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Austro-Hungarian occupation of Serbia

The Austro-Hungarian Armed Forces occupied Serbia from late 1915 until the end of World War I. Austria-Hungary's declaration of war against Serbia on 28 July 1914 marked the beginning of the war. After three unsuccessful Austro-Hungarian offensives between August and December 1914, a combined Austro-Hungarian and German offensive breached the Serbian front from the north and west in October 1915, while Bulgaria attacked from the southeast. By January 1916, all of Serbia had been occupied by the Central Powers.

Austro-Hungarian occupation of Serbia
Austro-Hungarian troops in the streets of Belgrade during the occupation
Date1 January 1916 – 1 November 1918
(2 years, 10 months, 4 weeks and 1 day)
LocationTerritory of the Kingdom of Serbia west of the Morava Valley

Serbia was divided into two separate occupation zones, one Bulgarian and the other Austro-Hungarian, both governed under a military administration. Germany declined to directly annex any Serbian territory and instead took control of railways, mines, and forestry and agricultural resources in both occupied zones. The Austro-Hungarian occupation zone covered the northern three-quarters of Serbia. It was ruled by the Military General Governorate, an administration set up by the Austro-Hungarian Army with a military governor at its head, seconded by a civil commissioner. The goal of the new administration was to denationalise the Serb population and turn the country into a territory from which to draw food and exploit economic resources.

In addition to a military legal system that banned all political organizations, forbade public assembly, and brought schools under its control, the Austro-Hungarian Army was allowed to impose martial law, practice hostage-taking, burn villages in punitive raids and respond to uprisings with public hangings and summary executions. During the occupation, between 150,000 and 200,000 men, women and children were deported to purpose-built internment and concentration camps in Austria-Hungary, most notably Mauthausen in Austria, Doboj in Bosnia, and Nagymegyer, Arad and Kecskemét in Hungary.

In September 1918, Allied forces, spearheaded by the Serbian Second Army and the Yugoslav Volunteer Division, broke through the Salonica front, leading to the surrender of Bulgaria on 30 September, followed by the quick liberation of Serbia and the retreat of all remaining Austro-Hungarian troops by the end of October. By 1 November 1918, all of pre-war Serbia had been liberated, bringing the occupation to an end.

Background

On 28 June 1914, the heir to the Habsburg throne, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, was assassinated by Bosnian Serb student Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo. The preservation of Austria-Hungary's prestige necessitated a punishing attack on Serbia, which the Austro-Hungarian leadership deemed responsible for the murder. The Austro-Hungarian military leadership was determined to quash Serbia's independence, which it viewed as an unacceptable threat to the future of the empire given its sizeable South Slavic population.[1]

On 28 July 1914, exactly one month after Franz Ferdinand's assassination, Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. That evening, Austro-Hungarian artillery shelled the Serbian capital of Belgrade from the border town of Semlin (modern-day Zemun), effectively starting World War I. Command of the Austro-Hungarian invasion force was delegated to Feldzeugmeister Oskar Potiorek, the Governor-General of Bosnia and Herzegovina, who had been responsible for the security of Franz Ferdinand and his wife Duchess Sophie of Hohenberg in Sarajevo.[2] On the morning of 12 August 1914, the Austro-Hungarian Fifth Army crossed the Drina River, effectively starting the first invasion of Serbia.[3]

Punitive expedition and first occupation

 
Šabac, pictured in August 1914, was the first target of the Austro-Hungarian punitive expedition and the site of many atrocities committed against the local population

During the first invasion of Serbia, which the Austro-Hungarian leadership euphemistically dubbed a punitive expedition (German: Strafexpedition),[4] Austro-Hungarian forces occupied parts of Serbia for thirteen days. Their war aims were not only to eliminate Serbia as a threat but also to punish her for fuelling South Slav irredentism in the Monarchy. The occupation turned into a war of annihilation, accompanied by massacres of civilians and the taking of hostages.[5] Austro-Hungarian troops committed a number of war crimes against the Serbian population, especially in the area of Mačva, where according to historian Geoffrey Wawro the Austro-Hungarian army savaged the civilian population in a wave of atrocities.[6] During the short occupation between 3,500 and 4,000 Serb civilians were killed in executions and acts of random violence by marauding troops.[7]

Mass killings took place in numerous towns in northern Serbia. On 17 August 1914, in the Serbian town of Šabac, 120 residents—mostly women, children and old men, who had previously been locked in a church—were shot and buried in the churchyard by Austro-Hungarian troops on the orders of Feldmarschall-Leutnant Kasimir von Lütgendorf.[8] The remaining residents were beaten to death, hanged, stabbed, mutilated or burned alive.[9] A pit was later discovered in the village of Lešnica containing 109 dead peasants who were "bound together with a rope and encircled by wire"; they had been shot and immediately buried, even with some still alive.[10] Wawro writes that in Krupanj, men of the 42nd Home Guard Infantry Division, the exclusively Croat formation known as the Devil's Division,[a] bashed a group of old men and boys to the ground using rifle buttstrokes and then hanged any who were still breathing.[6]

 
A picture postcard showing Serbs being executed by hanging in Kruševac as Austrian soldiers pose.

These types of attacks were planned at the highest level, the ground for the escalation of violence was ideologically prepared by the commanders' verbal radicalism,[8] on August 13 Potiorek ordered reprisal hangings, the taking of hostages and arson by all units.[6] Often bodies were left hanging on the gallows, trees or street lamps for days as a deterrent and as evidence of the Austro-Hungarian military's determination to deal with Serbian suspects.[12] Many executions were photographed by Austro-Hungarian soldiers and officers; some of the images were reproduced as postcards and sold through the Austro-Hungarian army's official sales outlets.[8][12] The Swiss criminologist and physician Archibald Reiss reported on the atrocities committed by the Austro-Hungarian army in a report that was presented at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919,[13] Reiss recorded that the number of civilians killed in the invaded Serbian territory amounted to between 3,000 and 4,000, including a large number of women and children, in the region around Šabac he counted 1,658 burned buildings. According to historian James Lyon, "the Habsburg forces engaged in an orgy of looting, rape, murder, mass extermination, and other atrocities".[14] Reiss likened the Austro-Hungarian atrocities to the Rape of Belgium.[15]

On 24 August, after delivering a major defeat to Austria-Hungary's invading "Balkan Armed Forces" (German: Balkanstreitkräfte) at the Battle of Cer,[11] the Royal Serbian Army liberated Šabac and reached the frontier banks of the Sava River, thereby bringing the first Austro-Hungarian invasion of Serbia to an end, and securing the first Allied victory of World War I.[16]

Repulsed invasions and Serbian victory

On 8 September 1914 the Austro-Hungarians launched a second invasion, a twin-pronged night attack across the Drina to secure a firm bridgehead. This time engaging all their forces the well-equipped Habsburg forces outnumbered the Serbs who were short of munitions two to one.[17] Facing fierce resistance, the Fifth Army was pushed back into Bosnia while the Sixth Army's offensive was stopped by a strong Serbian counterattack. On 23 October, the flagship of the Austro-Hungarian Danube Flotilla, the SMS Temes, which had shelled Belgrade on the first day of the war, was sunk by a mine on the Sava.[18] Although it suffered nearly 30,000 casualties and the invasion was temporarily halted, the Austro-Hungarian army retained a foothold in Serbia.[19] Convinced that Serbia was near defeat, Potiorek regrouped and launched a third offensive on 5 November 1914. Potiorek exploited the Austro-Hungarians' superiority in artillery, including large calibre mortar, to capture Valjevo on 15 November and with support from a monitor group of the Danube Flotilla as well as aerial reconnaissance,[20] Belgrade on 30 November, forcing the Royal Serbian Army to retreat.[19]

 
Serbian troops march through the Austro-Hungarian border town of Semlin (modern-day Zemun) in December 1914

The conquered territory was divided into five county commands (German: Etappenbezirkskommando). The Austro-Hungarian Feldmarschall of Croatian ethnicity Stjepan Sarkotić, commander during the first invasion of the 42nd Home Guard Infantry Division,[11] was appointed governor-general of Serbia by Emperor Franz Joseph on 24 November 1914.[6] Under Sarkotić's administration, multiple concentration camps were established in which tens of thousands of Serbs were interned,[7] in the town of Šabac alone, between 1,500 and 2,000 civilians were deported to internment camps in Hungary.[21] According to the historian Bastian Matteo Scianna, the Austro-Hungarian atrocities had a planned exterminatory character.[22]

In early December, the Royal Serbian Army launched a sustained counterattack, decisively defeating the Austro-Hungarians at the Battle of Kolubara and recapturing Belgrade a day after General Sarkotic's new military government had been established.[6] By 15 December, the Royal Serbian Army had captured Zemun, having crossed the border in pursuit of the Austro-Hungarians,[23] Defeat at the hands of Serbia, a small Balkan peasant kingdom, wounded the pride of Austria-Hungary's military and civilian leadership.[24] One Austrian officer was reported as saying that Potiorek would be shot if he appeared among his own troops. [25] On 22 December, Potiorek was relieved of his command and replaced by Archduke Eugen of Austria.[26] Although Austria-Hungary had failed to defeat Serbia, the Royal Serbian Army had exhausted its military capability, losing 100,000 men in battle, and was forced to deal with a typhoid epidemic that further decimated the army and civilian population.[27]

German officials urged their Austro-Hungarian counterparts to launch yet another offensive against Serbia, despite the fact that the Austro-Hungarians were engaged in a costly second front with Russia to the east.[28] The Austro-Hungarian leadership would not consider invading Serbia again for almost a year, when Bulgarian participation in such an invasion was guaranteed.[29]

Conquest of Serbia

On 6 September 1915, Germany and Bulgaria entered into a secret military alliance. German officials promised Bulgaria all of Serbian Macedonia, parts of northeastern Serbia, as well as a new loan of 200,000,000 gold francs[30] in return for Bulgaria's participation in an upcoming invasion of Serbia. The agreement was signed in the German town of Plessa.[31]

 
Generalfeldmarschall August von Mackensen visiting an Austro-Hungarian unit during the Serbian Campaign of 1915

On 5 October 1915, Austria-Hungary and Germany launched a joint invasion of Serbia. The offensive marked Austria-Hungary's fourth attempt to conquer Serbia, this time led by German General August von Mackensen. On that day, artillery bombardment began, a few days later three German and three Austro-Hungarian Army corps crossed the Sava, attacking from the north as part of Army Group Mackensen.[32] On 14 October, with the bulk of the Serbian forces opposing combined invaders up north, two Bulgarian armies invaded southern Serbia from the east, advancing towards Niš and Skoplje.[33] The Bulgarian offensive cut off the Royal Serbian Army's lines of communication to the south as well as a retreat route towards French General Maurice Sarrail's relief force, which had advanced northwards up the Vardar River valley from the Allies' new base in Salonica.[34] Despite the treaty of mutual assistance with Serbia against a Bulgarian attack, King Constantine of Greece refused to let the Greek army enter the war to aid the Serbs or let the Allies use the Greek railroads devoted to supporting their mobilization.[35]

The Central Powers enjoyed massive superiority in numbers and equipment, especially in artillery, along the nearly 1,000-kilometre (620 mi) front. Serbia and Montenegro could hardly muster half the number of soldiers as the Central Powers.[36] Within six weeks, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria and Germany had succeeded in conquering Serbia.[37]

While the strategic goals set before the offensive had been achieved, the Central Powers were deprived of a decisive victory by the Royal Serbian Army's winter retreat over the mountains of Albania and Montenegro towards the Adriatic coast. Ultimately, around 140,000 Serbian soldiers and hundreds of thousands of civilians were evacuated to the Greek island of Corfu, among them the entire Serbian government, as well as the Serbian royal family.[38] The Royal Serbian Army retrenched itself in Greece, where it was reorganised and repurposed to combating Bulgarian and German troops on the Salonica front. Towards the end of 1915, Serbia was divided between Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria, with both countries establishing military administrations in the territories they had occupied.[39]

Administration and governance

Shortly after the retreat of the Royal Serbian Army, the country was divided into three zones. The Austro-Hungarian occupational zone stretched from the region west of the Morava Valley to the Macedonian frontier, and included Belgrade. Bulgaria gained the whole of Serbian Macedonia, as well as the areas east of the Morava, and Southern Serbia between Kosovo and the Danube River. A German control zone was established in the area east of the Velika Morava, the Južna Morava in Kosovo and the Vardar Valley. The Germans took control of all railways, mines, forestry, and agricultural resources in Serbia.[40]

 
Occupied Serbia (Austro-Hungarian occupation zone in dark grey)

On 1 January 1916, the Austro-Hungarian High Command (German: Armeeoberkommando; AOK) ordered the formation of the Military General Governorate of Serbia (German: Militärgeneralgouvernement in Serbien; MGG/S), with Belgrade as its administrative centre. The Austro-Hungarian occupation zone was divided into thirteen approximately equal districts (German: Kreise), which were then divided into sixty-four boroughs (German: Brezirke), with the city of Belgrade as its own district.[41] The occupational administration was subordinate to the AOK under General Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, and later under Generaloberst Arthur Arz von Straußenburg. The Military Governorate was headed by a General Governor with the rank of a corps commander.[42]

The first governor-general, Johann Graf Salis-Seewis, an ethnic Croat with experience fighting insurgents in Macedonia, had served as the commander of the 42nd Devil's Division after Sarkotić.[11] Salis-Seewis was appointed to the position in late 1915 by Emperor Franz Joseph, officially taking office on 1 January 1916.[41] The historian and Balkan specialist Lajos Thallóczy was appointed as the Military General Governorate's civilian commissioner, as well as Salis-Seewis's deputy. Thallóczy arrived in Belgrade on 17 January 1916.[43]

With the Austrians in charge of the military, the civilian administration was mostly made up of Hungarians and Croats. Four administrative departments were set up: military, economic, judicial, and political, with the latter, which had its own intelligence and police forces, under former Devil's Division officer and future Ustaše[b] leader Major Slavko Kvaternik.[45] Military intelligence (German: Nachrichtenabteilung) for the occupation zone was entrusted to Croat Lujo Šafranek-Kavić,[46] as the Austro-Hungarian army relied considerably on South Slav officers and Bosnian Muslims knowledge of the language for intelligence purposes.[47]

In December 1916, Thallóczy was killed in a train crash while returning from Vienna to Belgrade.[48] In January 1917, Teodor Kušević, a high-ranking functionary from Bosnia and Herzegovina, was appointed to replace him as the civilian commissioner. The function was given more prominence with new areas of responsibility including trade, police, religion, education, justice and finance.[41]

System of occupation

Rule of law

 
A poster dated 18 September 1916 announcing the implementation of martial law in occupied Serbia. The sentence for possession of a weapon is death by hanging.

The first measure of the occupiers was to establish a new legal system to secure order, prevent guerrilla resistance and exploit the country's resources. MGG/S control over the population was accomplished in accordance with the "Directives for the Political Administration in the Areas of the General Military Governorate in Serbia" (German: Direktiven für die politische Verwaltung im Bereiche des Militärgeneralgouvernements in Serbien) and with the "General Principles for the Imperial and Royal Military Administration in the Occupied Territories of Serbia" (German: Allgemeine Grundzüge für die K.u.K Militärverwaltung in den beset-zen Gebieten Serbiens). The MGG/S intended to ignore Hungarian objections and integrate Serbia as a part of the empire, but as an area that would remain under direct military rule for decades after the end of the war and where political participation would be prohibited to prevent the emergence of a new Serbian state.[49]

Occupation forces

The MGG was safeguarded by a permanent Austro-Hungarian garrison consisting, in August 1916, of 35 battalions, a Landsturm regiment, six companies of patrol troops, 12 units of railway guards, four-and-a-half squadrons, five artillery batteries and two anti-aircraft batteries, totaling around 70,000 men, of which 50,000 were reserved for military operations.[50] Within the towns and villages of the twelve districts, 5,000 gendarmes were posted in groups of 20 to 30.[50] If needed, patrol companies also served as mobile combat reserves.[50]

 
An Austro-Hungarian patrol company in the streets of Ruma.

To help police the civilian population and to track down partisans, the Austro-Hungarian leadership decided to recruit amongst ethnic minority groups positively disposed towards the Dual Monarchy.[51] With Thallóczy's encouragement, the Austro-Hungarian authorities permitted Kosovo Albanians to volunteer for service in the Austro-Hungarian Armed Forces.[52] Prominent Albanians in towns such as Novi Pazar and Kosovska Mitrovica declared their support and offered to recruit volunteers for the occupying authorities. According to the notes of Colonel Hugo Kerchnawe, the Muslims in the Sandžak and the Albanians in Kosovo "behaved very loyally and offered their support" to the empire,[53] Kerchnawe added in his report that "our interests ran parallel with the Muslims' interests."[54]

A special commission to organise recruitment was set up by Thallóczy, assisted by former Ottoman officers and Bosnian militia leaders. Over 8,000 volunteers were recruited this way,[55][56] despite the fact that the recruitment drive was a violation of the Hague Convention treaties that Austria-Hungary had signed,[57] which forbade the use of occupied populations towards a country's war efforts.[58] In March 1917, a home battalion was formed, supported by Bosnian gendarmes and led by former Ottoman officers.[51]

In the final phase of the Serbian Campaign, the Austro-Hungarian military had relied on paramilitaries consisting of Albanian clansmen from Kosovo and northern Albania as irregular troops,[59] organised early in the occupied territories Albanian pursuit fighting units were set up to assist Austro-Hungarians patrols track down Serbian guerrillas.[60] These counter-insurgency bands were based on their Bosnian counterparts, the Streifkorps, paramilitary groups made up of Muslim volunteers with experience fighting Serb guerrillas and a reputation for heavy-handed tactics.[61][c] District pursuit units were established in each district of the Austro-Hungarian occupied zone, each consisted of 40 men led by one officer.[60] The Bulgarian occupation authorities also used Albanian gendarmes and irregular troops within their occupation zones.[63]

Conflicts between the Central Powers

Annexation

The separation of power in Serbia quickly led to clashes between the civilian and military authorities, as well as between Austrian and Hungarian occupation officials. The Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs' envoy in Serbia, Lajos Széchényi, argued that Salis-Seewis' policies would lead to Serbia's annexation to the Dual Monarchy, which Thallóczy, following Hungarian prime minister István Tisza's directives, strongly opposed.[43]

In mid-February 1916, Thallóczy complained to Tisza about the number of Slavs in positions of authority, writing, "the governor is Croat, the chief of the general staff is Czech, the deputy governor is from the former military border and the new General Staff Officer Slavko Kvaternik is the son in law of Croatian independentist Josip Frank."[64]

 
Prime Minister of Hungary, Count István Tisza was alarmed to discover that the Austro-Hungarian army was pursuing its own political agenda in occupied Serbia.

General Conrad saw the military administration of Serbia as preliminary to its annexation, along with Montenegro and Albania, to a future South Slavic union under Croatian leadership.[65] Conrad worried that by not annexing Serbia the monarchy would lose its Great Power status. Austria-Hungary's Joint Foreign Minister, Stephan Burián von Rajecz, supported the annexation of Serbia, but only if it would be allotted to Hungary.[65]

Tisza refused to consider the annexation of Serbia as it would lead to a substantial increase in Austria-Hungary's Slavic population, and significantly reduce the proportion of Hungarians within the Dual Monarchy. He demanded instead that northern Serbia be colonized by Hungarian and German farmers.[65] After touring the three northwestern districts of Serbia together with Salis-Seewis and the visiting General Conrad, Tisza came to regard the Austro-Hungarian military's efforts in the occupied territory as a prelude to annexation.[48]

Tisza submitted a complaint to Burián asking for a thorough reorganisation of the Military Governorate, the removal of Salis-Seewis, whose administration he described as "Serbophile and economically incompetent",[66] and requesting the condemnation of those demanding that Serbia be annexed. Burián took the complaint directly to Emperor Franz Joseph. On 6 July 1916, the emperor decreed that Salis-Seewis and his chief of staff, Colonel Gelinek, were to be replaced by his former corps commander, General Adolf Freiherr von Rhemen and Colonel Hugo Kerchnawe, effective 26 July 1916. Rhemen remained in this office until the end of the war.[67]

Austro-Bulgarian confrontation

Tensions between Bulgaria and the Dual Monarchy started after Bulgaria extended its zone to western Kosovo, on the Austro-Hungarian side of the treaty border, going as far as Elbasan in Albania, a region that Austria-Hungary considered an occupied friendly state and of "outstanding importance" to the Dual Monarchy. Kaiser Wilhelm himself repeatedly told Bulgarian king Ferdinand that Germany supported "the independence of Albania under Austrian protection".[68] Burián also reminded Ferdinand that at the "west of the treaty border began the Austro-Hungarian sphere of interest."[69]

According to the terms of the secret alliance between Bulgaria and Germany, the greater part of Kosovo, including the areas of Priština, Prizren, Gnjilane, Uroševac, and Orahovac, were to fall under Bulgarian rule as part of the Military Region of Macedonia.[70] Metohija, the southwestern area of Kosovo, was to be incorporated as part of the Austro-Hungarian zone of Montenegro, with the rest of Kosovo, including Kosovska Mitrovica, Vučitrn, and Đakovica, established as part of the Austro-Hungarian Military Governorate of Serbia.[71]

The Bulgarians maintained that they had the right to install a civilian administration on any territory they conquered, including outside their treaty border. Conrad, suspecting Bulgaria of harbouring ambitions to annex the whole region, sent troops to expel the Bulgarian civilian administrators. The arrival of Austro-Hungarian troops in areas already garrisoned by Bulgarian forces resulted in a military confrontation. On 27 February the Bulgarian military commander Racho Petrov issued an ultimatum to the Austrians to immediately evacuate Kačanik, on the frontier with Macedonia, resulting in a military standoff.[72]

Conrad warned the Bulgarian High Command that unless local Bulgarian commanders abstained from interfering with the Austro-Hungarian administration, a conflict with his troops would be inevitable.[73] On 15 March, the Austro-Hungarians issued an order to secure Novi Pazar, and prepared to add Kosovska Mitrovica to their governorate.[74] The German chief of staff, General Erich von Falkenhayn, ordered Mackensen to mediate between the two parties. Mackensen visited Sofia in person to meet Ferdinand and Prime Minister Vasil Radoslavov. The proposed German compromise was accepted and an agreement on a demarcation line was signed between the Austro-Hungarian and Bulgarian high commands on 1 April 1916.[74]

The Bulgarians withdrew eastwards, retaining the district containing Prizren and Priština, but leaving Albania and western Kosovo to the Austro-Hungarians. The agreement gave Bulgaria administrative rights over areas of Serbia that were not in the original agreement. In return, Bulgaria agreed to let Germany have access to the valleys east of the Velika Morava, the Južna Morava in Kosovo, as well as the Vardar Valley, effectively turning Macedonia and Kosovo into zones dedicated to German economic exploitation.[74][72]

Life under the occupation

Denationalisation and depoliticisation

 
Serbian schoolchildren in Loznica learning Latin characters after the Cyrillic script was banned by the Austro-Hungarian authorities. A portrait of Emperor Franz Joseph can be seen on the wall.

The occupational authorities considered Serbian national consciousness an existential threat to Austria-Hungary. Thus, the policies of the Military Governorate were aimed at depoliticising and denationalising the Serbian population.[75] Public gatherings and political parties were banned, the Cyrillic script was termed "dangerous to the state" (German: staatsgefährlich) and banned from schools and public spaces, streets named after people perceived as being significant to Serbian national identity were renamed, the wearing of traditional Serbian clothing was proscribed and the Gregorian calendar replaced the Julian. Additionally, all Serbian students had to be educated in the German language, according to Austrian academic standards and through teachers imported from Austria.[76]

Significant cultural institutions such as the Royal Serbian Academy, the National Museum and the National Library were closed down and looted of their historical artifacts and art collections. The University of Belgrade, as well as various publishing houses and bookshops, were closed down. Schoolbooks and books in French, English, Russian and Italian were banned. Political expression was severely limited with the prohibition of newspaper publication except for the official MGG/S propaganda newspaper Belgrader Nachrichten (published in Serbian as Beogradske novine), which featured letters and photographs purporting to show how well those who stayed behind in occupied Serbia were living. Such propaganda was intended to convince Serbian soldiers who came across the Belgrader Nachrichten to desert.[77][d]

Repression

 
Public execution of alleged Serbian guerrillas by Austro-Hungarian troops, c. 1916

In 1916, both Austria-Hungary and Bulgaria announced that Serbia had ceased to exist as a political entity, and that its inhabitants could therefore not invoke the international rules of war dictating the treatment of civilians as defined by the Geneva Conventions and the Hague Conventions.[78]

The occupational authorities carried out numerous summary executions with little or no legal process. Upon being found guilty by a military court, victims were usually shot or hanged. Martial law, such as Kriegsnotwehrrecht (the martial law of self-defense), was employed to quash dissent and severe preventive measures were undertaken against civilians.[79]

The occupational authorities were gripped by the fear of levée en masse and of civilians taking up arms. The Austro-Hungarian Army consequently employed the seizure of hostages from the general population and the burning of villages in punitive raids as a means of quelling resistance. These measures, as well as summary executions, were all permitted under section 61 of the Dienstreglement[e] (k.u.k army regulations).[79] Disarming the populace was done by holding village elders responsible for handing over a certain quota of weapons that were judged to be held before the war began.[81] The sentence for possession of a weapon was death by hanging. Military courts also tried civilians for newly defined offenses, including the crime of lèse-majesté.[82]

Civilians suspected of engaging in resistance activities were subjected to the harshest measures, including hanging and shooting. The house of an offender's family would also be destroyed.[83] Victims were usually hanged on the main squares of villages and towns, in full view of the general population. The lifeless bodies were left to hang by the noose for several days so as to clearly show the treatment reserved for "spies" and "traitors".[84]

Deportation and forced labour

The MGG/S, as well as the High Command in Vienna, considered sending civilian prisoners to internment camps as a preventive measure to discourage insurgent activities.[85] During the occupation, between 150,000 and 200,000 men, women and children were deported to various camps in Austria-Hungary,[86] it has been estimated they represented slightly more than 10 per cent of the Serb population.[87]

Since Serbia did not have its own Red Cross, Serbian prisoners did not have access to the aid the Red Cross provided to other Allied prisoners.[38] Moreover, Serbian prisoners were not considered "enemy aliens" but "internal enemies" by Austria-Hungary's Ministry of War. By defining them as "terrorists" or "insurgents", the Austro-Hungarian authorities were not obliged to disclose the number of captives they held, and which camps they were being held in, to Red Cross societies.[88]

 
Serbian prisoners of war in Austro-Hungarian captivity

Four significant waves of deportations occurred in occupied Serbia. The first occurred at the very start of the occupation, when Salis-Seewis rounded up 70,000 "dissidents", mostly able-bodied men, ex-soldiers, politically active individuals, as well as members of the political and cultural elite who had remained in the country after the retreat to Corfu. University professors, teachers, and priests, especially those who had participated in political, cultural or even athletic associations, were arrested and sent to internment camps.[89]

The second and largest deportations took place after Romania entered the war on the side of the Allies on 27 August 1916. From mid-August to late October 1916, an order to arrest all males between the ages of 17 and 50 was issued. These men were targeted because they were of fighting age. More than 16,500 males were sent to internment camps during this round of deportations.[90] During the Toplica uprising, in the Spring of 1916 when armed resistance seemed to be spreading, more deportations took place. The fourth and final round of deportations occurred after the Allied breakthrough on the Salonica front in late 1918.[86] In Bohemia, the camp at Braunau (modern-day Broumov, Czech Republic) held about 35,000 prisoners, almost exclusively Serbian, civilian, military prisoners, men, women and children.[87] According to a 1918 press report, an epidemic of dysentery almost wiped out all the children in the camp.[91] After the war, a mass grave was found behind the camp containing the remains of 2,674 people (these remains were later moved to the crypt of the Heinrichsgrün camp).[92] The camp at Heinrichsgrün (modern-day Jindřichovice, Czech Republic), held mostly Serbs, both soldiers and civilians, from the Šumadija and Kolubara districts of western Serbia. An average of 40 people died there every day.[92]

 
The Nezsider concentration camp (in modern-day Neusiedl am See, Austria), where about 17,000 internees, mostly from Serbia and Montenegro, were held

In Hungary, the largest internment camps were in the Nezsider district; Nezsider (modern-day Neusiedl am See, Austria) was a concentration camp primarily used to detain civilians from Serbia and Montenegro, and the principal camp for Serbs suspected to be "terrorists" or "agitators".[93] The number of detainees by May 1917 was 9,934, including children as young as nine.[93] Over the course of the war, the Nezsider camp held 17,000 internees, about 4,800 people are known to have perished at the camp.[94]

In addition to those deported to Hungary, some 30,000 Serb civilians were sent to Austrian camps or used as forced labour.[39] In Lower Austria, the camps of Drosendorf and Mittendorf held both Serbian soldiers and civilians.[87] Thousand of Serbs perished during a typhus epidemic at the Mauthausen camp in Upper Austria when about 14,000 were being held; an official Austro-Hungarian army report mentioned 5,600 prisoners of war buried in the camp graveyard in the early months of the war.[95]

According to official figures, between 27 December 1915 and 5 July 1917, 45,791 civilians and prisoners of war from Serbia and Montenegro were held captive at the camp in Doboj, in Bosnia. Around 12,000 are estimated to have perished there.[96] Other camps held both civilians and prisoners of war, including Boldogasszony, Nagymegyer (modern-day Veľký Meder, Slovakia), Arad (modern-day Romania), Cegléd, Kecskemét and Győr.[97]

By May 1917, 39,359 people from Serbia, including women and children, were interned outside the country. These large scale deportations caused concern around Europe quickly becoming an international scandal. The Spanish authorities complained then, in April 1917, the Holy See intervened through the office of the Apostolic Nunciature to Austria against the internment of Serbian women and children between the ages of 10 and 15.[93] By the end of the year, Austria-Hungary's Ministry of War admitted that 526 Serb children were in fact being held at Nezsider, but that it was necessary on the grounds of military security.[93]

According to a Red Cross report dated 1 February 1918, by the end of 1917, there were 206,500 prisoners of war and internees from Serbia in Austro-Hungarian and German camps. According to the historian Alan Kramer, the Serbians in Austro-Hungarian captivity received the worst treatment of all the prisoners, and at least 30,000–40,000 had died of starvation by January 1918.[98]

Economic exploitation and famine

 
A Serbian Relief Fund campaign poster distributed in New York, c. 1918

Tensions between the Austrian and German authorities increased after Burián complained that the German military was employing a ruthless system of requisition, resulting in famine and the pauperisation of the population.[29] Behind the front lines, the Germans "Etappenzone" was an area that Berlin had secured as a zone dedicated to agricultural production to feed its troops on the Salonica front.[99] As the German exploitation of resources in occupied Serbia was handled by the German Oriental Society (German: Deutsch-orientalische Gesellschaft), the exploitation of mines failed to satisfy the Dual Monarchy's need for vital raw materials because Germany took two-thirds of all production from Serbia as reparations for its military aid.[99]

Austro-Hungarian reports on the state of Serbia in 1915 noted famine threatening the occupation zone and a population in a desperate state after nearly four years of constant war. The return of refugees exacerbated the shortage of food. Reports from late 1915 spoke of the necessity of receiving urgent relief to avoid disaster. Starvation loomed after soldiers destroyed or captured much of Serbia's foodstuffs and livestock. Harvest yields and produced goods had to be turned over to authorities while food was rationed.[39]

In this very year (1917) there was a drought that can never be forgotten. A frost and then a drought destroyed everything. Even had there nor been a war, hunger would have invaded us. People ate wild herbs and sawdust made from beechwood . . . . It was then for the first time that we spoke of death.

— Milovan Djilas, Land Without Justice, [100]

In early 1916, Conrad ordered that Serbia's resources be "squeezed dry" regardless of the consequences for the population.[101] As news of the famine in Serbia spread around the world, campaigns were organised asking for Relief for Agonized Serbia.[91] American, Swiss and Swedish humanitarian organisations offered assistance. According to Red Cross reports, starvation killed more than 8,000 Serbians during the first winter under Austro-Hungarian occupation. By mid-May 1917, figures from the Habsburg High Command reported that 170,000 cattle, 190,000 sheep, and 50,000 pigs had been exported to Austria-Hungary.[101]

Resistance

Immediately after the withdrawal of the Royal Serbian Army and the start of the Austro-Hungarian occupation, armed individuals and small groups of insurgents, called Chetniks, made up of former soldiers who had remained in the country, began to wage a guerrilla campaign against the occupiers.[102] The Chetniks had a long tradition as guerrillas after centuries of Ottoman rule. Their actions were often considered heroic by the population and depicted in epic folk poetry, giving them strong local support.[103]

 
The burned-out remains of a train in Šabac

The first organised guerrilla group was formed in the Novi Pazar and Kosovska Mitrovica districts in early 1916, and was led by former army captain Kosta Vojinović. In March 1916, General Conrad ordered that all resistance be quashed with ruthless severity. Komitadjis, as the Austro-Hungarian army called the insurgents, were deemed outside international law by the MGG and were to be "completely wiped out".[104][f] Jovan Avakumović, a former Prime Minister of Serbia, suggested to Salis-Seewis that he should issue a joint proclamation for the restoration of peace and order. Avakumović's proposal was turned down and Salis-Seewis ordered his arrest and internment.[105]

The Military Governorate responded to the multiplication of guerrilla groups by employing small Ottoman and Albanian counter-guerrilla units based on the Streifkorps from Bosnia instead of regular patrol troops.[60] In late September 1916, the Serbian High Command flew in the experienced Chetnik guerrilla leader Kosta Pećanac from Allied Headquarters in Salonica. He was parachuted in by air to organize resistance in Serbia together with Vojinović.[39]

In early February 1917, a rebellion led by Vojinović broke out in the vicinity of Kuršumlija and Prokuplje. The insurgents, supported by volunteers and Chetniks from Montenegro, liberated Kuršumlija, Prokuplje, Pusta Reka, Lebane and Ribarska. The uprising was planned to coincide with an Allied offensive.[106] Later that month, a large scale uprising broke out in the Toplica District in Bulgarian-occupied Serbia. A force of 4,000 armed men and women managed to liberate a significant area in the Morava Valley before the uprising was put down.[39] During the summer of 1917, the Austro-Hungarian Army was forced to bring in troops from the Isonzo Front to reinforce the Bulgarian Army and Bulgarian paramilitary groups.[107] Without the expected Allied support, the uprising collapsed. In late 1917, Vojinović was killed; Pećanac managed to escape and went into hiding. According to contemporary Austro-Hungarian Army reports, 20,000 Serbs were killed in the course of the rebellion, while 2,600 managed to escape into the forests.[108] Despite the harsh repression, guerrilla groups managed to survive and were able to support Allied offensive operations in the summer of 1918.[109] After the war, Chief of Staff Paul Kirch described the withdrawal of the German 11th Army:

Serb guerrilla groups emerged throughout the country and attacked our units when they were resting or eating. They also attacked our rearguard and our supply trains on the march and sabotaged the railways. We have sent special Jäger units against them, but it would have been easier to find a needle in a haystack than to find those guerrilla groups in the mountain terrain they are familiar with.[110]

Liberation of Serbia

In September 1918, following the Vardar Offensive and the success of Allied forces at the Battle of Dobro Pole, Bulgaria capitulated and signed the Armistice of Salonica. On 3 October, a German military governorate was created in Niš to replace the departing Bulgarian administration, while new Austro-Hungarian and German troops were redeployed to try to block the northward advance of Serb and French troops.[111]

Guerilla warfare broke out spontaneously across all occupied regions in support of the Allies offensive.[109] By the third week of October, General Hermann von Kövess, commander of all Austro-Hungarian and German forces in the Balkans, ordered a strategic retreat behind the Danube, Sava and Drina rivers, also ordering that ‘about "two per cent of the male population should be taken as hostages, and kept with the troops on the march".[110]

On 29 October, Governor-General von Rhemen and his staff left occupied Serbia. The following day, Belgrade was liberated by the Royal Serbian Army. By 1 November, all of pre-war Serbia had been liberated, bringing the three-year Central Powers occupation to an end.[112]

Military commanders and governors

 
Personnel list of the Military General Government in Serbia, 1916

Austro-Hungarian commanders

Austro-Hungarian military governors-general

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The 42nd Honvéd Devil's Division (Croatian: Vražija divizija) was the only unit designated as a Home Guard (Croatian: Domobran) division, with the right for officers to use Serbo-Croatian instead of German or Hungarian.[11]
  2. ^ Both Sarkotić and Salis-Seewis joined the ranks of the fascist, Croatian nationalist Ustaše movement in the 1930s.[44]
  3. ^ In August 1914 Streifkorps units (volunteer border militia) had joined the Austro-Hungarian troops invading from Bosnia, they later took part in the looting of the Serbian capital.[62]
  4. ^ Front-line patrols were instructed to approach Serbian posts and deposit propaganda material such as the Belgrader Nachrichten in order to encourage desertion by promising freedom to those longing to return home.[77]
  5. ^ The Dienstreglement, the Habsburg army regulations, dictated that "an enemy or unreliable population is to be placed under the constraint of severe reprisals such as hostage-taking from among communities, Standrecht (summary justice), punishments, and the like."[80]
  6. ^ The Kriegsausstellung war exhibition of 1917, held in Vienna, was intended to characterize Serb civilians and Komitadjis as criminals outside the laws and customs of war. It included a section about guerrilla warfare in Serbia, where visitors could learn about the methods used to track Komitadjis and Chetniks, including a life-size model of one of their hideout.[82]

References

Citations

  1. ^ Lebow 1981, p. 68.
  2. ^ Schindler 2015, p. 118.
  3. ^ Schindler 2015, p. 177.
  4. ^ Merrill 2001, p. 167.
  5. ^ Jeřábek 1991, p. 25.
  6. ^ a b c d e Wawro 2014, p. 195.
  7. ^ a b Kramer 2008, p. 140.
  8. ^ a b c Holzer & Spiegel 2008.
  9. ^ Hastings 2013, p. 226.
  10. ^ Reiss 2019, p. 34.
  11. ^ a b c d Lyon 2015, p. 114.
  12. ^ a b Holzer 2014, p. 12.
  13. ^ Levental & Kordić 1992, p. 70.
  14. ^ Lyon 2015, p. 148.
  15. ^ Reiss 2019, p. 37.
  16. ^ Fried 2014, p. 115.
  17. ^ Lyon 2015, p. 161.
  18. ^ Rauchensteiner, Kay & Güttel-Bellert 2014, p. 274.
  19. ^ a b Tucker & Roberts 2005, p. 366.
  20. ^ Marble 2016, p. 134.
  21. ^ Stojančević 1988, p. 7.
  22. ^ Scianna 2012.
  23. ^ Kiraly et al. 1985, p. 569.
  24. ^ Schindler 2015, p. 270.
  25. ^ Wawro 2014, p. 202.
  26. ^ Herwig 2014, p. 111.
  27. ^ Pavlowitch 2002, p. 122.
  28. ^ Herwig 2014, p. 439.
  29. ^ a b Fried 2014, p. 121.
  30. ^ Luckau 1971, p. 278.
  31. ^ Khristov & Markovski 1985, p. 166.
  32. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 65.
  33. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 62.
  34. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 100.
  35. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 85.
  36. ^ Strachan 2014, p. 96.
  37. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 106.
  38. ^ a b DiNardo 2015, p. 122.
  39. ^ a b c d e Calic & Geyer 2019, p. 166.
  40. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 183.
  41. ^ a b c d Mitrović 2007, p. 203.
  42. ^ Bled 2014.
  43. ^ a b Buttar 2016, p. 43.
  44. ^ Newman 2015, p. 182.
  45. ^ Jarman 1997, p. 261.
  46. ^ Gumz 2014, p. 41.
  47. ^ Newman 2015, p. 121.
  48. ^ a b Höbelt, Otte & Bridge 2010, p. 257.
  49. ^ Fried 2014, p. 203.
  50. ^ a b c Melson 2019, p. 55.
  51. ^ a b Melson 2019, p. 57.
  52. ^ Tatum 2010, p. 4.
  53. ^ Suppan 2019, p. 300.
  54. ^ Kerchnawe et al. 1928, p. 93.
  55. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 234.
  56. ^ Rauchensteiner, Kay & Güttel-Bellert 2014, p. 733.
  57. ^ Reiss 2019, p. 47.
  58. ^ Strupp 1914, p. 111.
  59. ^ Tasic 2020, p. 19.
  60. ^ a b c Melson 2019, p. 56.
  61. ^ Lyon 2015, p. 46.
  62. ^ Đurić 1987, p. 118.
  63. ^ Mitrović 1984, p. 392.
  64. ^ Suppan 2019, p. 299.
  65. ^ a b c Herwig 2014, p. 161.
  66. ^ Rauchensteiner, Kay & Güttel-Bellert 2014, p. 732.
  67. ^ a b Schweizerische Offiziersgesellschaft 1968, p. 386.
  68. ^ Fried 2014, p. 146.
  69. ^ Fried 2014, p. 148.
  70. ^ Glenny 2012, p. 333.
  71. ^ Fried 2014, p. 231.
  72. ^ a b Glenny 2012, p. 335.
  73. ^ Afflerbach 2015, p. 129.
  74. ^ a b c Mitrović 2007, p. 202.
  75. ^ Gumz 2014, p. 21.
  76. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 232.
  77. ^ a b Cornwall 2000, p. 64.
  78. ^ Faculty of History, Cambridge University 2017, p. 56.
  79. ^ a b Bischof, Karlhofer & Williamson 2014, p. 139.
  80. ^ Bischof, Karlhofer & Williamson 2014, p. 136.
  81. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 227.
  82. ^ a b De Schaepdrijver 2016, p. 105.
  83. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 68.
  84. ^ Holzer 2014, p. 241.
  85. ^ Stojančević 1988, p. 34.
  86. ^ a b Luthar 2016, p. 76.
  87. ^ a b c Winter 2014, p. 257.
  88. ^ Stibbe 2019, p. 111.
  89. ^ Herwig 2014, p. 164.
  90. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 228.
  91. ^ a b Conway Publications. 1918, p. 61.
  92. ^ a b Serbian Prisoners of War.
  93. ^ a b c d Stibbe 2019, p. 110.
  94. ^ Nikolic 2013.
  95. ^ Bischof, Karlhofer & Williamson 2014, p. 240.
  96. ^ RTRS 2012.
  97. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 369.
  98. ^ Kramer 2008, p. 67.
  99. ^ a b Herwig 2014, p. 239.
  100. ^ Biskupski & Wandycz 2003, p. 44.
  101. ^ a b Calic & Geyer 2019, p. 157.
  102. ^ Tasic 2020, p. 20.
  103. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 115.
  104. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 247.
  105. ^ Luthar 2016, p. 78.
  106. ^ Laqueur 2017, p. 169.
  107. ^ Melson 2019, p. 60.
  108. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 261.
  109. ^ a b Moal 2008, p. 128.
  110. ^ a b Mitrović 2007, p. 316.
  111. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 314.
  112. ^ Tasic 2020, p. 22.
  113. ^ Rauchensteiner, Kay & Güttel-Bellert 2014, p. 176.
  114. ^ Tucker & Roberts 2005, p. 933.
  115. ^ Dawnay & Headlam 1933, p. 238.
  116. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 47.
  117. ^ Rauchensteiner, Kay & Güttel-Bellert 2014, p. 987.

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External links

  • The second occupation of Serbia at the International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Laws and Customs of War on Land (Hague IV); October 18, 1907 Hague Conventions of 1907

austro, hungarian, occupation, serbia, austro, hungarian, armed, forces, occupied, serbia, from, late, 1915, until, world, austria, hungary, declaration, against, serbia, july, 1914, marked, beginning, after, three, unsuccessful, austro, hungarian, offensives,. The Austro Hungarian Armed Forces occupied Serbia from late 1915 until the end of World War I Austria Hungary s declaration of war against Serbia on 28 July 1914 marked the beginning of the war After three unsuccessful Austro Hungarian offensives between August and December 1914 a combined Austro Hungarian and German offensive breached the Serbian front from the north and west in October 1915 while Bulgaria attacked from the southeast By January 1916 all of Serbia had been occupied by the Central Powers Austro Hungarian occupation of SerbiaAustro Hungarian troops in the streets of Belgrade during the occupationDate1 January 1916 1 November 1918 2 years 10 months 4 weeks and 1 day LocationTerritory of the Kingdom of Serbia west of the Morava ValleySerbia was divided into two separate occupation zones one Bulgarian and the other Austro Hungarian both governed under a military administration Germany declined to directly annex any Serbian territory and instead took control of railways mines and forestry and agricultural resources in both occupied zones The Austro Hungarian occupation zone covered the northern three quarters of Serbia It was ruled by the Military General Governorate an administration set up by the Austro Hungarian Army with a military governor at its head seconded by a civil commissioner The goal of the new administration was to denationalise the Serb population and turn the country into a territory from which to draw food and exploit economic resources In addition to a military legal system that banned all political organizations forbade public assembly and brought schools under its control the Austro Hungarian Army was allowed to impose martial law practice hostage taking burn villages in punitive raids and respond to uprisings with public hangings and summary executions During the occupation between 150 000 and 200 000 men women and children were deported to purpose built internment and concentration camps in Austria Hungary most notably Mauthausen in Austria Doboj in Bosnia and Nagymegyer Arad and Kecskemet in Hungary In September 1918 Allied forces spearheaded by the Serbian Second Army and the Yugoslav Volunteer Division broke through the Salonica front leading to the surrender of Bulgaria on 30 September followed by the quick liberation of Serbia and the retreat of all remaining Austro Hungarian troops by the end of October By 1 November 1918 all of pre war Serbia had been liberated bringing the occupation to an end Contents 1 Background 1 1 Punitive expedition and first occupation 1 1 1 Repulsed invasions and Serbian victory 1 2 Conquest of Serbia 2 Administration and governance 3 System of occupation 3 1 Rule of law 3 2 Occupation forces 4 Conflicts between the Central Powers 4 1 Annexation 4 2 Austro Bulgarian confrontation 5 Life under the occupation 5 1 Denationalisation and depoliticisation 5 2 Repression 5 3 Deportation and forced labour 5 4 Economic exploitation and famine 5 5 Resistance 6 Liberation of Serbia 7 Military commanders and governors 7 1 Austro Hungarian commanders 7 2 Austro Hungarian military governors general 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Bibliography 10 3 Websites 11 External linksBackground EditSee also July Crisis On 28 June 1914 the heir to the Habsburg throne Archduke Franz Ferdinand was assassinated by Bosnian Serb student Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo The preservation of Austria Hungary s prestige necessitated a punishing attack on Serbia which the Austro Hungarian leadership deemed responsible for the murder The Austro Hungarian military leadership was determined to quash Serbia s independence which it viewed as an unacceptable threat to the future of the empire given its sizeable South Slavic population 1 On 28 July 1914 exactly one month after Franz Ferdinand s assassination Austria Hungary declared war on Serbia That evening Austro Hungarian artillery shelled the Serbian capital of Belgrade from the border town of Semlin modern day Zemun effectively starting World War I Command of the Austro Hungarian invasion force was delegated to Feldzeugmeister Oskar Potiorek the Governor General of Bosnia and Herzegovina who had been responsible for the security of Franz Ferdinand and his wife Duchess Sophie of Hohenberg in Sarajevo 2 On the morning of 12 August 1914 the Austro Hungarian Fifth Army crossed the Drina River effectively starting the first invasion of Serbia 3 Punitive expedition and first occupation Edit Main article Serbian campaign 1914 Sabac pictured in August 1914 was the first target of the Austro Hungarian punitive expedition and the site of many atrocities committed against the local population During the first invasion of Serbia which the Austro Hungarian leadership euphemistically dubbed a punitive expedition German Strafexpedition 4 Austro Hungarian forces occupied parts of Serbia for thirteen days Their war aims were not only to eliminate Serbia as a threat but also to punish her for fuelling South Slav irredentism in the Monarchy The occupation turned into a war of annihilation accompanied by massacres of civilians and the taking of hostages 5 Austro Hungarian troops committed a number of war crimes against the Serbian population especially in the area of Macva where according to historian Geoffrey Wawro the Austro Hungarian army savaged the civilian population in a wave of atrocities 6 During the short occupation between 3 500 and 4 000 Serb civilians were killed in executions and acts of random violence by marauding troops 7 Mass killings took place in numerous towns in northern Serbia On 17 August 1914 in the Serbian town of Sabac 120 residents mostly women children and old men who had previously been locked in a church were shot and buried in the churchyard by Austro Hungarian troops on the orders of Feldmarschall Leutnant Kasimir von Lutgendorf 8 The remaining residents were beaten to death hanged stabbed mutilated or burned alive 9 A pit was later discovered in the village of Lesnica containing 109 dead peasants who were bound together with a rope and encircled by wire they had been shot and immediately buried even with some still alive 10 Wawro writes that in Krupanj men of the 42nd Home Guard Infantry Division the exclusively Croat formation known as the Devil s Division a bashed a group of old men and boys to the ground using rifle buttstrokes and then hanged any who were still breathing 6 A picture postcard showing Serbs being executed by hanging in Krusevac as Austrian soldiers pose These types of attacks were planned at the highest level the ground for the escalation of violence was ideologically prepared by the commanders verbal radicalism 8 on August 13 Potiorek ordered reprisal hangings the taking of hostages and arson by all units 6 Often bodies were left hanging on the gallows trees or street lamps for days as a deterrent and as evidence of the Austro Hungarian military s determination to deal with Serbian suspects 12 Many executions were photographed by Austro Hungarian soldiers and officers some of the images were reproduced as postcards and sold through the Austro Hungarian army s official sales outlets 8 12 The Swiss criminologist and physician Archibald Reiss reported on the atrocities committed by the Austro Hungarian army in a report that was presented at the Paris Peace Conference of 1919 13 Reiss recorded that the number of civilians killed in the invaded Serbian territory amounted to between 3 000 and 4 000 including a large number of women and children in the region around Sabac he counted 1 658 burned buildings According to historian James Lyon the Habsburg forces engaged in an orgy of looting rape murder mass extermination and other atrocities 14 Reiss likened the Austro Hungarian atrocities to the Rape of Belgium 15 On 24 August after delivering a major defeat to Austria Hungary s invading Balkan Armed Forces German Balkanstreitkrafte at the Battle of Cer 11 the Royal Serbian Army liberated Sabac and reached the frontier banks of the Sava River thereby bringing the first Austro Hungarian invasion of Serbia to an end and securing the first Allied victory of World War I 16 Repulsed invasions and Serbian victory Edit On 8 September 1914 the Austro Hungarians launched a second invasion a twin pronged night attack across the Drina to secure a firm bridgehead This time engaging all their forces the well equipped Habsburg forces outnumbered the Serbs who were short of munitions two to one 17 Facing fierce resistance the Fifth Army was pushed back into Bosnia while the Sixth Army s offensive was stopped by a strong Serbian counterattack On 23 October the flagship of the Austro Hungarian Danube Flotilla the SMS Temes which had shelled Belgrade on the first day of the war was sunk by a mine on the Sava 18 Although it suffered nearly 30 000 casualties and the invasion was temporarily halted the Austro Hungarian army retained a foothold in Serbia 19 Convinced that Serbia was near defeat Potiorek regrouped and launched a third offensive on 5 November 1914 Potiorek exploited the Austro Hungarians superiority in artillery including large calibre mortar to capture Valjevo on 15 November and with support from a monitor group of the Danube Flotilla as well as aerial reconnaissance 20 Belgrade on 30 November forcing the Royal Serbian Army to retreat 19 Serbian troops march through the Austro Hungarian border town of Semlin modern day Zemun in December 1914 The conquered territory was divided into five county commands German Etappenbezirkskommando The Austro Hungarian Feldmarschall of Croatian ethnicity Stjepan Sarkotic commander during the first invasion of the 42nd Home Guard Infantry Division 11 was appointed governor general of Serbia by Emperor Franz Joseph on 24 November 1914 6 Under Sarkotic s administration multiple concentration camps were established in which tens of thousands of Serbs were interned 7 in the town of Sabac alone between 1 500 and 2 000 civilians were deported to internment camps in Hungary 21 According to the historian Bastian Matteo Scianna the Austro Hungarian atrocities had a planned exterminatory character 22 In early December the Royal Serbian Army launched a sustained counterattack decisively defeating the Austro Hungarians at the Battle of Kolubara and recapturing Belgrade a day after General Sarkotic s new military government had been established 6 By 15 December the Royal Serbian Army had captured Zemun having crossed the border in pursuit of the Austro Hungarians 23 Defeat at the hands of Serbia a small Balkan peasant kingdom wounded the pride of Austria Hungary s military and civilian leadership 24 One Austrian officer was reported as saying that Potiorek would be shot if he appeared among his own troops 25 On 22 December Potiorek was relieved of his command and replaced by Archduke Eugen of Austria 26 Although Austria Hungary had failed to defeat Serbia the Royal Serbian Army had exhausted its military capability losing 100 000 men in battle and was forced to deal with a typhoid epidemic that further decimated the army and civilian population 27 German officials urged their Austro Hungarian counterparts to launch yet another offensive against Serbia despite the fact that the Austro Hungarians were engaged in a costly second front with Russia to the east 28 The Austro Hungarian leadership would not consider invading Serbia again for almost a year when Bulgarian participation in such an invasion was guaranteed 29 Conquest of Serbia Edit Main article Serbian campaign 1915 On 6 September 1915 Germany and Bulgaria entered into a secret military alliance German officials promised Bulgaria all of Serbian Macedonia parts of northeastern Serbia as well as a new loan of 200 000 000 gold francs 30 in return for Bulgaria s participation in an upcoming invasion of Serbia The agreement was signed in the German town of Plessa 31 Generalfeldmarschall August von Mackensen visiting an Austro Hungarian unit during the Serbian Campaign of 1915 On 5 October 1915 Austria Hungary and Germany launched a joint invasion of Serbia The offensive marked Austria Hungary s fourth attempt to conquer Serbia this time led by German General August von Mackensen On that day artillery bombardment began a few days later three German and three Austro Hungarian Army corps crossed the Sava attacking from the north as part of Army Group Mackensen 32 On 14 October with the bulk of the Serbian forces opposing combined invaders up north two Bulgarian armies invaded southern Serbia from the east advancing towards Nis and Skoplje 33 The Bulgarian offensive cut off the Royal Serbian Army s lines of communication to the south as well as a retreat route towards French General Maurice Sarrail s relief force which had advanced northwards up the Vardar River valley from the Allies new base in Salonica 34 Despite the treaty of mutual assistance with Serbia against a Bulgarian attack King Constantine of Greece refused to let the Greek army enter the war to aid the Serbs or let the Allies use the Greek railroads devoted to supporting their mobilization 35 The Central Powers enjoyed massive superiority in numbers and equipment especially in artillery along the nearly 1 000 kilometre 620 mi front Serbia and Montenegro could hardly muster half the number of soldiers as the Central Powers 36 Within six weeks Austria Hungary Bulgaria and Germany had succeeded in conquering Serbia 37 While the strategic goals set before the offensive had been achieved the Central Powers were deprived of a decisive victory by the Royal Serbian Army s winter retreat over the mountains of Albania and Montenegro towards the Adriatic coast Ultimately around 140 000 Serbian soldiers and hundreds of thousands of civilians were evacuated to the Greek island of Corfu among them the entire Serbian government as well as the Serbian royal family 38 The Royal Serbian Army retrenched itself in Greece where it was reorganised and repurposed to combating Bulgarian and German troops on the Salonica front Towards the end of 1915 Serbia was divided between Austria Hungary and Bulgaria with both countries establishing military administrations in the territories they had occupied 39 Administration and governance EditFurther information Military General Governorate of Serbia Shortly after the retreat of the Royal Serbian Army the country was divided into three zones The Austro Hungarian occupational zone stretched from the region west of the Morava Valley to the Macedonian frontier and included Belgrade Bulgaria gained the whole of Serbian Macedonia as well as the areas east of the Morava and Southern Serbia between Kosovo and the Danube River A German control zone was established in the area east of the Velika Morava the Juzna Morava in Kosovo and the Vardar Valley The Germans took control of all railways mines forestry and agricultural resources in Serbia 40 Occupied Serbia Austro Hungarian occupation zone in dark grey On 1 January 1916 the Austro Hungarian High Command German Armeeoberkommando AOK ordered the formation of the Military General Governorate of Serbia German Militargeneralgouvernement in Serbien MGG S with Belgrade as its administrative centre The Austro Hungarian occupation zone was divided into thirteen approximately equal districts German Kreise which were then divided into sixty four boroughs German Brezirke with the city of Belgrade as its own district 41 The occupational administration was subordinate to the AOK under General Franz Conrad von Hotzendorf and later under Generaloberst Arthur Arz von Straussenburg The Military Governorate was headed by a General Governor with the rank of a corps commander 42 The first governor general Johann Graf Salis Seewis an ethnic Croat with experience fighting insurgents in Macedonia had served as the commander of the 42nd Devil s Division after Sarkotic 11 Salis Seewis was appointed to the position in late 1915 by Emperor Franz Joseph officially taking office on 1 January 1916 41 The historian and Balkan specialist Lajos Thalloczy was appointed as the Military General Governorate s civilian commissioner as well as Salis Seewis s deputy Thalloczy arrived in Belgrade on 17 January 1916 43 With the Austrians in charge of the military the civilian administration was mostly made up of Hungarians and Croats Four administrative departments were set up military economic judicial and political with the latter which had its own intelligence and police forces under former Devil s Division officer and future Ustase b leader Major Slavko Kvaternik 45 Military intelligence German Nachrichtenabteilung for the occupation zone was entrusted to Croat Lujo Safranek Kavic 46 as the Austro Hungarian army relied considerably on South Slav officers and Bosnian Muslims knowledge of the language for intelligence purposes 47 In December 1916 Thalloczy was killed in a train crash while returning from Vienna to Belgrade 48 In January 1917 Teodor Kusevic a high ranking functionary from Bosnia and Herzegovina was appointed to replace him as the civilian commissioner The function was given more prominence with new areas of responsibility including trade police religion education justice and finance 41 System of occupation EditRule of law Edit A poster dated 18 September 1916 announcing the implementation of martial law in occupied Serbia The sentence for possession of a weapon is death by hanging The first measure of the occupiers was to establish a new legal system to secure order prevent guerrilla resistance and exploit the country s resources MGG S control over the population was accomplished in accordance with the Directives for the Political Administration in the Areas of the General Military Governorate in Serbia German Direktiven fur die politische Verwaltung im Bereiche des Militargeneralgouvernements in Serbien and with the General Principles for the Imperial and Royal Military Administration in the Occupied Territories of Serbia German Allgemeine Grundzuge fur die K u K Militarverwaltung in den beset zen Gebieten Serbiens The MGG S intended to ignore Hungarian objections and integrate Serbia as a part of the empire but as an area that would remain under direct military rule for decades after the end of the war and where political participation would be prohibited to prevent the emergence of a new Serbian state 49 Occupation forces Edit The MGG was safeguarded by a permanent Austro Hungarian garrison consisting in August 1916 of 35 battalions a Landsturm regiment six companies of patrol troops 12 units of railway guards four and a half squadrons five artillery batteries and two anti aircraft batteries totaling around 70 000 men of which 50 000 were reserved for military operations 50 Within the towns and villages of the twelve districts 5 000 gendarmes were posted in groups of 20 to 30 50 If needed patrol companies also served as mobile combat reserves 50 An Austro Hungarian patrol company in the streets of Ruma To help police the civilian population and to track down partisans the Austro Hungarian leadership decided to recruit amongst ethnic minority groups positively disposed towards the Dual Monarchy 51 With Thalloczy s encouragement the Austro Hungarian authorities permitted Kosovo Albanians to volunteer for service in the Austro Hungarian Armed Forces 52 Prominent Albanians in towns such as Novi Pazar and Kosovska Mitrovica declared their support and offered to recruit volunteers for the occupying authorities According to the notes of Colonel Hugo Kerchnawe the Muslims in the Sandzak and the Albanians in Kosovo behaved very loyally and offered their support to the empire 53 Kerchnawe added in his report that our interests ran parallel with the Muslims interests 54 A special commission to organise recruitment was set up by Thalloczy assisted by former Ottoman officers and Bosnian militia leaders Over 8 000 volunteers were recruited this way 55 56 despite the fact that the recruitment drive was a violation of the Hague Convention treaties that Austria Hungary had signed 57 which forbade the use of occupied populations towards a country s war efforts 58 In March 1917 a home battalion was formed supported by Bosnian gendarmes and led by former Ottoman officers 51 In the final phase of the Serbian Campaign the Austro Hungarian military had relied on paramilitaries consisting of Albanian clansmen from Kosovo and northern Albania as irregular troops 59 organised early in the occupied territories Albanian pursuit fighting units were set up to assist Austro Hungarians patrols track down Serbian guerrillas 60 These counter insurgency bands were based on their Bosnian counterparts the Streifkorps paramilitary groups made up of Muslim volunteers with experience fighting Serb guerrillas and a reputation for heavy handed tactics 61 c District pursuit units were established in each district of the Austro Hungarian occupied zone each consisted of 40 men led by one officer 60 The Bulgarian occupation authorities also used Albanian gendarmes and irregular troops within their occupation zones 63 Conflicts between the Central Powers EditAnnexation Edit The separation of power in Serbia quickly led to clashes between the civilian and military authorities as well as between Austrian and Hungarian occupation officials The Hungarian Ministry of Foreign Affairs envoy in Serbia Lajos Szechenyi argued that Salis Seewis policies would lead to Serbia s annexation to the Dual Monarchy which Thalloczy following Hungarian prime minister Istvan Tisza s directives strongly opposed 43 In mid February 1916 Thalloczy complained to Tisza about the number of Slavs in positions of authority writing the governor is Croat the chief of the general staff is Czech the deputy governor is from the former military border and the new General Staff Officer Slavko Kvaternik is the son in law of Croatian independentist Josip Frank 64 Prime Minister of Hungary Count Istvan Tisza was alarmed to discover that the Austro Hungarian army was pursuing its own political agenda in occupied Serbia General Conrad saw the military administration of Serbia as preliminary to its annexation along with Montenegro and Albania to a future South Slavic union under Croatian leadership 65 Conrad worried that by not annexing Serbia the monarchy would lose its Great Power status Austria Hungary s Joint Foreign Minister Stephan Burian von Rajecz supported the annexation of Serbia but only if it would be allotted to Hungary 65 Tisza refused to consider the annexation of Serbia as it would lead to a substantial increase in Austria Hungary s Slavic population and significantly reduce the proportion of Hungarians within the Dual Monarchy He demanded instead that northern Serbia be colonized by Hungarian and German farmers 65 After touring the three northwestern districts of Serbia together with Salis Seewis and the visiting General Conrad Tisza came to regard the Austro Hungarian military s efforts in the occupied territory as a prelude to annexation 48 Tisza submitted a complaint to Burian asking for a thorough reorganisation of the Military Governorate the removal of Salis Seewis whose administration he described as Serbophile and economically incompetent 66 and requesting the condemnation of those demanding that Serbia be annexed Burian took the complaint directly to Emperor Franz Joseph On 6 July 1916 the emperor decreed that Salis Seewis and his chief of staff Colonel Gelinek were to be replaced by his former corps commander General Adolf Freiherr von Rhemen and Colonel Hugo Kerchnawe effective 26 July 1916 Rhemen remained in this office until the end of the war 67 Austro Bulgarian confrontation Edit Tensions between Bulgaria and the Dual Monarchy started after Bulgaria extended its zone to western Kosovo on the Austro Hungarian side of the treaty border going as far as Elbasan in Albania a region that Austria Hungary considered an occupied friendly state and of outstanding importance to the Dual Monarchy Kaiser Wilhelm himself repeatedly told Bulgarian king Ferdinand that Germany supported the independence of Albania under Austrian protection 68 Burian also reminded Ferdinand that at the west of the treaty border began the Austro Hungarian sphere of interest 69 According to the terms of the secret alliance between Bulgaria and Germany the greater part of Kosovo including the areas of Pristina Prizren Gnjilane Urosevac and Orahovac were to fall under Bulgarian rule as part of the Military Region of Macedonia 70 Metohija the southwestern area of Kosovo was to be incorporated as part of the Austro Hungarian zone of Montenegro with the rest of Kosovo including Kosovska Mitrovica Vucitrn and Đakovica established as part of the Austro Hungarian Military Governorate of Serbia 71 The Bulgarians maintained that they had the right to install a civilian administration on any territory they conquered including outside their treaty border Conrad suspecting Bulgaria of harbouring ambitions to annex the whole region sent troops to expel the Bulgarian civilian administrators The arrival of Austro Hungarian troops in areas already garrisoned by Bulgarian forces resulted in a military confrontation On 27 February the Bulgarian military commander Racho Petrov issued an ultimatum to the Austrians to immediately evacuate Kacanik on the frontier with Macedonia resulting in a military standoff 72 Conrad warned the Bulgarian High Command that unless local Bulgarian commanders abstained from interfering with the Austro Hungarian administration a conflict with his troops would be inevitable 73 On 15 March the Austro Hungarians issued an order to secure Novi Pazar and prepared to add Kosovska Mitrovica to their governorate 74 The German chief of staff General Erich von Falkenhayn ordered Mackensen to mediate between the two parties Mackensen visited Sofia in person to meet Ferdinand and Prime Minister Vasil Radoslavov The proposed German compromise was accepted and an agreement on a demarcation line was signed between the Austro Hungarian and Bulgarian high commands on 1 April 1916 74 The Bulgarians withdrew eastwards retaining the district containing Prizren and Pristina but leaving Albania and western Kosovo to the Austro Hungarians The agreement gave Bulgaria administrative rights over areas of Serbia that were not in the original agreement In return Bulgaria agreed to let Germany have access to the valleys east of the Velika Morava the Juzna Morava in Kosovo as well as the Vardar Valley effectively turning Macedonia and Kosovo into zones dedicated to German economic exploitation 74 72 Life under the occupation EditDenationalisation and depoliticisation Edit Serbian schoolchildren in Loznica learning Latin characters after the Cyrillic script was banned by the Austro Hungarian authorities A portrait of Emperor Franz Joseph can be seen on the wall The occupational authorities considered Serbian national consciousness an existential threat to Austria Hungary Thus the policies of the Military Governorate were aimed at depoliticising and denationalising the Serbian population 75 Public gatherings and political parties were banned the Cyrillic script was termed dangerous to the state German staatsgefahrlich and banned from schools and public spaces streets named after people perceived as being significant to Serbian national identity were renamed the wearing of traditional Serbian clothing was proscribed and the Gregorian calendar replaced the Julian Additionally all Serbian students had to be educated in the German language according to Austrian academic standards and through teachers imported from Austria 76 Significant cultural institutions such as the Royal Serbian Academy the National Museum and the National Library were closed down and looted of their historical artifacts and art collections The University of Belgrade as well as various publishing houses and bookshops were closed down Schoolbooks and books in French English Russian and Italian were banned Political expression was severely limited with the prohibition of newspaper publication except for the official MGG S propaganda newspaper Belgrader Nachrichten published in Serbian as Beogradske novine which featured letters and photographs purporting to show how well those who stayed behind in occupied Serbia were living Such propaganda was intended to convince Serbian soldiers who came across the Belgrader Nachrichten to desert 77 d Repression Edit Public execution of alleged Serbian guerrillas by Austro Hungarian troops c 1916 In 1916 both Austria Hungary and Bulgaria announced that Serbia had ceased to exist as a political entity and that its inhabitants could therefore not invoke the international rules of war dictating the treatment of civilians as defined by the Geneva Conventions and the Hague Conventions 78 The occupational authorities carried out numerous summary executions with little or no legal process Upon being found guilty by a military court victims were usually shot or hanged Martial law such as Kriegsnotwehrrecht the martial law of self defense was employed to quash dissent and severe preventive measures were undertaken against civilians 79 The occupational authorities were gripped by the fear of levee en masse and of civilians taking up arms The Austro Hungarian Army consequently employed the seizure of hostages from the general population and the burning of villages in punitive raids as a means of quelling resistance These measures as well as summary executions were all permitted under section 61 of the Dienstreglement e k u k army regulations 79 Disarming the populace was done by holding village elders responsible for handing over a certain quota of weapons that were judged to be held before the war began 81 The sentence for possession of a weapon was death by hanging Military courts also tried civilians for newly defined offenses including the crime of lese majeste 82 Civilians suspected of engaging in resistance activities were subjected to the harshest measures including hanging and shooting The house of an offender s family would also be destroyed 83 Victims were usually hanged on the main squares of villages and towns in full view of the general population The lifeless bodies were left to hang by the noose for several days so as to clearly show the treatment reserved for spies and traitors 84 Deportation and forced labour Edit The MGG S as well as the High Command in Vienna considered sending civilian prisoners to internment camps as a preventive measure to discourage insurgent activities 85 During the occupation between 150 000 and 200 000 men women and children were deported to various camps in Austria Hungary 86 it has been estimated they represented slightly more than 10 per cent of the Serb population 87 Since Serbia did not have its own Red Cross Serbian prisoners did not have access to the aid the Red Cross provided to other Allied prisoners 38 Moreover Serbian prisoners were not considered enemy aliens but internal enemies by Austria Hungary s Ministry of War By defining them as terrorists or insurgents the Austro Hungarian authorities were not obliged to disclose the number of captives they held and which camps they were being held in to Red Cross societies 88 Serbian prisoners of war in Austro Hungarian captivityFour significant waves of deportations occurred in occupied Serbia The first occurred at the very start of the occupation when Salis Seewis rounded up 70 000 dissidents mostly able bodied men ex soldiers politically active individuals as well as members of the political and cultural elite who had remained in the country after the retreat to Corfu University professors teachers and priests especially those who had participated in political cultural or even athletic associations were arrested and sent to internment camps 89 The second and largest deportations took place after Romania entered the war on the side of the Allies on 27 August 1916 From mid August to late October 1916 an order to arrest all males between the ages of 17 and 50 was issued These men were targeted because they were of fighting age More than 16 500 males were sent to internment camps during this round of deportations 90 During the Toplica uprising in the Spring of 1916 when armed resistance seemed to be spreading more deportations took place The fourth and final round of deportations occurred after the Allied breakthrough on the Salonica front in late 1918 86 In Bohemia the camp at Braunau modern day Broumov Czech Republic held about 35 000 prisoners almost exclusively Serbian civilian military prisoners men women and children 87 According to a 1918 press report an epidemic of dysentery almost wiped out all the children in the camp 91 After the war a mass grave was found behind the camp containing the remains of 2 674 people these remains were later moved to the crypt of the Heinrichsgrun camp 92 The camp at Heinrichsgrun modern day Jindrichovice Czech Republic held mostly Serbs both soldiers and civilians from the Sumadija and Kolubara districts of western Serbia An average of 40 people died there every day 92 The Nezsider concentration camp in modern day Neusiedl am See Austria where about 17 000 internees mostly from Serbia and Montenegro were heldIn Hungary the largest internment camps were in the Nezsider district Nezsider modern day Neusiedl am See Austria was a concentration camp primarily used to detain civilians from Serbia and Montenegro and the principal camp for Serbs suspected to be terrorists or agitators 93 The number of detainees by May 1917 was 9 934 including children as young as nine 93 Over the course of the war the Nezsider camp held 17 000 internees about 4 800 people are known to have perished at the camp 94 In addition to those deported to Hungary some 30 000 Serb civilians were sent to Austrian camps or used as forced labour 39 In Lower Austria the camps of Drosendorf and Mittendorf held both Serbian soldiers and civilians 87 Thousand of Serbs perished during a typhus epidemic at the Mauthausen camp in Upper Austria when about 14 000 were being held an official Austro Hungarian army report mentioned 5 600 prisoners of war buried in the camp graveyard in the early months of the war 95 According to official figures between 27 December 1915 and 5 July 1917 45 791 civilians and prisoners of war from Serbia and Montenegro were held captive at the camp in Doboj in Bosnia Around 12 000 are estimated to have perished there 96 Other camps held both civilians and prisoners of war including Boldogasszony Nagymegyer modern day Veľky Meder Slovakia Arad modern day Romania Cegled Kecskemet and Gyor 97 By May 1917 39 359 people from Serbia including women and children were interned outside the country These large scale deportations caused concern around Europe quickly becoming an international scandal The Spanish authorities complained then in April 1917 the Holy See intervened through the office of the Apostolic Nunciature to Austria against the internment of Serbian women and children between the ages of 10 and 15 93 By the end of the year Austria Hungary s Ministry of War admitted that 526 Serb children were in fact being held at Nezsider but that it was necessary on the grounds of military security 93 According to a Red Cross report dated 1 February 1918 by the end of 1917 there were 206 500 prisoners of war and internees from Serbia in Austro Hungarian and German camps According to the historian Alan Kramer the Serbians in Austro Hungarian captivity received the worst treatment of all the prisoners and at least 30 000 40 000 had died of starvation by January 1918 98 Economic exploitation and famine Edit A Serbian Relief Fund campaign poster distributed in New York c 1918 Tensions between the Austrian and German authorities increased after Burian complained that the German military was employing a ruthless system of requisition resulting in famine and the pauperisation of the population 29 Behind the front lines the Germans Etappenzone was an area that Berlin had secured as a zone dedicated to agricultural production to feed its troops on the Salonica front 99 As the German exploitation of resources in occupied Serbia was handled by the German Oriental Society German Deutsch orientalische Gesellschaft the exploitation of mines failed to satisfy the Dual Monarchy s need for vital raw materials because Germany took two thirds of all production from Serbia as reparations for its military aid 99 Austro Hungarian reports on the state of Serbia in 1915 noted famine threatening the occupation zone and a population in a desperate state after nearly four years of constant war The return of refugees exacerbated the shortage of food Reports from late 1915 spoke of the necessity of receiving urgent relief to avoid disaster Starvation loomed after soldiers destroyed or captured much of Serbia s foodstuffs and livestock Harvest yields and produced goods had to be turned over to authorities while food was rationed 39 In this very year 1917 there was a drought that can never be forgotten A frost and then a drought destroyed everything Even had there nor been a war hunger would have invaded us People ate wild herbs and sawdust made from beechwood It was then for the first time that we spoke of death Milovan Djilas Land Without Justice 100 In early 1916 Conrad ordered that Serbia s resources be squeezed dry regardless of the consequences for the population 101 As news of the famine in Serbia spread around the world campaigns were organised asking for Relief for Agonized Serbia 91 American Swiss and Swedish humanitarian organisations offered assistance According to Red Cross reports starvation killed more than 8 000 Serbians during the first winter under Austro Hungarian occupation By mid May 1917 figures from the Habsburg High Command reported that 170 000 cattle 190 000 sheep and 50 000 pigs had been exported to Austria Hungary 101 Resistance Edit Immediately after the withdrawal of the Royal Serbian Army and the start of the Austro Hungarian occupation armed individuals and small groups of insurgents called Chetniks made up of former soldiers who had remained in the country began to wage a guerrilla campaign against the occupiers 102 The Chetniks had a long tradition as guerrillas after centuries of Ottoman rule Their actions were often considered heroic by the population and depicted in epic folk poetry giving them strong local support 103 The burned out remains of a train in Sabac The first organised guerrilla group was formed in the Novi Pazar and Kosovska Mitrovica districts in early 1916 and was led by former army captain Kosta Vojinovic In March 1916 General Conrad ordered that all resistance be quashed with ruthless severity Komitadjis as the Austro Hungarian army called the insurgents were deemed outside international law by the MGG and were to be completely wiped out 104 f Jovan Avakumovic a former Prime Minister of Serbia suggested to Salis Seewis that he should issue a joint proclamation for the restoration of peace and order Avakumovic s proposal was turned down and Salis Seewis ordered his arrest and internment 105 The Military Governorate responded to the multiplication of guerrilla groups by employing small Ottoman and Albanian counter guerrilla units based on the Streifkorps from Bosnia instead of regular patrol troops 60 In late September 1916 the Serbian High Command flew in the experienced Chetnik guerrilla leader Kosta Pecanac from Allied Headquarters in Salonica He was parachuted in by air to organize resistance in Serbia together with Vojinovic 39 In early February 1917 a rebellion led by Vojinovic broke out in the vicinity of Kursumlija and Prokuplje The insurgents supported by volunteers and Chetniks from Montenegro liberated Kursumlija Prokuplje Pusta Reka Lebane and Ribarska The uprising was planned to coincide with an Allied offensive 106 Later that month a large scale uprising broke out in the Toplica District in Bulgarian occupied Serbia A force of 4 000 armed men and women managed to liberate a significant area in the Morava Valley before the uprising was put down 39 During the summer of 1917 the Austro Hungarian Army was forced to bring in troops from the Isonzo Front to reinforce the Bulgarian Army and Bulgarian paramilitary groups 107 Without the expected Allied support the uprising collapsed In late 1917 Vojinovic was killed Pecanac managed to escape and went into hiding According to contemporary Austro Hungarian Army reports 20 000 Serbs were killed in the course of the rebellion while 2 600 managed to escape into the forests 108 Despite the harsh repression guerrilla groups managed to survive and were able to support Allied offensive operations in the summer of 1918 109 After the war Chief of Staff Paul Kirch described the withdrawal of the German 11th Army Serb guerrilla groups emerged throughout the country and attacked our units when they were resting or eating They also attacked our rearguard and our supply trains on the march and sabotaged the railways We have sent special Jager units against them but it would have been easier to find a needle in a haystack than to find those guerrilla groups in the mountain terrain they are familiar with 110 Liberation of Serbia EditIn September 1918 following the Vardar Offensive and the success of Allied forces at the Battle of Dobro Pole Bulgaria capitulated and signed the Armistice of Salonica On 3 October a German military governorate was created in Nis to replace the departing Bulgarian administration while new Austro Hungarian and German troops were redeployed to try to block the northward advance of Serb and French troops 111 Guerilla warfare broke out spontaneously across all occupied regions in support of the Allies offensive 109 By the third week of October General Hermann von Kovess commander of all Austro Hungarian and German forces in the Balkans ordered a strategic retreat behind the Danube Sava and Drina rivers also ordering that about two per cent of the male population should be taken as hostages and kept with the troops on the march 110 On 29 October Governor General von Rhemen and his staff left occupied Serbia The following day Belgrade was liberated by the Royal Serbian Army By 1 November all of pre war Serbia had been liberated bringing the three year Central Powers occupation to an end 112 Military commanders and governors Edit Personnel list of the Military General Government in Serbia 1916 Austro Hungarian commanders Edit Feldzeugmeister Oskar Potiorek 12 August 1914 27 December 1914 113 Generaloberst Archduke Eugen Ferdinand 27 December 1914 27 May 1915 114 General Karl Tersztyanszky von Nadas 27 May 1915 27 September 1915 115 General Hermann Kovess von Kovesshaza 27 September 1915 1 January 1916 116 Austro Hungarian military governors general Edit Feldmarschallleutnant Johann Ulrich Graf von Salis Seewis 1 January 1916 July 1916 41 Generaloberst Adolf Freiherr von Rhemen zu Barensfeld 6 July 1916 October 1918 67 Feldmarschall Hermann Kovess von Kovesshaza October 1918 1 November 1918 117 See also Edit Serbia portal World War I portalMilitary General Governorate of Serbia Bulgarian occupation of Serbia World War I Nazi occupation of Serbia World War II Notes Edit The 42nd Honved Devil s Division Croatian Vrazija divizija was the only unit designated as a Home Guard Croatian Domobran division with the right for officers to use Serbo Croatian instead of German or Hungarian 11 Both Sarkotic and Salis Seewis joined the ranks of the fascist Croatian nationalist Ustase movement in the 1930s 44 In August 1914 Streifkorps units volunteer border militia had joined the Austro Hungarian troops invading from Bosnia they later took part in the looting of the Serbian capital 62 Front line patrols were instructed to approach Serbian posts and deposit propaganda material such as the Belgrader Nachrichten in order to encourage desertion by promising freedom to those longing to return home 77 The Dienstreglement the Habsburg army regulations dictated that an enemy or unreliable population is to be placed under the constraint of severe reprisals such as hostage taking from among communities Standrecht summary justice punishments and the like 80 The Kriegsausstellung war exhibition of 1917 held in Vienna was intended to characterize Serb civilians and Komitadjis as criminals outside the laws and customs of war It included a section about guerrilla warfare in Serbia where visitors could learn about the methods used to track Komitadjis and Chetniks including a life size model of one of their hideout 82 References EditCitations Edit Lebow 1981 p 68 Schindler 2015 p 118 Schindler 2015 p 177 Merrill 2001 p 167 Jerabek 1991 p 25 a b c d e Wawro 2014 p 195 a b Kramer 2008 p 140 a b c Holzer amp Spiegel 2008 Hastings 2013 p 226 Reiss 2019 p 34 a b c d Lyon 2015 p 114 a b Holzer 2014 p 12 Levental amp Kordic 1992 p 70 Lyon 2015 p 148 Reiss 2019 p 37 Fried 2014 p 115 Lyon 2015 p 161 Rauchensteiner Kay amp Guttel Bellert 2014 p 274 a b Tucker amp Roberts 2005 p 366 Marble 2016 p 134 Stojancevic 1988 p 7 Scianna 2012 Kiraly et al 1985 p 569 Schindler 2015 p 270 Wawro 2014 p 202 Herwig 2014 p 111 Pavlowitch 2002 p 122 Herwig 2014 p 439 a b Fried 2014 p 121 Luckau 1971 p 278 Khristov amp Markovski 1985 p 166 DiNardo 2015 p 65 DiNardo 2015 p 62 DiNardo 2015 p 100 DiNardo 2015 p 85 Strachan 2014 p 96 DiNardo 2015 p 106 a b DiNardo 2015 p 122 a b c d e Calic amp Geyer 2019 p 166 Mitrovic 2007 p 183 a b c d Mitrovic 2007 p 203 Bled 2014 a b Buttar 2016 p 43 Newman 2015 p 182 Jarman 1997 p 261 Gumz 2014 p 41 Newman 2015 p 121 a b Hobelt Otte amp Bridge 2010 p 257 Fried 2014 p 203 a b c Melson 2019 p 55 a b Melson 2019 p 57 Tatum 2010 p 4 Suppan 2019 p 300 Kerchnawe et al 1928 p 93 Mitrovic 2007 p 234 Rauchensteiner Kay amp Guttel Bellert 2014 p 733 Reiss 2019 p 47 Strupp 1914 p 111 Tasic 2020 p 19 a b c Melson 2019 p 56 Lyon 2015 p 46 Đuric 1987 p 118 Mitrovic 1984 p 392 Suppan 2019 p 299 a b c Herwig 2014 p 161 Rauchensteiner Kay amp Guttel Bellert 2014 p 732 a b Schweizerische Offiziersgesellschaft 1968 p 386 Fried 2014 p 146 Fried 2014 p 148 Glenny 2012 p 333 Fried 2014 p 231 a b Glenny 2012 p 335 Afflerbach 2015 p 129 a b c Mitrovic 2007 p 202 Gumz 2014 p 21 Mitrovic 2007 p 232 a b Cornwall 2000 p 64 Faculty of History Cambridge University 2017 p 56 a b Bischof Karlhofer amp Williamson 2014 p 139 Bischof Karlhofer amp Williamson 2014 p 136 Mitrovic 2007 p 227 a b De Schaepdrijver 2016 p 105 DiNardo 2015 p 68 Holzer 2014 p 241 Stojancevic 1988 p 34 a b Luthar 2016 p 76 a b c Winter 2014 p 257 Stibbe 2019 p 111 Herwig 2014 p 164 Mitrovic 2007 p 228 a b Conway Publications 1918 p 61 a b Serbian Prisoners of War a b c d Stibbe 2019 p 110 Nikolic 2013 Bischof Karlhofer amp Williamson 2014 p 240 RTRS 2012 Mitrovic 2007 p 369 Kramer 2008 p 67 a b Herwig 2014 p 239 Biskupski amp Wandycz 2003 p 44 a b Calic amp Geyer 2019 p 157 Tasic 2020 p 20 Tomasevich 1975 p 115 Mitrovic 2007 p 247 Luthar 2016 p 78 Laqueur 2017 p 169 Melson 2019 p 60 Mitrovic 2007 p 261 a b Moal 2008 p 128 a b Mitrovic 2007 p 316 Mitrovic 2007 p 314 Tasic 2020 p 22 Rauchensteiner Kay amp Guttel Bellert 2014 p 176 Tucker amp Roberts 2005 p 933 Dawnay amp Headlam 1933 p 238 DiNardo 2015 p 47 Rauchensteiner Kay amp Guttel Bellert 2014 p 987 Bibliography Edit Afflerbach H 2015 The Purpose of the First World War War Aims and Military Strategies Schriften des Historischen Kollegs De Gruyter p 129 ISBN 978 3 11 044348 6 Biskupski M B Wandycz P 2003 Ideology Politics and Diplomacy in East Central Europe University of Rochester Press ISBN 978 1 58046 137 5 Bled J P 2014 L agonie d une Monarchie Autriche Hongrie 1914 1920 TEXTO in French Tallandier ISBN 979 10 210 0447 4 Buttar P 2016 Russia s Last Gasp The Eastern Front 1916 17 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 1277 3 Bischof G Karlhofer F Williamson S R 2014 1914 Austria Hungary the Origins and the First Year of World War I Uno Press ISBN 978 1 60801 026 4 Calic M J Geyer D 2019 A History of Yugoslavia Central European studies Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 838 3 Conway Publications 1918 Manufacturers Record Conway Publications Cornwall M 2000 The Undermining of Austria Hungary The Battle for Hearts and Minds Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 978 0 230 28635 1 Dawnay G P Headlam C M 1933 The Army Quarterly William Clowes amp Sons Limited De Schaepdrijver S 2016 Military Occupations in First World War Europe Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 317 58713 2 DiNardo R L 2015 Invasion The Conquest of Serbia 1915 War technology and history ABC CLIO LLC ISBN 978 1 4408 0092 4 Đuric A 1987 Belgrade during the First World War Selected books by Antonije Đuric in Serbian NIRO Knjizevne novine ISBN 978 86 391 0078 0 Fried M 2014 Austro Hungarian War Aims in the Balkans during World War I Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 978 1 137 35901 8 Glenny M 2012 The Balkans Nationalism War and the Great Powers 1804 2012 New and Updated House of Anansi Press Incorporated ISBN 978 1 77089 274 3 Gumz J E 2014 The Resurrection and Collapse of Empire in Habsburg Serbia 1914 1918 Volume 1 Cambridge Military Histories Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 68972 5 Hastings M 2013 Catastrophe 1914 Europe Goes to War Vintage Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 385 35122 5 Herwig H H 2014 The First World War Germany and Austria Hungary 1914 1918 Modern Wars Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4725 1081 5 Hobelt L Otte T G Bridge F R 2010 A Living Anachronism European Diplomacy and the Habsburg Monarchy Festschrift Fur Francis Roy Bridge Zum 70 Geburtstag Bohlau ISBN 978 3 205 78510 1 Holzer A 2014 Das Lacheln der Henker der unbekannte Krieg gegen die Zivilbevolkerung 1914 1918 mit zahlreichen bisher unveroffentlichten Fotografien The Executioner s Smile The Unknown War Against The Civilian Population 1914 1918 in German Primus ISBN 978 3 86312 063 4 Jarman R L 1997 Yugoslavia 1938 1948 Yugoslavia Political Diaries 1918 1965 Archive Editions Limited ISBN 978 1 85207 950 5 Jerabek R 1991 Potiorek General im Schatten von Sarajevo Eine Publikation des Militarhistorischen Dienstes Wien Osterreich Militarhistorischer Dienst Eine Publikation des Militarhistorischen Dienstes Wien in German Verlag Styria ISBN 978 3 222 12067 1 Kerchnawe H Mitzka R Sobotka F Leidl H Krauss A 1928 The military administration in the areas occupied by Austro Hungarian troops Carnegie Stiftung fur Internationalen Frieden Abteilung fur Volkswirtschaft und Geschichte in German Holder Pichler Tempsky A G Kiraly B K Bela K Kiraly B K Dreisziger P N Dreisziger N F Nofi A A Kiraly D Kiraly P B Rockefeller Foundation 1985 East Central European Society in World War I Atlantic studies on society in change Social Science Monographs ISBN 978 0 88033 089 3 Kramer A 2008 Dynamic of Destruction Culture and Mass Killing in the First World War Making of the Modern World OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 158011 6 Khristov K A Markovski D 1985 A History of Bulgaria Sofia Press Laffan R G D 1989 The Serbs The Guardians of the Gate Armenian Research Center collection Dorset Press ISBN 978 0 88029 413 3 Laqueur W 2017 Guerrilla Warfare A Historical and Critical Study Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 1 351 51657 0 Lebow R N 1981 Between Peace and War The Nature of International Crisis A Johns Hopkins paperback Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 2311 4 Levental Z Kordic M 1992 Rodolphe Archibald Reiss criminaliste et moraliste de la Grande guerre in French L Age d homme ISBN 978 2 8251 0197 1 Luckau A 1971 The German Delegation at the Paris Peace Conference H Fertig ISBN 978 0 86527 078 7 Luthar O 2016 The Great War and Memory in Central and South Eastern Europe Balkan Studies Library Brill ISBN 978 90 04 31623 2 Lyon J 2015 Serbia and the Balkan Front 1914 The Outbreak of the Great War Bloomsbury Academic ISBN 978 1 4725 8003 0 Marble S 2016 King of Battle Artillery in World War I History of Warfare Brill ISBN 978 90 04 30728 5 Melson C 2019 The German Army Guerrilla Warfare Casemate Publishers Ignition ISBN 978 1 61200 798 4 Merrill C 2001 Only the Nails Remain Scenes from the Balkan Wars G Reference Information and Interdisciplinary Subjects Series Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers Incorporated ISBN 978 0 7425 1686 1 Mitrovic A 2007 Serbia s Great War 1914 1918 Central European studies Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 476 7 Mitrovic A 1984 Serbia in World War I in Serbian Serbian Literary Association Moal F L 2008 La Serbie du martyre a la victoire 1914 1918 Collection Les nations dans la Grande Guerre in French 14 18 Editions ISBN 978 2 916385 18 1 Newman J P 2015 Yugoslavia in the Shadow of War Veterans and the Limits of State Building 1903 1945 Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 07076 9 Paravac D 2002 Dobojski logor hronika o austrougarskom logoru interniraca u Doboju 1915 1917 in Serbian Narodna Biblioteka ISBN 978 86 7536 008 7 Pavlowitch S K 2002 Serbia The History Behind the Name Hurst amp Company ISBN 978 1 85065 477 3 Rauchensteiner M Kay A J Guttel Bellert A 2014 The First World War and the End of the Habsburg Monarchy 1914 1918 V amp r Academic ISBN 978 3 205 79588 9 Reiss R A Copeland F S 2018 Report Upon the Atrocities Committed by the Austro Hungarian Army During the First Invasion of Serbia FRANKLIN CLASSICS TRADE Press ISBN 978 0 344 98444 0 Reiss R A 2019 How Austria Hungary Waged War in Serbia in French Creative Media Partners LLC ISBN 978 0 353 68572 7 Reiss R A 2018 The Kingdom of Serbia Infringements of the Rules and Laws of War Committed by the Austro Bulgaro Germans Letters of a Criminologist on the Serbian M FRANKLIN CLASSICS TRADE Press ISBN 978 0 353 06558 1 Scianna Bastian Matteo 2012 Reporting Atrocities Archibald Reiss in Serbia 1914 1918 The Journal of Slavic Military Studies 25 4 596 617 doi 10 1080 13518046 2012 730395 S2CID 144851616 Schindler J R 2015 Fall of the Double Eagle The Battle for Galicia and the Demise of Austria Hungary Potomac Books ISBN 978 1 61234 806 3 Schweizerische Offiziersgesellschaft 1968 Allgemeine schweizerische militarzeitschrift in German Huber Stibbe M 2019 Civilian Internment during the First World War A European and Global History 1914 1920 Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 978 1 137 57191 5 Strachan Hew 2014 The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War New Edition OUP Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 164041 4 Suppan A 2019 National Conflicts World Wars Genocides Expulsions and Divided Remembrance in East Central and Southeastern Europe 1848 2018 Sitzungsberichte Akademie der Wissenschaften in Wien Philosophisch Historische Klasse Austrian Academy of Sciences ISBN 978 3 7001 8657 1 Stojancevic V 1988 Serbia and the Serbian Nation during the War and Occupation 1914 1918 in Serbian Strupp K 1914 Das internationale Landkriegsrecht in German Baer Tasic D 2020 Paramilitarism in the Balkans Yugoslavia Bulgaria and Albania 1917 1924 The Greater War Series Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 885832 4 Tatum D 2010 Genocide at the Dawn of the Twenty First Century Rwanda Bosnia Kosovo and Darfur Palgrave Macmillan US p 4 ISBN 978 0 230 10967 4 Tomasevich J 1975 The Chetniks His War and revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0857 9 Tucker S Roberts P M 2005 World War I Encyclopedia World War I Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 85109 420 2 Wawro G 2014 A Mad Catastrophe The Outbreak of World War I and the Collapse of the Habsburg Empire Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 08081 6 Winter J 2014 The Cambridge History of the First World War Volume 3 Civil Society The Cambridge History of the First World War Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 316 02554 3 Websites Edit Doboj Anniversary of the founding of the Austro Hungarian camp for Serbs RTRS in Serbian 2012 12 03 Holzer Anton Spiegel Der 2008 10 06 Geschichte Der Spiegel in German Mausoleum at Jindrichovice Serbian Prisoners of War Serbian Prisoners of War Nikolic Jelena 2013 12 17 Nezider Austro Hungarian Camp for Serbian Prisoners 1914 1918 Prisoners of War in Bulgaria during the First World War Faculty of History Cambridge University 2017 06 06 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Austro Hungarian occupation of Serbia The second occupation of Serbia at the International Encyclopedia of the First World War Laws and Customs of War on Land Hague IV October 18 1907 Hague Conventions of 1907 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Austro Hungarian occupation of Serbia amp oldid 1140379029, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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