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Nikola Stojanović (politician, born 1880)

Nikola Stojanović (3 January 1880 – 5 March 1964) was a lawyer and Bosnian Serb and Yugoslavian politician. As a student, he wrote the article Serbs and Croats, printed in the Serbian Literary Herald, applying Social Darwinism and claiming that Serbs as 'superior people' would eventually assimilate the Croats. In the text, Stojanović announced war to extermination of either Serbs or Croats and the text has been cited as the blueprint for ethnic cleansing by Croatian writers. Following a politically-motivated reprint of the article in Srbobran [hr], the newspaper of the Serb Independent Party in Zagreb, it led to 1902 riots targeting Serb businesses and homes in the city [sr], involving a crowd of about 20,000.

Nikola Stojanović
Born(1880-01-03)3 January 1880
Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria-Hungary
(now Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Died5 March 1964(1964-03-05) (aged 84)
Belgrade, Yugoslavia
(now Serbia)
Alma materUniversity of Vienna
Occupation(s)Politician, lawyer
Political partySerb National Organisation

Stojanović became a member of the Serb National Organisation [sr] political party in Bosnia and Herzegovina and its representative in the Diet of Bosnia. He called for the end of the Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina and annexation of the land by Serbia as a part of its access to the Adriatic Sea through Dalmatia. Serbian prime minister Nikola Pašić directed Stojanović to contact émigré Croatian politicians Ante Trumbić and Julije Gazzari to form a body which would promote unification of South Slavs through expansion of Serbia. The group was established as the Yugoslav Committee with Stojanović was one of its founding members. Trumbić and Stojanović came into conflict with Pašić. While the former disagreed with Pašić on the issue of federation or greater centralisation, while the latter might have objected to the proposed state being a monarchy. Stojanović opposed the Corfu Declaration on unification which affirmed that the union would be a monarchy ruled by the Karađorđević dynasty. Stojanović was a part of the Yugoslav Committee's delegation which negotiated and the signed short-lived Geneva Declaration defining the future common confederal state. Despite initiatives calling on the National Council of Bosnia and Herzegovina [sr] to proclaim direct unification with Serbia similarly to the Podgorica Assembly, the council remained passive on Stojanović's instructions. At the Paris Peace Conference (1919–1920), Stojanović was a representative of the newly proclaimed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes as an expert for Bosnia and Herzegovina.

In the interwar period, Stojanović pursued the career of an attorney. Upon the establishment of the Serbian Cultural Club in Belgrade in 1937, Stojanović joined the organisation. He was a part of a group tasked with drafting the organisation's rules of procedure and formulating its objectives. The Serbian Cultural Club took the leading role in shaping of the Greater Serbian ideology in the period. It also shaped the political programme of the Chetniks led by Draža Mihailović. In the summer of 1941, Stojanović started working for Mihailović in his Belgrade office and formally joined the Central National Committee in August 1943. That year, Nazi German authorities arrested him and took him to occupied France where Stojanović remained until the end of the war. He returned to the Communist Yugoslavia after the war. He was tried and convicted for his political work.

Early life edit

Nikola Stojanović was a Bosnian Serb born in Mostar, in the Condominium of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 3 January 1880.[1] He studied law at the University of Vienna.[2]

Serbs and Croats edit

While still a student, Stojanović published an anonymous (subsequently attributed) article titled Serbs and Croats (Serbian: Срби и Хрвати) in the Serbian Literary Herald. In the article, he claimed Serbs would eventually assimilate Croats because the latter had inferior culture and lower national awareness prevented their development as a full-fledged nation.[3] Stojanović asserted that Croats cannot be a distinct nation because they lacked a separate language, unified customs and lifestyle.[4] In the text, Stojanović announced war to extermination "ours or yours", meaning Serbs and Croats respectively. The phrase, likely meant as a call to cultural war where Croats would be seduced by the Serbian national identity, resonated well not only with Serbian, but also Croatian nationalists (as its topics were similar to those tackled by the former leader of Croatian Party of Rights Ante Starčević. The article brought little new to the political discourse of the day, except the call to a war, and the phrase of "war to extermination of ours or yours" would be echoed in Yugoslav politics since then.[3] Stojanović's article applied Social Darwinism to model Serbian approach to non-Serbs and became cited as the blueprint for ethnic cleansing by Croatian writers.[5] In his text, Stojanović dismissed the Illyrian movement championed by Ljudevit Gaj as an effort of the House of Habsburg to contain Hungary, as well as the Yugoslavism advocated by bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer and Starčević's Croatian nationalism as reactions to Serbian rejection of Illyrism seeking to promote Habsburg and Roman Catholic interests in the Balkans.[6] He based the rejection, as well as the concept of inevitable assimilation, on chauvinist belief that Serbs are the superior in every aspect.[7] Despite the patronizing tone of the text, Political scientist David Bruce MacDonald argues that Stojanović wanted to unite Croatia with Serbia, thereby allowing Croatia to secure "economic, political and cultural independence, and freedom from German encroachment", with the goal of rallying the two against the threat of external powers.[8]

The article gained prominence when it was reprinted in Srbobran [hr] newspaper of the Serb Independent Party in Zagreb. The reprinting was arranged, as prime minister Kálmán Tisza implied, by Hungarian authorities in Budapest. The move was in response to the harassment of the government of Ban Károly Khuen-Héderváry by political activists organised by Stjepan Radić. The purpose of the move was to incite ethnic hatred between Croatian Serbs and Croats as a form of the divide and rule policy. Party of Rights newspaper Obzor quoted Stojanović, concluding that the war to extermination has been announced. Josip Frank, the most prominent Croatian nationalist and leader of the Pure Party of Rights, collaborated with the Hungarian authorities and called his followers to streets. The ensuing riots targeting Serb businesses and homes in Zagreb [sr] were welcomed by Frank and denounced by Radić,[9] as well as the entire Croatian opposition. Nonetheless, Radić also indirectly implied Croats should cease business dealings with Serbs. About 20,000 people rioted, largely urged and well-organised by the Frankists, but many others joined in. A substantial portion of the public interpreted the riots as a result of Habsburg and Hungarian efforts to ensure a dominant position in Croatia-Slavonia by preventing unity of Croats and Serbs.[10] The damage caused by the rioters was paid by the city and charged to taxpayers as a 3.5% tax.[11]

Yugoslav Committee edit

 
Yugoslav Committee photographed in Paris in 1916; Nikola Stojanović is standing, the fourth from the left

Stojanović joined the Serb National Organisation [sr] and successfully ran as the party's candidate, becoming a member of the Diet of Bosnia[12] elected in the 1910 Bosnian parliamentary election.[2] As a member of the Bosnian Diet, Stojanović advocated the position that the Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina should end and that Bosnia and Herzegovina should be added to the Kingdom of Serbia. Furthermore, Stojanović held that Serbia should gain access to the Adriatic Sea through Dalmatia.[13] At the outbreak of the World War I, Stojanović was in Serbia.[2] There he took part in formulation of Serbian war objectives formulated as the 1914 Niš Declaration.[14] Serbian prime minister Nikola Pašić directed Stojanović, and a fellow-Bosnian Serb member of the Diet of Bosnia Dušan Vasiljević to contact émigré Croatian politicians and lawyers Ante Trumbić and Julije Gazzari with the aim of establishing a body which would cooperate with the government of Serbia on unification of South Slavs in a state created through expansion of Serbia. The group's policy was to be set entirely by Serbia while the proposed body would carry out propaganda activities.[15] The four met in Florence on 22 November 1914.[16] The group was formally established as the Yugoslav Committee in Paris, and Stojanović was one of its founding members.[17]

Stojanović took the position that if unification of South Slavs becomes impossible, in case of a negotiated end of the war, Serbia should capture Bosnia and Herzegovina to reverse Austro-Hungarian annexation of 1908 and to gain territory in Dalmatia as an access to the sea.[18] Nonetheless, Stojanović came into conflict with Pašić following the Salonika Trial and execution of Dragutin Dimitrijević, convicted as the lead conspirator against Prince Regent Alexander and organiser of an attempted assassination of the Regent. It remains unclear why exactly the two were in conflict, except that it coincided with conclusion of the trial.[19] Some sources indicate that the conflict might stem from Stojanović's alleged preference for a republic, contrary to Pašić's ideas. Stojanović voiced opposition, without specifying reasons, to the Corfu Declaration on unification signed by Pašić and Yugoslav Committee president Trumbić—affirming that the new union will be a monarchy ruled by the Karađorđević dynasty.[20] As the conflict with Pašić deteriorated, Stojanović had Serb members of the Yugoslav Committee (Vasiljević and Pero Slijepčević [sr]—substituting Milan Srškić who quit the committee in protest) declare they support only unification of South Slavs on the integral Yugoslavist basis, and would not support just addition of Bosnia and Herzegovina to Serbia.[21]

In November 1918, Stojanović was a part of the Yugoslav Committee's delegation which negotiated and signed the Geneva Declaration with Pašić, representatives of the Serbian parliamentary opposition, and a delegation of the National Council of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs—newly established polity of South Slavs on the territory of the recently dissolved Austria-Hungary.[22] Pašić was isolated and compelled to concede to the establishment of a common government, where the National Council and the government of Serbia would appoint an equal number of ministers to govern a common confederal state.[23] Pašić only consented after receiving a message from the President of France Raymond Poincaré that he wished Pašić to come to an agreement with the National Council.[24] A week later, the Serbian government renounced the Declaration. Vice president of the National Council, Croatian Serb politician Svetozar Pribičević supported the repudiation of the Geneva Agreement and successfully swayed the National Council against the position negotiated by Trumbić. Pribičević persuaded the Council members to proceed with unification and that details could be arranged afterwards.[23]

Despite initiatives calling on the National Council of Bosnia and Herzegovina [sr] to proclaim direct unification with Serbia similarly to the Podgorica Assembly, the council's president Atanasije Šola [sr] declined to act in that way. Instead, he accepted Stojanović's instructions and remained passive to allow Bosnia and Herzegovina be added to the new unified state through actions of the National Council of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs in Zagreb.[25] At the Paris Peace Conference (1919–1920), Stojanović was a representative of the newly proclaimed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes as an expert for Bosnia and Herzegovina.[26]

Serbian Cultural Club edit

After 1920, Stojanović pursued the career of an attorney.[27] Upon establishment of the Serbian Cultural Club in Belgrade in 1937, Stojanović joined the organisation. According to various sources, he was appointed one of its vice-presidents and/or a honorary member,[28][27] and he was in a group tasked with drafting the organisation's rules of procedure, as well as formulating its objectives.[29] The Serbian Cultural Club assumed the leading role in shaping of the Greater Serbian ideology in the periiod.[30] It also significantly influenced the political programme of the Chetniks led by Draža Mihailović.[31] On 1 April 1941, king Peter II of Yugoslavia appointed Stojanović Ban (head) of Vrbas Banovina—days before the Invasion of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers of the World War II. In the summer of 1941, Stojanović started to work for Mihailović in his Belgrade office and formally joined the Central National Committee in August 1943.[27]

Later life edit

Later in 1943, Nazi German authorities in the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia arrested him and took him to occupied France where Stojanović remained until the end of the war. He returned to the Communist Yugoslavia after the war. He was tried and convicted for his political work to imprisonment, commuted to ten years of loss of civil rights.[27] He died in Belgrade on 5 March 1964.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ Mastilović 2012, p. 267.
  2. ^ a b c d Zgodić 2022, p. 115.
  3. ^ a b Miller 1998, pp. 52–53.
  4. ^ MacDonald 2002, p. 110.
  5. ^ MacDonald 2002, p. 109.
  6. ^ Zgodić 2022, p. 125.
  7. ^ Zgodić 2022, p. 128.
  8. ^ MacDonald 2002, pp. 110–111.
  9. ^ Glenny 2012, pp. 262–263.
  10. ^ Miller 1998, pp. 53–56.
  11. ^ Artuković 2010, p. 215.
  12. ^ Mastilović 2012, p. 270.
  13. ^ Mastilović 2012, p. 286.
  14. ^ Mastilović 2012, p. 271.
  15. ^ Boban 2019, p. 17.
  16. ^ Banac 1984, p. 118.
  17. ^ Boban 2019, pp. 20–21.
  18. ^ Mastilović 2012, pp. 280–282.
  19. ^ Mastilović 2012, p. 283.
  20. ^ Mastilović 2012, p. 284.
  21. ^ Mastilović 2012, pp. 286–287.
  22. ^ Štambuk-Škalić & Matijević 2008, p. 189.
  23. ^ a b Banac 1984, pp. 124–128.
  24. ^ Janković 1964, pp. 246–247.
  25. ^ Mastilović 2012, pp. 295–296.
  26. ^ Zgodić 2022, note 2.
  27. ^ a b c d Nadoveza 2015, p. 104.
  28. ^ Sušić 2020, p. 108.
  29. ^ Sušić 2020, p. 117.
  30. ^ Sušić 2020, p. 130.
  31. ^ Zgodić 2022, note 1.

Sources edit

  • Artuković, Mato (2010). "Pitanje šteta i odštete u antisrpskim demonstracijama 1902. godine" [The Question of Damages and Compensation in the Anti-Serb Demonstrations of 1902]. Časopis za suvremenu povijest (in Croatian). 42 (1). Zagreb: Croatian Institute for History: 179–217. ISSN 0590-9597.
  • Banac, Ivo (1984). The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-1675-2.
  • Boban, Branka (2019). "Stavovi hrvatske političke elite prema stvaranju jugoslavenske države" [Attitudes of Croatian political elite towards formation of the Yugoslav state]. Tragovi: časopis za srpske i hrvatske teme (in Croatian). 2 (2). Zagreb: Serb National Council: 8–98. doi:10.52328/t. ISSN 2623-8926.
  • Glenny, Misha (2012). The Balkans, 1804–2012: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers. Toronto: House of Anansi Press. ISBN 978-1-77089-273-6.
  • Janković, Dragoslav (1964). "Ženevska konferencija o stvaranju jugoslovenske zajednice 1918. godine" [Geneva Conference on Creation of the Yugoslav Community in 1918]. Istorija XX veka [History of the 20th Century] (in Serbian). Vol. V. Belgrade: Institute of Legal History of the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law. pp. 225–262. OCLC 67000822.
  • Mastilović, Draga (2012). "Др Никола Стојановић између српства и југословенства" [Dr Nikola Stojanović between Serbia and Yugoslavia]. Зборник за историју Босне и Херцеговине (in Serbian) (7). Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts: 267–299. ISSN 0354-9461.
  • MacDonald, David Bruce (2002). Balkan Holocausts?: Serbian and Croatian Victim Centered Propaganda and the War in Yugoslavia. Manchester: Manchester University Press. ISBN 9780719064678. JSTOR j.ctt155jbrm.9.
  • Miller, Nicholas J. (1998). Between Nation and State: Serbian Politics in Croatia Before the First World War. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 9780822977223.
  • Nadoveza, Branko (2015). "Политичка мисао Николе Стојановића о организацији прве југословенске државе" [On Political Thought of Nikola Stojanovic Regarding Organization of First Yugoslav State]. Политичка ревија (in Serbian). 43 (1). Belgrade: Institute for Political Studies: 103–120. doi:10.22182/pr.4312015.7. ISSN 1451-4281.
  • Štambuk-Škalić, Marina; Matijević, Zlatko, eds. (2008). "Narodno vijeće Slovenaca, Hrvata i Srba u Zagrebu 1918–1919. (izabrani dokumenti)" [National Council of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs in Zagreb 1918–1919 (Selected Documents)]. Fontes: Izvori Za Hrvatsku Povijest (in Croatian). 14 (1). Zagreb: Croatian State Archives: 71–596. ISSN 1330-6804.
  • Sušić, Osman (2020). "Bosna i Hercegovina u koncepcijama Srpskog kulturnog kluba" [Bosnia and Herzegovina in Serbian Cultural Club Concepts]. Historijski Pogledi (in Bosnian). 3 (4). Tuzla: Centar za istraživanje moderne i savremene historije: 108–132. doi:10.52259/historijskipogledi.2020.3.4.108. ISSN 2637-1502.
  • Zgodić, Esad (2022). "Nikola Stojanović - Prilog kritičkoj historiji socijalne i političke misli u Bosni i Hercegovini" [Nikola Stojanović: Contribution to a critical history of social and political thought in Bosnia and Herzegovina]. Znakovi vremena - Časopis za filozofiju, religiju, znanost i društvenu praksu (in Bosnian). 25 (92/93). Sarajevo: Naučnoistraživački institut "Ibn Sina": 114–145. ISSN 1512-5416.

nikola, stojanović, politician, born, 1880, nikola, stojanović, january, 1880, march, 1964, lawyer, bosnian, serb, yugoslavian, politician, student, wrote, article, serbs, croats, printed, serbian, literary, herald, applying, social, darwinism, claiming, that,. Nikola Stojanovic 3 January 1880 5 March 1964 was a lawyer and Bosnian Serb and Yugoslavian politician As a student he wrote the article Serbs and Croats printed in the Serbian Literary Herald applying Social Darwinism and claiming that Serbs as superior people would eventually assimilate the Croats In the text Stojanovic announced war to extermination of either Serbs or Croats and the text has been cited as the blueprint for ethnic cleansing by Croatian writers Following a politically motivated reprint of the article in Srbobran hr the newspaper of the Serb Independent Party in Zagreb it led to 1902 riots targeting Serb businesses and homes in the city sr involving a crowd of about 20 000 Nikola StojanovicBorn 1880 01 03 3 January 1880Mostar Bosnia and Herzegovina Austria Hungary now Bosnia and Herzegovina Died5 March 1964 1964 03 05 aged 84 Belgrade Yugoslavia now Serbia Alma materUniversity of ViennaOccupation s Politician lawyerPolitical partySerb National Organisation Stojanovic became a member of the Serb National Organisation sr political party in Bosnia and Herzegovina and its representative in the Diet of Bosnia He called for the end of the Austro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina and annexation of the land by Serbia as a part of its access to the Adriatic Sea through Dalmatia Serbian prime minister Nikola Pasic directed Stojanovic to contact emigre Croatian politicians Ante Trumbic and Julije Gazzari to form a body which would promote unification of South Slavs through expansion of Serbia The group was established as the Yugoslav Committee with Stojanovic was one of its founding members Trumbic and Stojanovic came into conflict with Pasic While the former disagreed with Pasic on the issue of federation or greater centralisation while the latter might have objected to the proposed state being a monarchy Stojanovic opposed the Corfu Declaration on unification which affirmed that the union would be a monarchy ruled by the Karađorđevic dynasty Stojanovic was a part of the Yugoslav Committee s delegation which negotiated and the signed short lived Geneva Declaration defining the future common confederal state Despite initiatives calling on the National Council of Bosnia and Herzegovina sr to proclaim direct unification with Serbia similarly to the Podgorica Assembly the council remained passive on Stojanovic s instructions At the Paris Peace Conference 1919 1920 Stojanovic was a representative of the newly proclaimed Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes as an expert for Bosnia and Herzegovina In the interwar period Stojanovic pursued the career of an attorney Upon the establishment of the Serbian Cultural Club in Belgrade in 1937 Stojanovic joined the organisation He was a part of a group tasked with drafting the organisation s rules of procedure and formulating its objectives The Serbian Cultural Club took the leading role in shaping of the Greater Serbian ideology in the period It also shaped the political programme of the Chetniks led by Draza Mihailovic In the summer of 1941 Stojanovic started working for Mihailovic in his Belgrade office and formally joined the Central National Committee in August 1943 That year Nazi German authorities arrested him and took him to occupied France where Stojanovic remained until the end of the war He returned to the Communist Yugoslavia after the war He was tried and convicted for his political work Contents 1 Early life 2 Serbs and Croats 3 Yugoslav Committee 4 Serbian Cultural Club 5 Later life 6 References 7 SourcesEarly life editNikola Stojanovic was a Bosnian Serb born in Mostar in the Condominium of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 3 January 1880 1 He studied law at the University of Vienna 2 Serbs and Croats editWhile still a student Stojanovic published an anonymous subsequently attributed article titled Serbs and Croats Serbian Srbi i Hrvati in the Serbian Literary Herald In the article he claimed Serbs would eventually assimilate Croats because the latter had inferior culture and lower national awareness prevented their development as a full fledged nation 3 Stojanovic asserted that Croats cannot be a distinct nation because they lacked a separate language unified customs and lifestyle 4 In the text Stojanovic announced war to extermination ours or yours meaning Serbs and Croats respectively The phrase likely meant as a call to cultural war where Croats would be seduced by the Serbian national identity resonated well not only with Serbian but also Croatian nationalists as its topics were similar to those tackled by the former leader of Croatian Party of Rights Ante Starcevic The article brought little new to the political discourse of the day except the call to a war and the phrase of war to extermination of ours or yours would be echoed in Yugoslav politics since then 3 Stojanovic s article applied Social Darwinism to model Serbian approach to non Serbs and became cited as the blueprint for ethnic cleansing by Croatian writers 5 In his text Stojanovic dismissed the Illyrian movement championed by Ljudevit Gaj as an effort of the House of Habsburg to contain Hungary as well as the Yugoslavism advocated by bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer and Starcevic s Croatian nationalism as reactions to Serbian rejection of Illyrism seeking to promote Habsburg and Roman Catholic interests in the Balkans 6 He based the rejection as well as the concept of inevitable assimilation on chauvinist belief that Serbs are the superior in every aspect 7 Despite the patronizing tone of the text Political scientist David Bruce MacDonald argues that Stojanovic wanted to unite Croatia with Serbia thereby allowing Croatia to secure economic political and cultural independence and freedom from German encroachment with the goal of rallying the two against the threat of external powers 8 The article gained prominence when it was reprinted in Srbobran hr newspaper of the Serb Independent Party in Zagreb The reprinting was arranged as prime minister Kalman Tisza implied by Hungarian authorities in Budapest The move was in response to the harassment of the government of Ban Karoly Khuen Hedervary by political activists organised by Stjepan Radic The purpose of the move was to incite ethnic hatred between Croatian Serbs and Croats as a form of the divide and rule policy Party of Rights newspaper Obzor quoted Stojanovic concluding that the war to extermination has been announced Josip Frank the most prominent Croatian nationalist and leader of the Pure Party of Rights collaborated with the Hungarian authorities and called his followers to streets The ensuing riots targeting Serb businesses and homes in Zagreb sr were welcomed by Frank and denounced by Radic 9 as well as the entire Croatian opposition Nonetheless Radic also indirectly implied Croats should cease business dealings with Serbs About 20 000 people rioted largely urged and well organised by the Frankists but many others joined in A substantial portion of the public interpreted the riots as a result of Habsburg and Hungarian efforts to ensure a dominant position in Croatia Slavonia by preventing unity of Croats and Serbs 10 The damage caused by the rioters was paid by the city and charged to taxpayers as a 3 5 tax 11 Yugoslav Committee editMain article Yugoslav Committee nbsp Yugoslav Committee photographed in Paris in 1916 Nikola Stojanovic is standing the fourth from the left Stojanovic joined the Serb National Organisation sr and successfully ran as the party s candidate becoming a member of the Diet of Bosnia 12 elected in the 1910 Bosnian parliamentary election 2 As a member of the Bosnian Diet Stojanovic advocated the position that the Austro Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina should end and that Bosnia and Herzegovina should be added to the Kingdom of Serbia Furthermore Stojanovic held that Serbia should gain access to the Adriatic Sea through Dalmatia 13 At the outbreak of the World War I Stojanovic was in Serbia 2 There he took part in formulation of Serbian war objectives formulated as the 1914 Nis Declaration 14 Serbian prime minister Nikola Pasic directed Stojanovic and a fellow Bosnian Serb member of the Diet of Bosnia Dusan Vasiljevic to contact emigre Croatian politicians and lawyers Ante Trumbic and Julije Gazzari with the aim of establishing a body which would cooperate with the government of Serbia on unification of South Slavs in a state created through expansion of Serbia The group s policy was to be set entirely by Serbia while the proposed body would carry out propaganda activities 15 The four met in Florence on 22 November 1914 16 The group was formally established as the Yugoslav Committee in Paris and Stojanovic was one of its founding members 17 Stojanovic took the position that if unification of South Slavs becomes impossible in case of a negotiated end of the war Serbia should capture Bosnia and Herzegovina to reverse Austro Hungarian annexation of 1908 and to gain territory in Dalmatia as an access to the sea 18 Nonetheless Stojanovic came into conflict with Pasic following the Salonika Trial and execution of Dragutin Dimitrijevic convicted as the lead conspirator against Prince Regent Alexander and organiser of an attempted assassination of the Regent It remains unclear why exactly the two were in conflict except that it coincided with conclusion of the trial 19 Some sources indicate that the conflict might stem from Stojanovic s alleged preference for a republic contrary to Pasic s ideas Stojanovic voiced opposition without specifying reasons to the Corfu Declaration on unification signed by Pasic and Yugoslav Committee president Trumbic affirming that the new union will be a monarchy ruled by the Karađorđevic dynasty 20 As the conflict with Pasic deteriorated Stojanovic had Serb members of the Yugoslav Committee Vasiljevic and Pero Slijepcevic sr substituting Milan Srskic who quit the committee in protest declare they support only unification of South Slavs on the integral Yugoslavist basis and would not support just addition of Bosnia and Herzegovina to Serbia 21 In November 1918 Stojanovic was a part of the Yugoslav Committee s delegation which negotiated and signed the Geneva Declaration with Pasic representatives of the Serbian parliamentary opposition and a delegation of the National Council of the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs newly established polity of South Slavs on the territory of the recently dissolved Austria Hungary 22 Pasic was isolated and compelled to concede to the establishment of a common government where the National Council and the government of Serbia would appoint an equal number of ministers to govern a common confederal state 23 Pasic only consented after receiving a message from the President of France Raymond Poincare that he wished Pasic to come to an agreement with the National Council 24 A week later the Serbian government renounced the Declaration Vice president of the National Council Croatian Serb politician Svetozar Pribicevic supported the repudiation of the Geneva Agreement and successfully swayed the National Council against the position negotiated by Trumbic Pribicevic persuaded the Council members to proceed with unification and that details could be arranged afterwards 23 Despite initiatives calling on the National Council of Bosnia and Herzegovina sr to proclaim direct unification with Serbia similarly to the Podgorica Assembly the council s president Atanasije Sola sr declined to act in that way Instead he accepted Stojanovic s instructions and remained passive to allow Bosnia and Herzegovina be added to the new unified state through actions of the National Council of the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs in Zagreb 25 At the Paris Peace Conference 1919 1920 Stojanovic was a representative of the newly proclaimed Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes as an expert for Bosnia and Herzegovina 26 Serbian Cultural Club editMain article Serbian Cultural Club After 1920 Stojanovic pursued the career of an attorney 27 Upon establishment of the Serbian Cultural Club in Belgrade in 1937 Stojanovic joined the organisation According to various sources he was appointed one of its vice presidents and or a honorary member 28 27 and he was in a group tasked with drafting the organisation s rules of procedure as well as formulating its objectives 29 The Serbian Cultural Club assumed the leading role in shaping of the Greater Serbian ideology in the periiod 30 It also significantly influenced the political programme of the Chetniks led by Draza Mihailovic 31 On 1 April 1941 king Peter II of Yugoslavia appointed Stojanovic Ban head of Vrbas Banovina days before the Invasion of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers of the World War II In the summer of 1941 Stojanovic started to work for Mihailovic in his Belgrade office and formally joined the Central National Committee in August 1943 27 Later life editLater in 1943 Nazi German authorities in the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia arrested him and took him to occupied France where Stojanovic remained until the end of the war He returned to the Communist Yugoslavia after the war He was tried and convicted for his political work to imprisonment commuted to ten years of loss of civil rights 27 He died in Belgrade on 5 March 1964 2 References edit Mastilovic 2012 p 267 a b c d Zgodic 2022 p 115 a b Miller 1998 pp 52 53 MacDonald 2002 p 110 MacDonald 2002 p 109 Zgodic 2022 p 125 Zgodic 2022 p 128 MacDonald 2002 pp 110 111 Glenny 2012 pp 262 263 Miller 1998 pp 53 56 Artukovic 2010 p 215 Mastilovic 2012 p 270 Mastilovic 2012 p 286 Mastilovic 2012 p 271 Boban 2019 p 17 Banac 1984 p 118 Boban 2019 pp 20 21 Mastilovic 2012 pp 280 282 Mastilovic 2012 p 283 Mastilovic 2012 p 284 Mastilovic 2012 pp 286 287 Stambuk Skalic amp Matijevic 2008 p 189 a b Banac 1984 pp 124 128 Jankovic 1964 pp 246 247 Mastilovic 2012 pp 295 296 Zgodic 2022 note 2 a b c d Nadoveza 2015 p 104 Susic 2020 p 108 Susic 2020 p 117 Susic 2020 p 130 Zgodic 2022 note 1 Sources editArtukovic Mato 2010 Pitanje steta i odstete u antisrpskim demonstracijama 1902 godine The Question of Damages and Compensation in the Anti Serb Demonstrations of 1902 Casopis za suvremenu povijest in Croatian 42 1 Zagreb Croatian Institute for History 179 217 ISSN 0590 9597 Banac Ivo 1984 The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 1675 2 Boban Branka 2019 Stavovi hrvatske politicke elite prema stvaranju jugoslavenske drzave Attitudes of Croatian political elite towards formation of the Yugoslav state Tragovi casopis za srpske i hrvatske teme in Croatian 2 2 Zagreb Serb National Council 8 98 doi 10 52328 t ISSN 2623 8926 Glenny Misha 2012 The Balkans 1804 2012 Nationalism War and the Great Powers Toronto House of Anansi Press ISBN 978 1 77089 273 6 Jankovic Dragoslav 1964 Zenevska konferencija o stvaranju jugoslovenske zajednice 1918 godine Geneva Conference on Creation of the Yugoslav Community in 1918 Istorija XX veka History of the 20th Century in Serbian Vol V Belgrade Institute of Legal History of the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law pp 225 262 OCLC 67000822 Mastilovic Draga 2012 Dr Nikola Stoјanoviћ izmeђu srpstva i јugoslovenstva Dr Nikola Stojanovic between Serbia and Yugoslavia Zbornik za istoriјu Bosne i Hercegovine in Serbian 7 Belgrade Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts 267 299 ISSN 0354 9461 MacDonald David Bruce 2002 Balkan Holocausts Serbian and Croatian Victim Centered Propaganda and the War in Yugoslavia Manchester Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719064678 JSTOR j ctt155jbrm 9 Miller Nicholas J 1998 Between Nation and State Serbian Politics in Croatia Before the First World War Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 9780822977223 Nadoveza Branko 2015 Politichka misao Nikole Stoјanoviћa o organizaciјi prve јugoslovenske drzhave On Political Thought of Nikola Stojanovic Regarding Organization of First Yugoslav State Politichka reviјa in Serbian 43 1 Belgrade Institute for Political Studies 103 120 doi 10 22182 pr 4312015 7 ISSN 1451 4281 Stambuk Skalic Marina Matijevic Zlatko eds 2008 Narodno vijece Slovenaca Hrvata i Srba u Zagrebu 1918 1919 izabrani dokumenti National Council of Slovenes Croats and Serbs in Zagreb 1918 1919 Selected Documents Fontes Izvori Za Hrvatsku Povijest in Croatian 14 1 Zagreb Croatian State Archives 71 596 ISSN 1330 6804 Susic Osman 2020 Bosna i Hercegovina u koncepcijama Srpskog kulturnog kluba Bosnia and Herzegovina in Serbian Cultural Club Concepts Historijski Pogledi in Bosnian 3 4 Tuzla Centar za istrazivanje moderne i savremene historije 108 132 doi 10 52259 historijskipogledi 2020 3 4 108 ISSN 2637 1502 Zgodic Esad 2022 Nikola Stojanovic Prilog kritickoj historiji socijalne i politicke misli u Bosni i Hercegovini Nikola Stojanovic Contribution to a critical history of social and political thought in Bosnia and Herzegovina Znakovi vremena Casopis za filozofiju religiju znanost i drustvenu praksu in Bosnian 25 92 93 Sarajevo Naucnoistrazivacki institut Ibn Sina 114 145 ISSN 1512 5416 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nikola Stojanovic politician born 1880 amp oldid 1208982210, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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