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Battle of Grčarice

The Battle of Grčarice was fought in early September 1943[1] between the Slovene Partisans and the Blue Guard. The battle was waged in Grčarice in German-occupied Yugoslavia, modern-day Slovenia.

Battle of Grčarice
Part of World War II
Date7—10 September 1943
Location
Grčarice, German occupied Yugoslavia, modern-day Slovenia
45°39′5.78″N 14°45′20.02″E / 45.6516056°N 14.7555611°E / 45.6516056; 14.7555611
Result Partisan victory
Belligerents
Slovene Chetniks Slovene Partisans
Commanders and leaders
Karl Novak
Danilo Borut Koprivica
Pavle Vošmar Vidmar
Milan Kranjc Kajtimar
Jaka Avšič
Vinko Šumrada-Radoš
Units involved
Blue Guard:
Dolenjska Chetnik Detachment
Ljubljana Chetnik Detachment
14th Slovenian Division:
1st Shock Brigade "Tone Tomšič"
2nd Shock Brigade "Ljubo Šercer"
3rd Shock Brigade "Ivan Gradnik"
artillery battery of 2 guns
Strength
350 2,000
Casualties and losses
Complete annihilation:
10  
120-171 POW, almost all killed after Kočevje trial or without any trial
unknown
class=notpageimage|
Location within Yugoslavia

Background edit

The capitulation of Italy was an important turning point in the World War II in Slovenian part of Axis occupied Kingdom of Yugoslavia.[2] Slovene Partisans had a British mission inside their headquarter. Based on the instructions received from the Allies, the Italian troops were ordered to surrender their arms to the Partisans in Yugoslavia, which allowed Slovene Partisans to significantly strengthen their forces.[3] The Slovene Partisans immediately used this arms to eliminate their main political opponents, Slovenian detachment of the Yugoslav Army in Homeland.

Forces edit

National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Slovenia edit

Slovene Partisans which attacked Yugoslav Army in Grčarice belonged to three shock brigades (Tomšič, Šercer and Gradnik) of the 14th Slovenian Division. After the capitulation of Italy in 1943 the Slovene Partisans captured 2 heavy guns together with its crew that they brought to Grčarice.[4] According to an interview of former Chetnik officer Uroš Šušterič, the Italian soldiers operated artillery weapons used against Chetniks.[5]

Slovenian Chetniks edit

 
Karl Novak in the 1930s, commander of all Chetnik detachments in Slovenia

The commander of all Chetniks in Slovenia was Karl Novak. Most of Slovene Chetniks in Grčarice were members of the Sokol movement.[6] Chetnik detachment in Grčarice was the main Slovene Chetnik group.[7] Their number grew from 50 initially to 350.[8] Their official name was Dolenjska Chetnik Detachment while they were also known as the Central Chetnik Detachment (Slovene: Centralni Četniški Odred)[9] About 60 of them were officers or non-commissioned officers.[10] Dolenjska Chetnik Detachment was commanded by the Major Danilo Borut Koprivica. It had four battalions, the first commanded by Captain Pavle Vošmar Vidmar, the second by Milan Kranjc, third by Marjan Strniša and fourth by Stanko Abram.[11]

Chetniks in Grčarice expected reinforcements consisting of Chetniks from Ljubljana and around 300[12] Chetniks from Lika region.[13] Only small detachment of 20 Chetniks from Ljubljana managed to reach Grčarice and reinforce defenders. One detachment of 270 Chetniks from Lika commanded by Vasilije Marović was sent by Major Bjelajac to join Chetniks in Slovenia, tried to reach Grčarice, but returned after reaching Srbske Moravice where they learned about the Italian capitulation and decided to return.

Battle edit

The prelude of the Battle of Grčarice were the clashes between the Partisans and Chetniks in Sveti Gregor on 3 September. After being attacked by the Tone Tomšič Partisan Brigade, the Chetnik forces retreated to Grčarice, where they had their center and headquarters.[14] The Chetniks immediately fortified their positions connecting two buildings and the church.[15] On 5 September Chetniks received two trucks of arms and ammunition, because Italian General Gambara wanted to establish connection with the Allies.[16]

 
Partisans from Šercer brigade near Kočevje in September 1943

On 6 September the Chetniks in Grčarice celebrated the birthday of Peter II of Yugoslavia.[17]

On 7 September, the Partisans encircled Grčarice and on 8 September they began the attack on Grčarice.[18] On the first day of attack the Slovene Partisans did not have any heavy weapons, so Chetniks successfully repelled all their attacks.[19]

Major Novak was in Ljubljana during this battle and commanded his units through radio connection. Expecting the reinforcement from Chetniks from Lika, he continually sent instructions to Dolenjska Chetniks Detachment to keep their positions. When Koprivica was wounded he appointed Captain Milan Kranjc to take over the command over the detachment.[20] On 9 September 20 Chetniks of the Ljubljana detachment joined surrounded Chetniks.

When Kranjc realized that the Chetnik units could not withheld the Partisan's attacks, he planned to break through their lines during the night.[21] In midnight Kranjc shouted to Partisans explaining them that their political commissars were guilty of crimes against Slovenian people and accusing them of attacking regular Yugoslav army units instead of the Nazi troops that occupied their country.[22] Kranjc invited the Partisan soldiers to kill their political commissars and join the Chetniks in their struggle against occupation.[23] When Kranjc was wounded by Partisan artillery fire, Marijan Strniša (nom de guerre Pribina) took command over the surrounded Chetnik forces.

According to post-war Yugoslav sources, both Koprivica and Kranjc committed suicide to avoid capture by the Partisans.[24]

The forces of Yugoslav Army in the Homeland suffered a defeat, and with 11 soldiers killed and 171 captured.[25]

According to Vladimir Dedijer, the Partisans occupied Grčarice on 9 September 1943.[26] Among the Chetniks captured by the Partisans was Vladimir Kalan, who worked for Allied intelligence and was released after he claimed British citizenship.[27]

Kočevje trials edit

 
Kočevje trials organized in former hall of Sokol assotiations between 9 and 11 October 1943.

The Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation organized trials for captured Yugoslav soldiers between 9 and 11 October 1943.[28] The Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation organized a trial to 21 captured Yugoslav officers, condemning to death 16 of them while 5 were sentenced to forced labor.[29]

Besides nine prisoners who escaped and those who were put on trial and sentenced to death, all other prisoners were secretly executed in November and December 1943 on many different places in Kočevje although they surrendered after Partisans guaranteed their lives which was a condition for their surrender.[30]

Aftermath edit

 
The image taken during the Siege of Turjak

On 19 September 1943 around 700 members of Slovenian detachments of Yugoslav Army in the Homeland surrendered to Slovene Partisans in Turjak Castle after the Siege of Turjak.[31]

Slovenian historian Janez Grum emphasized that the defeat of Chetniks in three day battle of Grčarice was serious blow for anti-communist Slovenians and their resistance to communist terror.[32]

After the defeat in Grčarice only small scattered groups of Chetniks in Slovenia continued to exist, while Major Novak resigned as their commander.[33] Dragoslav Mihailović appointed Ivan Prezelj as new commander of the Slovenian units of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland.[34] Prezelj commanded over small number of Chetnik detachments until the end of the World War II.[35]

The Slovene Home Guard was established as a reaction to massacres and inadmissible actions of Partisans connected with battles of Turjak and Grčarice.[36]

Legacy edit

In his postwar work, Edvard Kardelj recounted that, until the capitulation of Italy and destruction of the Slovenian detachment of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland in Grčarice, Joseph Stalin had insisted that the Chetniks and Partisans should "reach an agreement at any price ... in order to create an army under the command of Draža Mihailović."[37]

 
2011 picture of the repaired building in Grčarice where the Chetniks had their headquarters during the Battle of Grčarice, with a commemorative plaque in honour of the Chetniks

References edit

  1. ^ (Terzić 1957, p. 535)
  2. ^ (Dežman, Štepec & Cregeen 2006, p. 23)
  3. ^ (Dežman, Štepec & Cregeen 2006, p. 23)
  4. ^ (Mlakar 2003, p. 48): "Ko so partizani izvedeli za kapitulacijo Italije, so četnike ponovno pozvali na predajo, a ni bilo odziva. Nato so pred Grčarice pripeljali dve havbici, ki ju je partizanska vojska zaplenila pri Dolenji vasi. Z njima so upravljali italijanski častniki,"
  5. ^ Šušterič, Uroš (22 August 2005). "Slovenačke straže Đenerala Draže". Večernje Novosti. Retrieved 30 December 2018.
  6. ^ (Bevc 2007, p. 149)
  7. ^ (Plut-Pregelj & Rogel 2010)
  8. ^ (Plut-Pregelj & Rogel 2010)
  9. ^ Zaveza št. 10, "Revija za duhovna, kulturna in politična vprašanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti – s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljševiški revoluciji in državljanski vojni" - Elektronska izdaja, Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana: 2009
  10. ^ Borbe u Sloveniji 1943. god. — Beograd, Vojnoistorijski institut JNA, 1957, page 33
  11. ^ Vojno-istoriski glasnik. 1983. p. 189.
  12. ^ (Grum & Pleško 1961, p. 69)
  13. ^ (Ravnikar-Podbevšek 1972, p. 275)
  14. ^ (Saje 1952, p. 567)
  15. ^ Zaveza št. 10, "Revija za duhovna, kulturna in politična vprašanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti – s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljševiški revoluciji in državljanski vojni" - Elektronska izdaja, Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana: 2009
  16. ^ Zaveza št. 10, "Revija za duhovna, kulturna in politična vprašanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti – s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljševiški revoluciji in državljanski vojni" - Elektronska izdaja, Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana: 2009
  17. ^ Zaveza št. 10, "Revija za duhovna, kulturna in politična vprašanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti – s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljševiški revoluciji in državljanski vojni" - Elektronska izdaja, Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana: 2009
  18. ^ Zaveza št. 10, "Revija za duhovna, kulturna in politična vprašanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti – s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljševiški revoluciji in državljanski vojni" - Elektronska izdaja, Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana: 2009
  19. ^ Zaveza št. 10, "Revija za duhovna, kulturna in politična vprašanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti – s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljševiški revoluciji in državljanski vojni" - Elektronska izdaja, Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana: 2009
  20. ^ (Javoršek 1990, p. 262)
  21. ^ (Grum & Pleško 1961, p. 72)
  22. ^ (Grum & Pleško 1961, p. 72)
  23. ^ (Grum & Pleško 1961, p. 70)
  24. ^ Vojno-istoriski glasnik. 1983. p. 189.
  25. ^ (Švajncer 1992, p. 187)
  26. ^ (Dedijer 1990, p. 65)
  27. ^ The South Slav Journal. Dositey Obradovich Circle. 2002. p. 61. ... Allied intelligence and captured by the Communists in September 1943, was one Dr. Vladimir Kalan, a native of Celje. ... November of 1943. Dr.Kalan was captured as a member of a Slovene "Chetnik" detachment in the village of Grcarice.
  28. ^ (Milač 2002, p. 95): "At the beginning of October 1943, the so-called Kocevski process took place. The captured leaders of Grcarice and ..."
  29. ^ (Milač 2002, p. 95)
  30. ^ (Milač 2002, p. 235)
  31. ^ (Kardelj 1982, p. 156)
  32. ^ Zaveza št. 10 "Revija za duhovna, kulturna in politična vprašanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti – s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljševiški revoluciji in državljanski vojni" - Elektronska izdaja, Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana: 2009
  33. ^ (Plut-Pregelj & Rogel 2010)
  34. ^ (Plut-Pregelj & Rogel 2010)
  35. ^ (Plut-Pregelj & Rogel 2010)
  36. ^ (Griesser-Pečar 2007, p. 292):"Domobranstvo je nastalo kot reakcija na nedopustna ravnanja partizanov in OF - predvsem pod vtisom bojev za Grčarice in Turjak v septembru 1943, ..."
  37. ^ (Luthar 2008, p. 430): "Surprisingly enough, before these developments, even Stalin had insisted that the partisans and Chetniks should "reach an agreement at any price ... in order to create an army under the command of Draža Mihailović".[534] Kardelj recounted that ...

Sources edit

  • Terzić, Velimir (1957). Oslobodilacki rat naroda Jugoslavije 1941-1945. Vojni istoriski Institut Jugoslovenske narodne armije.
  • Mlakar, Boris (2003). Slovensko domobranstvo, 1943-1945: ustanovitev, organizacija, idejno ozadje. Slovenska matica. ISBN 978-961-213-114-2.
  • Bevc, Vladislav (2007). Liberal Forces in Twentieth Century Yugoslavia: Memoirs of Ladislav Bevc. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-1-4331-0008-6.
  • Dedijer, Vladimir (1990). From September 11, 1943, to November 7, 1944. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-10110-8.
  • Dežman, Jože; Štepec, Marko; Cregeen, Martin (2006). The Making of Slovenia. National Museum of Contemporary History. ISBN 978-961-91040-2-6.
  • Plut-Pregelj, Leopoldina; Rogel, Carole (2010). The A to Z of Slovenia. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-8108-7216-5.
  • Saje, Franček (1952). Belogardizem. Slovenski knjižni zavod.
  • Milač, Metod M. (2002). Resistance, Imprisonment, and Forced Labor. P. Lang. ISBN 978-0-8204-5781-9.
  • Kardelj, Edvard (1982). Reminiscences--the Struggle for Recognition and Independence the New Yugoslavia, 1944-1957. Blond & Briggs. ISBN 978-0-85634-135-9.
  • Švajncer, Janez J. (1992). Vojna in vojaška zgodovina Slovencev. Prešernova družba.
  • Griesser-Pečar, Tamara (2007). Razdvojeni narod: Slovenija 1941-1945 : okupacija, kolaboracija, državljanska vojna, revolucija. Mladinska knj. ISBN 978-961-01-0208-3.
  • Luthar, Oto (2008). The Land Between: A History of Slovenia. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-3-631-57011-1.
  • Grum, France; Pleško, Stane (1961). Svoboda v razvzlinah: Grčarice, Turjak, Kočevje. Zgodovinski odsek Zveze slovenskih protikomunističnih borcev.
  • Ravnikar-Podbevšek, Štefanija (1972). Sv. Urh: Kronika dogodkov iz narodnoosvobodilne vojne. Borec.
  • Javoršek, Jože (1990). Spomini na Slovence. ADIT.

battle, grčarice, fought, early, september, 1943, between, slovene, partisans, blue, guard, battle, waged, grčarice, german, occupied, yugoslavia, modern, slovenia, part, world, iidate7, september, 1943locationgrčarice, german, occupied, yugoslavia, modern, sl. The Battle of Grcarice was fought in early September 1943 1 between the Slovene Partisans and the Blue Guard The battle was waged in Grcarice in German occupied Yugoslavia modern day Slovenia Battle of GrcaricePart of World War IIDate7 10 September 1943LocationGrcarice German occupied Yugoslavia modern day Slovenia45 39 5 78 N 14 45 20 02 E 45 6516056 N 14 7555611 E 45 6516056 14 7555611ResultPartisan victoryBelligerentsSlovene ChetniksSlovene PartisansCommanders and leadersKarl NovakDanilo Borut Koprivica Pavle Vosmar Vidmar Milan Kranjc KajtimarJaka Avsic Vinko Sumrada RadosUnits involvedBlue Guard Dolenjska Chetnik DetachmentLjubljana Chetnik Detachment14th Slovenian Division 1st Shock Brigade Tone Tomsic 2nd Shock Brigade Ljubo Sercer 3rd Shock Brigade Ivan Gradnik artillery battery of 2 gunsStrength3502 000Casualties and lossesComplete annihilation 10 120 171 POW almost all killed after Kocevje trial or without any trialunknownclass notpageimage Location within Yugoslavia Contents 1 Background 2 Forces 2 1 National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Slovenia 2 2 Slovenian Chetniks 3 Battle 4 Kocevje trials 5 Aftermath 6 Legacy 7 References 8 SourcesBackground editThe capitulation of Italy was an important turning point in the World War II in Slovenian part of Axis occupied Kingdom of Yugoslavia 2 Slovene Partisans had a British mission inside their headquarter Based on the instructions received from the Allies the Italian troops were ordered to surrender their arms to the Partisans in Yugoslavia which allowed Slovene Partisans to significantly strengthen their forces 3 The Slovene Partisans immediately used this arms to eliminate their main political opponents Slovenian detachment of the Yugoslav Army in Homeland Forces editNational Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Slovenia edit Slovene Partisans which attacked Yugoslav Army in Grcarice belonged to three shock brigades Tomsic Sercer and Gradnik of the 14th Slovenian Division After the capitulation of Italy in 1943 the Slovene Partisans captured 2 heavy guns together with its crew that they brought to Grcarice 4 According to an interview of former Chetnik officer Uros Susteric the Italian soldiers operated artillery weapons used against Chetniks 5 Slovenian Chetniks edit nbsp Karl Novak in the 1930s commander of all Chetnik detachments in Slovenia The commander of all Chetniks in Slovenia was Karl Novak Most of Slovene Chetniks in Grcarice were members of the Sokol movement 6 Chetnik detachment in Grcarice was the main Slovene Chetnik group 7 Their number grew from 50 initially to 350 8 Their official name was Dolenjska Chetnik Detachment while they were also known as the Central Chetnik Detachment Slovene Centralni Cetniski Odred 9 About 60 of them were officers or non commissioned officers 10 Dolenjska Chetnik Detachment was commanded by the Major Danilo Borut Koprivica It had four battalions the first commanded by Captain Pavle Vosmar Vidmar the second by Milan Kranjc third by Marjan Strnisa and fourth by Stanko Abram 11 Chetniks in Grcarice expected reinforcements consisting of Chetniks from Ljubljana and around 300 12 Chetniks from Lika region 13 Only small detachment of 20 Chetniks from Ljubljana managed to reach Grcarice and reinforce defenders One detachment of 270 Chetniks from Lika commanded by Vasilije Marovic was sent by Major Bjelajac to join Chetniks in Slovenia tried to reach Grcarice but returned after reaching Srbske Moravice where they learned about the Italian capitulation and decided to return Battle editThe prelude of the Battle of Grcarice were the clashes between the Partisans and Chetniks in Sveti Gregor on 3 September After being attacked by the Tone Tomsic Partisan Brigade the Chetnik forces retreated to Grcarice where they had their center and headquarters 14 The Chetniks immediately fortified their positions connecting two buildings and the church 15 On 5 September Chetniks received two trucks of arms and ammunition because Italian General Gambara wanted to establish connection with the Allies 16 nbsp Partisans from Sercer brigade near Kocevje in September 1943 On 6 September the Chetniks in Grcarice celebrated the birthday of Peter II of Yugoslavia 17 On 7 September the Partisans encircled Grcarice and on 8 September they began the attack on Grcarice 18 On the first day of attack the Slovene Partisans did not have any heavy weapons so Chetniks successfully repelled all their attacks 19 Major Novak was in Ljubljana during this battle and commanded his units through radio connection Expecting the reinforcement from Chetniks from Lika he continually sent instructions to Dolenjska Chetniks Detachment to keep their positions When Koprivica was wounded he appointed Captain Milan Kranjc to take over the command over the detachment 20 On 9 September 20 Chetniks of the Ljubljana detachment joined surrounded Chetniks When Kranjc realized that the Chetnik units could not withheld the Partisan s attacks he planned to break through their lines during the night 21 In midnight Kranjc shouted to Partisans explaining them that their political commissars were guilty of crimes against Slovenian people and accusing them of attacking regular Yugoslav army units instead of the Nazi troops that occupied their country 22 Kranjc invited the Partisan soldiers to kill their political commissars and join the Chetniks in their struggle against occupation 23 When Kranjc was wounded by Partisan artillery fire Marijan Strnisa nom de guerre Pribina took command over the surrounded Chetnik forces According to post war Yugoslav sources both Koprivica and Kranjc committed suicide to avoid capture by the Partisans 24 The forces of Yugoslav Army in the Homeland suffered a defeat and with 11 soldiers killed and 171 captured 25 According to Vladimir Dedijer the Partisans occupied Grcarice on 9 September 1943 26 Among the Chetniks captured by the Partisans was Vladimir Kalan who worked for Allied intelligence and was released after he claimed British citizenship 27 Kocevje trials edit nbsp Kocevje trials organized in former hall of Sokol assotiations between 9 and 11 October 1943 The Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation organized trials for captured Yugoslav soldiers between 9 and 11 October 1943 28 The Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation organized a trial to 21 captured Yugoslav officers condemning to death 16 of them while 5 were sentenced to forced labor 29 Besides nine prisoners who escaped and those who were put on trial and sentenced to death all other prisoners were secretly executed in November and December 1943 on many different places in Kocevje although they surrendered after Partisans guaranteed their lives which was a condition for their surrender 30 Aftermath edit nbsp The image taken during the Siege of Turjak On 19 September 1943 around 700 members of Slovenian detachments of Yugoslav Army in the Homeland surrendered to Slovene Partisans in Turjak Castle after the Siege of Turjak 31 Slovenian historian Janez Grum emphasized that the defeat of Chetniks in three day battle of Grcarice was serious blow for anti communist Slovenians and their resistance to communist terror 32 After the defeat in Grcarice only small scattered groups of Chetniks in Slovenia continued to exist while Major Novak resigned as their commander 33 Dragoslav Mihailovic appointed Ivan Prezelj as new commander of the Slovenian units of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland 34 Prezelj commanded over small number of Chetnik detachments until the end of the World War II 35 The Slovene Home Guard was established as a reaction to massacres and inadmissible actions of Partisans connected with battles of Turjak and Grcarice 36 Legacy editIn his postwar work Edvard Kardelj recounted that until the capitulation of Italy and destruction of the Slovenian detachment of the Yugoslav Army in the Homeland in Grcarice Joseph Stalin had insisted that the Chetniks and Partisans should reach an agreement at any price in order to create an army under the command of Draza Mihailovic 37 nbsp 2011 picture of the repaired building in Grcarice where the Chetniks had their headquarters during the Battle of Grcarice with a commemorative plaque in honour of the ChetniksReferences edit Terzic 1957 p 535 Dezman Stepec amp Cregeen 2006 p 23 Dezman Stepec amp Cregeen 2006 p 23 Mlakar 2003 p 48 Ko so partizani izvedeli za kapitulacijo Italije so cetnike ponovno pozvali na predajo a ni bilo odziva Nato so pred Grcarice pripeljali dve havbici ki ju je partizanska vojska zaplenila pri Dolenji vasi Z njima so upravljali italijanski castniki Susteric Uros 22 August 2005 Slovenacke straze Đenerala Draze Vecernje Novosti Retrieved 30 December 2018 Bevc 2007 p 149 Plut Pregelj amp Rogel 2010 Plut Pregelj amp Rogel 2010 Zaveza st 10 Revija za duhovna kulturna in politicna vprasanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljseviski revoluciji in drzavljanski vojni Elektronska izdaja Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana 2009 Borbe u Sloveniji 1943 god Beograd Vojnoistorijski institut JNA 1957 page 33 Vojno istoriski glasnik 1983 p 189 Grum amp Plesko 1961 p 69 Ravnikar Podbevsek 1972 p 275 Saje 1952 p 567 Zaveza st 10 Revija za duhovna kulturna in politicna vprasanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljseviski revoluciji in drzavljanski vojni Elektronska izdaja Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana 2009 Zaveza st 10 Revija za duhovna kulturna in politicna vprasanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljseviski revoluciji in drzavljanski vojni Elektronska izdaja Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana 2009 Zaveza st 10 Revija za duhovna kulturna in politicna vprasanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljseviski revoluciji in drzavljanski vojni Elektronska izdaja Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana 2009 Zaveza st 10 Revija za duhovna kulturna in politicna vprasanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljseviski revoluciji in drzavljanski vojni Elektronska izdaja Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana 2009 Zaveza st 10 Revija za duhovna kulturna in politicna vprasanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljseviski revoluciji in drzavljanski vojni Elektronska izdaja Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana 2009 Javorsek 1990 p 262 Grum amp Plesko 1961 p 72 Grum amp Plesko 1961 p 72 Grum amp Plesko 1961 p 70 Vojno istoriski glasnik 1983 p 189 Svajncer 1992 p 187 Dedijer 1990 p 65 The South Slav Journal Dositey Obradovich Circle 2002 p 61 Allied intelligence and captured by the Communists in September 1943 was one Dr Vladimir Kalan a native of Celje November of 1943 Dr Kalan was captured as a member of a Slovene Chetnik detachment in the village of Grcarice Milac 2002 p 95 At the beginning of October 1943 the so called Kocevski process took place The captured leaders of Grcarice and Milac 2002 p 95 Milac 2002 p 235 Kardelj 1982 p 156 Zaveza st 10 Revija za duhovna kulturna in politicna vprasanja sedanjosti in prihodnosti s posebnim ozirom na krizo slovenstva po boljseviski revoluciji in drzavljanski vojni Elektronska izdaja Nova slovenska zaveza Ljubljana 2009 Plut Pregelj amp Rogel 2010 Plut Pregelj amp Rogel 2010 Plut Pregelj amp Rogel 2010 Griesser Pecar 2007 p 292 Domobranstvo je nastalo kot reakcija na nedopustna ravnanja partizanov in OF predvsem pod vtisom bojev za Grcarice in Turjak v septembru 1943 Luthar 2008 p 430 Surprisingly enough before these developments even Stalin had insisted that the partisans and Chetniks should reach an agreement at any price in order to create an army under the command of Draza Mihailovic 534 Kardelj recounted that Sources editTerzic Velimir 1957 Oslobodilacki rat naroda Jugoslavije 1941 1945 Vojni istoriski Institut Jugoslovenske narodne armije Mlakar Boris 2003 Slovensko domobranstvo 1943 1945 ustanovitev organizacija idejno ozadje Slovenska matica ISBN 978 961 213 114 2 Bevc Vladislav 2007 Liberal Forces in Twentieth Century Yugoslavia Memoirs of Ladislav Bevc Peter Lang ISBN 978 1 4331 0008 6 Dedijer Vladimir 1990 From September 11 1943 to November 7 1944 University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 10110 8 Dezman Joze Stepec Marko Cregeen Martin 2006 The Making of Slovenia National Museum of Contemporary History ISBN 978 961 91040 2 6 Plut Pregelj Leopoldina Rogel Carole 2010 The A to Z of Slovenia Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0 8108 7216 5 Saje Francek 1952 Belogardizem Slovenski knjizni zavod Milac Metod M 2002 Resistance Imprisonment and Forced Labor P Lang ISBN 978 0 8204 5781 9 Kardelj Edvard 1982 Reminiscences the Struggle for Recognition and Independence the New Yugoslavia 1944 1957 Blond amp Briggs ISBN 978 0 85634 135 9 Svajncer Janez J 1992 Vojna in vojaska zgodovina Slovencev Presernova druzba Griesser Pecar Tamara 2007 Razdvojeni narod Slovenija 1941 1945 okupacija kolaboracija drzavljanska vojna revolucija Mladinska knj ISBN 978 961 01 0208 3 Luthar Oto 2008 The Land Between A History of Slovenia Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 631 57011 1 Grum France Plesko Stane 1961 Svoboda v razvzlinah Grcarice Turjak Kocevje Zgodovinski odsek Zveze slovenskih protikomunisticnih borcev Ravnikar Podbevsek Stefanija 1972 Sv Urh Kronika dogodkov iz narodnoosvobodilne vojne Borec Javorsek Joze 1990 Spomini na Slovence ADIT Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Grcarice amp oldid 1213898194, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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