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Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral

The Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral (German: Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland, OZAK; or colloquially: Operationszone Adria; Italian: Zona d'operazioni del Litorale adriatico; Croatian: Operativna zona Jadransko primorje; Slovene: Operacijska cona Jadransko primorje) was a Nazi German district on the northern Adriatic coast created during World War II in 1943. It was formed out of territories that were previously under Fascist Italian control until its takeover by Germany. It included parts of present-day Italian, Slovenian, and Croatian territories.[1] The area was administered as territory attached, but not incorporated, to the Reichsgau of Carinthia. The capital of the zone was the city of Trieste.

Operational Zone of the
Adriatic Littoral
Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland
1943–1945
The Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral ("OZAK")
CapitalTriest
GovernmentCommissariat
High Commissioner 
• 1943–1945
Friedrich Rainer
History 
1943
1945
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofCroatia
Italy
Slovenia

Background

OZAK was established, with its headquarters in Trieste, on 10 September 1943, by Adolf Hitler,[2] as a response to the Italian capitulation (8 September 1943) following the Allied invasion of Italy. It comprised the provinces of Udine, Gorizia [it], Trieste, Pula (Pola), Rijeka (Fiume) and Ljubljana (Lubiana).[3] The Operational Zone of the Alpine Foothills, comprising the provinces of Belluno, South Tyrol, and Trentino, was established on the same day. Both operational zones were separate from the Italian Social Republic (RSI), based in Salò on Lake Garda, which governed the remainder of Italy that had not yet been occupied by the Allies.[4] The name of the zone was a reference to the historical crown land of the Austrian Littoral.[citation needed]

The OZAK was not incorporated in the German Reich outright, but attached to the Gau of Carinthia.[5][6] Friedrich Rainer, Nazi Gauleiter of Carinthia was appointed Reich Defense Commissioner of OZAK, thereby becoming chief of the civil administration of the semi-annexed territory. The province of Ljubljana was given a Slovenian provincial administration. Leading collaborator Gregorij Rožman, Bishop of Ljubljana, recommended to Rainer that notorious anti-Semite Leon Rupnik should be the president of the new Ljubljana provincial government,[7] and Rupnik was then duly appointed on 22 September 1943. SS General Erwin Rösener became Advisor to the President.[3]

Genocidal activities

OZAK was the scene of genocidal activities. Its commander, Higher SS and Police Leader Odilo Globocnik, had become one of the most feared Nazi leaders in Eastern Europe after liquidating the Jewish ghettoes in Warsaw and Białystok and supervising the operations of the extermination camps at Belzec, Sobibór, Majdanek, and Treblinka.[8] He commanded all the Nazi camps in occupied Poland from 1941 to 1943. After serving briefly as Gauleiter of Vienna he had been posted to Trieste, where to the very end he ran the Risiera di San Sabba prison, the only SS camp ever set-up on Italian soil.[9]

Globocnik, returning to his native city in triumph in mid-September 1943, established his office at Via Nizza 21 in Trieste and began to carry out Einsatz R, the systematic persecution of Jews, partisans and anti-Nazi politicians in Friuli, Istria and other areas of the Croatian Adriatic coastline. His staff of 92, mostly members of the German and Ukrainian SS with killing experience gained in Operation Reinhard, was quickly expanded to combat the unrelenting partisan activity throughout the region. Globocnik's domain included Risiera di San Sabba, a large, disused and decrepit rice mill at Ratto della Pileria 43 in the Triestine suburb of San Sabba.[10] Under his supervision it was converted into the only Nazi extermination camp in Italian territory. The camp was used to detain hostages, partisans and political prisoners, and as a collection and transit camp for Jews being deported to Nazi concentration camps.[11] In October 1943, arrests started and the camp opened,[12] staffed primarily by German and Ukrainian members of the SS under the command of SS-Sturmbannführer Christian Wirth, former commander of Belzec extermination camp. Wirth was killed by Yugoslav Partisans in Opatija, on 26 May 1944.[13] He was replaced by Wirth's former deputy in Lublin and successor in Belzec, SS-Hauptsturmführer Gottlieb Hering. Hering was replaced by SS-Obersturmbannführer Dietrich Allers in August 1944.[14] On 28 April 1945, the San Sabba camp ceased operating, and Waffen-SS troops set free the remaining inmates and demolished the gas chamber and incinerator building the next day, to destroy evidence of war crimes.[15]

Over 25,000 Italian, Slovene, Croatian and Jewish civilians passed through the San Sabba camp, about 5,000 were killed there by various methods including gassing. Today the rice mill is an Italian National Memorial Site.[16] The camp's commanders and collaborators were tried in Trieste in 1976,[17] but their sentences were never carried out.

German plans for the region

 
The Austrian littoral, with Gorizia and Istria in pink and Carniola in yellow

The ethnic and political re-definition of the Adriatic Littoral was considered during the war on a theoretical level. In a telegram sent on 9 September 1943 to foreign minister Ribbentrop, Gauleiter Rainer suggests the future establishment of Reich protectorates in Gorizia, Istria and Carniola, based on the subdivisions of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire. Initial German occupation policy, however, favored incorporating the area into the Reichsgau of Carinthia. The ethnic complexity of the region was to be used to minimize Italian influence, promote ethnic segmentation, and introduce Germandom as a stabilizing force. This strategy was based on an understanding of history of medieval Germany and the Habsburg monarchy, where the German lords and nobles were seen to have made the economic and administrative development of the region possible.[5]

The ethno-social composition of Venezia-Giulia, Trieste, and Friuli was an important component to Germany's plans of occupation. The fascist government had lost support of the fragmented social groups throughout the region- and the collapse of the regime ushered in a period of disorientation amongst Italians. [18] Nazi propaganda worked to create the illusion that the areas under the zone had Austo-Hungarian roots. Germany had plans to adopt the region as part of the Reichstag; however, they used the region's imperial-past to make connections with the Austo-Hungarian Empire. They named the zone "Adriatisches Küstenland" which bore reference to the Austo-Hungarian past as that had been the named used by the empire in reference of areas North of the Adriatic. This propaganda relates to the greater German plan as they intended to replace Rome with Vienna as the capital of the Italy.[19] Germans believed that by referencing the prosperous past, they could evoke feelings of nostalgia that would ultimately forge cultural links between Vienna and Trieste to Germany.

Nazis employed more tactics of propaganda as seen in Italy through the creation of the Italian Social Republic (RSI), which effectively was a puppet-government that was under the control of Germany. With the RSI in control, Germany was able to enact extremely repressive laws which targeted specific ethnic and national groups, thereby spreading Nazi ideology throughout the zone. On 10 November 1943, Karl Lapper - head of SS Alpenland- issued an order which restricted all Italian radio and news sources within the zone, as they were substituted with German broadcasts of radio and news.[20] By creating an extensive propaganda network that affected all parts of daily life, Germans were able to coerce support for the Nazi cause.

The future of the Province of Udine (Central and Western Friuli, today the provinces of Udine and Pordenone) was uncertain, but it is evident that a strategy similar to the other areas of the operational zone was to be pursued. In the previously mentioned telegram, Rainer emphasizes that the Friuli region is not ethnically Italian, but is composed of speakers of Friulian and, to a small extent German and Slovene. German scholars also presented supposed evidence for the "profound influence" German culture and language have had on the Friulians, including loan words and medieval place-names. Historical evidence was also found for the region of Friuli being a march land in the Carolingian and the early German empires, as well as for the role the German feudal lords played in the region, and its annexation to the Duchy of Carinthia in the late 10th century. It was thus concluded that the Friulians belonged to the German cultural field, and that their land was an ancient part of the German empire and has ever since been part of the German "vital space" (Lebensraum). These supposedly scholarly findings were echoed in German newspapers, although the Italian-language propaganda spread in the province of Udine emphasized the local population's ethnic distinction and regional autonomy, not pan-Germanism.[5]

Several factions within the Nazi government also intended to extend the area of the two operational zones even further to the detriment of Italian territory. Joseph Goebbels wrote in his diary that the only "logical" border would be one that included the territories of the former Habsburg Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, expressing his hopes that Hitler's renewed friendship with Benito Mussolini would not deter him from this step:[21]

We must not only get back South Tyrol, but I envisage the boundary line drawn south of Venice. Whatever was once an Austrian possession we must get back into our own hands. The Italians by their infidelity and treachery have lost any claim to a national state of the modern type.

He eventually managed to convince Hitler that this course of action should be undertaken, who agreed that Venice should be bound to the Reich in "some sort of loose confederation."[21]

Military operations in the zone

Since an Allied landing in the area was anticipated by the Germans,[22] and because of presence of large numbers of Italian, Slovene and Croatian partisans, OZAK also hosted a substantial German military contingent, commanded by General der Gebirgstruppe Ludwig Kübler. On 28 September 1944, these units were redesignated LXXXXVII Army Corps.[23] Nearly every available armored vehicle, modern or obsolete, was pressed into service with Wehrmacht, Waffen-SS, Ordnungspolizei, or fascist Italian and Slovenian units.[citation needed]

On 30 April 1945, several thousand volunteers of the Italian anti-fascist Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale rose up against the Nazis. On 1 May, Globocnik was given command of a chaotic assortment of German and collaborationist troops converging on Trieste as they retreated from Italy and Yugoslavia. These units were immediately engaged by the Partisans' 4th Army before surrendering to the New Zealand 2nd Division commanded by NZ Lieutenant-General Sir Bernard Freyberg on the evening of 2 May. However, fighting continued between Josip Broz Tito's army and remnant Wehrmacht and collaborationist forces for several days. The Partisans began to withdraw from areas west of the Isonzo river on 15 May.[24][25] On 11 June Yugoslav troops began to withdraw from Trieste.[26]

See also

References

  1. ^ (in Italian) http://www.panzer-ozak.it/immagini/mappaozak100grande.gif
  2. ^ A copy of an existing document is available online. It reads
    "In addition to my (...) order of the commander of the Greater German Reich in Italy and the organisation of the occupied Italian area from 10 September 1943 I determine:
    The supreme commanders in the Operational Zone Adriatic Coast consisting of the provinces of Friaul, Görz, Triest, Istrien, Fiume, Quarnero, Laibach, and in the Prealpine Operations Zone consisting of the provinces of Bozen, Trient and Belluno receive the fundamental instructions for their activity from me.
    Führer's headquarters, 10 September 1943.
    The Führer Gen. Adolf Hitler".
  3. ^ a b Jozo Tomasevich (2001). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: Occupation and Collaboration. Stanford University Press. pp. 121–123. ISBN 9780804736152. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  4. ^ Bresadola, Gianmarco (2004). "The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy: Propaganda in the Adriatisches Küstenland". Contemporary European History. 13 (4): 425–451. doi:10.1017/S0960777304001882. ISSN 0960-7773. JSTOR 20081231. S2CID 159821248.
  5. ^ a b c Michael Wedekind (2005). "The Sword of Science". In Ingo Haar; Michael Fahlbusch (eds.). German scholars and ethnic cleansing, 1919-1945. Berghahn Books. pp. 111–123. ISBN 9781571814357. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  6. ^ Speer, Albert (1995). Inside the Third Reich. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. p. 420. ISBN 978-1-842127353.
  7. ^ Tone Ferenc, The German Occupier in Ljubljana. p. 211; Jozo Tomašević, War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941-1945. p. 122, available online at https://books.google.com/books?id=fqUSGevFe5MC&dq=the+chetniks+by+jozo+toma%C5%A1evi%C4%87&printsec=frontcover&source=web&ots=-LhVfrc7Pg&sig=5MdcxAM9qowMnXF0Szy38oeOC1k#PPR1,M1
  8. ^ Odilo Globocnik
  9. ^ Gallery – The Risiera di San Sabba – Photos
  10. ^ Risiera di San Sabba
  11. ^ Pamela Ballinger (2003). History in Exile: Memory and Identity at the Borders of the Balkans. Princeton University Press. p. 23. ISBN 9780691086972. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  12. ^ Joshua D. Zimmerman (2005). Jews in Italy under Fascist and Nazi Rule, 1922-1945. Cambridge University Press. p. 248. ISBN 9780521841016. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  13. ^ David Wingeate Pike (2004). Spaniards in the Holocaust: Mauthausen, Horror on the Danube. Routledge. p. 267. ISBN 9780203361238. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  14. ^ Joseph Poprzeczny (2004). Odilo Globocnik: Hitler's man in the East. McFarland. p. 343. ISBN 9780786416257. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  15. ^ Katia Pizzi (2002). A City in Search of an Author. Continuum International Publishing Group. p. 19. ISBN 9781841272849. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-06-05. Retrieved 2006-06-15.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-06-05. Retrieved 2006-06-15.
  18. ^ Bresadola, Gianmarco (2004). "The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy: Propaganda in the Adriatisches Küstenland". Contemporary European History. 13 (4): 425–451. doi:10.1017/S0960777304001882. ISSN 0960-7773. JSTOR 20081231. S2CID 159821248.
  19. ^ Bresadola, Gianmarco (2004). "The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy: Propaganda in the Adriatisches Küstenland". Contemporary European History. 13 (4): 425–451. doi:10.1017/S0960777304001882. ISSN 0960-7773. JSTOR 20081231. S2CID 159821248.
  20. ^ Bresadola, Gianmarco (2004). "The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy: Propaganda in the Adriatisches Küstenland". Contemporary European History. 13 (4): 425–451. doi:10.1017/S0960777304001882. ISSN 0960-7773. JSTOR 20081231. S2CID 159821248.
  21. ^ a b [Rich, Norman: Hitler's War Aims: The Establishment of the New Order, page 320. W.W. Norton & Company Inc. 1981.]
  22. ^ László Borhi (2004). Hungary in the Cold War, 1945-1956: Between the United States and the Soviet Union. Central European University Press. p. 31. ISBN 9789639241800. Retrieved 20 January 2013.
  23. ^ Bernhard Kroener, Rolf-Dieter Müller, Hans Umbreit (2003). Germany and the Second World War, volume 5. Oxford University Press. p. 80. ISBN 9780198208730. Retrieved 20 January 2013.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-07-24. Retrieved 2007-12-04.
  25. ^ II: Confrontation with the Yugoslavs | NZETC
  26. ^ McLintock, A. H., ed. (1966). "The Army – From the Senio to Trieste". Te Ara: The Encyclopedia of New Zealand. Retrieved 31 December 2013.

External links

  • Panzers in the OZAK 1943-1945 by Stefano di Giusto, standard reference to German and collaborationist armor in the Operationszone Adriatisches Küstenland. Accessed 15 June 2006.
  • the story of Risiera di San Sabba

operational, zone, adriatic, littoral, german, operationszone, adriatisches, küstenland, ozak, colloquially, operationszone, adria, italian, zona, operazioni, litorale, adriatico, croatian, operativna, zona, jadransko, primorje, slovene, operacijska, cona, jad. The Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral German Operationszone Adriatisches Kustenland OZAK or colloquially Operationszone Adria Italian Zona d operazioni del Litorale adriatico Croatian Operativna zona Jadransko primorje Slovene Operacijska cona Jadransko primorje was a Nazi German district on the northern Adriatic coast created during World War II in 1943 It was formed out of territories that were previously under Fascist Italian control until its takeover by Germany It included parts of present day Italian Slovenian and Croatian territories 1 The area was administered as territory attached but not incorporated to the Reichsgau of Carinthia The capital of the zone was the city of Trieste Operational Zone of theAdriatic LittoralOperationszone Adriatisches Kustenland1943 1945Flag EmblemThe Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral OZAK CapitalTriestGovernmentCommissariatHigh Commissioner 1943 1945Friedrich RainerHistory Establishment1943 Dissolution1945Preceded by Succeeded byKingdom of Italy YugoslaviaKingdom of ItalyToday part ofCroatiaItalySlovenia Contents 1 Background 2 Genocidal activities 3 German plans for the region 4 Military operations in the zone 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBackground EditOZAK was established with its headquarters in Trieste on 10 September 1943 by Adolf Hitler 2 as a response to the Italian capitulation 8 September 1943 following the Allied invasion of Italy It comprised the provinces of Udine Gorizia it Trieste Pula Pola Rijeka Fiume and Ljubljana Lubiana 3 The Operational Zone of the Alpine Foothills comprising the provinces of Belluno South Tyrol and Trentino was established on the same day Both operational zones were separate from the Italian Social Republic RSI based in Salo on Lake Garda which governed the remainder of Italy that had not yet been occupied by the Allies 4 The name of the zone was a reference to the historical crown land of the Austrian Littoral citation needed The OZAK was not incorporated in the German Reich outright but attached to the Gau of Carinthia 5 6 Friedrich Rainer Nazi Gauleiter of Carinthia was appointed Reich Defense Commissioner of OZAK thereby becoming chief of the civil administration of the semi annexed territory The province of Ljubljana was given a Slovenian provincial administration Leading collaborator Gregorij Rozman Bishop of Ljubljana recommended to Rainer that notorious anti Semite Leon Rupnik should be the president of the new Ljubljana provincial government 7 and Rupnik was then duly appointed on 22 September 1943 SS General Erwin Rosener became Advisor to the President 3 Genocidal activities EditOZAK was the scene of genocidal activities Its commander Higher SS and Police Leader Odilo Globocnik had become one of the most feared Nazi leaders in Eastern Europe after liquidating the Jewish ghettoes in Warsaw and Bialystok and supervising the operations of the extermination camps at Belzec Sobibor Majdanek and Treblinka 8 He commanded all the Nazi camps in occupied Poland from 1941 to 1943 After serving briefly as Gauleiter of Vienna he had been posted to Trieste where to the very end he ran the Risiera di San Sabba prison the only SS camp ever set up on Italian soil 9 Globocnik returning to his native city in triumph in mid September 1943 established his office at Via Nizza 21 in Trieste and began to carry out Einsatz R the systematic persecution of Jews partisans and anti Nazi politicians in Friuli Istria and other areas of the Croatian Adriatic coastline His staff of 92 mostly members of the German and Ukrainian SS with killing experience gained in Operation Reinhard was quickly expanded to combat the unrelenting partisan activity throughout the region Globocnik s domain included Risiera di San Sabba a large disused and decrepit rice mill at Ratto della Pileria 43 in the Triestine suburb of San Sabba 10 Under his supervision it was converted into the only Nazi extermination camp in Italian territory The camp was used to detain hostages partisans and political prisoners and as a collection and transit camp for Jews being deported to Nazi concentration camps 11 In October 1943 arrests started and the camp opened 12 staffed primarily by German and Ukrainian members of the SS under the command of SS Sturmbannfuhrer Christian Wirth former commander of Belzec extermination camp Wirth was killed by Yugoslav Partisans in Opatija on 26 May 1944 13 He was replaced by Wirth s former deputy in Lublin and successor in Belzec SS Hauptsturmfuhrer Gottlieb Hering Hering was replaced by SS Obersturmbannfuhrer Dietrich Allers in August 1944 14 On 28 April 1945 the San Sabba camp ceased operating and Waffen SS troops set free the remaining inmates and demolished the gas chamber and incinerator building the next day to destroy evidence of war crimes 15 Over 25 000 Italian Slovene Croatian and Jewish civilians passed through the San Sabba camp about 5 000 were killed there by various methods including gassing Today the rice mill is an Italian National Memorial Site 16 The camp s commanders and collaborators were tried in Trieste in 1976 17 but their sentences were never carried out German plans for the region Edit The Austrian littoral with Gorizia and Istria in pink and Carniola in yellow The ethnic and political re definition of the Adriatic Littoral was considered during the war on a theoretical level In a telegram sent on 9 September 1943 to foreign minister Ribbentrop Gauleiter Rainer suggests the future establishment of Reich protectorates in Gorizia Istria and Carniola based on the subdivisions of the Austrian Hungarian Empire Initial German occupation policy however favored incorporating the area into the Reichsgau of Carinthia The ethnic complexity of the region was to be used to minimize Italian influence promote ethnic segmentation and introduce Germandom as a stabilizing force This strategy was based on an understanding of history of medieval Germany and the Habsburg monarchy where the German lords and nobles were seen to have made the economic and administrative development of the region possible 5 The ethno social composition of Venezia Giulia Trieste and Friuli was an important component to Germany s plans of occupation The fascist government had lost support of the fragmented social groups throughout the region and the collapse of the regime ushered in a period of disorientation amongst Italians 18 Nazi propaganda worked to create the illusion that the areas under the zone had Austo Hungarian roots Germany had plans to adopt the region as part of the Reichstag however they used the region s imperial past to make connections with the Austo Hungarian Empire They named the zone Adriatisches Kustenland which bore reference to the Austo Hungarian past as that had been the named used by the empire in reference of areas North of the Adriatic This propaganda relates to the greater German plan as they intended to replace Rome with Vienna as the capital of the Italy 19 Germans believed that by referencing the prosperous past they could evoke feelings of nostalgia that would ultimately forge cultural links between Vienna and Trieste to Germany Nazis employed more tactics of propaganda as seen in Italy through the creation of the Italian Social Republic RSI which effectively was a puppet government that was under the control of Germany With the RSI in control Germany was able to enact extremely repressive laws which targeted specific ethnic and national groups thereby spreading Nazi ideology throughout the zone On 10 November 1943 Karl Lapper head of SS Alpenland issued an order which restricted all Italian radio and news sources within the zone as they were substituted with German broadcasts of radio and news 20 By creating an extensive propaganda network that affected all parts of daily life Germans were able to coerce support for the Nazi cause The future of the Province of Udine Central and Western Friuli today the provinces of Udine and Pordenone was uncertain but it is evident that a strategy similar to the other areas of the operational zone was to be pursued In the previously mentioned telegram Rainer emphasizes that the Friuli region is not ethnically Italian but is composed of speakers of Friulian and to a small extent German and Slovene German scholars also presented supposed evidence for the profound influence German culture and language have had on the Friulians including loan words and medieval place names Historical evidence was also found for the region of Friuli being a march land in the Carolingian and the early German empires as well as for the role the German feudal lords played in the region and its annexation to the Duchy of Carinthia in the late 10th century It was thus concluded that the Friulians belonged to the German cultural field and that their land was an ancient part of the German empire and has ever since been part of the German vital space Lebensraum These supposedly scholarly findings were echoed in German newspapers although the Italian language propaganda spread in the province of Udine emphasized the local population s ethnic distinction and regional autonomy not pan Germanism 5 Several factions within the Nazi government also intended to extend the area of the two operational zones even further to the detriment of Italian territory Joseph Goebbels wrote in his diary that the only logical border would be one that included the territories of the former Habsburg Kingdom of Lombardy Venetia expressing his hopes that Hitler s renewed friendship with Benito Mussolini would not deter him from this step 21 We must not only get back South Tyrol but I envisage the boundary line drawn south of Venice Whatever was once an Austrian possession we must get back into our own hands The Italians by their infidelity and treachery have lost any claim to a national state of the modern type He eventually managed to convince Hitler that this course of action should be undertaken who agreed that Venice should be bound to the Reich in some sort of loose confederation 21 Military operations in the zone EditSince an Allied landing in the area was anticipated by the Germans 22 and because of presence of large numbers of Italian Slovene and Croatian partisans OZAK also hosted a substantial German military contingent commanded by General der Gebirgstruppe Ludwig Kubler On 28 September 1944 these units were redesignated LXXXXVII Army Corps 23 Nearly every available armored vehicle modern or obsolete was pressed into service with Wehrmacht Waffen SS Ordnungspolizei or fascist Italian and Slovenian units citation needed On 30 April 1945 several thousand volunteers of the Italian anti fascist Comitato di Liberazione Nazionale rose up against the Nazis On 1 May Globocnik was given command of a chaotic assortment of German and collaborationist troops converging on Trieste as they retreated from Italy and Yugoslavia These units were immediately engaged by the Partisans 4th Army before surrendering to the New Zealand 2nd Division commanded by NZ Lieutenant General Sir Bernard Freyberg on the evening of 2 May However fighting continued between Josip Broz Tito s army and remnant Wehrmacht and collaborationist forces for several days The Partisans began to withdraw from areas west of the Isonzo river on 15 May 24 25 On 11 June Yugoslav troops began to withdraw from Trieste 26 See also EditSlovenian National Defense Corps Adriatic Campaign of World War II Areas annexed by Nazi GermanyReferences Edit in Italian http www panzer ozak it immagini mappaozak100grande gif A copy of an existing document is available online It reads In addition to my order of the commander of the Greater German Reich in Italy and the organisation of the occupied Italian area from 10 September 1943 I determine The supreme commanders in the Operational Zone Adriatic Coast consisting of the provinces of Friaul Gorz Triest Istrien Fiume Quarnero Laibach and in the Prealpine Operations Zone consisting of the provinces of Bozen Trient and Belluno receive the fundamental instructions for their activity from me Fuhrer s headquarters 10 September 1943 The Fuhrer Gen Adolf Hitler a b Jozo Tomasevich 2001 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 Occupation and Collaboration Stanford University Press pp 121 123 ISBN 9780804736152 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Bresadola Gianmarco 2004 The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy Propaganda in the Adriatisches Kustenland Contemporary European History 13 4 425 451 doi 10 1017 S0960777304001882 ISSN 0960 7773 JSTOR 20081231 S2CID 159821248 a b c Michael Wedekind 2005 The Sword of Science In Ingo Haar Michael Fahlbusch eds German scholars and ethnic cleansing 1919 1945 Berghahn Books pp 111 123 ISBN 9781571814357 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Speer Albert 1995 Inside the Third Reich London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson p 420 ISBN 978 1 842127353 Tone Ferenc The German Occupier in Ljubljana p 211 Jozo Tomasevic War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 p 122 available online at https books google com books id fqUSGevFe5MC amp dq the chetniks by jozo toma C5 A1evi C4 87 amp printsec frontcover amp source web amp ots LhVfrc7Pg amp sig 5MdcxAM9qowMnXF0Szy38oeOC1k PPR1 M1 Odilo Globocnik Gallery The Risiera di San Sabba Photos Risiera di San Sabba Pamela Ballinger 2003 History in Exile Memory and Identity at the Borders of the Balkans Princeton University Press p 23 ISBN 9780691086972 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Joshua D Zimmerman 2005 Jews in Italy under Fascist and Nazi Rule 1922 1945 Cambridge University Press p 248 ISBN 9780521841016 Retrieved 20 January 2013 David Wingeate Pike 2004 Spaniards in the Holocaust Mauthausen Horror on the Danube Routledge p 267 ISBN 9780203361238 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Joseph Poprzeczny 2004 Odilo Globocnik Hitler s man in the East McFarland p 343 ISBN 9780786416257 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Katia Pizzi 2002 A City in Search of an Author Continuum International Publishing Group p 19 ISBN 9781841272849 Retrieved 20 January 2013 ANED The camps The Risiera National Memorial Site Archived from the original on 2006 06 05 Retrieved 2006 06 15 ANED The camps Risiera The Trial Archived from the original on 2006 06 05 Retrieved 2006 06 15 Bresadola Gianmarco 2004 The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy Propaganda in the Adriatisches Kustenland Contemporary European History 13 4 425 451 doi 10 1017 S0960777304001882 ISSN 0960 7773 JSTOR 20081231 S2CID 159821248 Bresadola Gianmarco 2004 The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy Propaganda in the Adriatisches Kustenland Contemporary European History 13 4 425 451 doi 10 1017 S0960777304001882 ISSN 0960 7773 JSTOR 20081231 S2CID 159821248 Bresadola Gianmarco 2004 The Legitimising Strategies of the Nazi Administration in Northern Italy Propaganda in the Adriatisches Kustenland Contemporary European History 13 4 425 451 doi 10 1017 S0960777304001882 ISSN 0960 7773 JSTOR 20081231 S2CID 159821248 a b Rich Norman Hitler s War Aims The Establishment of the New Order page 320 W W Norton amp Company Inc 1981 Laszlo Borhi 2004 Hungary in the Cold War 1945 1956 Between the United States and the Soviet Union Central European University Press p 31 ISBN 9789639241800 Retrieved 20 January 2013 Bernhard Kroener Rolf Dieter Muller Hans Umbreit 2003 Germany and the Second World War volume 5 Oxford University Press p 80 ISBN 9780198208730 Retrieved 20 January 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link UK Official History amp 149 Trieste and Austrian Crises Archived from the original on 2008 07 24 Retrieved 2007 12 04 II Confrontation with the Yugoslavs NZETC McLintock A H ed 1966 The Army From the Senio to Trieste Te Ara The Encyclopedia of New Zealand Retrieved 31 December 2013 External links EditPanzers in the OZAK 1943 1945 by Stefano di Giusto standard reference to German and collaborationist armor in the Operationszone Adriatisches Kustenland Accessed 15 June 2006 the story of Risiera di San Sabba Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral amp oldid 1115878667, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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