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Radoje Knežević

Radoje Knežević (Serbian Cyrillic: Радоје Кнежевић; 20 August 1901 – 22 June 1983) was a key member of the group that organised the Yugoslav coup d'état of 27 March 1941 that deposed the regency of Prince Paul, Dr. Radenko Stanković and Dr. Ivo Perović, along with the government of Prime Minister Dragiša Cvetković. Following the coup he was appointed as the Minister of the Royal Court, and after the resulting invasion of Yugoslavia, he accompanied the King and government into exile in Cairo then London. Along with his brother Živan Knežević, he was a member of the so-called "League of Majors", which was at the centre of the ill-fated Greater Serbian agenda of the Yugoslav government-in-exile and who was instrumental in having Draža Mihailović appointed as Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command. He was sidelined in June 1943 when he was appointed to the Yugoslav legation in Portugal. He remained in exile after the war, was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment with hard labour in absentia during the Belgrade Process conducted by the country's newly-established communist authorities, and emigrated to Canada where he lived until his death in 1983.

Professor
Radoje Knežević
Radoje Knežević in England in June 1941
Minister of the Royal Court
In office
27 March 1941 – June 1943
MonarchPeter II of Yugoslavia
Prime MinisterDušan Simović to 9 January 1942
Prime MinisterSlobodan Jovanović from 11 January 1942
Personal details
Born(1901-08-20)20 August 1901
Stragari, Kingdom of Serbia
Died22 June 1983(1983-06-22) (aged 81)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
RelationsŽivan Knežević (brother)

Early life edit

Radoje Knežević was born on 20 August 1901 in the village of Stragari, near Kragujevac, Kingdom of Serbia.[1] He was the son of Lazar and Mileva Knežević (née Veljković). Prior to the outbreak of World War II, he was a professor in Belgrade,[2] and had been a French-language tutor to Prince Peter.[3] He was also a prominent member of the Serbian Cultural Club.[4] Knežević was married, and had two children.[2]

Role in the coup edit

Knežević, his brother Živan and their fellow plotters, led by Royal Yugoslav Air Force (Serbo-Croatian Latin: Vazduhoplovstvo Vojske Kraljevine Jugoslavije, VVKJ) Brigadier General Borivoje Mirković declared the 17-year-old Prince Peter to be of age and brought to power a government of national unity led by VVKJ General Dušan Simović. Knežević was a member of the National Committee of the almost exclusively Serbian Democratic Party, as well as a friend of Mirković.[4] He was resolutely anti-Axis and remained as Minister of the Royal Court in the Simović government.[5] The coup resulted in the German-led Axis invasion of Yugoslavia commencing on 6 April 1941, during which the armed forces of Yugoslavia were defeated within eleven days. Fleeing the country by air, Knežević remained with King Peter as Minister of the Royal Court, and was part of the Yugoslav government-in-exile in London.[6]

Yugoslav government-in-exile edit

On 17 December 1941, King Peter gave a speech to a British audience in which he gave credit for the coup to younger and middle-ranking officers of the Yugoslav Army, and did not mention either Simović or Mirković at all. As Minister of the Royal Court, Knežević may well have ghost-written this speech for the king.[7] In early 1942, the government-in-exile led by Simović was split along ethnic lines, with Knežević and his brother Živan forming part of an inner circle of anti-Simović advisers around King Peter, known as the "League of Majors".[8] Under the influence of this group, and on advice from the rest of the cabinet, the king dismissed Simović and appointed Slobodan Jovanović as Prime Minister.[9] The group of younger officers wanted to ensure that they would have a "direct share in power" with the Chetnik leader Brigadier General Draža Mihailović in a Chetnik-dominated government after the war had ended. Achieving this objective required the removal of the senior coup plotters Simović, Minister of the Army and Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command General Bogoljub Ilić, and Mirković, who was the Chief of the VVKJ in exile. These three officers had the support of almost all the officers of the VVKJ and most of the exiled colonels. Mirković and the Chief of Military Intelligence Colonel Žarko Popović also had good connections with British military intelligence and the Special Operations Executive from their close liaison before and during the coup.[10] Both Ilić and Mirković were based in Cairo with the remnants of the Yugoslav forces that had fled the country in the face of the invasion.[11]

As soon as the new cabinet met for the first time, both Simović and Ilić were dismissed from their ministerial posts,[9] and Ilić and Mirković were also dismissed from their respective positions as Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command and Air Force respectively.[10] Jovanović created a new portfolio for Mihailović as Minister of the Army, Navy and Air Force.[9] Ilić and Mirković disputed their dismissal, which was seen by the government as open mutiny, and has become known in Yugoslav historiography as the "Scandal of Cairo". The government placed Ilić and Mirković on the retired list, and appointed another of the coup plotters and member of the "League of Majors" Lieutenant Colonel Miodrag Lozić as acting Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command, despite the fact that there were four generals and eight colonels in exile who outranked him. On 5 March 1942, his first day in the role, Lozić asked the British to remove Mirković and his supporters from Cairo and hand over several others, including Popović, to Yugoslav authorities for court martial on charges of mutiny. In response the British ordered Lozić to vacate his post and appointed Lieutenant General Robert Stone, the Commander of British Troops in Egypt, as acting Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command. The government-in-exile sent Colonel Miodrag Rakić to Cairo to resolve the situation, and on 7 May the British transferred the role of acting Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command to Rakić. In June the government-in-exile transferred the post of Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command to Yugoslavia and appointed Mihailović to the position. Mirković and his supporters were given the opportunity to transfer into British service in theatres away from the Balkans. The "Scandal of Cairo" constituted at least a partial victory for the Jovanović government and "League of Majors" but the whole affair damaged the relationship of the government-in-exile with the Western Allies and negatively affected potential aid to Mihailović. Historian Jozo Tomasevich considered it a serious setback for the Great Serbian forces in exile and that it "contributed substantially to the downfall" of Mihailović.[12]

The British ambassador to the Yugoslav government-in-exile from July 1941 until August 1943, George William Rendel, was very conscious of the power wielded by Knežević, noting that he was "by no means working in harmony with the government".[13] A wartime British intelligence handbook described the Knežević brothers as "the most powerful forces in the exiled Yugoslav Government and the most instrumental in carrying through its chauvinistic Great Serb and anti-Partisan policy".[13] In June 1943 Jovanović was replaced as Prime Minister by Miloš Trifunović who replaced Knežević, appointing him as chargé d'affaires at the Yugoslav legation in Lisbon, Portugal. This removed Knežević from political power and from a position of influence over King Peter.[14]

Post-war edit

After the war, Knežević remained in exile and was tried in absentia alongside others. He was found guilty of treason and war crimes and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment with hard labour, loss of political and civic rights for 5 years, confiscation of all property, and loss of citizenship. The sentence of imprisonment with hard labour was to commence from the date of his future arrest.[15] He emigrated to Canada where he was the editor of Glas kanadskih Srba (Voice of the Canadian Serbs). In the early 1950s, an acrimonious dispute arose between Cvetković and Knežević. Knežević wrote an article in the international relations journal International Affairs claiming that Prince Paul and Cvetković had formulated a secret plan to ally Yugoslavia with Germany and to gain control of the port of Salonika while Greece was defending against the Italian invasion. While Cvetković issued two strong denials in the historical journal Dokumenti o Jugoslaviji, and stated that seizing Salonika had never been on the agenda of the Yugoslav government, his latter statement was not true. The main purpose of Knežević's allegation was to discredit Prince Paul and portray the coup plotters in a favourable light.[16]

Knežević moved to Montreal to join his daughter (Ljiljana Tomic) and died there on 22 June 1983.[1]

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b Popov 2011, pp. 101–102.
  2. ^ a b Mihailović trial record 1946, pp. 14–15.
  3. ^ Tomasevich 1969, p. 67.
  4. ^ a b Cohen 1996, p. 25.
  5. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 49.
  6. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 164.
  7. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 44.
  8. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 278–279.
  9. ^ a b c Roberts 1987, p. 53.
  10. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 279.
  11. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 262, 270.
  12. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 279–281.
  13. ^ a b Tomasevich 1975, p. 273.
  14. ^ Tomasevich 1975, p. 305.
  15. ^ Mihailović trial record 1946, pp. 538–540.
  16. ^ Tomasevich 1975, pp. 31–32.

References edit

  • Cohen, Philip J. (1996). Serbia's Secret War: Propaganda and the Deceit of History. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-760-7.
  • Popov, Čedomir, ed. (2011). Српски биографски речник. 5, Кв-Мао [Serbian Biographical Dictionary, Volume 5, Kv-Mao] (in Serbian). Novi Sad, Serbia: Matica Srpska. ISBN 978-86-7946-085-1.
  • Roberts, Walter R. (1987). Tito, Mihailović and the Allies: 1941–1945. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0-8223-0773-0.
  • The Trial of Dragoljub-Draža Mihailović, Stenographic Record and Documents from the Trial of Dragoljub-Draža Mihailović. Belgrade, Yugoslavia: Union of the Journalists' Association of the Federative People's Republic of Yugoslavia. 1946. OCLC 1539805.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1969). "Yugoslavia During the Second World War". In Vucinich, Wayne S. (ed.). Contemporary Yugoslavia: Twenty Years of Socialist Experiment. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. pp. 59–118. OCLC 652337606.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (1975). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9.

radoje, knežević, serbian, cyrillic, Радоје, Кнежевић, august, 1901, june, 1983, member, group, that, organised, yugoslav, coup, état, march, 1941, that, deposed, regency, prince, paul, radenko, stanković, perović, along, with, government, prime, minister, dra. Radoje Knezevic Serbian Cyrillic Radoјe Knezheviћ 20 August 1901 22 June 1983 was a key member of the group that organised the Yugoslav coup d etat of 27 March 1941 that deposed the regency of Prince Paul Dr Radenko Stankovic and Dr Ivo Perovic along with the government of Prime Minister Dragisa Cvetkovic Following the coup he was appointed as the Minister of the Royal Court and after the resulting invasion of Yugoslavia he accompanied the King and government into exile in Cairo then London Along with his brother Zivan Knezevic he was a member of the so called League of Majors which was at the centre of the ill fated Greater Serbian agenda of the Yugoslav government in exile and who was instrumental in having Draza Mihailovic appointed as Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command He was sidelined in June 1943 when he was appointed to the Yugoslav legation in Portugal He remained in exile after the war was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment with hard labour in absentia during the Belgrade Process conducted by the country s newly established communist authorities and emigrated to Canada where he lived until his death in 1983 ProfessorRadoje KnezevicRadoje Knezevic in England in June 1941Minister of the Royal CourtIn office 27 March 1941 June 1943MonarchPeter II of YugoslaviaPrime MinisterDusan Simovic to 9 January 1942Prime MinisterSlobodan Jovanovic from 11 January 1942Personal detailsBorn 1901 08 20 20 August 1901Stragari Kingdom of SerbiaDied22 June 1983 1983 06 22 aged 81 Montreal Quebec CanadaRelationsZivan Knezevic brother Contents 1 Early life 2 Role in the coup 3 Yugoslav government in exile 4 Post war 5 Footnotes 6 ReferencesEarly life editRadoje Knezevic was born on 20 August 1901 in the village of Stragari near Kragujevac Kingdom of Serbia 1 He was the son of Lazar and Mileva Knezevic nee Veljkovic Prior to the outbreak of World War II he was a professor in Belgrade 2 and had been a French language tutor to Prince Peter 3 He was also a prominent member of the Serbian Cultural Club 4 Knezevic was married and had two children 2 Role in the coup editMain article Yugoslav coup d etat Knezevic his brother Zivan and their fellow plotters led by Royal Yugoslav Air Force Serbo Croatian Latin Vazduhoplovstvo Vojske Kraljevine Jugoslavije VVKJ Brigadier General Borivoje Mirkovic declared the 17 year old Prince Peter to be of age and brought to power a government of national unity led by VVKJ General Dusan Simovic Knezevic was a member of the National Committee of the almost exclusively Serbian Democratic Party as well as a friend of Mirkovic 4 He was resolutely anti Axis and remained as Minister of the Royal Court in the Simovic government 5 The coup resulted in the German led Axis invasion of Yugoslavia commencing on 6 April 1941 during which the armed forces of Yugoslavia were defeated within eleven days Fleeing the country by air Knezevic remained with King Peter as Minister of the Royal Court and was part of the Yugoslav government in exile in London 6 Yugoslav government in exile editOn 17 December 1941 King Peter gave a speech to a British audience in which he gave credit for the coup to younger and middle ranking officers of the Yugoslav Army and did not mention either Simovic or Mirkovic at all As Minister of the Royal Court Knezevic may well have ghost written this speech for the king 7 In early 1942 the government in exile led by Simovic was split along ethnic lines with Knezevic and his brother Zivan forming part of an inner circle of anti Simovic advisers around King Peter known as the League of Majors 8 Under the influence of this group and on advice from the rest of the cabinet the king dismissed Simovic and appointed Slobodan Jovanovic as Prime Minister 9 The group of younger officers wanted to ensure that they would have a direct share in power with the Chetnik leader Brigadier General Draza Mihailovic in a Chetnik dominated government after the war had ended Achieving this objective required the removal of the senior coup plotters Simovic Minister of the Army and Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command General Bogoljub Ilic and Mirkovic who was the Chief of the VVKJ in exile These three officers had the support of almost all the officers of the VVKJ and most of the exiled colonels Mirkovic and the Chief of Military Intelligence Colonel Zarko Popovic also had good connections with British military intelligence and the Special Operations Executive from their close liaison before and during the coup 10 Both Ilic and Mirkovic were based in Cairo with the remnants of the Yugoslav forces that had fled the country in the face of the invasion 11 As soon as the new cabinet met for the first time both Simovic and Ilic were dismissed from their ministerial posts 9 and Ilic and Mirkovic were also dismissed from their respective positions as Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command and Air Force respectively 10 Jovanovic created a new portfolio for Mihailovic as Minister of the Army Navy and Air Force 9 Ilic and Mirkovic disputed their dismissal which was seen by the government as open mutiny and has become known in Yugoslav historiography as the Scandal of Cairo The government placed Ilic and Mirkovic on the retired list and appointed another of the coup plotters and member of the League of Majors Lieutenant Colonel Miodrag Lozic as acting Chief of Staff of the Supreme Command despite the fact that there were four generals and eight colonels in exile who outranked him On 5 March 1942 his first day in the role Lozic asked the British to remove Mirkovic and his supporters from Cairo and hand over several others including Popovic to Yugoslav authorities for court martial on charges of mutiny In response the British ordered Lozic to vacate his post and appointed Lieutenant General Robert Stone the Commander of British Troops in Egypt as acting Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command The government in exile sent Colonel Miodrag Rakic to Cairo to resolve the situation and on 7 May the British transferred the role of acting Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command to Rakic In June the government in exile transferred the post of Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav Supreme Command to Yugoslavia and appointed Mihailovic to the position Mirkovic and his supporters were given the opportunity to transfer into British service in theatres away from the Balkans The Scandal of Cairo constituted at least a partial victory for the Jovanovic government and League of Majors but the whole affair damaged the relationship of the government in exile with the Western Allies and negatively affected potential aid to Mihailovic Historian Jozo Tomasevich considered it a serious setback for the Great Serbian forces in exile and that it contributed substantially to the downfall of Mihailovic 12 The British ambassador to the Yugoslav government in exile from July 1941 until August 1943 George William Rendel was very conscious of the power wielded by Knezevic noting that he was by no means working in harmony with the government 13 A wartime British intelligence handbook described the Knezevic brothers as the most powerful forces in the exiled Yugoslav Government and the most instrumental in carrying through its chauvinistic Great Serb and anti Partisan policy 13 In June 1943 Jovanovic was replaced as Prime Minister by Milos Trifunovic who replaced Knezevic appointing him as charge d affaires at the Yugoslav legation in Lisbon Portugal This removed Knezevic from political power and from a position of influence over King Peter 14 Post war editAfter the war Knezevic remained in exile and was tried in absentia alongside others He was found guilty of treason and war crimes and sentenced to 10 years imprisonment with hard labour loss of political and civic rights for 5 years confiscation of all property and loss of citizenship The sentence of imprisonment with hard labour was to commence from the date of his future arrest 15 He emigrated to Canada where he was the editor of Glas kanadskih Srba Voice of the Canadian Serbs In the early 1950s an acrimonious dispute arose between Cvetkovic and Knezevic Knezevic wrote an article in the international relations journal International Affairs claiming that Prince Paul and Cvetkovic had formulated a secret plan to ally Yugoslavia with Germany and to gain control of the port of Salonika while Greece was defending against the Italian invasion While Cvetkovic issued two strong denials in the historical journal Dokumenti o Jugoslaviji and stated that seizing Salonika had never been on the agenda of the Yugoslav government his latter statement was not true The main purpose of Knezevic s allegation was to discredit Prince Paul and portray the coup plotters in a favourable light 16 Knezevic moved to Montreal to join his daughter Ljiljana Tomic and died there on 22 June 1983 1 Footnotes edit a b Popov 2011 pp 101 102 a b Mihailovic trial record 1946 pp 14 15 Tomasevich 1969 p 67 a b Cohen 1996 p 25 Tomasevich 1975 p 49 Tomasevich 1975 p 164 Tomasevich 1975 p 44 Tomasevich 1975 pp 278 279 a b c Roberts 1987 p 53 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 279 Tomasevich 1975 pp 262 270 Tomasevich 1975 pp 279 281 a b Tomasevich 1975 p 273 Tomasevich 1975 p 305 Mihailovic trial record 1946 pp 538 540 Tomasevich 1975 pp 31 32 References editCohen Philip J 1996 Serbia s Secret War Propaganda and the Deceit of History College Station Texas Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 760 7 Popov Cedomir ed 2011 Srpski biografski rechnik 5 Kv Mao Serbian Biographical Dictionary Volume 5 Kv Mao in Serbian Novi Sad Serbia Matica Srpska ISBN 978 86 7946 085 1 Roberts Walter R 1987 Tito Mihailovic and the Allies 1941 1945 New Brunswick New Jersey Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 0773 0 The Trial of Dragoljub Draza Mihailovic Stenographic Record and Documents from the Trial of Dragoljub Draza Mihailovic Belgrade Yugoslavia Union of the Journalists Association of the Federative People s Republic of Yugoslavia 1946 OCLC 1539805 Tomasevich Jozo 1969 Yugoslavia During the Second World War In Vucinich Wayne S ed Contemporary Yugoslavia Twenty Years of Socialist Experiment Berkeley California University of California Press pp 59 118 OCLC 652337606 Tomasevich Jozo 1975 War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941 1945 The Chetniks Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0857 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Radoje Knezevic amp oldid 1149840573, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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