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Ivo Herenčić

Ivan "Ivo" Herenčić (28 February 1910 – 8 December 1978) was a general in the armed forces of the Independent State of Croatia (Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH), a fascist puppet state. In 1941, he commanded a battalion of Ustaše Militia that committed many war crimes and atrocities on civilians during the Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia. Born in Bjelovar in Austria-Hungary, he completed his secondary and tertiary education in Zagreb and Sarajevo in what was by then the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In 1933, he left Yugoslavia to join the fascist and ultranationalist Croatian Ustaše movement in Italy. Late that year, Herenčić participated in an unsuccessful assassination attempt on the King of Yugoslavia, Alexander.

Ivan Herenčić
Nickname(s)Ivo
Konzul
Born28 February 1910
Bjelovar, Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-Hungary
Died8 December 1978 (aged 68)
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Allegiance Independent State of Croatia
Years of service1941–1945
RankGeneral
Commands held1st Ustaše Company
5th Ustaše Corps
Battles/warsWorld War II in Yugoslavia  (WIA)

Herenčić returned to his homeland when the NDH was established following the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941. He was sent to the Herzegovina region where he formed and commanded the Mostar Battalion which committed war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Herenčić also served in the surveillance departments of the NDH, and committed atrocities that made him much feared. After being involved in an assassination attempt on Home Guard general Ivan Prpić in 1943, Herenčić had to emigrate to Hungary. Several months later he was brought back to Croatia to help uncover the Lorković–Vokić plot against the NDH government.

In March 1945 he was appointed commander of 5th Ustaše Corps of the Croatian Armed Forces (Croatian: Hrvatske oružane snage, HOS) and in the same month Herenčić was one of the leaders of the withdrawal of the HOS towards Austria. He participated in negotiations with the British, who decided that members of the NDH armed forces and accompanying civilians would not be allowed to proceed further and would have to surrender their arms to the Yugoslav Partisans. Herenčić evaded the Yugoslav pursuit of Nazi collaborators and was able to escape to Italy and later to Argentina where he died in 1978.

Early life edit

Ivo Herenčić was born on 28 February 1910 in Bjelovar, a city in the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, a part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[1] He attended high school in Zagreb after which he attended a business college[a] in the same city. From 1930 to 1931, he attended the school for reserve officers of the Royal Yugoslav Army in Sarajevo. In the early 1930s, Herenčić was a member of the security detail for the leader of the Croatian Peasant Party, Vladko Maček.[1]

Ustaše activity edit

In 1933, Herenčić left Yugoslavia and on 9 September he joined a camp for members of the ultra-nationalist and fascist Ustaše organisation in Borgo Val di Taro, Italy.[2] While in Italy, he adopted pseudonym Hetman.[3] this being a historical military title used in the Polish–Lithuanian state.[4]

Herenčić was a leader of an Ustaše plot to assassinate Alexander, King of Yugoslavia, in Zagreb. The King was visiting the city to celebrate his and his wife Maria's birthday and the anniversary of the creation of Yugoslavia.[5] In Piacenza, on 9 December 1933, Herenčić met with another Ustaša, Petar Oreb, who was meant to assassinate the King. Oreb and Herenčić traveled to Klagenfurt in Austria using fake passports in the names of Emil Benedikt and Janoš Kren respectively. They illegally crossed the Austrian–Yugoslav border and spent a night in Celje. They arrived in Zagreb on 11 December and were welcomed into the home of Josip Begović, a student.[6] On 16 December,[b] the King arrived in Zagreb and was welcomed by a crowd at Jelačić Square. Oreb was in the crowd and had two hand grenades in his pockets which he had been taught how to throw in a training camp in Vischetto [sh]. Herenčić and Begović were also nearby. Oreb was tasked with assassinating the King while Begović was to throw another grenade into the crowd immediately after Oreb's attack, in order to cause panic which would allow them to escape apprehension. When the King's car arrived at the center of the square, a group of children ran towards Alexander. Oreb was petrified after seeing the children, and Begović suggested that he throw a grenade at the military band behind the car, but Oreb refused. They left the square and started making new plans for the King's assassination.[5]

On the same day, Herenčić left Zagreb while Oreb and Begović were joined by another Ustaša, Anton Podgorelac. During the night police found out where the three Ustašas were, and, at dawn, broke into Begović's apartment. Oreb fired two shots, killing one policeman and injuring another, after which he managed to escape. Podgorelac and Begović were taken into custody where they gave a detailed description of Oreb, who was caught by the police the same day, in Velika Gorica.[8] After the interrogation of the three imprisoned Ustašas, Herenčić was implicated.[9] Klagenfurt police attempted to determine whether Herenčić and other Ustaše were in Klagenfurt and were involved in the assassination plot. They managed to find out that Herenčić had met with Begović and Vladimir Singer in the autumn of 1933, and also that Herenčić was in Klagenfurt just before and after the assassination attempt. However, this was not enough to prove that Herečić had been involved.[10]

Upon returning to Italy Herenčić continued to live and work in various Ustaše camps.[1] He also continued to occasionally travel to Austria in order to complete different Ustaše missions, such as recruiting new members into the Ustaše, which gained him the nickname Konzul (English: Consul).[11][12] In 1935, he became the commander of the 1st Ustaše Company, a paramilitary unit with a strength of 74 men, stationed on the Italian island of Lipari.[13]

World War II edit

Herenčić participated in a meeting in Pistoia on 10 April 1941, organized by the Ustaše leader (Poglavnik), Ante Pavelić, after the Ustaše received uniforms and weapons from the Italians following the news of initial German success in the invasion of Yugoslavia.[14] On 11 April, while the invasion was still underway, Herenčić traveled together with Pavelić and other Ustašas to Trieste. The following morning Pavelić tasked Herenčić with traveling to Zagreb where he was supposed to meet with the Ustaše deputy leader, Slavko Kvaternik. Herenčić's mission to Zagreb was canceled after the Italian general Vittorio Ambrosio told Pavelić that the Ustašas could travel to Zagreb that day, as the Italian Army had reached Karlovac.[15] After being provided with buses and automobiles in Trieste on the same day, Ustašas traveled towards Zagreb and they entered the city on 15 April.[16]

After Pavelić arrived in Zagreb, he sent Herenčić along with Jure Francetić and Mijo Babić to Bosnia and Herzegovina to form Ustaše units and organizations.[17] Herenčić participated in the suppression of the Serb uprising in eastern Herzegovina in June and early July 1941. Main Ustaša Headquarters sent Herenčić to Mostar in mid-July. A few days after he arrived, arrests and killings of Serbs and Jews began in the city. Between 19 July and 4 August 750 people were arrested in Mostar and sent to various concentration camps in the NDH.[7] On 2 August, Herenčić ordered the establishment of the Jablanica concentration camp where, according to one witness, around 400 Serbs were detained.[18] During the summer of 1941, Herenčić formed the Ustaše Mostar Battalion and became its first commander.[1] His battalion committed various war crimes in the Mostar area, where it operated until 7 September when Italy took full control of the area. After this, the battalion traveled to the German occupation zone, where it continued to commit atrocities that disgusted even the high-ranking officials of the NDH.[19] In November, Herenčić was promoted to the rank of major and soon after to lieutenant colonel. Later he was wounded while participating in fighting in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[1]

In April 1941, Herenčić was appointed as a commissioner in RAVSIGUR, a supervisory department in the Ministry of Internal Affairs.[1][20] In April 1942, the Chief Surveillance Department[c] was created and tasked with overseeing the work of the Ustaše Surveillance Service (UNS)[d] and of the police. Herenčić was appointed its leader with Lieutenant Mirko Vutuc as his deputy.[21] Herenčić remained in this position until August 1943, when he ordered the assassination of the Chief of Staff of the Croatian Home Guard, General Ivan Prpić, as he feared Prpić might reveal compromising information about him and other Ustaše Militia officers. The assassination failed and Herenčić had to flee to Hungary.[22] He was brought back to Zagreb by RAVSIGUR in the spring of 1944 when he was tasked with uncovering the Lorković–Vokić plot against the NDH government.[23] Herenčić was one of the most feared UNS and RAVSIGUR officers because of the atrocities previously committed by units under his command.[24]

In mid-December 1944, Herenčić was promoted to the rank of general[25] and in mid-March 1945, he was appointed commander of the newly formed 5th Ustaše Corps.[26] Herenčić, along with two other generals, Vladimir Metikoš and Vjekoslav Servatzy, led the withdrawal of the Croatian Armed Forces towards Austria with the goal of surrendering to the advancing British.[27] Once the lead elements of the fleeing columns reached Bleiburg just across the Austrian border on 14 May 1945 they were stopped by the British 38th (Irish) Brigade, commanded by Brigadier Patrick T.D. Scott. Herenčić, together with Metikoš, Servatzy and Danijel Crljen met with Scott on the same day. Scott decided that the NDH troops and the civilians accompanying them should not withdraw any further. On 15 May, Herenčić, Metikoš, Servatzy and Crljen, representing the retreating NDH forces, met with Scott and the Partisan representatives, Milan Basta and Ivan Kovačić-Efenka. During this meeting, it was decided that the NDH forces would have to surrender to the Partisans.[28][29]

Post-war life and death edit

Although he was not able to negotiate passage for the NDH forces and the accompanying civilians into Austria, Herenčić himself was able to escape into the countryside and make his way to Italy.[30] He lived for a time in Rome near Porta Pia, working as an art dealer.[31] Later he traveled to Argentina, where he died on 8 December 1978 in Buenos Aires, aged 68.[32]

Personal life edit

During World War II, Herenčić married Vera Javor, Ante Pavelić's secretary; she fled to Argentina with Herenčić. She died in Buenos Aires on 19 August 1991.[33]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Croatian: Ekonomsko-komercijalna visoka škola
  2. ^ Sources contradict on the date the King arrived in Zagreb. Adriano and Cingolani give the date as 11 December[5] while Krizman and Skoko give that date as 16 December.[6][7]
  3. ^ Croatian: Glavno nadzorništvo
  4. ^ Croatian: Ustaška nadzorna služba

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Rupić & Aljinović 1997, p. 155.
  2. ^ Krizman 1978, p. 566.
  3. ^ Krizman 1978, p. 68.
  4. ^ "hetman | historical military title | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  5. ^ a b c Adriano & Cingolani 2018, p. 85.
  6. ^ a b Krizman 1978, p. 130.
  7. ^ a b Skoko 1991, p. 241.
  8. ^ Adriano & Cingolani 2018, p. 86.
  9. ^ Lewis 2014, p. 202.
  10. ^ Lewis 2014, p. 203.
  11. ^ Begić 1986, p. 191.
  12. ^ Krizman 1978, p. 165.
  13. ^ Krizman 1978, p. 575.
  14. ^ Krizman 1978, pp. 403–404.
  15. ^ Krizman 1978, p. 411.
  16. ^ Tomasevich 2001, pp. 59–60.
  17. ^ Redžić 2005, p. 214.
  18. ^ Škiljan 2014, p. 207.
  19. ^ Skoko 1991, p. 250.
  20. ^ Jelić-Butić 1977, pp. 102–103.
  21. ^ Kovačić 2009, p. 147.
  22. ^ Jelinović 1995, p. 575.
  23. ^ Yeomans 2013, p. 346.
  24. ^ Jelić-Butić 1977, p. 185.
  25. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 458.
  26. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 462.
  27. ^ Adriano & Cingolani 2018, p. 272.
  28. ^ Geiger 2003, pp. 189–190.
  29. ^ Grahek Ravančić 2006, pp. 33–35.
  30. ^ Tomasevich 2001, p. 759.
  31. ^ Adriano & Cingolani 2018, p. 315.
  32. ^ Rupić & Aljinović 1997, p. 156.
  33. ^ Blažeković 1997, p. 156.

Bibliography edit

  • Adriano, Pino; Cingolani, Giorgio (2018). Nationalism and Terror: Ante Pavelić and Ustashe Terrorism from Fascism to the Cold War. Translated by Riccardo James Vargiu. Budapest: Central European University Press. ISBN 978-963-3862-06-3. JSTOR 10.7829/j.ctv4cbhsr.
  • Begić, Miron Krešimir (1986). Ustaški pokret, 1929–1941: pregled njegove poviesti (in Serbo-Croatian). New York: Naklada Smotre "Ustas̆a".
  • Blažeković, Milan (1997). "Herenčić, Vera". In Dizdar, Zdravko; Grčić, Marko; Ravlić, Slaven; Stuparić, Darko (eds.). Tko je tko u NDH [Who Was Who in the NDH] (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Minerva. ISBN 978-953-6377-03-9.
  • Dizdar, Zdravko; Grčić, Marko; Ravlić, Slaven; Stuparić, Darko, eds. (1997). Tko je tko u NDH: Hrvatska 1941–1945 [Who Was Who in the NDH] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Minerva. ISBN 978-953-6377-03-9.
  • Geiger, Vladimir (2003). "Osvrt na važniju literaturu o Bleiburgu 1945" [Important literature on Bleiburg events in May 1945] (PDF). Journal of Contemporary History (in Croatian). Croatian Institute of History. 35 (1): 189–216. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  • Grahek Ravančić, Martina (2006). "Controversies about the Croatian victims at Bleiburg and in "death marches"" (PDF). Review of Croatian History. Croatian Institute of History. II (1): 27–46. Retrieved 12 April 2021.
  • Jelić-Butić, Fikreta (1977). Ustaše i Nezavisna Država Hrvatska 1941–1945 [Ustaše and the Independent State of Croatia 1941–1945] (in Serbo-Croatian). Liber.
  • Jelinović, Zvonimir (1995). "Hrvatska vojska (domobranstvo) i obrana" (PDF). Časopis za suvremenu povijest (in Croatian). Zagreb: Croatian Institute of History. 27 (3): 569–583. Retrieved 24 July 2020.
  • Kovačić, Davor (2009). Redarstveno—obavještatjni sustav Nezavisne Državne Hrvatske od 1941. do 1945 godine (in Croatian). Hrvatski institut za povijest. ISBN 978-953-6324-74-3.
  • Krizman, Bogdan (1978). Ante Pavelić i ustaše [Ante Pavelić and Ustaše]. Zagreb, Croatia: Globus.
  • Lewis, Mark (2014). "The Failure of the Austrian and Yugoslav Police to Repress the Croatian Ustaša in Austria, 1929–1934". Austrian History Yearbook. 45: 186–212. doi:10.1017/S0067237813000672. S2CID 145640912.
  • Redžić, Enver (2005). Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War. Abingdon: Frank Cass. ISBN 978-071-4656-25-0.
  • Rupić, Mato; Aljinović, Rudi (1997). "Herenčić, Ivo". In Dizdar, Zdravko; Grčić, Marko; Ravlić, Slaven; Stuparić, Darko (eds.). Tko je tko u NDH [Who Was Who in the NDH] (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Minerva. ISBN 978-953-6377-03-9.
  • Skoko, Savo (1991). Pokolji hercegovačkih Srba '41 [Massacres of Herzegovinian Serbs] (in Serbo-Croatian). Stručna knjiga. ISBN 978-864-1900-99-6.
  • Škiljan, Filip (2014). Organizirana prisilna iseljavanja Srba iz NDH [Organized forced evictions of Serbs from NDH] (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Srpsko narodno vijeće. ISBN 978-953-7442-13-2.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-080-4736-15-2.
  • Yeomans, Rory (2013). Visions of annihilation : the Ustasha regime and the cultural politics of fascism, 1941–1945. Pittsburgh, United States of America: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-082-2961-92-5.

herenčić, ivan, herenčić, february, 1910, december, 1978, general, armed, forces, independent, state, croatia, nezavisna, država, hrvatska, fascist, puppet, state, 1941, commanded, battalion, ustaše, militia, that, committed, many, crimes, atrocities, civilian. Ivan Ivo Herencic 28 February 1910 8 December 1978 was a general in the armed forces of the Independent State of Croatia Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska NDH a fascist puppet state In 1941 he commanded a battalion of Ustase Militia that committed many war crimes and atrocities on civilians during the Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia Born in Bjelovar in Austria Hungary he completed his secondary and tertiary education in Zagreb and Sarajevo in what was by then the Kingdom of Yugoslavia In 1933 he left Yugoslavia to join the fascist and ultranationalist Croatian Ustase movement in Italy Late that year Herencic participated in an unsuccessful assassination attempt on the King of Yugoslavia Alexander Ivan HerencicNickname s IvoKonzulBorn28 February 1910Bjelovar Croatia Slavonia Austria HungaryDied8 December 1978 aged 68 Buenos Aires ArgentinaAllegiance Independent State of CroatiaYears of service1941 1945RankGeneralCommands held1st Ustase Company5th Ustase CorpsBattles warsWorld War II in Yugoslavia WIA Herencic returned to his homeland when the NDH was established following the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 He was sent to the Herzegovina region where he formed and commanded the Mostar Battalion which committed war crimes in Bosnia and Herzegovina Herencic also served in the surveillance departments of the NDH and committed atrocities that made him much feared After being involved in an assassination attempt on Home Guard general Ivan Prpic in 1943 Herencic had to emigrate to Hungary Several months later he was brought back to Croatia to help uncover the Lorkovic Vokic plot against the NDH government In March 1945 he was appointed commander of 5th Ustase Corps of the Croatian Armed Forces Croatian Hrvatske oruzane snage HOS and in the same month Herencic was one of the leaders of the withdrawal of the HOS towards Austria He participated in negotiations with the British who decided that members of the NDH armed forces and accompanying civilians would not be allowed to proceed further and would have to surrender their arms to the Yugoslav Partisans Herencic evaded the Yugoslav pursuit of Nazi collaborators and was able to escape to Italy and later to Argentina where he died in 1978 Contents 1 Early life 2 Ustase activity 3 World War II 4 Post war life and death 5 Personal life 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Footnotes 7 2 BibliographyEarly life editIvo Herencic was born on 28 February 1910 in Bjelovar a city in the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia a part of the Austro Hungarian Empire 1 He attended high school in Zagreb after which he attended a business college a in the same city From 1930 to 1931 he attended the school for reserve officers of the Royal Yugoslav Army in Sarajevo In the early 1930s Herencic was a member of the security detail for the leader of the Croatian Peasant Party Vladko Macek 1 Ustase activity editIn 1933 Herencic left Yugoslavia and on 9 September he joined a camp for members of the ultra nationalist and fascist Ustase organisation in Borgo Val di Taro Italy 2 While in Italy he adopted pseudonym Hetman 3 this being a historical military title used in the Polish Lithuanian state 4 Herencic was a leader of an Ustase plot to assassinate Alexander King of Yugoslavia in Zagreb The King was visiting the city to celebrate his and his wife Maria s birthday and the anniversary of the creation of Yugoslavia 5 In Piacenza on 9 December 1933 Herencic met with another Ustasa Petar Oreb who was meant to assassinate the King Oreb and Herencic traveled to Klagenfurt in Austria using fake passports in the names of Emil Benedikt and Janos Kren respectively They illegally crossed the Austrian Yugoslav border and spent a night in Celje They arrived in Zagreb on 11 December and were welcomed into the home of Josip Begovic a student 6 On 16 December b the King arrived in Zagreb and was welcomed by a crowd at Jelacic Square Oreb was in the crowd and had two hand grenades in his pockets which he had been taught how to throw in a training camp in Vischetto sh Herencic and Begovic were also nearby Oreb was tasked with assassinating the King while Begovic was to throw another grenade into the crowd immediately after Oreb s attack in order to cause panic which would allow them to escape apprehension When the King s car arrived at the center of the square a group of children ran towards Alexander Oreb was petrified after seeing the children and Begovic suggested that he throw a grenade at the military band behind the car but Oreb refused They left the square and started making new plans for the King s assassination 5 On the same day Herencic left Zagreb while Oreb and Begovic were joined by another Ustasa Anton Podgorelac During the night police found out where the three Ustasas were and at dawn broke into Begovic s apartment Oreb fired two shots killing one policeman and injuring another after which he managed to escape Podgorelac and Begovic were taken into custody where they gave a detailed description of Oreb who was caught by the police the same day in Velika Gorica 8 After the interrogation of the three imprisoned Ustasas Herencic was implicated 9 Klagenfurt police attempted to determine whether Herencic and other Ustase were in Klagenfurt and were involved in the assassination plot They managed to find out that Herencic had met with Begovic and Vladimir Singer in the autumn of 1933 and also that Herencic was in Klagenfurt just before and after the assassination attempt However this was not enough to prove that Herecic had been involved 10 Upon returning to Italy Herencic continued to live and work in various Ustase camps 1 He also continued to occasionally travel to Austria in order to complete different Ustase missions such as recruiting new members into the Ustase which gained him the nickname Konzul English Consul 11 12 In 1935 he became the commander of the 1st Ustase Company a paramilitary unit with a strength of 74 men stationed on the Italian island of Lipari 13 World War II editHerencic participated in a meeting in Pistoia on 10 April 1941 organized by the Ustase leader Poglavnik Ante Pavelic after the Ustase received uniforms and weapons from the Italians following the news of initial German success in the invasion of Yugoslavia 14 On 11 April while the invasion was still underway Herencic traveled together with Pavelic and other Ustasas to Trieste The following morning Pavelic tasked Herencic with traveling to Zagreb where he was supposed to meet with the Ustase deputy leader Slavko Kvaternik Herencic s mission to Zagreb was canceled after the Italian general Vittorio Ambrosio told Pavelic that the Ustasas could travel to Zagreb that day as the Italian Army had reached Karlovac 15 After being provided with buses and automobiles in Trieste on the same day Ustasas traveled towards Zagreb and they entered the city on 15 April 16 After Pavelic arrived in Zagreb he sent Herencic along with Jure Francetic and Mijo Babic to Bosnia and Herzegovina to form Ustase units and organizations 17 Herencic participated in the suppression of the Serb uprising in eastern Herzegovina in June and early July 1941 Main Ustasa Headquarters sent Herencic to Mostar in mid July A few days after he arrived arrests and killings of Serbs and Jews began in the city Between 19 July and 4 August 750 people were arrested in Mostar and sent to various concentration camps in the NDH 7 On 2 August Herencic ordered the establishment of the Jablanica concentration camp where according to one witness around 400 Serbs were detained 18 During the summer of 1941 Herencic formed the Ustase Mostar Battalion and became its first commander 1 His battalion committed various war crimes in the Mostar area where it operated until 7 September when Italy took full control of the area After this the battalion traveled to the German occupation zone where it continued to commit atrocities that disgusted even the high ranking officials of the NDH 19 In November Herencic was promoted to the rank of major and soon after to lieutenant colonel Later he was wounded while participating in fighting in Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 In April 1941 Herencic was appointed as a commissioner in RAVSIGUR a supervisory department in the Ministry of Internal Affairs 1 20 In April 1942 the Chief Surveillance Department c was created and tasked with overseeing the work of the Ustase Surveillance Service UNS d and of the police Herencic was appointed its leader with Lieutenant Mirko Vutuc as his deputy 21 Herencic remained in this position until August 1943 when he ordered the assassination of the Chief of Staff of the Croatian Home Guard General Ivan Prpic as he feared Prpic might reveal compromising information about him and other Ustase Militia officers The assassination failed and Herencic had to flee to Hungary 22 He was brought back to Zagreb by RAVSIGUR in the spring of 1944 when he was tasked with uncovering the Lorkovic Vokic plot against the NDH government 23 Herencic was one of the most feared UNS and RAVSIGUR officers because of the atrocities previously committed by units under his command 24 In mid December 1944 Herencic was promoted to the rank of general 25 and in mid March 1945 he was appointed commander of the newly formed 5th Ustase Corps 26 Herencic along with two other generals Vladimir Metikos and Vjekoslav Servatzy led the withdrawal of the Croatian Armed Forces towards Austria with the goal of surrendering to the advancing British 27 Once the lead elements of the fleeing columns reached Bleiburg just across the Austrian border on 14 May 1945 they were stopped by the British 38th Irish Brigade commanded by Brigadier Patrick T D Scott Herencic together with Metikos Servatzy and Danijel Crljen met with Scott on the same day Scott decided that the NDH troops and the civilians accompanying them should not withdraw any further On 15 May Herencic Metikos Servatzy and Crljen representing the retreating NDH forces met with Scott and the Partisan representatives Milan Basta and Ivan Kovacic Efenka During this meeting it was decided that the NDH forces would have to surrender to the Partisans 28 29 Post war life and death editAlthough he was not able to negotiate passage for the NDH forces and the accompanying civilians into Austria Herencic himself was able to escape into the countryside and make his way to Italy 30 He lived for a time in Rome near Porta Pia working as an art dealer 31 Later he traveled to Argentina where he died on 8 December 1978 in Buenos Aires aged 68 32 Personal life editDuring World War II Herencic married Vera Javor Ante Pavelic s secretary she fled to Argentina with Herencic She died in Buenos Aires on 19 August 1991 33 Notes edit Croatian Ekonomsko komercijalna visoka skola Sources contradict on the date the King arrived in Zagreb Adriano and Cingolani give the date as 11 December 5 while Krizman and Skoko give that date as 16 December 6 7 Croatian Glavno nadzornistvo Croatian Ustaska nadzorna sluzbaReferences editFootnotes edit a b c d e f Rupic amp Aljinovic 1997 p 155 Krizman 1978 p 566 Krizman 1978 p 68 hetman historical military title Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 17 January 2022 a b c Adriano amp Cingolani 2018 p 85 a b Krizman 1978 p 130 a b Skoko 1991 p 241 Adriano amp Cingolani 2018 p 86 Lewis 2014 p 202 Lewis 2014 p 203 Begic 1986 p 191 Krizman 1978 p 165 Krizman 1978 p 575 Krizman 1978 pp 403 404 Krizman 1978 p 411 Tomasevich 2001 pp 59 60 Redzic 2005 p 214 Skiljan 2014 p 207 Skoko 1991 p 250 Jelic Butic 1977 pp 102 103 Kovacic 2009 p 147 Jelinovic 1995 p 575 Yeomans 2013 p 346 Jelic Butic 1977 p 185 Tomasevich 2001 p 458 Tomasevich 2001 p 462 Adriano amp Cingolani 2018 p 272 Geiger 2003 pp 189 190 Grahek Ravancic 2006 pp 33 35 Tomasevich 2001 p 759 Adriano amp Cingolani 2018 p 315 Rupic amp Aljinovic 1997 p 156 Blazekovic 1997 p 156 Bibliography edit Adriano Pino Cingolani Giorgio 2018 Nationalism and Terror Ante Pavelic and Ustashe Terrorism from Fascism to the Cold War Translated by Riccardo James Vargiu Budapest Central European University Press ISBN 978 963 3862 06 3 JSTOR 10 7829 j ctv4cbhsr Begic Miron Kresimir 1986 Ustaski pokret 1929 1941 pregled njegove poviesti in Serbo Croatian New York Naklada Smotre Ustas a Blazekovic Milan 1997 Herencic Vera In Dizdar Zdravko Grcic Marko Ravlic Slaven Stuparic Darko eds Tko je tko u NDH Who Was Who in the NDH in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Minerva ISBN 978 953 6377 03 9 Dizdar Zdravko Grcic Marko Ravlic Slaven Stuparic Darko eds 1997 Tko je tko u NDH Hrvatska 1941 1945 Who Was Who in the NDH in Croatian Zagreb Minerva ISBN 978 953 6377 03 9 Geiger Vladimir 2003 Osvrt na vazniju literaturu o Bleiburgu 1945 Important literature on Bleiburg events in May 1945 PDF Journal of Contemporary History in Croatian Croatian Institute of History 35 1 189 216 Retrieved 12 April 2021 Grahek Ravancic Martina 2006 Controversies about the Croatian victims at Bleiburg and in death marches PDF Review of Croatian History Croatian Institute of History II 1 27 46 Retrieved 12 April 2021 Jelic Butic Fikreta 1977 Ustase i Nezavisna Drzava Hrvatska 1941 1945 Ustase and the Independent State of Croatia 1941 1945 in Serbo Croatian Liber Jelinovic Zvonimir 1995 Hrvatska vojska domobranstvo i obrana PDF Casopis za suvremenu povijest in Croatian Zagreb Croatian Institute of History 27 3 569 583 Retrieved 24 July 2020 Kovacic Davor 2009 Redarstveno obavjestatjni sustav Nezavisne Drzavne Hrvatske od 1941 do 1945 godine in Croatian Hrvatski institut za povijest ISBN 978 953 6324 74 3 Krizman Bogdan 1978 Ante Pavelic i ustase Ante Pavelic and Ustase Zagreb Croatia Globus Lewis Mark 2014 The Failure of the Austrian and Yugoslav Police to Repress the Croatian Ustasa in Austria 1929 1934 Austrian History Yearbook 45 186 212 doi 10 1017 S0067237813000672 S2CID 145640912 Redzic Enver 2005 Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Second World War Abingdon Frank Cass ISBN 978 071 4656 25 0 Rupic Mato Aljinovic Rudi 1997 Herencic Ivo In Dizdar Zdravko Grcic Marko Ravlic Slaven Stuparic Darko eds Tko je tko u NDH Who Was Who in the NDH in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Minerva ISBN 978 953 6377 03 9 Skoko Savo 1991 Pokolji hercegovackih Srba 41 Massacres of Herzegovinian Serbs in Serbo Croatian Strucna knjiga ISBN 978 864 1900 99 6 Skiljan Filip 2014 Organizirana prisilna iseljavanja Srba iz NDH Organized forced evictions of Serbs from NDH in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Srpsko narodno vijece ISBN 978 953 7442 13 2 Tomasevich Jozo 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 978 080 4736 15 2 Yeomans Rory 2013 Visions of annihilation the Ustasha regime and the cultural politics of fascism 1941 1945 Pittsburgh United States of America University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 082 2961 92 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ivo Herencic amp oldid 1193127395, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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