hoped the pact might provide some protection against Germany.[47] After the coup d'état in May 1934 in Sofia, King Alexander also hoped that Bulgaria would join the Balkan Entente. The new Bulgarian government had started repression against IMRO. In September 1934, Alexander visited Sofia to improve relations with Bulgaria. A Bulgarian military organisation, Zveno, supported the unification of Bulgaria and Albania into Yugoslavia, which agreed with Alexander's policy, Balkans for the Balkan peoples.

Assassination of Alexander I

After the Ustaše's Velebit uprising in November 1932, Alexander said through an intermediary to the Italian government, "If you want to have serious riots in Yugoslavia or cause a regime change, you need to kill me. Shoot at me and be sure you have finished me off, because that's the only way to make changes in Yugoslavia."[62]

The French Foreign Minister Louis Barthou had attempted in 1934 to build an alliance meant to contain Germany, consisting of France's allies in Eastern Europe like Yugoslavia, together with Italy and the Soviet Union.[63] The long-standing rivalry between Benito Mussolini and King Alexander had complicated Barthou's work as Alexander complained about Italian claims against his country together with Italian support for Hungarian revisionism and the Croat Ustaše.[64]

As long as the French ally Yugoslavia continued to have disputes with Italy, Barthou's plans for an Italo-French rapprochement would be stillborn. During a visit to Belgrade in June 1934, Barthou promised the King that France would pressure Mussolini into signing a treaty under which he would renounce his claims against Yugoslavia.[65] Alexander was sceptical of Barthou's plan, noting that there were hundreds of Ustašhi being sheltered in Italy and it was rumoured that Mussolini had financed an unsuccessful attempt by the Ustaše to assassinate him in December 1933.[65]

 
Chernozemski Automatic Pistol with three 20 round magazines


 
A monument to Alexander I and Louis Barthou in Marseille.
 
A photograph of the assassination.

Mussolini had come to believe that it was only the personality of Alexander that was holding Yugoslavia together and that if the King were assassinated, Yugoslavia would descend into civil war, which would allow Italy to annex certain regions of Yugoslavia without the fear of France.[66] However, France was Yugoslavia's closest ally, and Barthou invited Alexander for a visit to France to sign a Franco-Yugoslav agreement that would allow Barthou to "go to Rome with the certainty of success".[66] As a result of the previous deaths of three family members on Tuesdays, Alexander refused to undertake any public functions on that day of the week. On Tuesday, 9 October 1934, however, he had no choice, as he was arriving in Marseille to start a state visit to France to strengthen both countries' alliance in the Little Entente.[67][failed verification][dubious ]

While Alexander was being slowly driven in a car through the streets along with French Foreign Minister Barthou, a gunman, the Bulgarian Vlado Chernozemski,[68] stepped from the street and shot the King twice and the chauffeur with a Mauser C96 semiautomatic pistol. Alexander died in the car and was slumped backwards in the seat with his eyes open.[69] Barthou was also killed by a stray bullet fired by French police during the scuffle following the attack.[70] Lieutenant-Colonel Piollet, having finally managed to turn his horse, struck the assailant with his sword. Ten people in the procession were wounded, including General Alphonse Georges was hit by two bullets as he tried to intervene, and nine people in the crowd who came to see the king, four of them fatally, among them Yolande Farris, barely 20 years old, on Place Castellane, who came to the Palais de la Bourse to see the king. She was hit by a stray bullet and died at the Hôtel-Dieu on October 11, 1934. Mrs. Dumazet and Durbec, who also came to see the king, also died.

It was one of the first assassinations to be captured on film; the shooting occurred in front of the newsreel cameraman,[71] who was only metres away at the time. While the exact moment of shooting was not captured on film, the events leading to the assassination and the immediate aftermath were. The body of the chauffeur Foissac, who had been mortally wounded, slumped and jammed against the brakes of the car, which allowed the cameraman to continue filming from within inches of the King for a number of minutes afterwards. The film record of Alexander I's assassination remains one of the most notable pieces of newsreel in existence,[72][73] alongside the film of Emperor Nicholas II of Russia's coronation, the funerals of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom (see state funeral of Queen Victoria) and Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria, and the assassination of John F. Kennedy. A 20th Century Fox newsreel presented by Graham McNamee was manipulated to give the audience the impression that the assassination had been captured on film. Three identical gunshot sounds were added to the film afterwards, but in reality, Chernozemski fired his handgun over ten times and killed or wounded a total of 15 people. A straw hat is shown on the ground, as if it had belonged to the assassin, unlike in reality. A Mauser C96 semi-automatic pistol with a 10-round magazine is shown as the assassination weapon, but the actual one had a 20-round magazine. The exact moment of assassination was never filmed.[74] Just hours later, Chernozemski died in police custody.[75]

 
The Death masks of Alexander I and Louis Barthou.
 
The funeral of king Alexander at Belgrade.

The assassin was a member of the pro-Bulgarian Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO or VMRO) and an experienced marksman.[76] Immediately after assassinating King Alexander, Chernozemski was cut down by the sword of a mounted French policeman, and then beaten by the crowd. By the time that he was removed from the scene, the King was already dead. The IMRO was a political organization that fought for the liberation of the occupied region of Macedonia and its independence, initially as some form of second Bulgarian state, followed by a later unification with the Kingdom of Bulgaria.[77]

The IMRO worked in alliance with the Croatian Ustaše group, led by Ante Pavelić.[71][78] Chernozemski and three Croatian accomplices had travelled to France from Hungary via Switzerland. After the assassination, Chernozemski's accomplices were arrested by French police.[71] A prominent diplomat with the Palazzo Chigi, Baron Pompeo Aloisi, expressed fears that the Ustashi based in Italy had killed the King and sought reassurances from another diplomat, Paolo Cortese, that Italy had not been involved.[66] Aloisi was not reassured when Cortese told him that with Alexander being dead, Yugoslavia was about to break up.[66]

Public opinion and press in Yugoslavia held that Italy had been crucial in the planning and directing of the assassination.[79] Demonstrators outside of the Italian embassy in Belgrade and the Italian consulates in Zagreb and Ljubljana blamed Mussolini for Alexander's assassination.[80] An investigation by the French police quickly established that the assassins had been trained and armed in Hungary; had travelled to France on forged Czechoslovak passports; and frequently telephoned Ustaše leader Ante Pavelić, who was living in Italy.[81]

The incident was later used by Yugoslavia as an argument to counter the Croatian attempts of secession and Italian and Hungarian revisionism.[71] The participants in the assassination were Ivan Rajić, Mijo Kralj, Zvonimir Pospišil and Antun Godina. They were sentenced to life in prison although the Yugoslav authorities had expected that they would be sentenced to death. In 1940, after the fall of France, they were released from prison by Germany.

Pierre Laval, who succeeded Barthou as foreign minister, wished to continue the rapprochement with Rome and saw the assassinations in Marseille as an inconvenience that was best forgotten.[82] Both London and Paris made it clear that they regarded Mussolini as a responsible European statesman and in private told Belgrade that under no circumstances would they allow Il Duce to be blamed.[83] In a speech in Northampton, England, on 19 October 1934, British Foreign Secretary Sir John Simon expressed his sympathy to the people of Yugoslavia over the king's assassination and stated that he was convinced by Mussolini's speech in Milan that denied being involvement in the assassination.[84]

When Yugoslavia made an extradition request to Italy for Pavelić on charges of regicide, the Quai d'Orsay expressed concern that if Pavelić were extradited, he might incriminate Mussolini and were greatly reassured when its counterparts at the Palazzo Chigi stated there was no possibility of Pavelić being extradited.[85] Laval cynically told a French journalist off the record that the French press should stop going on about the assassinations in Marseille because France would never go to war to defend the honour of a weak country like Yugoslavia.[85]

 
Novi dvor was founded by Alexander I

The following day, the body of King Alexander I was transported back to the port of Split in Yugoslavia by the destroyer JRM Dubrovnik. After a huge funeral in Belgrade that was attended by about 500,000 people and many leading European statesmen, Alexander was interred in the Oplenac Church in Topola, which had been built by his father. The Holy See gave special permission to bishops Aloysius Stepinac, Antun Akšamović, Dionisije Njaradi, and Gregorij Rožman to attend the funeral in an Orthodox church.[86] As his son King Peter II was still a minor, Alexander's first cousin Prince Paul took the regency of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.

A ballistic report on the bullets found in the car was made in 1935, but its results were not made available to the public until 1974. It revealed that Barthou was hit by an 8 mm Modèle 1892 revolver round commonly used in weapons, carried by French police.[70]

After the assassination, relations between Yugoslavia and France became colder and never returned to the previous level. Also, the Little Entente and the Balkan Pact lost their importance. The Yugoslav public considered it shocking that the assassination had happened on French soil. In the coming years, Prince Paul (as regent) attempted to keep a neutral balance between London and Berlin until 1941, when he yielded to heavy pressure to join the Tripartite Pact.

Issue

Name Birth Death Spouse Children
King Peter II 6 September 1923 3 November 1970 Princess Alexandra of Greece and Denmark Crown Prince Alexander (b. 1945)
Prince Tomislav 19 January 1928 12 July 2000 Princess Margarita of Baden
Divorced 1981
Prince Nikola (b. 1958)
Princess Katarina (b. 1959)
Linda Mary Bonney Prince George (b. 1984)
Prince Michael (b. 1985)
Prince Andrew 28 June 1929 7 May 1990 Princess Christina Margarethe of Hesse
Divorced 1962
Princess Maria Tatiana (b. 1957)
Prince Christopher (1960–1994)
Princess Kira Melita of Leiningen
Divorced 1972
Princess Lavinia Maria (b. 1961)[87]
Prince Karl Vladimir (b. 1964)
Prince Dimitri (b. 1965)
Eva Maria Andjelkovich

In popular culture

  • The song "Don Juan" by British synth duo Pet Shop Boys (the B-side to their 1988 single "Domino Dancing") contains the phrase "King Zog's back from holiday, Marie Lupescu's grey and King Alexander is dead in Marseille".(21)
  • In Upton Sinclair's historical novel, "Wide Is The Gate" (novel 4 in the Lanny Budd series published 1941) the assassination is attributed to the Nazi German government. The novel claims funds and a forged passport were obtained by the Croatian assassin from the head of German foreign policy department.
  • A heavily fictionalized version of the assassination serves as the opening to the book The Second Assassin by Christopher Hyde. The gunman is changed to a Croatian, while an Irish hitman kills both him and Barthou using a rifle, undetected in the confusion. It is described as masterminded by Nazi Germany to get rid of both Alexander and Barthou while they are together.
  • In Ivan Vazov's poem "Па ща си ти?" ("What are you?")[88] is depicted a case when crown prince Alexander asks the question to a little girl from Skopje and when she answers 'I'm Bulgarian' he slaps her in the face. The poem emphasizes the suffering of the Macedonian Bulgarians under Serbian rule.[89]
  • TV series Alexander of Yugoslavia directed by Zdravko Šotra[90]

Honours

 
Monument to Alexander the Unifier in Niš, Serbia.
 
King Alexandar on the cover of Time on 11 February 1929
Serbian and Yugoslavian military decorations
  Order of Saint Prince Lazarus, Collar (Royal Order only)[91]
  Order of Karađorđe's Star, Grand Master[91]
  Order of the White Eagle, Grand Master[91]
  Order of the Karađorđe's Star with Swords, Grand Master[91]
  Order of the White Eagle with swords, Grand Master[91]
  Order of the Yugoslav Crown, Grand Master[91]
  Order of Saint Sava, Grand Master[91]
Serbian service medals
  Gold Bravery Medal, 1912[91]
  Gold Bravery Medal, 1913[91]
  Commemorative Medal of the first Balkan War, 1912[91]
  Commemorative Medal of the second Balkan War, 1913[91]
  Commemorative Medal of the Election of Peter I as King of Serbia[91]
  Commemorative Medal of the Albanian Campaign[91]
International and foreign awards
  Order of Leopold, Grand Cordon (Belgium)[91]
  War Cross 1914–1918, (Belgium)[91]
  Order of Saints Cyril and Methodius, Collar (Bulgaria)[91]
  Order of St. Alexander with swords, Collar (Bulgaria)[91]
  Order of the White Lion, Collar (Czechoslovakia)[91]
  War Cross 1914–1918, (Czechoslovakia)[91]
  Order of the Elephant, Grand Cross (Denmark)[91]
  Legion of Honour, Grand Cross (France)[91]
  Médaille militaire, (France)[91]
  War Cross 1914–1918, (France)[91]
  Order of the Redeemer, Grand Cross (Greece)[91]
  War Cross 1914–1918, (Greece)[91]
  Supreme Order of the Most Holy Annunciation, Collar (Italy)[91]
  Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus, Knight Grand Cross (Italy)[91]
  Order of the Crown of Italy, Knight Grand Cross (Italy)[91]
  Military Order of Savoy, Knight Grand Cross (Italy)[91]
  Order of the Wendish Crown, Grand Cross (Mecklenburg)[91]
  Order of Saint Peter of Cetinje, Knight (Montenegro)[91]
  Order of Prince Danilo I, Knight Grand Cross (Montenegro)[91]
  Order of the Orthodox Church of Jerusalem, Knight of the Collar (Orthodox Church of Jerusalem)[91]
  Order of Distinction, 1st class (Ottoman Empire)[91]
  Order of the Sun of Peru, Grand Cross (Peru)[91]
  Virtuti Militari, Grand Cross (Poland)[91]
  Order of the White Eagle, Grand Cross (Poland)[91]
  Order of Polonia Restituta, Grand Cross (Poland)[91]
  Sash of the Three Orders, Grand Cross[92] (Portugal)[91]
  Order of the Tower and Sword, Grand Cross[93] (Portugal)[91]
  Order of Michael the Brave, 1st class (Romania)[91]
  Order of Carol I, Knight Grand Cross with Collar[94][95] (Romania)[91]
  Order of St. Andrew, Collar (Russia)[91]
  Order of St. Alexander Nevsky, (Russia)[91]
  Order of the White Eagle, Grand Cross (Russia)[91]
  Order of St. George, 3rd class (Russia)[91]
  Order of St. George, 4th class (Russia)[91]
  Order of St. Anna, 1st class (Russia)[91]
  Order of St. Stanislaus, 1st class (Russia)[91]
  Order of the White Elephant, Knight Grand Cordon (Siam)[91]
  Order of the Bath, Knight Grand Cross (United Kingdom)[91]
  Royal Victorian Order, Honorary Knight Grand Cross (United Kingdom)[91]
  King George V Coronation Medal (United Kingdom)[91]

References and notes

Notes
  1. ^ Alternative pronunciations of 'Aleksandar' and 'I' are [alěksaːndar] and [pr̩̂ːʋiː], respectively.
  2. ^ Passmore 2003, p. 104
  3. ^ Aleksandar Ujedinitelj (Serbian: Александар Ујединитељ [aleksǎːndar ujedǐniteʎ])
  4. ^ "In 1934 a Bulgarian member of VMRO, Vlado Černozemski, known as 'Vlado the Chauffeur,' with support from the Ustashe , assassinated the Yugoslav king Aleksandar in France". For more see: James Ridgeway, Burn This House: The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia, with editors Jasminka Udovicki and James Ridgeway, Edition 2, Duke University Press, 2000, ISBN 0822325756, p. 35.
  5. ^ liamfoley63 (2021-10-09). "October 9, 1934: Assassination of King Alexander of Yugoslavia". European Royal History. Retrieved 2023-02-24.
  6. ^ Seton-Watson 1935, p. 35.
  7. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 55.
  8. ^ Farley 2007, pp. 57–58.
  9. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 58.
  10. ^ Farley 2007, p. 56.
  11. ^ Bakić, Dragan (2017). "Regent Alexander Karadjordjević in the First World War". Balcanica (XLVIII): 193.
  12. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 57.
  13. ^ Bakić, Dragan (2017). "Regent Alexander Karadjordjević in the First World War". Balcanica (XLVIII): 193–194.
  14. ^ Farley 2007, p. 59.
  15. ^ Teodorov, "Balkanskite voini", pp. 259, 261.
  16. ^ Ethnic Cleansing in the Balkans: Nationalism and the Destruction of Tradition, Cathie Carmichael, Routledge, 2003, ISBN 1134479530, p. 138.
  17. ^ Contested Ethnic Identity: The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto, 1900–1996, Chris Kostov, Peter Lang, 2010, ISBN 3034301960, p. 77.
  18. ^ Igor Despot (2019) "The Balkan Wars: An Expected Opportunity for Ethnic Cleansing", Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs, 39:3, 343–355, [doi/abs/10.1080/13602004.2019.1652410].
  19. ^ Y. Konstantinova, (2011) "Allies and Enemies: The Balkan Peoples in the Bulgarian Political Propaganda During the Balkan Wars", p. 130 in Études Balkaniques, issue 1, pp. 109–148.
  20. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 62.
  21. ^ . Documents Nikola Pasic (in Russian). Serbian Archive. Archived from the original on 14 June 2010. Retrieved 21 September 2010.
  22. ^ [1] Živojinović, Dragoljub R., "King Peter I Karadjordjević," I–III, Belgrade, 1990. ISBN 86-13-00494-6
  23. ^ Farley 2007, pp. 59–60.
  24. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 60.
  25. ^ a b Farley 2007, p. 61.
  26. ^ a b c d Hastings 2013, pp. 141–142.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g Strachan 2006, p. 153.
  28. ^ a b c d e Strachan 2006, p. 154.
  29. ^ Farley 2007, pp. 62–63.
  30. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 63.
  31. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 64.
  32. ^ Farley 2007, p. 65.
  33. ^ a b Farley 2007, p. 66.
  34. ^ Crampton 1997, p. 131.
  35. ^ a b c d e Crampton 1997, p. 130.
  36. ^ a b Farley 2007, p. 83.
  37. ^ Seton-Watson 1935, pp. 20–22.
  38. ^ Seton-Watson 1935, pp. 21–22.
  39. ^ Seton-Watson 1935, p. 20.
  40. ^ Farley 2007, pp. 84–85.
  41. ^ Farley 2007, p. 85.
  42. ^ a b Farley 2007, p. 84.
  43. ^ Seton-Watson 1935, p. 21.
  44. ^ a b Farley 2007, p. 69.
  45. ^ a b Crampton 1997, pp. 140–141.
  46. ^ "Atentat O Kojem Se Nije Učilo U Školama: Moler koji je usred Beograda Zamalo Ubio Kralja". Istorijski Zabavnik. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
  47. ^ a b c Crampton 1997, p. 141.
  48. ^ a b c d Farley 2007, p. 71.
  49. ^ a b c d e f g Crampton 1997, p. 138.
  50. ^ a b Crampton 1997, pp. 138–139.
  51. ^ Dangerous Decree, Time, 21 October 1929
  52. ^ Farley 2007, p. 76.
  53. ^ Farley 2007, pp. 76–77.
  54. ^ a b c Crampton 1997, p. 139.
  55. ^ a b c d e f Farley 2007, p. 77.
  56. ^ a b c Farley 2007, p. 78.
  57. ^ a b c d Crampton 1997, p. 140.
  58. ^ a b c d e Farley 2007, p. 79.
  59. ^ a b c d Farley 2007, p. 80.
  60. ^ a b Farley 2007, pp. 80–81.
  61. ^ a b Seton-Watson 1935, p. 26.
  62. ^ Marković 2003, p. 21.
  63. ^ Kovrig 1976, pp. 191–192.
  64. ^ Kovrig 1976, p. 192.
  65. ^ a b Kovrig 1976, p. 193.
  66. ^ a b c d Kovrig 1976, p. 194.
  67. ^ Matthew Graves, 'Memory and Forgetting on the National Periphery: Marseille and the Regicide of 1934', Portal: Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, Vol. 7, No. 1, January 2010 [2]
  68. ^ The assassination was attributed to the Croatian Ustashi organization, mortal enemies of Serbian domination, but it was established that the actual assassin was Bulgarian, the IMRO member Tchernozemski, alias "Vlado the Chauffeur. Crown of Thorns: The Reign of King Boris III of Bulgaria, 1918–1943, Stephane Groueff, Madison Books, 1998, ISBN 1461730538, p. 224.
  69. ^ "Assassination of King Alexander – Vivid pictures from the scene of the tragedy at Marseille". British Pathe. Retrieved 8 July 2013.
  70. ^ a b de Launay, Jacques (1974). Les grandes controverses de l'histoire contemporaine 1914–1945. Edito-Service Histoire Secrete de Notre Temps. p. 568.
  71. ^ a b c d Moll, Nicolas (2012). "Kampf gegen den Terror" [Fight against the Terror]. Damals (in German). No. 6. pp. 72–77.
  72. ^ Documentary film The Assassination of the Yugoslavian king Alexander in 1934 on YouTube
  73. ^ Documentary film The Assassination and the Funeral of the Yugoslavian king Alexander in 1934 on YouTube (in Bulgarian)
  74. ^ Verschollene Filmschätze 1934 Das Attentat auf König Alexander I. von Jugoslawien on YouTube (in German)
  75. ^ Morawski, Konrad Sebastian (2016). "The assassination of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia in the light of archival press articles". Studia z Dziejów Rosji i Europy Środkowo-Wschodniej. 51 (1): 47–76. doi:10.12775/SDR.2016.EN1.03.
  76. ^ "The suicide-assassin from VMRO was Vlado Cernozemski, who on orders from Mihajlov and his ethno-national VMRO, which was defined as Bulgarian, killed the Yugoslav king Alexander I Karadzordzevic and the French Minister of Foreign Affairs Louis Bareau in Marseille in 1934." New Balkan Politics, Issue 6, 2003, Stefan Troebst, Historical Politics and Historical "Masterpieces" in Macedonia before and after 1991. 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  77. ^ "Collective Memory, National Identity, and Ethnic Conflict: Greece, Bulgaria, and the Macedonian Question," Victor Roudometof, Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002, ISBN 0275976483, p. 99: "In the aftermath of the WWI the conservative (pro-Bulgarian) fraction of the IMRO was reconstructed under the leadership of Todor Alexandrov... This IMRO developed an agenda for an autonomous Macedonia, as it was a way for an unification with Bulgaria... Ivan Mihailov and Alexander Protogerov, who assumed IMRO's leadership in the wake of Todor Alexandrov's death (1924), retracted their support for an independent Macedonia and moved toward that would be their old position of autonomy. By 1928, Mihailov, who had emerged as the key leader of the group proposed a new plan calling for unification of a pre-1913 Macedonia region into a single state, that would be autonomous from Bulgaria. By 1931, Mihailov, with Italian support, broke his ties with the Bulgarian government and began to operate as a semi-autonomous agent, wishing to create a Macedonian state that would be under his personal control."
  78. ^ "Infamous Assassinations-King Alexander". UKTV History. Retrieved 17 June 2012.
  79. ^ Hamerli, Petra. "The Hungarian-Italian Support of the Croatian Separatism between 1928 and 1934". West Bohemian Historical Review.
  80. ^ Kovrig 1976, p. 195.
  81. ^ Kovrig 1976, p. 196.
  82. ^ Kovrig 1976, p. 197.
  83. ^ Kovrig 1976, pp. 197–198.
  84. ^ Kovrig 1976, p. 199.
  85. ^ a b Kovrig 1976, p. 201.
  86. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 29 December 2013.
  87. ^ Born while her father was still married to Princess Christina of Hesse (thus making it necessary for him to adopt her legally on 15 February 1965, after marrying her mother)
  88. ^ Словото, Виртуална библиотека за българска литература, Песни за Македония, Ив. Вазов: "Па шта си ти?".
  89. ^ Църнушанов, Коста. Македонизмът и съпротивата на Македония срещу него, Университетско издание Св. Климент Охридски, София, 1992, стр. 107 -108.
  90. ^ ""Aleksandar od Jugoslavije" od 15. marta na Nova S". N1 (in Serbian). 2021-03-08. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
  91. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. pp. 273–289.
  92. ^ Oliviera, Humberto Nuno de (2010). "Subsídio para a história das relações bilaterais entre Portugal ea Sérvia" [Subsidy for the History of Bilateral relations between Portugal and Serbia]. Lusíada História. 2 (7): 460. ISSN 0873-1330. Retrieved 21 March 2020.
  93. ^ "Ordem Militar da Torre e Espada – Processos de Estrangeiros: Príncipe Alexandre (Regente do Reino dos Sérvios, Croatas e Eslovenos)" (in Portuguese), Arquivo Histórico da Presidência da República. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
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  1. ^ "The first central committee of IMRO. Memoirs of d-r Hristo Tatarchev", Materials for the Macedonian liberation movement, book IX (series of the Macedonian scientific institute of IMRO, led by Bulgarian academician prof. Lyubomir Miletich), Sofia, 1928, p. 102, поредица "Материяли за историята на македонското освободително движение" на Македонския научен институт на ВМРО, воден от българския академик проф. Любомир Милетич, книга IX, София, 1928.
  2. Farley, Brigit (2007). "King Aleksandar and the Royal Dictatorship in Yugoslavia". In Bernd J. Fischer (ed.). Balkan Strongmen: Dictators and Authoritarian Rulers of Southeastern Europe. Central European Studies. West Lafayette, IN. pp. 51–86.
  3. Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik.
Bibliography
  • Gligorijević, Branislav (2010). Kralj Aleksandar I Karađorđević (1–3). Zavod za udžbenike i nastavna sredstva. p. 1186.
  • Crampton, Richard (1997). Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century – And After. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415164238.
  • DiNardo, Richard L. (2015). Invasion: The Conquest of Serbia, 1915. Santa Barbara: Praeger. ISBN 978-1440800924.
  • Hastings, Max (2013). Catastrophe: Europe Goes to War 1914. London: William Collins.
  • Kovrig, Bennett (January 1976). "Mediation by Obfuscation: The Resolution of the Marseille Crisis, October 1934 to May 1935". The Historical Journal. 19 (1): 191–221. doi:10.1017/S0018246X00018367. S2CID 153681564.
  • Seton-Watson, Robert (January 1935). "King Alexander's Assassination: Its Background and Effects". International Affairs. 14 (1): 20–47.
  • Marković, Marko (2003). Povijest Crne legije: Jure i Boban (in Croatian).
  • Passmore, Kevin (2003). Women, gender, and fascism in Europe, 1919–45. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0719060834.
  • Strachan, Hew (2006). The First World War – A New Illustrated History. Pocket Books. ISBN 074323961X.

External links

  Media related to Alexander I of Yugoslavia at Wikimedia Commons

  • Wedding of King Alexander I and Princess Maria at Belgrade (1922), British Pathé
  • The first recorded sound movie of speech of the king Alexander I (Under of Yugoslav Sky, 1933 – Yugoslav Film Archive)
  • Newsreel footage of the Assassination of King Alexander
  • The Funeral of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia at Belgrade (1934), British Pathé
  • The Official Website of the Serbian Royal Family
  • Newspaper clippings about Alexander I of Yugoslavia in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
Alexander I of Yugoslavia
Born: 16 December 1888 Died: 9 October 1934
Regnal titles
Preceded by King of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes
16 August 1921 – 6 January 1929
Proclaimed King of Yugoslavia
New title King of Yugoslavia
6 January 1929 – 9 October 1934
Succeeded by

alexander, yugoslavia, other, people, with, similar, names, alexander, yugoslavia, disambiguation, alexander, serbia, disambiguation, alexander, serbian, cyrillic, Александар, Карађорђевић, romanized, aleksandar, karađorđević, pronounced, aleksǎːndar, ʋiː, kar. For other people with similar names see Alexander of Yugoslavia disambiguation and Alexander of Serbia disambiguation Alexander I Serbian Cyrillic Aleksandar I Karaђorђeviћ romanized Aleksandar I Karađorđevic pronounced aleksǎːndar pr ʋiː karad ʑǒːrd ʑeʋit ɕ 1 16 December 1888 O S 4 December 9 October 1934 also known as Alexander the Unifier 2 3 was the prince regent of the Kingdom of Serbia from 1914 and later the King of Yugoslavia from 1921 to 1934 prior to 1929 the state was known as the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes He was assassinated by the Bulgarian Vlado Chernozemski of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization during a 1934 state visit to France 4 Having sat on the throne for 13 years he is the longest reigning monarch of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia Alexander IKing of YugoslaviaReign3 October 1929 9 October 1934SuccessorPeter IIKing of the Serbs Croats and SlovenesReign16 August 1921 3 October 1929PredecessorPeter IPrince Regent of Serbia and the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and SlovenesReign24 June 1914 16 August 1921MonarchPeter IBorn 1888 12 16 16 December 1888Cetinje Royal Palace Cetinje MontenegroDied9 October 1934 1934 10 09 aged 45 Marseille FranceBurialOplenac Topola SerbiaSpouseMaria of Romania m 1922 wbr IssuePeter II of YugoslaviaPrince TomislavPrince AndrewNamesAlexander KarađorđevicHouseKarađorđevicFatherPeter I of SerbiaMotherZorka of MontenegroReligionSerbian OrthodoxSignatureMilitary careerAllegiance Kingdom of Serbia Kingdom of YugoslaviaYears of service1904 21 end of active service RankField MarshalUnitRoyal Yugoslav Army Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Becoming crown prince 2 Balkan wars and World War I 3 King of Yugoslavia 4 Assassination of Alexander I 5 Issue 6 In popular culture 7 Honours 8 References and notes 9 External linksEarly life EditThis article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alexander Karađorđevic was born on 16 December 1888 in the Principality of Montenegro as the fourth child second son of Peter Karađorđevic son of Prince Alexander of Serbia who thirty years earlier in 1858 was forced to abdicate and surrender power in Serbia to the rival House of Obrenovic and Princess Zorka of Montenegro eldest daughter of Prince Nicholas of Montenegro Despite enjoying support from the Russian Empire at the time of Alexander s birth and early childhood the House of Karađorđevic was in political exile with family members scattered all over Europe unable to return to Serbia 5 Serbia had recently been transformed from a principality into a kingdom under the Obrenovics who ruled with strong support from Austria Hungary The antagonism between the two rival royal houses was such that after the assassination of Prince Mihailo Obrenovic in 1868 an event Karađorđevics were suspected of taking part in the Obrenovics resorted to making constitutional changes specifically proclaiming the Karađorđevics banned from entering Serbia and stripping them of their civic rights Alexander was two when his mother Princess Zorka died in 1890 from complications while giving birth to his younger brother Andrew who died 23 days later Alexander spent his childhood in Montenegro In 1894 his widower father took the four children including Alexander to Geneva where the young man completed his elementary education citation needed Alongside his older brother George he continued his schooling at the imperial Page Corps in St Petersburg Russian Empire The British historian Robert Seton Watson described Alexander as becoming a Russophile during his time in St Petersburg feeling much gratitude for the willingness of the Emperor Nicholas II to give him a refuge where he was treated with much honor and respect citation needed 6 As a page Alexander was described as hard working and determined while also being a loner who kept to himself and rarely showed his feelings 7 Being a Karađorđevic led to Alexander being invited by Nicholas II to dinner at the Winter Palace where he was the guest of honor at meals hosted by the Russian imperial family which was a great honor for a prince from Serbia s deposed princely family citation needed 7 During his time in St Petersburg Alexander visited the Alexander Nevsky Monastery where the abbot gave Alexander an icon of Prince Alexander Nevsky and guided him to the grave of Marshal Alexander Suvorov 8 After his visit to the monastery Alexander expressed the wish to be a great general like Marshal Suvorov or Prince Alexander Nevsky saying he wanted to be commanding either a great army or a great armada when he was a man 9 In 1903 while young George and Alexander were in school citation needed a slew of conspirators pulled off a bloody coup d etat in the Kingdom of Serbia known as the May Overthrow in which King Alexander and Queen Draga were murdered and dismembered The House of Karađorđevic thus retook the Serbian throne after forty five years and Alexander s 58 year old father became king of Serbia prompting George s and Alexander s return to Serbia to continue their studies After Alexander s 15th birthday King Peter had Alexander enlisted into the Royal Serbian Army as a private with instructions to his officers to only promote his son if he proved worthy 7 On 25 March 1909 Alexander was suddenly recalled to Belgrade by his father with no explanation offered other than that he had an important announcement for his son citation needed 10 Becoming crown prince Edit This article or section contains close paraphrasing of one or more non free copyrighted sources Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please improve this article by re writing it in your own words October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Queen Maria with two of her children Tomislav and Andrej A key event for Prince Alexander occurred on 27 March 1909 when his older brother Crown Prince George publicly renounced his claim to the throne after strong pressure from political circles in Serbia Many in Serbia including powerful political and military figures such as Prime Minister Nikola Pasic as well as high ranking officers Dragutin Apis Dimitrijevic and Petar Zivkovic who did not appreciate the young man s impulsive nature and unstable incident prone personality had long regarded George as unfit to rule They believed that Prince Alexander had the makings of a fine sovereign citation needed Prince Alexander donated a large sum of money to the Black Hand oriented journal Pijemont Piedmont 11 founded in August 1911 George killed his servant Kolakovic by kicking him in the stomach which served as the final straw The death caused a huge scandal amongst the Serbian public as well as in the Austro Hungarian press which reported extensively on it and 21 year old Prince George was forced into renouncing his claim to the throne In 1910 Crown Prince Alexander nearly died from stomach typhus citation needed and was left with stomach problems for the rest of his life In the run up to the First Balkan War of 1912 1913 Alexander played the role of a diplomat visiting Sofia to meet Tsar Ferdinand of Bulgaria for secret talks for a Balkan League which was intended to drive the Ottomans out of the Balkans 12 Both Bulgaria and Serbia had rival claims to the Ottoman region of Macedonia and the talks with Ferdinand were difficult Together with Tsar Ferdinand s son Crown Prince Boris the future Tsar Boris III of Bulgaria Alexander traveled to Saint Petersburg to see the Russian Emperor Nicholas II to ask for Russian mediation on certain points that were dividing the Serbs and Bulgarians 12 In March 1912 Serbia and Bulgaria signed a defensive alliance that was later May 1912 joined by Greece 12 Balkan wars and World War I EditMain articles Balkan Wars and Serbian Campaign of World War I A wartime postcard of Alexander In March 1912 Alexander had a meeting with ten senior military commanders They all agreed to end all internal conflicts in the army and fully commit to realizing national goals which allowed space for consolidation before the two successive Balkan wars 13 In the First Balkan War in 1912 as commander of the First Army Crown Prince Alexander fought victorious battles in Kumanovo and Bitola One of Alexander s most cherished moments came when he drove the Ottomans out of Kosovo and on 28 October 1912 led the Serb Army on a review on the Field of Blackbirds 9 The Field of Blackbirds was where the Serbs under Prince Lazar had been defeated in a legendary battle by the Ottoman Sultan Murad I on 28 June 1389 and is regarded by the Serbs as holy ground It was a great honor for him to pay his respects to the Serbs who had fallen in that earlier battle 9 In the aftermath of the First Balkan War disputes emerged among the victors over control of Macedonia and Serbia and Greece signed an alliance against Bulgaria Later in 1913 during the Second Balkan War Alexander commanded the Serb Army at the Battle of Bregalnica against the Bulgarians 14 After the Ottoman withdrawal from Skopje most of whom had left after the Albanian revolt of 1912 Prince Alexander was met with flowers by the local people He stopped and asked a seven year old girl Vaska Zoicheva What are you Montenegrin Shto si ti When she replied Bulgarian Blgarka the prince slapped her and said You are not Bulgarian Fuck your father Montenegrin Niyesi ti Blgarka oca ti yebem 15 This news of the event spread quickly around Bulgaria In 1920 and 1921 Serbian authorities searched for the girl s father Danail Zoichev and offered him money to renounce the event as fictional but he refused 16 17 18 19 In the aftermath of the Second Balkan War Prince Alexander took sides in the complicated power struggle over how Macedonia should be administered In this Alexander bested Colonel Dragutin Dimitrijevic Apis and in the wake of this Alexander s father King Peter agreed to hand over royal powers to his son Though Colonel Dimitrijevic was the mastermind of the 1903 coup that had restored the House of Karađorđevic to the Serbian throne Alexander distrusted him regarding his attempts to set himself up as a kingmaker and to have the Serbian Army be a state within the state existing outside of civilian control as a major threat 20 Additionally Alexander saw Dimitrijevic as an irresponsible intriguer who having betrayed one king might always betray another In January 1914 the Serbian prime minister Nikola Pasic sent a letter to the Emperor Nicholas II in which King Peter expressed a desire for his son to marry one of the daughters of Nicholas 21 22 Nicholas in his reply stated that his daughters would not be forced into arranged marriages but noted Alexander on his most recent trips to St Petersburg had during dinners at the Winter Palace kept giving loving looks at the Grand Duchess Tatiana leading him to guess that it was her whom Alexander wanted to marry On 24 June 1914 Alexander became regent of Serbia Prince Regent Alexander on the Macedonian front in 1916 On 24 July 1914 Alexander was one of the first Serbian officials to see the Austrian ultimatum containing terms deliberately written to inspire rejection 23 Turning to Russia for help Alexander was advised to help the ultimatum as much as he could 24 Alexander was late to say he went as far as an independent could to accept the ultimatum as Serbia accepted all of the terms except for the one demanding that Austrian police officers investigating the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand could operate on Serbian soil with the powers of arrest which would have been the effective end of Serbia as an independent state 24 As expected the Austrians declared war on Serbia and Alexander threw himself into preparing his nation s defense 24 In a letter to King Nicholas of Montenegro Alexander wrote God has willed yet again that the Serbian people should give their lives for Serbs everywhere I pray for the support of my dear and wise forefathers 25 At the outbreak of World War I he was the nominal supreme commander of the Serbian army true command was in the hands of the Chief of Staff of Supreme Headquarters a position held by Stepa Stepanovic during the mobilisation Radomir Putnik 1914 1915 Petar Bojovic 1916 1917 and Zivojin Misic 1918 The Serbian army distinguished itself in the battles at Cer and at the Drina the Battle of Kolubara in 1914 scoring victories against the invading Austro Hungarian forces and evicting them from the country 26 The British historian Max Hastings described the Royal Serbian Army in 1914 as the toughest army in Europe and also the most egalitarian with none of the distinctions of rank that characterized the other European armies exemplified by how the Serb Army was the only army in Europe where officers would shake hands with the other ranks 26 However the Serbian Army suffered major shortages of equipment with a third of the men called up in August 1914 having no rifles or ammunition and new recruits being advised to bring their own boots and clothing as there were no uniforms for them 26 Alexander ordered the Serbian police to conduct searches of houses all over Serbia to see if there were any rifles and ammunition to be seized for the army 26 Regent Alexander and Raymond Poincare in 1916 In 1915 the Serbian army was attacked on several fronts by the allied forces of Germany and Austria Hungary suffering heavy losses On 7 October 1915 an Austro German army group under the command of Field Marshal August von Mackensen invaded Serbia and after encountering fierce resistance took Belgrade on 9 October 27 On 14 October 1915 Bulgaria invaded Serbia and on 16 October the Bulgarians took Nis severing the railroad that linked Serbia to Salonika in Greece 27 Being attacked from the north by the Austrians and the Germans and from the south by the Bulgarians the Serbs by 25 November 1915 had been forced into the Kosovo region 27 The massacres committed by the Austrians in 1914 when they invaded Serbia twice caused enormous panic and hundreds of thousands of Serbs fled their homes to escape the Austrians which greatly delayed the movement of the Serb Army 27 Field Marshal Radomir Putnik persuaded Crown Prince Alexander and King Peter that it was better to keep the Serb Army intact to one day liberate Serbia rather to stand and fight in Kosovo as many Serb officers wanted 27 Regent Alexander with high officers watching military positions during battle of Kaymakchalan in 1916 Regent Alexander I visits wounded on the Macedonian Front in 1917 The Serbian Army withdrew through the gorges of Montenegro and northern Albania to the Greek island of Corfu where it was reorganized The march across the Prokletije accursed mountains was a harrowing one as the Serb Army together with a mass of refugees had to cross mountains that rose to 3 000 feet high in the middle of winter with the average daily temperature being 20 while battling the hostile Albanian tribes with the armies of Austria Germany and Bulgaria in pursuit 28 Many Serbs died along the way as one Serb soldier wrote in his diary how the refugees rested by the side of the road were Immobilized by the snow their heads rest to their breasts The white snowflakes dance around them while the alpine winds whistle their songs of death The heads of horses and oxen which have fallen protrude from the snow 27 As the Serbs braved the icy winds and snowdrifts the only consolation for Alexander was that the winter weather was also delaying the German Austrian and Bulgarian armies under the command of von Mackensen that were pursuing his army 27 Alexander repeatedly exposed himself to danger during the march to the sea while his health declined 25 Upon reaching the sea the surviving Serbs who numbered about 140 000 were rescued by British and French ships which took them to Corfu 28 In September 1915 the Royal Serbian Army was estimated to have the strength of about 420 000 men of whom 94 000 had been killed or wounded while another 174 000 had been captured or were missing during the fall campaign in 1915 and the subsequent retreat to the sea 28 The losses taken by Serb civilians during the autumn campaign in 1915 together with the retreat to the sea have never been calculated but are estimated to be massive 28 The situation was further worsened by the outbreak of a typhus and relapsing fever epidemic which ravaged the country in 1915 Serb losses as a percentage of the population were the greatest of any belligerent in the war 28 The Royal Palace residence of Regent Alexander 1918 1922 The surviving Serb soldiers were ultimately taken to Thessaloniki to join the Armees alliees en Orient In the fall of 1916 Alexander s long standing dispute with the Black Hand group came to a head when Colonel Dimitrijevic began to criticize his leadership 20 Suspecting a threat to the throne Alexander promptly had officers who were members of the Black Hand arrested in December 1916 and tried for insubordination after their convictions Dimitrijevic and several other Black Hand leaders were executed by firing squad on 23 June 1917 20 At the same time the Serbian government in exile led by Prime Minister Nikola Pasic was in contact with the Yugoslav Committee a group of anti Habsburg Croats and Slovenes led by Ante Trumbic who talked about creating a new nation to be called Yugoslavia which would unite all of the South Slav peoples into one state 29 In June 1917 the Corfu Declaration was signed by Pasic and Trumbic promising Yugoslavia after the war 30 Alexander seems to have been dubious about the plans for Yugoslavia as throughout the war he spoke in terms of liberating Serbia 30 The introduction of the 14 Points by the American President Woodrow Wilson in January 1918 increased Alexander s doubts about Yugoslavia as Point 10 spoke of substantial autonomy in the Austrian Empire after the war not breaking it up 31 Not willing to antagonise Wilson Alexander favored a greater Serbia that saw the Serbs annex certain provinces of the Austrian Empire 30 Though the Crown Prince declared in a speech during a visit to Britain that he was fighting for Yugoslav unity in a Yugoslav state when he addressed his own soldiers he stated he was fighting for the reestablishment of Serbia our dear homeland 31 In a sign of the trouble to come Trumbic demanded to have the right to speak for the South Slavs living under Austrian rule a demand that Alexander rejected under the grounds that the Serb government represented the South Slavs 31 After the army was regrouped and reinforced it achieved a decisive victory on the Macedonian Front at Kajmakcalan The Serbian army carried out a major part in the final Allied breakthrough on the Macedonian Front in the autumn of 1918 The debate whatever the Serbian Army was fighting for Yugoslavia or Serbia resolved itself in October November 1918 as the Austrian Empire collapsed leaving the Royal Serbian Army to move into the vacuum 32 The Italians had ambitions to annex Dalmatia Istria and much of Slovenia leading the Croats and the Slovenes to prefer living with their fellow Slavs 33 On 1 December 1918 the National Council asked Alexander to declare Serbia united with the former Austrian provinces of Bosnia Croatia and Slovenia on the basis of the Corfu declaration 33 Serbia had been devastated by the war and 1 out of every 5 Serbs who were alive in 1914 were dead by 1918 34 Much of Alexander s time in the immediate post war years was to be taken up with reconstruction King of Yugoslavia Edit Regent Alexander I visiting Sarajevo for the first time in 1920 On 1 December 1918 in a prearranged set piece Alexander as Prince Regent received a delegation of the People s Council of Slovenes Croats and Serbs an address was read out by one of the delegation and Alexander made an address in acceptance This was considered to be the birth of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes One of Alexander s first acts as Prince Regent of the new kingdom was to declare his support for the widespread demand for land reform stating In our free state there can and will be only free landowners 35 On 25 February 1919 Alexander signed a land reform decree breaking up all feudal estates over the size of 100 cadastral yokes with compensation to be paid for the former landowners except for those who belonged to the House of Habsburg and the other ruling families of enemy states in the Great War 35 Under the land reform decree some two million hectares of land was handed over to a half million peasant households though the implementation was very slow taking 15 years before land reform was complete 35 In both Macedonia and Bosnia Herzegovina the majority of the landlords who lost land were Muslims while the majority of their former tenants who received the land were Christians and in both places land reform was seen as an attack on the political and economic power of the Muslim gentry 35 In Croatia Slovenia and Vojvodina the majority of the landlords who lost their land were Austrian or Hungarian nobility who usually did not reside in those places meaning that however much they might have resented the loss of their land it did not have the sort of political repercussions it did in Macedonia and in Bosnia where the Albanian and Bosnian Muslim landlords lived 35 Regent Alexander at the opening ceremony of the first Ljubljana Fair at Slovenia in 1920 On August 16 1921 upon the death of his father Alexander ascended to the throne of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes which from its inception was colloquially known both in the Kingdom and the rest of Europe alike as Yugoslavia The historian Brigit Farley described Alexander as something of a cipher to historians as he was a taciturn and reserved man who loathed to express his feelings either in person or in writing 36 As Alexander kept no diary or wrote no memoirs Farley wrote that any biography of Alexander could easily be titled In search of King Alexander as he remains an elusive and enigmatic figure 36 The British historian R W Seton Watson who knew Alexander well called him a soldiery man most comfortable in a military milieu who was very quiet and surprisingly modest for a king 37 Seton Watson described Alexander as having an autocratic personality a man who was first and foremost a soldier who spent six of his formative years in the Serbian Army which left him with a military outlook which unfitted him to deal with the delicate problems of constitutional government and which made compromise hard for him 38 Seton Watson wrote that Alexander was very courageous though not ever a man of strong physique or robust health He had a strong fixity of purpose great devotion to duty powers of sustained work He had great charm and simplicity of manner He was accessible and very open to opinions though he rarely acted on them and though occasionally he reacted with positive violence as in the case of the Slovene Zerjav who fainted in his presence 39 One of the things that historians can be certain about Alexander was his belief in keeping Yugoslavia as a unitary state and his consistent opposition to federalism which he believed would lead to the break up of Yugoslavia and perhaps his own assassination 40 In turn Alexander s opposition to federalism related to his belief that in a federalised Yugoslavia the precani Serbs would be discriminated against by the Croats and Bosnian Muslims once telling a Serb Orthodox priest that federalism would be stabbing the Serbs in the back 41 The wedding of King Alexander I and Princess Maria of Romania in 1922 As a Karađorđevic Alexander was very conscious of the long blood feud between the Houses of Obrenovic and Karađorđevic that had disfigured Serb politics in the 19th century and that the 1903 coup d etat that finally brought down the Obrenovics and led to the Karađorđevics regaining the throne had happened because the last Obrenovic king Alexander was widely viewed as too subservient to Austria Hungary and as having betrayed Serb interests 42 Because of the frequent changes in loyalty in the Royal Serbian Army in the 19th century between the feuding royal families Alexander was never entirely convinced that the Serb dominated officer corps of the Royal Yugoslav Army were completely loyal to him and always had the fear if he was seen to be betraying Serbdom as the last Obrenovic king was he too might be overthrown and killed 42 King Alexander I in 1926 Elysee Palace Paris France On 8 June 1922 he married Princess Maria of Romania who was a daughter of Ferdinand I of Romania They had three sons Crown Prince Peter and Princes Tomislav and Andrej He was said to have wished to marry Grand Duchess Tatiana Nikolaevna of Russia a cousin of his wife and the second daughter of Tsar Nicholas II and was distraught by her untimely death in the Russian Civil War The Russophile Alexander was horrified by the murders of the House of Romanov including the Grand Duchess Tatiana and during his reign was very hostile towards the Soviet Union welcoming Russian emigres to Belgrade 43 The lavish royal wedding to Princess Maria of Romania was intended to cement the alliance with Romania a fellow victor nation in World War I which like Yugoslavia had territorial disputes with the defeated nations like Hungary and Bulgaria 44 For Alexander the royal wedding was especially satisfactory as most of the royal families of Europe attended which showed that the House of Karađorđevic a family of peasant origins who were disliked for slaughtering the rival House of Obrenovic in 1903 were finally accepted by the rest of European royalty 44 King Alexander I in the uniform of Admiral of the Navy on Adriatic 1930 oil on canvas work of Ivan Vavpotic National Museum of Slovenia In foreign policy Alexander favored maintaining the international system created in 1918 19 and in 1921 Yugoslavia joined the Little Entente with Czechoslovakia and Romania to guard against Hungary Hungary refused to accept the Treaty of Trianon and made territorial claims against all three states of the Little Entente 45 In 1921 a war veteran and communist Spasoje Stejic Baco attempted to assassinate king Alexander by throwing a bomb at his carriage The bomb was thrown from a balcony and it got stuck in the telephone wires and it ended up wounding several bystanders 46 The principal enemy of Yugoslavia in the 1920s was Fascist Italy which wanted much of what is now modern Slovenia and Croatia 45 The origins of the Italo Yugoslav dispute concerned the Italian contention that they had been cheated out of what they had been promised in the secret Treaty of London in 1915 at the Paris peace conference in 1919 It was largely out of the fear of Italy that Alexander in 1927 signed a treaty of alliance with France which therefore became Yugoslavia s principal ally 47 In fact Alexander I and Benito Mussolini were arch rivals Starting in 1926 an alliance of the Serb Democrats led by Svetozar Pribicevic and the Croat Peasant Party led by Stjepan Radic had systematically obstructed the skupstina to press for federalism for Yugoslavia filibustering and filing nonsensical motions to prevent the government from passing any bills 48 In response to obstructionism from the opposition parties in June 1928 one frustrated deputy from Montenegro took out his handgun and shot Radic on the floor of the skupstina 48 The charismatic Radic the uncrowned king of Croatia had inspired intense devotion in Croatia and his assassination was seen as a sort of Serb declaration of war 49 The assassination pushed Yugoslavia to the brink of civil war and led Alexander to consider the amputation of Croatia as preferable to federalism 49 Alexander mused to Pribicevic that We cannot stay together with the Croats Since we cannot it would be better to separate The best way to be to effect a peaceful separation like Sweden and Norway did 48 When Pribicevic protested that this would be an act of treason Alexander told him he would think some more about what to do 48 Alexander appointed the Slovene Catholic priest Father Anton Korosec prime minister with one mandate namely to stop the slide towards civil war 49 On 1 December 1928 the lavish celebrations of the 10th anniversary of the founding of the triune Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes that the government organized led to rioting that left 10 dead in Zagreb 49 A report published by the Belgrade daily Politika on King Alexander s visit to Valandovo following an earthquake in March 1931 In response to the political crisis triggered by the assassination of Stjepan Radic King Alexander abolished the Constitution on 6 January 1929 prorogued the Parliament and introduced a personal dictatorship the so called January 6th Dictatorship Sestojanuarska diktatura One of the first acts of the new regime was to carry out a purge of the civil service with one third of the civil service being fired by May 1929 in an attempt to address popular complaints about rampant corruption in the bureaucracy 49 He also changed the name of the country to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and changed the internal divisions from the 33 oblasts to nine new banovinas on 3 October Of the banovinas only one had a Slovene majority two had Croat majorities and the rest had Serb majorities which especially angered the Bosnian Muslims who were in a minority in every banovine 50 The way in which the banovinas were based on new borders that did not correspond to the historical regional borders led to much resentment especially in Bosnia and Croatia 50 The banovinas were named after the topography of Yugoslavia rather than the historical names in a bid to weaken regional loyalties being governed by bans appointed by the King 49 In the same month he tried to banish by decree the use of Serbian Cyrillic to promote the exclusive use of the Latin alphabet in Yugoslavia 51 Alexander replaced the three regional flags for the triune Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes with a single flag for the entire country brought in a single legal code for his realm imposed a single fiscal code so all of his subjects would pay the same tax rate and a Yugoslav Agrarian Bank was created by merging all of the regional agrarian banks into one 49 Alexander tried to promote a sense of Yugoslav identity by always taking his vacations in Slovenia naming his second son after a Croat king and being a godfather to a Bosnian Muslim child 52 Alexander had once fraternised frequently with ordinary people being known for his habit of making unannounced visits to various villages all over Yugoslavia to chat with ordinary people but after the proclamation of the royal dictatorship his social circle consisted of a few generals and courtiers causing the King to lose touch with his subjects 53 King Alexander salutes war veterans from the palace window at Belgrade in 1931 Within Serbia the royal dictatorship for the first time made Alexander into an unpopular figure 54 The British historian Richard Crampton wrote many Serbs were alienated by the attempt albeit unsuccessful to lessen the Serbian domination on which to add insult to injury many of the faults of the previous system were blamed Alexander had implicitly made the Serbs the most reliable proponents of centralism the villains of the Vidovdan piece 54 The royal dictatorship was seen in Croatia as merely a form of Serbian domination and one result was a marked upswing in support for fascistic Ustashe which advocated winning Croat independence via violence 55 By 1931 the Ustashe was waging a terrorist campaign of bombings assassinations and sabotage which at least in part explained Alexander s reluctance to engage with ordinary people as he done in the past out of the fear of assassination 55 On 14 February 1931 Alexander visited Zagreb and the men of the Turnopolje district who for centuries always provided a mounted honour guard for any royal visitor to Zagreb failed to show up a snub that shown how unpopular Alexander had become in Croatia 55 On 19 February 1931 the Croat historian Milan Sufflay was murdered by police agents becoming an international cause celebre with Albert Einstein and Heinrich Mann leading a campaign to pressure Alexander to prosecute Sufflay s killers 55 The Great Depression was especially severe in predominantly rural Yugoslavia as it caused deflation leading to a collapse in price of agricultural products 55 The Croat politician Ante Trumbic summed up the feelings of many when he gave a speech in early 1931 stating We are in a crisis an economic financial and moral crisis There is no material or moral credit in the country Nobody believes anything anymore 55 However Alexander remain unperturbed stating in an interview with the press Yugoslav politics will never again be driven by narrow religious regional or national interests 56 In response to pressure from Yugoslavia s allies especially France and Czechoslovakia led Alexander to decide to lessen the royal dictatorship by bringing in a new constitution which allowed the skupstina to meet again 56 Pirot kilim at the balcony on the occasion of the festivities of 11 November 1930 In 1931 Alexander decreed a new Constitution which transferred executive power to the King Elections were to be by universal male suffrage The provision for a secret ballot was dropped and pressure on public employees to vote for the governing party was to be a feature of all elections held under Alexander s constitution Furthermore the King would appoint half of the upper house directly and legislation could become law with the approval of one of the houses alone if it were also approved by the King The 1931 constitution kept Yugoslavia as a unitary state which enraged the non Serbian peoples who demanded a federation and saw Alexander s royal dictatorship as thinly disguised Serbian domination 56 In the elections for the skupstina in December 1931 January 1932 the call of the opposition parties to boycott the vote were widely heeded a sign of popular dissatisfaction with the new constitution 54 In response to the impoverishment of the countryside caused by the Great Depression Alexander reaffirmed in a speech the right of every peasant family to a minimum amount of land that could not be seized by a bank in the event of a debt default In 1932 he issued a decree suspending all debt payments by farmers to the banks for six months and forbade any more foreclosures by the banks against farmers 57 Alexander s measures preventing the banks to foreclose on farmers who were unable to pay their loans saved many peasants from being ruined and prevented economic distress in the countryside from turning political but in the long run his policies did not solve the economic problems of the rural areas 57 The losses taken by the banks and their inability to foreclose on farmers who had delinquent loans made the banks unwilling to make new loans to the farmers 57 As Yugoslav agriculture especially in the southern parts of the country was backward the farmers needed loans to modernise their farms but the unwillingness of the banks to lend to the farmers made modernisation of the farms impossible in the 1930s 57 Suvobor Palace on Lake Bled one of the royal residences In September 1932 Alexander s friend the Croat politician Ante Trumbic gave an interview with The Manchester Guardian newspaper where he stated that life for ordinary Croats was better when they were part of the Austrian empire and stated that perhaps the Croats would be better off if they broke away from Yugoslavia to form their own state 58 For Alexander who always respected and liked Trumbic to see his former friend come very close to embracing Croat separatism was a painful blow 58 On 7 November 1932 Trumbic and Vladko Macek of the Croat Peasant Party issued the so called Zagreb Points which demanded a new constitution which would turn Yugoslavia into a federation and stated that the Croats would otherwise demand independence 58 Alexander had Macek imprisoned without charges but the issuing of the Zagreb Points inspired the other peoples to issue similar declarations with the Slovenes issuing the Ljubljana Points the Bosnian Muslims issuing the Sarajevo Points and the Magyars issuing the Novi Sad points 58 The emergence of a multi ethnic opposition movement embracing the non Serb peoples threatened to break the country apart and forced Alexander to ease the level of repression as his ministers warned him that he could not imprison the entire country 58 In Macedonia the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organisation was continuing its long running guerrilla struggle while in Croatia the security situation had further deteriorated by 1932 59 By the end of 1932 the Ustashe had blown up hundreds of trains and assassinated hundreds of government officials 59 The often violent response of the mainly Serb gendarmes to Ustashe terrorism fuelled more support for the Ustashe 59 To many it appeared that Yugoslavia was sliding into the civil war that Alexander s self coup of January 1929 was supposed to prevent 59 King Alexander I of Yugoslavia and Mustafa Kemal Ataturk the first president of Republic of Turkey in 1933 Starting in 1933 Alexander had become worried about Nazi Germany In March 1933 the French minister in Belgrade Paul Emile Naggiar told Alexander that France was seriously worried about the stability of Yugoslavia and warned that the King could not continue to rule in face of opposition from the majority of his subjects and that Paris viewed that Alexander was starting to become a liability for France 60 Naggiar predicted the new regime in Germany was going to challenge the international order created by the Treaty of Versailles sooner or later and that France needed Yugoslavia to be stable and strong which led Naggiar to advise the King to adopt federalism for his realm 60 However one point of agreement of Alexander with Mussolini was his fear of Anschluss which would make Germany a direct neighbour of Yugoslavia Alexander had no desire to have Germany as a neighbour which led him to support the continuation of Austrian independence 61 Despite his distaste for communism the King gave support albeit in a very cautious and hesitant way to the plans of French Foreign Minister Louis Barthou to bring the Soviet Union into a front meant to contain Germany 61 In 1933 34 Alexander become the proponent of a Balkan Pact which would unite Yugoslavia Greece Romania and Turkey 47 Although the Balkan Pact was directed primarily against Italy and its allies Hungary Albania and Bulgaria Alexander hoped the pact might provide some protection against Germany 47 After the coup d etat in May 1934 in Sofia King Alexander also hoped that Bulgaria would join the Balkan Entente The new Bulgarian government had started repression against IMRO In September 1934 Alexander visited Sofia to improve relations with Bulgaria A Bulgarian military organisation Zveno supported the unification of Bulgaria and Albania into Yugoslavia which agreed with Alexander s policy Balkans for the Balkan peoples Assassination of Alexander I EditAfter the Ustase s Velebit uprising in November 1932 Alexander said through an intermediary to the Italian government If you want to have serious riots in Yugoslavia or cause a regime change you need to kill me Shoot at me and be sure you have finished me off because that s the only way to make changes in Yugoslavia 62 The French Foreign Minister Louis Barthou had attempted in 1934 to build an alliance meant to contain Germany consisting of France s allies in Eastern Europe like Yugoslavia together with Italy and the Soviet Union 63 The long standing rivalry between Benito Mussolini and King Alexander had complicated Barthou s work as Alexander complained about Italian claims against his country together with Italian support for Hungarian revisionism and the Croat Ustase 64 As long as the French ally Yugoslavia continued to have disputes with Italy Barthou s plans for an Italo French rapprochement would be stillborn During a visit to Belgrade in June 1934 Barthou promised the King that France would pressure Mussolini into signing a treaty under which he would renounce his claims against Yugoslavia 65 Alexander was sceptical of Barthou s plan noting that there were hundreds of Ustashi being sheltered in Italy and it was rumoured that Mussolini had financed an unsuccessful attempt by the Ustase to assassinate him in December 1933 65 Vlado Chernozemski Chernozemski Automatic Pistol with three 20 round magazines A monument to Alexander I and Louis Barthou in Marseille A photograph of the assassination Mussolini had come to believe that it was only the personality of Alexander that was holding Yugoslavia together and that if the King were assassinated Yugoslavia would descend into civil war which would allow Italy to annex certain regions of Yugoslavia without the fear of France 66 However France was Yugoslavia s closest ally and Barthou invited Alexander for a visit to France to sign a Franco Yugoslav agreement that would allow Barthou to go to Rome with the certainty of success 66 As a result of the previous deaths of three family members on Tuesdays Alexander refused to undertake any public functions on that day of the week On Tuesday 9 October 1934 however he had no choice as he was arriving in Marseille to start a state visit to France to strengthen both countries alliance in the Little Entente 67 failed verification dubious discuss While Alexander was being slowly driven in a car through the streets along with French Foreign Minister Barthou a gunman the Bulgarian Vlado Chernozemski 68 stepped from the street and shot the King twice and the chauffeur with a Mauser C96 semiautomatic pistol Alexander died in the car and was slumped backwards in the seat with his eyes open 69 Barthou was also killed by a stray bullet fired by French police during the scuffle following the attack 70 Lieutenant Colonel Piollet having finally managed to turn his horse struck the assailant with his sword Ten people in the procession were wounded including General Alphonse Georges was hit by two bullets as he tried to intervene and nine people in the crowd who came to see the king four of them fatally among them Yolande Farris barely 20 years old on Place Castellane who came to the Palais de la Bourse to see the king She was hit by a stray bullet and died at the Hotel Dieu on October 11 1934 Mrs Dumazet and Durbec who also came to see the king also died It was one of the first assassinations to be captured on film the shooting occurred in front of the newsreel cameraman 71 who was only metres away at the time While the exact moment of shooting was not captured on film the events leading to the assassination and the immediate aftermath were The body of the chauffeur Foissac who had been mortally wounded slumped and jammed against the brakes of the car which allowed the cameraman to continue filming from within inches of the King for a number of minutes afterwards The film record of Alexander I s assassination remains one of the most notable pieces of newsreel in existence 72 73 alongside the film of Emperor Nicholas II of Russia s coronation the funerals of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom see state funeral of Queen Victoria and Emperor Franz Joseph I of Austria and the assassination of John F Kennedy A 20th Century Fox newsreel presented by Graham McNamee was manipulated to give the audience the impression that the assassination had been captured on film Three identical gunshot sounds were added to the film afterwards but in reality Chernozemski fired his handgun over ten times and killed or wounded a total of 15 people A straw hat is shown on the ground as if it had belonged to the assassin unlike in reality A Mauser C96 semi automatic pistol with a 10 round magazine is shown as the assassination weapon but the actual one had a 20 round magazine The exact moment of assassination was never filmed 74 Just hours later Chernozemski died in police custody 75 The Death masks of Alexander I and Louis Barthou The funeral of king Alexander at Belgrade The assassin was a member of the pro Bulgarian Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization IMRO or VMRO and an experienced marksman 76 Immediately after assassinating King Alexander Chernozemski was cut down by the sword of a mounted French policeman and then beaten by the crowd By the time that he was removed from the scene the King was already dead The IMRO was a political organization that fought for the liberation of the occupied region of Macedonia and its independence initially as some form of second Bulgarian state followed by a later unification with the Kingdom of Bulgaria 77 The IMRO worked in alliance with the Croatian Ustase group led by Ante Pavelic 71 78 Chernozemski and three Croatian accomplices had travelled to France from Hungary via Switzerland After the assassination Chernozemski s accomplices were arrested by French police 71 A prominent diplomat with the Palazzo Chigi Baron Pompeo Aloisi expressed fears that the Ustashi based in Italy had killed the King and sought reassurances from another diplomat Paolo Cortese that Italy had not been involved 66 Aloisi was not reassured when Cortese told him that with Alexander being dead Yugoslavia was about to break up 66 Public opinion and press in Yugoslavia held that Italy had been crucial in the planning and directing of the assassination 79 Demonstrators outside of the Italian embassy in Belgrade and the Italian consulates in Zagreb and Ljubljana blamed Mussolini for Alexander s assassination 80 An investigation by the French police quickly established that the assassins had been trained and armed in Hungary had travelled to France on forged Czechoslovak passports and frequently telephoned Ustase leader Ante Pavelic who was living in Italy 81 The incident was later used by Yugoslavia as an argument to counter the Croatian attempts of secession and Italian and Hungarian revisionism 71 The participants in the assassination were Ivan Rajic Mijo Kralj Zvonimir Pospisil and Antun Godina They were sentenced to life in prison although the Yugoslav authorities had expected that they would be sentenced to death In 1940 after the fall of France they were released from prison by Germany Pierre Laval who succeeded Barthou as foreign minister wished to continue the rapprochement with Rome and saw the assassinations in Marseille as an inconvenience that was best forgotten 82 Both London and Paris made it clear that they regarded Mussolini as a responsible European statesman and in private told Belgrade that under no circumstances would they allow Il Duce to be blamed 83 In a speech in Northampton England on 19 October 1934 British Foreign Secretary Sir John Simon expressed his sympathy to the people of Yugoslavia over the king s assassination and stated that he was convinced by Mussolini s speech in Milan that denied being involvement in the assassination 84 When Yugoslavia made an extradition request to Italy for Pavelic on charges of regicide the Quai d Orsay expressed concern that if Pavelic were extradited he might incriminate Mussolini and were greatly reassured when its counterparts at the Palazzo Chigi stated there was no possibility of Pavelic being extradited 85 Laval cynically told a French journalist off the record that the French press should stop going on about the assassinations in Marseille because France would never go to war to defend the honour of a weak country like Yugoslavia 85 Novi dvor was founded by Alexander I The following day the body of King Alexander I was transported back to the port of Split in Yugoslavia by the destroyer JRM Dubrovnik After a huge funeral in Belgrade that was attended by about 500 000 people and many leading European statesmen Alexander was interred in the Oplenac Church in Topola which had been built by his father The Holy See gave special permission to bishops Aloysius Stepinac Antun Aksamovic Dionisije Njaradi and Gregorij Rozman to attend the funeral in an Orthodox church 86 As his son King Peter II was still a minor Alexander s first cousin Prince Paul took the regency of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia A ballistic report on the bullets found in the car was made in 1935 but its results were not made available to the public until 1974 It revealed that Barthou was hit by an 8 mm Modele 1892 revolver round commonly used in weapons carried by French police 70 After the assassination relations between Yugoslavia and France became colder and never returned to the previous level Also the Little Entente and the Balkan Pact lost their importance The Yugoslav public considered it shocking that the assassination had happened on French soil In the coming years Prince Paul as regent attempted to keep a neutral balance between London and Berlin until 1941 when he yielded to heavy pressure to join the Tripartite Pact Issue EditName Birth Death Spouse ChildrenKing Peter II 6 September 1923 3 November 1970 Princess Alexandra of Greece and Denmark Crown Prince Alexander b 1945 Prince Tomislav 19 January 1928 12 July 2000 Princess Margarita of BadenDivorced 1981 Prince Nikola b 1958 Princess Katarina b 1959 Linda Mary Bonney Prince George b 1984 Prince Michael b 1985 Prince Andrew 28 June 1929 7 May 1990 Princess Christina Margarethe of HesseDivorced 1962 Princess Maria Tatiana b 1957 Prince Christopher 1960 1994 Princess Kira Melita of LeiningenDivorced 1972 Princess Lavinia Maria b 1961 87 Prince Karl Vladimir b 1964 Prince Dimitri b 1965 Eva Maria AndjelkovichIn popular culture EditThe song Don Juan by British synth duo Pet Shop Boys the B side to their 1988 single Domino Dancing contains the phrase King Zog s back from holiday Marie Lupescu s grey and King Alexander is dead in Marseille 21 In Upton Sinclair s historical novel Wide Is The Gate novel 4 in the Lanny Budd series published 1941 the assassination is attributed to the Nazi German government The novel claims funds and a forged passport were obtained by the Croatian assassin from the head of German foreign policy department A heavily fictionalized version of the assassination serves as the opening to the book The Second Assassin by Christopher Hyde The gunman is changed to a Croatian while an Irish hitman kills both him and Barthou using a rifle undetected in the confusion It is described as masterminded by Nazi Germany to get rid of both Alexander and Barthou while they are together In Ivan Vazov s poem Pa sha si ti What are you 88 is depicted a case when crown prince Alexander asks the question to a little girl from Skopje and when she answers I m Bulgarian he slaps her in the face The poem emphasizes the suffering of the Macedonian Bulgarians under Serbian rule 89 TV series Alexander of Yugoslavia directed by Zdravko Sotra 90 Honours Edit Monument to Alexander the Unifier in Nis Serbia King Alexandar on the cover of Time on 11 February 1929 Serbian and Yugoslavian military decorations Order of Saint Prince Lazarus Collar Royal Order only 91 Order of Karađorđe s Star Grand Master 91 Order of the White Eagle Grand Master 91 Order of the Karađorđe s Star with Swords Grand Master 91 Order of the White Eagle with swords Grand Master 91 Order of the Yugoslav Crown Grand Master 91 Order of Saint Sava Grand Master 91 Serbian service medals Gold Bravery Medal 1912 91 Gold Bravery Medal 1913 91 Commemorative Medal of the first Balkan War 1912 91 Commemorative Medal of the second Balkan War 1913 91 Commemorative Medal of the Election of Peter I as King of Serbia 91 Commemorative Medal of the Albanian Campaign 91 International and foreign awards Order of Leopold Grand Cordon Belgium 91 War Cross 1914 1918 Belgium 91 Order of Saints Cyril and Methodius Collar Bulgaria 91 Order of St Alexander with swords Collar Bulgaria 91 Order of the White Lion Collar Czechoslovakia 91 War Cross 1914 1918 Czechoslovakia 91 Order of the Elephant Grand Cross Denmark 91 Legion of Honour Grand Cross France 91 Medaille militaire France 91 War Cross 1914 1918 France 91 Order of the Redeemer Grand Cross Greece 91 War Cross 1914 1918 Greece 91 Supreme Order of the Most Holy Annunciation Collar Italy 91 Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus Knight Grand Cross Italy 91 Order of the Crown of Italy Knight Grand Cross Italy 91 Military Order of Savoy Knight Grand Cross Italy 91 Order of the Wendish Crown Grand Cross Mecklenburg 91 Order of Saint Peter of Cetinje Knight Montenegro 91 Order of Prince Danilo I Knight Grand Cross Montenegro 91 Order of the Orthodox Church of Jerusalem Knight of the Collar Orthodox Church of Jerusalem 91 Order of Distinction 1st class Ottoman Empire 91 Order of the Sun of Peru Grand Cross Peru 91 Virtuti Militari Grand Cross Poland 91 Order of the White Eagle Grand Cross Poland 91 Order of Polonia Restituta Grand Cross Poland 91 Sash of the Three Orders Grand Cross 92 Portugal 91 Order of the Tower and Sword Grand Cross 93 Portugal 91 Order of Michael the Brave 1st class Romania 91 Order of Carol I Knight Grand Cross with Collar 94 95 Romania 91 Order of St Andrew Collar Russia 91 Order of St Alexander Nevsky Russia 91 Order of the White Eagle Grand Cross Russia 91 Order of St George 3rd class Russia 91 Order of St George 4th class Russia 91 Order of St Anna 1st class Russia 91 Order of St Stanislaus 1st class Russia 91 Order of the White Elephant Knight Grand Cordon Siam 91 Order of the Bath Knight Grand Cross United Kingdom 91 Royal Victorian Order Honorary Knight Grand Cross United Kingdom 91 King George V Coronation Medal United Kingdom 91 References and notes EditNotes Alternative pronunciations of Aleksandar and I are aleksaːndar and pr ːʋiː respectively Passmore 2003 p 104 Aleksandar Ujedinitelj Serbian Aleksandar Uјediniteљ aleksǎːndar ujedǐniteʎ In 1934 a Bulgarian member of VMRO Vlado Cernozemski known as Vlado the Chauffeur with support from the Ustashe assassinated the Yugoslav king Aleksandar in France For more see James Ridgeway Burn This House The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia with editors Jasminka Udovicki and James Ridgeway Edition 2 Duke University Press 2000 ISBN 0822325756 p 35 liamfoley63 2021 10 09 October 9 1934 Assassination of King Alexander of Yugoslavia European Royal History Retrieved 2023 02 24 Seton Watson 1935 p 35 a b c Farley 2007 p 55 Farley 2007 pp 57 58 a b c Farley 2007 p 58 Farley 2007 p 56 Bakic Dragan 2017 Regent Alexander Karadjordjevic in the First World War Balcanica XLVIII 193 a b c Farley 2007 p 57 Bakic Dragan 2017 Regent Alexander Karadjordjevic in the First World War Balcanica XLVIII 193 194 Farley 2007 p 59 Teodorov Balkanskite voini pp 259 261 Ethnic Cleansing in the Balkans Nationalism and the Destruction of Tradition Cathie Carmichael Routledge 2003 ISBN 1134479530 p 138 Contested Ethnic Identity The Case of Macedonian Immigrants in Toronto 1900 1996 Chris Kostov Peter Lang 2010 ISBN 3034301960 p 77 Igor Despot 2019 The Balkan Wars An Expected Opportunity for Ethnic Cleansing Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs 39 3 343 355 doi abs 10 1080 13602004 2019 1652410 Y Konstantinova 2011 Allies and Enemies The Balkan Peoples in the Bulgarian Political Propaganda During the Balkan Wars p 130 in Etudes Balkaniques issue 1 pp 109 148 a b c Farley 2007 p 62 Draft letter to the Tsar written by hand Pasic Documents Nikola Pasic in Russian Serbian Archive Archived from the original on 14 June 2010 Retrieved 21 September 2010 1 Zivojinovic Dragoljub R King Peter I Karadjordjevic I III Belgrade 1990 ISBN 86 13 00494 6 Farley 2007 pp 59 60 a b c Farley 2007 p 60 a b Farley 2007 p 61 a b c d Hastings 2013 pp 141 142 a b c d e f g Strachan 2006 p 153 a b c d e Strachan 2006 p 154 Farley 2007 pp 62 63 a b c Farley 2007 p 63 a b c Farley 2007 p 64 Farley 2007 p 65 a b Farley 2007 p 66 Crampton 1997 p 131 a b c d e Crampton 1997 p 130 a b Farley 2007 p 83 Seton Watson 1935 pp 20 22 Seton Watson 1935 pp 21 22 Seton Watson 1935 p 20 Farley 2007 pp 84 85 Farley 2007 p 85 a b Farley 2007 p 84 Seton Watson 1935 p 21 a b Farley 2007 p 69 a b Crampton 1997 pp 140 141 Atentat O Kojem Se Nije Ucilo U Skolama Moler koji je usred Beograda Zamalo Ubio Kralja Istorijski Zabavnik Retrieved 2021 03 02 a b c Crampton 1997 p 141 a b c d Farley 2007 p 71 a b c d e f g Crampton 1997 p 138 a b Crampton 1997 pp 138 139 Dangerous Decree Time 21 October 1929 Farley 2007 p 76 Farley 2007 pp 76 77 a b c Crampton 1997 p 139 a b c d e f Farley 2007 p 77 a b c Farley 2007 p 78 a b c d Crampton 1997 p 140 a b c d e Farley 2007 p 79 a b c d Farley 2007 p 80 a b Farley 2007 pp 80 81 a b Seton Watson 1935 p 26 Markovic 2003 p 21 Kovrig 1976 pp 191 192 Kovrig 1976 p 192 a b Kovrig 1976 p 193 a b c d Kovrig 1976 p 194 Matthew Graves Memory and Forgetting on the National Periphery Marseille and the Regicide of 1934 Portal Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies Vol 7 No 1 January 2010 2 The assassination was attributed to the Croatian Ustashi organization mortal enemies of Serbian domination but it was established that the actual assassin was Bulgarian the IMRO member Tchernozemski alias Vlado the Chauffeur Crown of Thorns The Reign of King Boris III of Bulgaria 1918 1943 Stephane Groueff Madison Books 1998 ISBN 1461730538 p 224 Assassination of King Alexander Vivid pictures from the scene of the tragedy at Marseille British Pathe Retrieved 8 July 2013 a b de Launay Jacques 1974 Les grandes controverses de l histoire contemporaine 1914 1945 Edito Service Histoire Secrete de Notre Temps p 568 a b c d Moll Nicolas 2012 Kampf gegen den Terror Fight against the Terror Damals in German No 6 pp 72 77 Documentary film The Assassination of the Yugoslavian king Alexander in 1934 on YouTube Documentary film The Assassination and the Funeral of the Yugoslavian king Alexander in 1934 on YouTube in Bulgarian Verschollene Filmschatze 1934 Das Attentat auf Konig Alexander I von Jugoslawien on YouTube in German Morawski Konrad Sebastian 2016 The assassination of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia in the light of archival press articles Studia z Dziejow Rosji i Europy Srodkowo Wschodniej 51 1 47 76 doi 10 12775 SDR 2016 EN1 03 The suicide assassin from VMRO was Vlado Cernozemski who on orders from Mihajlov and his ethno national VMRO which was defined as Bulgarian killed the Yugoslav king Alexander I Karadzordzevic and the French Minister of Foreign Affairs Louis Bareau in Marseille in 1934 New Balkan Politics Issue 6 2003 Stefan Troebst Historical Politics and Historical Masterpieces in Macedonia before and after 1991 Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Collective Memory National Identity and Ethnic Conflict Greece Bulgaria and the Macedonian Question Victor Roudometof Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 ISBN 0275976483 p 99 In the aftermath of the WWI the conservative pro Bulgarian fraction of the IMRO was reconstructed under the leadership of Todor Alexandrov This IMRO developed an agenda for an autonomous Macedonia as it was a way for an unification with Bulgaria Ivan Mihailov and Alexander Protogerov who assumed IMRO s leadership in the wake of Todor Alexandrov s death 1924 retracted their support for an independent Macedonia and moved toward that would be their old position of autonomy By 1928 Mihailov who had emerged as the key leader of the group proposed a new plan calling for unification of a pre 1913 Macedonia region into a single state that would be autonomous from Bulgaria By 1931 Mihailov with Italian support broke his ties with the Bulgarian government and began to operate as a semi autonomous agent wishing to create a Macedonian state that would be under his personal control Infamous Assassinations King Alexander UKTV History Retrieved 17 June 2012 Hamerli Petra The Hungarian Italian Support of the Croatian Separatism between 1928 and 1934 West Bohemian Historical Review Kovrig 1976 p 195 Kovrig 1976 p 196 Kovrig 1976 p 197 Kovrig 1976 pp 197 198 Kovrig 1976 p 199 a b Kovrig 1976 p 201 The Dictatorship of King Alexander and the Roman Catholic Church 1929 1934 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 29 December 2013 Born while her father was still married to Princess Christina of Hesse thus making it necessary for him to adopt her legally on 15 February 1965 after marrying her mother Slovoto Virtualna biblioteka za blgarska literatura Pesni za Makedoniya Iv Vazov Pa shta si ti Crnushanov Kosta Makedonizmt i sprotivata na Makedoniya sreshu nego Universitetsko izdanie Sv Kliment Ohridski Sofiya 1992 str 107 108 Aleksandar od Jugoslavije od 15 marta na Nova S N1 in Serbian 2021 03 08 Retrieved 2021 03 08 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba Acovic Dragomir 2012 Slava i cast Odlikovanja među Srbima Srbi među odlikovanjima Belgrade Sluzbeni Glasnik pp 273 289 Oliviera Humberto Nuno de 2010 Subsidio para a historia das relacoes bilaterais entre Portugal ea Servia Subsidy for the History of Bilateral relations between Portugal and Serbia Lusiada Historia 2 7 460 ISSN 0873 1330 Retrieved 21 March 2020 Ordem Militar da Torre e Espada Processos de Estrangeiros Principe Alexandre Regente do Reino dos Servios Croatas e Eslovenos in Portuguese Arquivo Historico da Presidencia da Republica Retrieved 2 April 2020 Romania Pinterest The first central committee of IMRO Memoirs of d r Hristo Tatarchev Materials for the Macedonian liberation movement book IX series of the Macedonian scientific institute of IMRO led by Bulgarian academician prof Lyubomir Miletich Sofia 1928 p 102 poredica Materiyali za istoriyata na makedonskoto osvoboditelno dvizhenie na Makedonskiya nauchen institut na VMRO voden ot blgarskiya akademik prof Lyubomir Miletich kniga IX Sofiya 1928 Farley Brigit 2007 King Aleksandar and the Royal Dictatorship in Yugoslavia In Bernd J Fischer ed Balkan Strongmen Dictators and Authoritarian Rulers of Southeastern Europe Central European Studies West Lafayette IN pp 51 86 Acovic Dragomir 2012 Slava i cast Odlikovanja među Srbima Srbi među odlikovanjima Belgrade Sluzbeni Glasnik BibliographyGligorijevic Branislav 2010 Kralj Aleksandar I Karađorđevic 1 3 Zavod za udzbenike i nastavna sredstva p 1186 Crampton Richard 1997 Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century And After London Routledge ISBN 978 0415164238 DiNardo Richard L 2015 Invasion The Conquest of Serbia 1915 Santa Barbara Praeger ISBN 978 1440800924 Hastings Max 2013 Catastrophe Europe Goes to War 1914 London William Collins Kovrig Bennett January 1976 Mediation by Obfuscation The Resolution of the Marseille Crisis October 1934 to May 1935 The Historical Journal 19 1 191 221 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00018367 S2CID 153681564 Seton Watson Robert January 1935 King Alexander s Assassination Its Background and Effects International Affairs 14 1 20 47 Markovic Marko 2003 Povijest Crne legije Jure i Boban in Croatian Passmore Kevin 2003 Women gender and fascism in Europe 1919 45 Manchester University Press ISBN 0719060834 Strachan Hew 2006 The First World War A New Illustrated History Pocket Books ISBN 074323961X External links Edit Media related to Alexander I of Yugoslavia at Wikimedia Commons Wedding of King Alexander I and Princess Maria at Belgrade 1922 British Pathe The first recorded sound movie of speech of the king Alexander I Under of Yugoslav Sky 1933 Yugoslav Film Archive Newsreel footage of the Assassination of King Alexander The Funeral of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia at Belgrade 1934 British Pathe The Official Website of the Serbian Royal Family Royal Mausoleum Oplenac Newspaper clippings about Alexander I of Yugoslavia in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWAlexander I of YugoslaviaHouse of KarađorđevicBorn 16 December 1888 Died 9 October 1934Regnal titlesPreceded byPeter I King of the Serbs Croats and Slovenes16 August 1921 6 January 1929 Proclaimed King of YugoslaviaNew title King of Yugoslavia6 January 1929 9 October 1934 Succeeded byPeter II Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alexander I of Yugoslavia amp oldid 1144611071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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