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Serbian campaign

The Serbian campaign was a series of military expeditions launched in 1914 and 1915 by the Central Powers against the Kingdom of Serbia during the First World War.

Serbian campaign
Part of the Balkans Theatre of World War I

Serbian infantry positioned at Ada Ciganlija.
Date28 July 1914 – 24 November 1915
(1 year, 3 months, 3 weeks and 6 days)
Location
Result
Belligerents
Central Powers:
 Austria-Hungary
 Bulgaria (from 1915)
 Germany (from 1915)
Allied Powers:
 Serbia
 Montenegro
Commanders and leaders
1914:
Oskar Potiorek
E. von Böhm-Ermolli
L. R. von Frank
1915:
August von Mackensen
Max von Gallwitz
H. K. von Kövessháza
Kliment Boyadzhiev
Georgi Todorov
1914-1915:
Radomir Putnik
Živojin Mišić
Petar Bojović
Stepa Stepanović
Pavle Jurišić Šturm
Janko Vukotić
Strength
1914:
462,000[1]
1915:
300,000[2]
200,000[3]
100,000[3]
1914:
420,597[4][5]
~50,000
1915:
~260,000[6]
48,300
Casualties and losses

1914:
273,804[7]
28,276 killed
122,122 wounded
74,000 captured
49,406 sick
1915:
37,000[8]
18,000[9]
12,000[8]


Total: 340,000+ battle and non-battle casualties

1914:
163,557[10]
22,276 killed
96,122 wounded
45,159 missing
1915:
218,000
94,000 killed or wounded[6]
174,000 captured, of which 50,000 wounded[6]
23,000[a]
13,325 killed/missing[11]
~10,000 wounded[12]


Total: 405,000+ battle casualties
450,000[13] to 842,000[14] Serbian civilians died of war-related causes from 1914 to 1918

The first campaign began after Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia on 28 July 1914. The campaign to "punish" Serbia[clarification needed] was under the command of Austrian Oskar Potiorek. It ended after three unsuccessful Austro-Hungarian invasion attempts were repelled by the Serbians and their Montenegrin allies. The victory of the Serbian Army at the battle of Cer is considered the first Allied victory in World War I, while the defeat of the Austro-Hungarian Army by Serbia has been called one of the great upsets of modern military history.[15][16]

The second campaign was launched, under German command, almost a year later, on 6 October 1915, when Bulgarian, Austro-Hungarian, and German forces, led by Field Marshal August von Mackensen, successfully invaded Serbia from three sides, pre-empting an Allied advance from Salonica to help Serbia. This resulted in the Great Retreat through Montenegro and Albania, the evacuation to Greece, and the establishment of the Macedonian front.[17] The defeat of Serbia gave the Central Powers temporary mastery over the Balkans, opening up a land route from Berlin to Constantinople, allowing the Germans to re-supply the Ottoman Empire for the rest of the war.[18] Mackensen declared an end to the campaign on 24 November 1915. Serbia was then occupied and divided between the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Bulgaria.[19]

After the Allies launched the Vardar Offensive in September 1918, which broke through the Macedonian front and defeated the Bulgarians and their German allies, a Franco-Serbian force advanced into the occupied territories and liberated Serbia, Albania, and Montenegro. Serbian forces entered Belgrade on 1 November 1918.[20]

The Serbian Army declined severely from about 420,000[4] at its peak to about 100,000 at the moment of liberation. The estimates of casualties are various: Serb sources claim that the Kingdom of Serbia lost more than 1,200,000 inhabitants during the war (including both military and civilian losses), which represented more than 29% of its overall population and 60% of its male population,[21][22] while Western historians put the number either at 45,000 military and 650,000 civilian deaths[23] or 127,355 military and 82,000 civilian deaths. According to estimates prepared by the Yugoslav government in 1924, Serbia lost 265,164 soldiers, or 25% of all mobilized troops. By comparison, France lost 16.8%, Germany 15.4%, Russia 11.5%, and Italy 10.3%.[24]

Background

Austria-Hungary precipitated the Bosnian crisis of 1908–09 by annexing the former Ottoman territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which it had occupied since 1878. This angered the Kingdom of Serbia and its patron, the Pan-Slavic and Orthodox Russian Empire.[25] Russian political manoeuvring in the region destabilised peace accords that were already unravelling in what was known as "the powder keg of Europe".[25]

In 1912 and 1913, the First Balkan War was fought between the Balkan League of Greece, Bulgaria, Serbia, and Montenegro and the fracturing Ottoman Empire. The resulting Treaty of London further shrank the Ottoman Empire by creating an independent Principality of Albania and enlarging the territorial holdings of Bulgaria, Serbia, Montenegro, and Greece. When Bulgaria attacked both Serbia and Greece on 16 June 1913, it lost most of its Macedonian region to those countries, and additionally the Southern Dobruja region to Romania and Adrianople (the present-day city of Edirne) to Turkey in the 33-day Second Balkan War, which further destabilized the region.[26]

On 28 June 1914, Gavrilo Princip, a Bosnian Serb student and member of an organisation of national revolutionaries called Young Bosnia, assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, the heir to the Austro-Hungarian throne, in Sarajevo, Bosnia.[27] The political objective of the assassination was the independence of the southern Austro-Hungarian provinces mainly populated by Slavs from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, though it also inadvertently triggered a chain of events that embroiled Russia and the major European powers. This began a period of diplomatic manoeuvring among Austria-Hungary, Germany, Russia, France, and Britain called the July Crisis. Austria-Hungary delivered the July Ultimatum to Serbia, a series of ten demands intentionally made unacceptable in order to provoke a war with Serbia.[28] When Serbia agreed to only eight of the ten demands, Austria-Hungary declared war on 28 July 1914.

 
The Austro-Hungarian government's declaration of war in a telegram sent to the government of Serbia on 28 July 1914, signed by Imperial Foreign Minister Count Leopold Berchtold.

The dispute between Austria-Hungary and Serbia escalated into what is now known as World War I, and drew in Russia, Germany, France, and the British Empire. Within a week, Austria-Hungary had to face a war with Russia, Serbia's patron, which had the largest army in the world at the time. The result was that Serbia became a subsidiary front in the massive fight that started to unfold along Austria-Hungary's border with Russia. Serbia had an experienced army, but it was also exhausted from the conflicts of the Balkan Wars and poorly equipped, which led the Austro-Hungarians to believe that it would fall in less than a month. Serbia's strategy was to hold on as long as it could and hope the Russians could defeat the main Austro-Hungarian Army, with or without the help of other allies. Serbia constantly had to worry about its hostile neighbor to the east, Bulgaria, with which it had fought several wars, most recently in the Second Balkan War of 1913.

Military forces

Austro-Hungarian

The standing peacetime Austro-Hungarian army had some 36,000 officers and non-commissioned officers and 414,000 enlisted personnel. During the mobilization, this number was increased to a total of 3,350,000 men of all ranks. The operational army had over 1,420,000 men, and a further 600,000 were allocated to support and logistic units (train, munition and supply columns, etc.) while the rest – around 1,350,000 – were reserve troops available for replacing losses and the formation of new units.[29] This vast manpower allowed the Austro-Hungarian army to replace its losses regularly and keep units at their formation strength. According to some sources, during 1914 there were on average 150,000 men per month sent to replace the losses in the field army. During 1915 these numbers rose to 200,000 per month.[30][unreliable source?][better source needed] According to the official Austrian documents in the period from September until the end of December 1914, some 160,000 replacement troops were sent to the Balkan theater of war, as well as 82,000 reinforcements as part of newly formed units.[31][unreliable source?]

The pre-war Austro-Hungarian plan for invasion of Serbia envisioned the concentration of three armies (2nd, 5th and 6th) on the western and northern borders of Serbia with the main goal of enveloping and destroying the bulk of the Serbian army. However, with the beginning of the Russian general mobilization, the Armeeoberkommando (AOK, Austro-Hungarian Supreme Command) decided to move the 2nd Army to Galicia to counter Russian forces. Due to the congestion of railroad lines towards Galicia, the 2nd Army could only start its departure on 18 August, which allowed the AOK to assign some units of the 2nd Army to take part in operations in Serbia before that date. Eventually, the AOK allowed General Oskar Potiorek to deploy a significant part of the 2nd Army (around four divisions) in fighting against Serbia, which caused a delay of transport of these troops to the Russian front for more than a week. Furthermore, the Austro-Hungarian defeats suffered during the first invasion of Serbia forced the AOK to transfer two divisions from the 2nd Army permanently to Potiorek's force. By 12 August, Austria-Hungary had amassed over 500,000 soldiers on Serbian frontiers, including some 380,000 operational troops. With the departure of the major part of the 2nd Army to the Russian front, this number fell to some 285,000 of operational troops, including garrisons.[32] Apart from land forces, Austria-Hungary also deployed its Danube River flotilla of six monitors and six patrol boats.

Many Austro-Hungarian soldiers were not of good quality.[33] About one-quarter of them were illiterate, and most of the conscripts from the empire's subject nationalities did not speak or understand German or Hungarian. In addition to this, most of the soldiers — ethnic Czechs, Slovaks, Poles, Romanians and South Slavs — had linguistic and cultural links with the empire's various enemies.[34]

Serbian

 
Uniform of Serbian soldiers from 1914

The Serbian military command issued orders for the mobilization of its armed forces on 25 July and the mobilization began the following day. By 30 July, the mobilization was completed and the troops began to be deployed according to the war plan. Deployments were completed by 9 August, when all of the troops had arrived at their designated strategic positions. During mobilization, Serbia raised approximately 450,000 men of three age-defined classes (or bans) called poziv, which comprised all able-bodied men between 21 and 45 years of age.

The operational army consisted of 11 and 1/2 infantry (six of 1st and five of the 2nd ban) and 1 cavalry division. Aged men of the 3rd ban were organized in 15 infantry regiments with some 45–50,000 men designated for use in rear and line of communications duties. However, some of them were by necessity used as part of operational army as well, bringing its strength up to around 250,000 men.[35] Serbia was in a much more disadvantageous position when compared with Austria-Hungary with regard to human reserves and replacement troops, as its only source of replacements were new recruits reaching the age of military enlistment. Their maximum annual number was theoretically around 60,000, which was insufficient to replace the losses of more than 132,000 sustained during operations from August to December 1914. This shortage of manpower forced the Serbian army to recruit under- and over-aged men to make up for losses in the opening phase of the war.

 
Maxim МG 10 of Serbian Royal Army

Because of the poor financial state of the Serbian economy and losses in the recent Balkan Wars, the Serbian army lacked much of the modern weaponry and equipment necessary to engage in combat with their larger and wealthier adversaries. There were only 180,000 modern rifles available for the operational army, which meant that the Serbian Army lacked between one-quarter to one-third of the rifles necessary to fully equip even their front line units, let alone reserve forces.[36] Although Serbia tried to remedy this deficit by ordering 120,000 rifles from Russia in 1914, the weapons did not begin to arrive until the second half of August. Only 1st ban troops had complete grey-green M1908 uniforms, while 2nd ban troops often wore the obsolete dark blue M1896 issue, with the 3rd ban having no proper uniforms at all and were reduced to wearing their civilian clothes with military greatcoats and caps.[37] The Serbian troops did not have service issued boots at all, and the vast majority of them wore everyday footwear made of pig skin called opanak.

Ammunition reserves were also insufficient for sustained field operations as most of it had been used in the 1912–13 Balkan wars. Artillery ammunition was sparse and only amounted to several hundred shells per unit. Because Serbia lacked a significant domestic military-industrial complex, its army was completely dependent on imports of ammunition and arms from France and Russia, which themselves were chronically short of supplies. The inevitable shortages of ammunition, which later would include a complete lack of artillery ammunition, reached their peak during decisive moments of the Austro-Hungarian invasion.

Comparative strength

These figures detail the number of all Austro-Hungarian troops concentrated on the southern (Serbian) theater of war at the beginning of August 1914 and the resources of the entire Serbian army (the number of troops actually available for the operations on both sides was however somewhat less):

Type Austro-Hungarian[29] Serbian
Battalions 329 209
Batteries 200 122
Squadrons 51 44
Engineer companies 50 30
Field guns 1243 718
Machine guns 490 315
Total combatants 500,000 344,000
 
Montenegrin troops outside of Lovćen, October 1914.

Serbia's ally Montenegro mustered an army of some 45–50,000 men, with only 14 modern quick firing field guns, 62 machine guns and some 51 older pieces (some of them antique models from the 1870s). Unlike the Austro-Hungarian and the Serbian armies, the Montenegrin army was a militia type without proper military training or a career officer's corps.

note:

According to AH military formation,[38] the average war strength of the following units was:

Battalion:1000 (combatants)

Battery: 196

Squadron: 180

Engineer companies: 260

Strength of corresponding Serbian units was similar:

Battalion: 1116 (combatants and non-combatants)

Battery: 169

Squadron: 130

Engineer company: 250

Heavy artillery

Austro-Hungarian Serbian

12 mobile batteries:

4 305 mm mortars

5 240 mm mortars

20 150 mm howitzers

20 120 mm cannons

Additionally A-H fortresses and garrisons near the Serbian and Montenegrin borders (Petrovaradin, Sarajevo, Kotor etc.) had about 40 companies of heavy fortress artillery of various models.

13 mobile batteries:

8 150 mm mortars Schneider-Canet M97

22 120 mm howitzers Schneider-Canet M97

20 120 mm Schneider-Canet M1897 long gun

Order of battle

Serbian army

  • First Army, commanded by general Petar Bojović; Chief of Staff colonel Božidar Terzić.
    • Cavalry division, four regiments, colonel Branko Jovanović
    • Timok I division, four regiments, general Vladimir Kondić
    • Timok II division, three regiments
    • Morava II division, three regiments
    • Danube II division (Braničevo detachment), six regiments
    • Army artillery, colonel Božidar Srećković
  • Second Army, commanded by general Stepa Stepanović; Chief of Staff colonel Vojislav Živanović
    • Morava I division, colonel Ilija Gojković, four regiments
    • Combined I division, general Mihajlo Rašić, four regiments, regiment commanders Svetislav Mišković, X, X and Dragoljub Uzunmirković
    • Šumadija I division, four regiments
    • Danube I division, colonel Milivoje Anđelković, four regiments
    • Army artillery, colonel Vojislav Milojević
  • Third Army, commanded by general Pavle Jurišić Šturm; Chief of Staff colonel Dušan Pešić
    • Drina I division, four regiments
    • Drina II division, four regiments, regiment commanders Miloje Jelisijević, X, X and X
    • Obrenovac detachment, one regiment, two battalions
    • Jadar Chetnik detachment
    • Army artillery, colonel Miloš Mihailović
  • Užice Army, commanded by general Miloš Božanović
    • Šumadija II division, colonel Dragutin Milutinović, four regiments
    • Užice brigade, colonel Ivan Pavlović, two regiments
    • Chetnik detachments, Lim, Zlatibor, Gornjak detachments
    • Army artillery

Austro-Hungarian army

August 1914:

  • Balkan force
    • 5th Army, commanded by Liborius Ritter von Frank
    • 6th Army, commanded by Oskar Potiorek
      • 1. infantry division
      • 48. infantry division
      • 18. infantry division
      • 47. infantry division
      • 40. honved infantry division
      • 109. landsturm infantry brigade
    • Banat Rayon and garrisons
      • 107. landsturm infantry brigade
      • sundry units of infantry, cavalry and artillery
  • Parts of the 2nd Army, commanded by Eduard von Böhm-Ermolli
    • 17. infantry division
    • 34. infantry division
    • 31. infantry division
    • 32. infantry division, commanded by Andreas von Fail-Griessler
    • 29. infantry division
    • 7. infantry division
    • 23.infantry division
    • 10. cavalry division
    • 4. march brigade
    • 7. march brigade
    • 8. march brigade

1914

The Serbian campaign started on 28 July 1914, when Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia and bombarded Belgrade the following day.[39] On August 12 the Austro-Hungarian armies crossed the border, the Drina River (see map).

Initially, three out of six Austro-Hungarian armies were mobilized at the Serbian frontier, but due to Russian intervention, the 2nd Army was redirected east to the Galician theater. However, since the railroad lines leading to Galicia were busy with transport of other troops, the 2nd Army could only start its departure northward on 18 August. In order to make use of the temporary presence of the 2nd Army, AOK allowed parts of it to be used in the Serbian campaign until that date. Eventually, AOK directed significant parts of the 2nd Army (around four divisions) to assist General Potiorek's main force and postponed their transportation to Russia until the last week of August. Defeats suffered in the first invasion of Serbia eventually forced AOK to transfer two divisions from 2nd Army to Potiorek's army permanently.

The V and VI Austro-Hungarian Armies had about 270,000 men who were much better equipped than the Serbs. Overall, Austro-Hungarian command was in the hands of General Potiorek. The Austro-Hungarian Empire had the third largest population in Europe in 1914, behind Russia and Germany (almost twelve times the population of the Kingdom of Serbia), giving it an enormous manpower advantage.

Battle of Cer

 
First Attack on Serbia, August 1914

Potiorek rushed the attack against Serbia from northern Bosnia with his Fifth Army, supported by elements of the Second Army from Syrmia. The Second Army was due to be transported to Galicia to face the Russians at the end of August, but he made use of it until then. The Sixth was positioning itself in southern Bosnia and was not yet able to commence offensive operations. Potiorek's desire was to win a victory before Emperor Franz Joseph's birthday and to knock Serbia out as soon as possible. Thus he made two grave strategic errors by attacking with only just over half of his strength and attacking hilly western Serbia instead of the open plains of the north. This move surprised Marshal Putnik, who expected attack from the north and initially believed that it was a feint. Once it became clear that it was the main thrust, the strong Second Army under the command of General Stepa Stepanović was sent to join the small Third Army under Pavle Jurišić Šturm already facing the Austro-Hungarians and expel the invaders. After a fierce four-day battle, the Austro-Hungarians were forced to retreat, marking the first Allied victory of the war over the Central Powers led by Germany and Austria-Hungary. Casualties numbered 23,000 for the Austro-Hungarians (of whom 4,500 were captured) and 16,500 for the Serbs.

 
Town of Šabac which was on river Sava norther border of Serbia with Austro-Hungaria destroyed in bombardment and street fighting in 1914

Battle of Drina

 
"The defeat of the Serbian Timok division" an illustration in Wort und Bild—A German and Austrian soldiers' propaganda magazine published during the war.
 
Serbian soldiers during the Battle of the Drina
 
The remain of Serbian in battle of Mačkov Kamen

Under pressure from its allies, Serbia conducted a limited offensive across the Sava river into the Austro-Hungarian region of Syrmia with its Serbian First Army. The main operational goal was to delay the transport of the Austro-Hungarian Second Army to the Russian front. The objective was shown to be futile as forces of the Second Army were already in transport. Meanwhile, the Timok division I of the Serbian Second Army suffered a heavy defeat in a diversionary crossing, suffering around 6,000 casualties while inflicting only 2,000.

With most of his forces in Bosnia, Potiorek decided that the best way to stop the Serbian offensive was to launch another invasion into Serbia to force the Serbs to recall their troops to defend their much smaller homeland.

"The Serbians, seasoned, war-hardened men, inspired by the fiercest patriotism, the result of generations of torment and struggle, awaited undaunted whatever fate might bestow."

Winston Churchill, The Great War.[40]

7 September brought a renewed Austro-Hungarian attack from the west, across the river Drina, this time with both the Fifth Army in Mačva and the Sixth further south.[41] The initial attack by the Fifth Army was repelled by the Serbian Second Army, with 4,000 Austro-Hungarian casualties, but the stronger Sixth Army managed to surprise the Serbian Third Army and gain a foothold. After some units from the Serbian Second Army were sent to bolster the Third, the Austro-Hungarian Fifth Army also managed to establish a bridgehead with a renewed attack. At that time, Marshal Putnik withdrew the First Army from Syrmia (against much popular opposition) and used it to deliver a fierce counterattack against the Sixth Army that initially went well, but finally bogged down in a bloody four-day fight for a peak of the Jagodnja mountain called Mačkov Kamen, in which both sides suffered horrendous losses in successive frontal attacks and counterattacks. Two Serbian divisions lost around 11,000 men, while Austro-Hungarian losses were probably comparable.

Marshal Putnik ordered a retreat into the surrounding hills and the front settled into a month and a half of trench warfare, which was highly unfavourable to the Serbs, who had little in the way of an industrial base and were deficient in heavy artillery, ammunition stocks, shell production and footwear, since the vast majority of infantry wore the traditional (though state-issued) opanaks,[33] while the Austro-Hungarians had waterproof leather boots. Most of their war material was supplied by the Allies, who were short of such materials themselves. In such a situation, Serbian artillery quickly became almost silent, while the Austro-Hungarians steadily increased their fire. Serbian casualties reached 100 soldiers a day from all causes in some divisions.

During the first weeks of trench warfare, the Serbian Užice Army (first strengthened division) and the Montenegrin Sanjak Army (roughly a division) conducted an abortive offensive into Bosnia. In addition, both sides conducted a few local attacks, most of which were soundly defeated. In one such attack, the Serbian Army used mine warfare for the first time: the Combined Division dug tunnels beneath the Austro-Hungarian trenches (that were only 20–30 meters away from the Serbian ones on this sector), planted mines and set them off just before an infantry charge.

Battle of Kolubara

 
Later Operations in Serbia, 1914
 
Austro-Hungarian troops entering the Serbian town of Valjevo during the first phase of the battle of Kolubara on 16 November 1914. An illustration in Wort und Bild.
 
Serbian artillery in trenches in 1914

Having thus weakened the Serbian army, the Austro-Hungarian Army launched another massive attack on 5 November. The Serbs withdrew step by step, offering strong resistance at the Kolubara River, but to no avail, due to the lack of artillery ammunition. It was at that time that General Živojin Mišić was made commander of the battered First Army, replacing the wounded Petar Bojović. He insisted on a deep withdrawal in order to give the troops some much-needed rest and to shorten the front. Marshal Putnik finally relented, but the consequence was the abandonment of the capital city of Belgrade. After suffering heavy losses, the Austro-Hungarian Army entered the city on 2 December. This action led Potiorek to move the whole Fifth Army into the Belgrade area and use it to crush the Serbian right flank. This, however, left the Sixth alone for a few days to face the whole Serbian army.

At this point, artillery ammunition finally arrived from France and Greece. In addition, some replacements were sent to the units and Marshal Putnik correctly sensed that the Austro-Hungarian forces were dangerously overstretched and weakened in the previous offensives, so he ordered a full-scale counterattack with the entire Serbian Army on 3 December against the Sixth Army. The Fifth hurried its flanking maneuver, but it was already too late – with the Sixth Army broken, the Second and Third Serbian Armies overwhelmed the Fifth. Finally, Potiorek lost his nerve and ordered yet another retreat back across the rivers into Austria-Hungary's territory. The Serbian Army recaptured Belgrade on 15 December.

The first phase of the war against Serbia had ended with no change in the border, but casualties were enormous compared to earlier wars, albeit comparable to other campaigns of World War I. The Serbian army suffered 170,000 men killed, wounded, captured or missing. Austro-Hungarian losses were approaching 215,000 men killed, wounded or missing.[citation needed]. Austro-Hungarian General Potiorek was removed from command and replaced by Archduke Eugen of Austria (C. Falls p. 54). On the Serbian side, a deadly typhus epidemic killed hundreds of thousands of Serb civilians during the winter.

After the Battle of Kolubara, the Serbian Parliament adopted the Niš Declaration (7 December 1914) on the war goals of Serbia: "Convinced that the entire Serbian nation is determined to persevere in the holy struggle for the defense of their homesteads and their freedom, the government of the Kingdom (of Serbia) considers that, in these fateful times, its main and only task is to ensure the successful completion of this great warfare which, at the moment when it started, also became a struggle for the liberation and unification of all our unliberated Serbian, Croatian and Slovenian brothers. The great success which is to crown this warfare will make up for the extremely bloody sacrifices which this generation of Serbs is making". This amounted to announcing Serbia's intention to annex extensive amounts of Austria-Hungary's Balkan provinces.

1915

Prelude

 
Refugee Transport from Serbia 1914/15 in Leibnitz, Styria

Early in 1915, with Ottoman defeats at the Battle of Sarikamish and in the First Suez Offensive, the German Chief of the General Staff Erich von Falkenhayn tried to convince the Austro-Hungarian Chief of Staff, Conrad von Hötzendorf, of the importance of conquering Serbia. If Serbia were taken, then the Germans would have a direct rail link from Germany through Austria-Hungary, then down to Istanbul and beyond. This would allow the Germans to send military supplies and even troops to help the Ottoman Empire. However, Russia was the more dangerous enemy, and furthermore, with the entry of Italy into the war on the Allied side, the Austro-Hungarians had their hands full (see Italian Front (World War I)).

On 8 September 1915, Erich von Falkenhayn, and Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf signed a military convention in Pless. The conference called for an immediate attack on Serbia.[42]

Both the Allies and the Central Powers tried to get Bulgaria to pick a side in the Great War. Bulgaria and Serbia had fought two wars in the last 30 years: the Serbo-Bulgarian War in 1885, and the Second Balkan War in 1913. The result was that the Bulgarian government and people felt that Serbia was in possession of lands to which Bulgaria was entitled, and when the Central Powers offered to give them what they claimed, the Bulgarians entered the war on their side. With the Allied loss in the Gallipoli campaign and the Russian defeat at Gorlice, King Ferdinand of Bulgaria signed a treaty with Germany and on 23 September 1915, Bulgaria began mobilizing for war.

Opposing forces

During the preceding nine months, the Serbs had tried and failed to rebuild their battered armies and improve their supply situation. Despite their efforts, the Serbian Army was only about 30,000 men stronger than at the start of the war (around 225,000) and was still badly equipped. Although Britain and France had talked about sending serious military forces to Serbia, nothing was done until it was too late. When Bulgaria began mobilizing, the French and British sent two divisions, but they arrived late in the Greek town of Salonika. Part of the reason for the delay was the National schism in Greek politics of the time that generating conflicting views about the war.

Against Serbia were marshalled the Bulgarian First Army commanded by Kliment Boyadzhiev, the German Eleventh Army commanded by Max von Gallwitz and the Austro-Hungarian Third Army commanded by Hermann Kövess von Kövessháza, all under the control of Field Marshal August von Mackensen. In addition the Bulgarian Second Army commanded by (Georgi Todorov), which remained under the direct control of the Bulgarian high command, was deployed against Macedonia.

 
Austro-Hungarian river boat on the Danube and Sava with Kalemegdan fortress during Austrian attack in 1915

Course of the campaign

 
Austro-Hungarian troops capture Belgrade in 1915

The Austro-Hungarians and Germans began their attack on 7 October with their troops crossing the Drina and Sava rivers, covered by heavy artillery fire. Once they crossed the Danube, the Germans and Austro-Hungarians moved on Belgrade itself. Vicious street fighting ensued,[43] and the Serbs' resistance in the city was finally crushed on 9 October.[44]

Then, on 14 October, the Bulgarian Army attacked from the north of Bulgaria towards Niš and from the south towards Skopje (see map). The Bulgarian First Army defeated the Serbian Second Army at the Battle of Morava, while the Bulgarian Second Army defeated the Serbians at the Battle of Ovche Pole. With the Bulgarian breakthrough, the Serbian position became untenable; the main army in the north (around Belgrade) could either retreat or be surrounded and forced to surrender. In the Battle of Kosovo, the Serbs made a last and desperate attempt to join the two incomplete Allied divisions that made a limited advance from the south, but were unable to gather enough forces due to the pressure from the north and east. They were halted by the Bulgarians under General Todorov and had to pull back.

 
Serbian Army during its retreat towards Albania

Marshal Putnik ordered the Great Retreat, a full retreat south and west through Montenegro and into Albania. The weather was terrible, the roads poor, and the army had to help the tens of thousands of civilians who retreated with them with almost no supplies or food left. But the bad weather and poor roads worked for the refugees as well, as the Central Powers forces could not press them hard enough, so they evaded capture. Many of the fleeing soldiers and civilians did not make it to the coast, though – they were lost to hunger, disease, and attacks by enemy forces and Albanian tribal bands,[45] due to the memory of suppressed rebellions and massacres of Albanians in the Balkan Wars.[46][47][48]

The circumstances of the retreat were disastrous. All told, only some 155,000 Serbs, mostly soldiers, reached the coast of the Adriatic Sea and embarked on Allied transport ships that carried the army to various Greek islands (many to Corfu) before being sent to Salonika. The evacuation of the Serbian army from Albania was completed on 10 February 1916. The survivors were so weakened that thousands of them died from sheer exhaustion in the weeks after their rescue. Marshal Putnik had to be carried during the whole retreat and he died around fifteen months later in a hospital in France.

The French and British divisions had marched north from Thessaloniki in October 1915 under the command of French General Maurice Sarrail. The War Office in London was reluctant to advance too deep into Serbia, so the French divisions advanced on their own up the Vardar River. This advance gave some limited help to the retreating Serbian Army, as the Bulgarians had to concentrate larger forces on their southern flank to deal with the threat, which led to the Battle of Krivolak (October–November 1915). By the end of November, General Sarrail had to retreat in the face of massive Bulgarian assaults on his positions. During his retreat, the British at the Battle of Kosturino were also forced to retreat. By 12 December, all allied forces were back in Greece.

 
German and Bulgarian commanders in Serbia on 16 November 1915. From right to left: Erich von Falkenhayn, Boris of Bulgaria, Hans von Seeckt, Gerhard Tappen, Petar Ganchev, Nikola Zhekov and August von Mackensen.

The Army of Serbia's ally Montenegro did not follow the Serbs into exile, but retreated to defend their own country. The Austrian-Hungarians launched their Montenegrin campaign on 5 January 1916 and despite some success of The Montenegrins in the Battle of Mojkovac, they were completely defeated within two weeks.

This was a nearly complete victory for the Central Powers at a cost of around 67,000 casualties as compared to around 94,000 Serbs killed or wounded and 174,000 captured, of which 70,000 were wounded.[6] The railroad from Berlin to Istanbul was finally opened. The only flaw in the victory was that much of the Serbian Army had successfully retreated, although it was left very disorganized and required rebuilding.

Aftermath

1916–1918

 
A 1976 Yugoslav postage stamp depicting the collapse of the Salonika front by war artist Veljko Stanojević

The Serbian army was evacuated to Greece and joined up with the Allied Army of the Orient. They then fought a trench war against the Bulgarians on the Macedonia Front. The Macedonian front in the beginning was mostly static. French and Serbian forces re-took limited areas of Macedonia by recapturing Bitola on 19 November 1916 as a result of the costly Monastir Offensive, which brought stabilization of the front.

French and Serbian troops finally made a breakthrough in the Vardar Offensive in 1918, after most of the German and Austro-Hungarian troops had withdrawn. This breakthrough was significant in defeating Bulgaria and Austria-Hungary, which led to the final victory of World War I. After the Allied breakthrough, Bulgaria capitulated on 29 September 1918.[49] Hindenburg and Ludendorff concluded that the strategic and operational balance had now shifted decidedly against the Central Powers and insisted on an immediate peace settlement during a meeting with government officials a day after the Bulgarian collapse.[50] On 29 September 1918, the German Supreme Army Command informed Kaiser Wilhelm II and the Imperial Chancellor Count Georg von Hertling, that the military situation facing Germany was hopeless .[51]

German Emperor Wilhelm II in his telegram to Bulgarian Tsar Ferdinand I stated: “Disgraceful! 62,000 Serbs decided the war!".[52][53]

The collapse of the Macedonian front meant that the road to Budapest and Vienna was now opened for the 670,000-strong army of General Franchet d'Esperey as the Bulgarian surrender deprived the Central Powers of the 278 infantry battalions and 1,500 guns (the equivalent of some 25 to 30 German divisions) that were previously holding the line.[54] The German high command responded by sending only seven infantry and one cavalry division, but these forces were far from enough for a front to be re-established.[54] In September, Entente armies spearheaded by Serbian and French troops, broke through the remaining German and Bulgarians defense, forcing Bulgaria to exit the war and liberating Serbia two weeks before the ceasefire.[55]

End of the War

The ramifications of the war were manifold. When World War I ended, the Treaty of Neuilly awarded Western Thrace to Greece, whereas Serbia received some minor territorial concessions from Bulgaria. Austria-Hungary was broken apart, and Hungary lost much land to both Yugoslavia and Romania in the Treaty of Trianon. Serbia assumed the leading position in the new Kingdom of Yugoslavia, joined by its old ally, Montenegro. Meanwhile, Italy established a quasi-protectorate over Albania and Greece re-occupied Albania's southern part, which was autonomous under a local Greek provisional government (see Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus), despite Albania's neutrality during the war.

Casualties

 
The Entente casualties

Before the war, the Kingdom of Serbia had 4,500,000 inhabitants.[56] According to The New York Times, 150,000 people are estimated to have died in 1915 alone during the worst typhus epidemic in world history. With the aid of the American Red Cross and 44 foreign governments, the outbreak was brought under control by the end of the year.[57] The number of civilian deaths is estimated by some sources at 650,000, primarily due to the typhus outbreak and famine, but also direct clashes with the occupiers.[58] Serbia's casualties accounted for 8% of the total Allied military deaths. 58% of the regular Serbian Army (420,000 strong) perished during the conflict.[59] According to the Serb sources, the total number of casualties is placed around 1,000,000:[60] 25% of Serbia's prewar size, and an absolute majority (57%) of its overall male population.[61] L.A. Times and N.Y. Times also cited early Serbian sources which claimed over 1,000,000 victims in their respective articles.[62][63] Modern western and non-Serb historians put the casualties number either at 45,000 military deaths and 650,000 civilian deaths[23] or 127,355 military deaths and 82,000 civilian deaths.[24]

 
The remains of Serbs killed by Bulgarian soldiers during the Surdulica massacre. It is estimated that 2,000–3,000 Serbian men were killed in the town during the first months of the Bulgarian occupation of southern Serbia.[64]

The extent of the Serbian demographic disaster can be illustrated by the statement of the Bulgarian Prime Minister Vasil Radoslavov: "Serbia ceased to exist" (New York Times, summer 1917).[65] In July 1918 the US Secretary of State Robert Lansing urged the Americans of all religions to pray for Serbia in their respective churches.[66][67]

The Serbian Army suffered a staggering number of casualties. It was largely destroyed near the end of the war, falling from about 420,000[4] at its peak to about 100,000 at the moment of liberation.

The Serb sources claim that the Kingdom of Serbia lost 1,100,000 inhabitants during the war. Of 4.5 million people, there were 275,000 military deaths and 450,000 among the ordinary citizenry. The civilian deaths were attributable mainly to food shortages and the effects of epidemics such as Spanish flu. In addition to the military deaths, there were 133,148 wounded. According to the Yugoslav government in 1924, Serbia lost 365,164 soldiers, or 26% of all mobilized personnel, while France suffered 16.8%, Germany 15.4%, Russia 11.5%, and Italy 10.3%.[citation needed]

At the end of the war, there were 114,000 disabled soldiers and 500,000 orphaned children.[68]

Attacks against ethnic Serb civilians

The assassination in Sarajevo of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, was followed by violent anti-Serb demonstrations of angry Croats and Muslims[69] in the city during the evening of 28 June 1914 and for much of the following day. This happened because most Croats and many Muslims considered the archduke the best hope for the establishment of a South Slav political entity within the Habsburg Empire. The crowd directed its anger principally at shops owned by ethnic Serbs and the residences of prominent Serbs. Two ethnic Serbs were killed on 28 June by crowd violence.[70] That night there were anti-Serb demonstrations in other parts of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[71][72]

Incited by anti-Serbian propaganda with the collusion of the command of the Austro-Hungarian Army, soldiers committed numerous atrocities against the Serbs in both Serbia and Austria-Hungary. According to the German-Swiss criminologist and observer R.A. Reiss, it was a "system of extermination". In addition to executions of prisoners of war, civilian populations were subjected to mass murder and rape. Villages and towns were burned and looted. Fruit trees were cut down and water wells were poisoned in an effort on the Austro-Hungarian part to discourage Serb inhabitants from ever returning.[73][74][75]

See also

References

  1. ^ Number is for total Montenegrin losses in the war, including the Macedonian front.
  1. ^ Österreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg — Wien: Verlag der Militärwissenschaftlichen Mitteilungen, 1930. — Vol. 1. pg. 759. This is the total number of soldiers who served on the Balkans until the middle of December 1914.
  2. ^ Prit Buttar 2015, p. 594.
  3. ^ a b Josephus Nelson Larned 1924, p. 9991.
  4. ^ a b c "Serbian army, August 1914".
  5. ^ Thomas & Babac. "Armies in the Balkans 1914–1918" pg.12
  6. ^ a b c d DiNardo 2015, p. 122.
  7. ^ Lyon 2015, p. 234.
  8. ^ a b Георги Бакалов, "История на Българите: Военна история на българите от древността до наши дни", p.463
  9. ^ Spencer Tucker, "Encyclopedia of World War I"(2005) pg 1077, ISBN 1-85109-420-2
  10. ^ Lyon 2015, p. 235.
  11. ^ International Labour Office, Enquête sur la production. Rapport général. Paris [etc.] Berger-Levrault, 1923–25. Tom 4 , II Les tués et les disparus p.29
  12. ^ Military Casualties-World War-Estimated," Statistics Branch, GS, War Department, 25 February 1924; cited in World War I: People, Politics, and Power, published by Britannica Educational Publishing (2010) Page 219
  13. ^ Urlanis, Boris (1971). Wars and Population. Moscow Pages 66,79,83, 85,160,171 and 268.
  14. ^ Milošević 2008, p. 7.
  15. ^ Schindler, John R. (2002). "Disaster on the Drina: The Austro-Hungarian Army in Serbia, 1914". War in History. Sage Publications, Ltd. 9 (2): 159–95. doi:10.1191/0968344502wh250oa. JSTOR 26014058. S2CID 145488166.
  16. ^ Rose, R.A.D. (2018). History of Europe. EDTECH. p. 195. ISBN 978-1-83947-278-7.
  17. ^ Hughes Philpott 2005, p.48
  18. ^ Hart 2013, p.325>
  19. ^ DiNardo 2015, p. 117
  20. ^ Fred Singleton (1985). A Short History of the Yugoslav Peoples. Cambridge University Press. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-521-27485-2. ww1 Serbian army entered belgrade.
  21. ^ Чедомир Антић, Судњи рат, Политика од 14. септембра 2008.
  22. ^ Владимир Радомировић, Највећа српска победа, Политика од 14. септембра 2008.
  23. ^ a b Sammis 2002, p. 32.
  24. ^ a b Tucker 2005, p. 273.
  25. ^ a b Keegan 1998, pp. 48–49
  26. ^ Willmott 2003, pp. 2–23
  27. ^ Willmott 2003, p. 26
  28. ^ Willmott 2003, p. 27
  29. ^ a b Österreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 - 1918, vol. 1, Wienn 1930, p68
  30. ^ http://digi.landesbibliothek.at/viewer/image/AC03568741/1/LOG_0003/ Die Entwicklung der öst.-ung. Wehrmacht in den ersten zwei Kriegsjahren, 10
  31. ^ http://digi.landesbibliothek.at/viewer/image/AC01351505/1/LOG_0003/ Österreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 -1918, vol. 2 Beilagen, Wienn 1930, table I )
  32. ^ http://honsi.org/literature/svejk/dokumenty/oulk/band1.html Österreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 - 1918, vol. 1, Wienn 1930, p68
  33. ^ a b Jordan 2008, p. 20
  34. ^ Willmott 2009, p. 69
  35. ^ James Lyon, A peasant mob: The Serbian army in the eve of the Great War, JMH 61, 1997, p501
  36. ^ James Lyon, p496
  37. ^ Thomas, Nigel (2001). Armies in the Balkans 1914-18. p. 38. ISBN 1-84176-194-X.
  38. ^ Österreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914–1918, vol. 1, Wienn 1930, p.82
  39. ^ Gordon Martel, The Origins of the First World War, Pearson Longman, Harlow, 2003, p. xii f.
  40. ^ Jordan 2008, p. 25
  41. ^ Jordan 2008, p. 31
  42. ^ Dinardo, Richard L. (1 September 2016). "The Limits of Envelopment: The Invasion of Serbia, 1915". The Historian. 78 (3): 486–503. doi:10.1111/hisn.12247. ISSN 0018-2370.
  43. ^ Jordan 2008, p. 53
  44. ^ Willmott 2008, p. 120
  45. ^ Tucker & Roberts 2005, pp. 1075–6
  46. ^ DiNardo 2015, pp. 117–118: "The Muslim population of Serbia had been subject to all manner of mistreatment oat the hands of the Serbian Orthodox majority during the Balkan Wars"
  47. ^ Lieberman, Benjamin (2013). Terrible Fate: Ethnic Cleansing in the Making of Modern Europe. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 83–84. ISBN 978-1-4422-3038-5. Retrieved 28 March 2020. Driven out of the north and east, the Serb retreat ended up in Kosovo in November 1915. This new addition to Serbia, the scene of nationalist triumph only three years earlier, was not hospitable ground for the fleeing Serbs. A large majority of the population was made up of Albanians. These Albanians lived with the memory of suppressed rebellions and recent massacres carried out by Serbs during the Blakan wars.
  48. ^ Eric, Sass (19 November 2015). "Serbian "Great Retreat" Begins". Mentalfloss. Retrieved 28 March 2020. Pack animals struggled to climb mountainsides turned to trackless wastes by several feet of snow, and what little shelter there was belonged to hostile Albanian villagers, who robbed and killed stragglers (perhaps in retribution for Serbian brutality in the First Balkan War).
  49. ^ Tucker, Wood & Murphy 1999, p. 120
  50. ^ Robert A. DOUGHTY (2005). Pyrrhic Victory. Harvard University Press. pp. 491–. ISBN 978-0-674-01880-8.
  51. ^ Axelrod 2018, p. 260.
  52. ^ Editor. "The Battle of Dobro Polje – The Forgotten Balkan Skirmish That Ended WW1 | Militaryhistorynow.com". Retrieved 21 November 2019. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  53. ^ Editor (22 February 2017). "The Germans Could no Longer Keep up the Fight | historycollection.co". Retrieved 21 November 2019. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  54. ^ a b Korsun, N. "The Balkan Front of the World War (in Russian)". militera.lib.ru. Retrieved 27 September 2010.
  55. ^ Moal, F.L. (2008). La Serbie: du martyre à la victoire, 1914-1918. Collection "Les nations dans la Grande Guerre." (in French). 14-18 Éditions. ISBN 978-2-916385-18-1.
  56. ^ "Serbia in 1914".
  57. ^ "$1,600,000 was raised for the Red Cross" (PDF). The New York Times. 29 October 1915.
  58. ^ "First World War.com - Feature Articles - The Minor Powers During World War One - Serbia". www.firstworldwar.com.
  59. ^ Serbian army, August 1914
  60. ^ "Политика Online". www.politika.rs.
  61. ^ Тема недеље : Највећа српска победа : Сви српски тријумфи : ПОЛИТИКА (in Serbian)
  62. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 July 2013. Retrieved 7 July 2017.
  63. ^ "Asserts Serbians face extinction" (PDF).
  64. ^ Mitrović 2007, p. 223.
  65. ^ "Serbia restored" (PDF).
  66. ^ "Serbia and Austria" (PDF). New York Times. 28 July 1918.
  67. ^ "Appeals to Americans to pray for Serbians" (PDF). New York Times. 27 July 1918.
  68. ^ Banac, Ivo (1988). The National Question in Yugoslavia: Origins, History, Politics. Cornell University Press. p. 222. ISBN 978-0-8014-9493-2. its postwar population included some 114,000 invalids and over half a million orphans
  69. ^ Christopher Bennett (1995). Yugoslavia's Bloody Collapse: Causes, Course and Consequences. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 259. ISBN 978-1-85065-232-8. Retrieved 7 September 2013.
  70. ^ Robert J. Donia (2006). Sarajevo: A Biography. University of Michigan Press. pp. 123–. ISBN 0-472-11557-X.
  71. ^ Joseph Ward Swain (1933). Beginning the twentieth century: a history of the generation that made the war. W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
  72. ^ Christopher Bennett (January 1995). Yugoslavia's Bloody Collapse: Causes, Course and Consequences. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. pp. 31–. ISBN 978-1-85065-232-8.
  73. ^ How Austria-Hungary waged war in Serbia (1915) German criminologist R.A. Reiss on atrocities by the Austro-Hungarian army
  74. ^ Augenzeugen. Der Krieg gegen Zivilisten. Fotografien aus dem Ersten Weltkrieg Anton Holzer, Vienna
  75. ^ "Executions, various". www.ww1-propaganda-cards.com.
  76. ^ Honzík, Miroslav; Honzíková, Hana (1984). 1914/1918, Léta zkázy a naděje. Czech Republic: Panorama.

Sources

Books

  • Babac, Dušan M. (2016). The Serbian Army in the Great War, 1914-1918. Solihull: Helion. ISBN 978-1-910777-29-9.
  • Bataković, Dušan T., ed. (2005). Histoire du peuple serbe [History of the Serbian People] (in French). Lausanne: L’Age d’Homme. ISBN 978-2-8251-1958-7.
  • Buttar, Prit (2014). Collision of Empires: The War on the Eastern Front in 1914. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-78200-972-6.
  • Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-4291-5.
  • Cox, John K. (2002). The History of Serbia. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-31290-8.
  • DiNardo, Richard L. (2015). Invasion: The Conquest of Serbia, 1915. Santa Barbara: Praeger. ISBN 978-1-4408-0093-1.
  • Đorđević, M. P.; Živojinović, D. R. (1991). Srbija i Jugosloveni za vreme rata 1914-1918. Vol. 5. Beograd: Biblioteka grada Beograda.
  • Dragnich, Alex N. (2004). Serbia Through the Ages. Boulder: East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0-88033-541-6.
  • Falls, Cyril, The Great War (1960) 978-1440800924
  • Fryer, Charles (1997). The Destruction of Serbia in 1915. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-88033-385-6.
  • Gumz, Jonathan E. (2009). The Resurrection and Collapse of Empire in Habsburg Serbia, 1914-1918. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89627-6.
  • Hadži-Vasiljević, Jovan (1922). Bugarska zverstva u Vranju i okolini, 1915-1918. Zastava.
  • Peter Hart (2013). The Great War: A Combat History of the First World War. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-997627-0.
  • M. Hughes; W. Philpott (29 March 2005). The Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of the First World War. Palgrave Macmillan UK. ISBN 978-0-230-50480-6.
  • Jordan, David (2008). The Balkans, Italy & Africa 1914–1918: From Sarajevo to the Piave and Lake Tanganyika. London: Amber Books. ISBN 978-1-906626-14-3.
  • Lyon, James B. (2015). Serbia and the Balkan Front, 1914: The Outbreak of the Great War. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1-4725-8005-4.
  • Mitrović, Andrej (2007). Serbia's Great War 1914-1918. West Lafayette: Purdue University Press. ISBN 978-1-55753-476-7.
  • Österreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 - 1918, vol. 1, Wienn 1930 [1]
  • Österreich-Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 -1918, vol. 2 Beilagen, Wienn 1931 [2]
  • Pavlowitch, Stevan K. (2002). Serbia: The History behind the Name. London: Hurst & Company. ISBN 978-1-85065-477-3.
  • Sammis, Kathy (2002). Focus on World History: The Twentieth Century. Vol. 5. Walch Publishing. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-8251-4371-7.
  • Hew Strachan (1998). World War I: A History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-820614-9.
  • Temperley, Harold W. V. (1919) [1917]. History of Serbia (PDF) (2 ed.). London: Bell and Sons.
  • Tomac, Petar; Đurašinović, Radomir (1973). Prvi svetski rat, 1914-1918. Vojnoizdavački zavod.
  • Tucker, Spencer (2005). World War I: Encyclopedia, Volume 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 273. ISBN 978-1-85109-420-2.
  • Willmott, H. P. (2003). World War I. Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-0-7894-9627-0.
  • Willmott, H. P. (2008). World War I. Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-1-4053-2986-6.
  • Willmott, H. P. (2009). World War I. Dorling Kindersley. ISBN 978-0-7566-5015-5.
  • Axelrod, Alan (2018). How America Won World War I. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4930-3192-4.
  • Josephus Nelson Larned (1924). The New Larned History for Ready Reference, Reading and Research: The Actual Words of the World's Best Historians, Biographers and Specialists; a Complete System of History for All Uses, Extending to All Countries and Subjects and Representing the Better and Newer Literature of History. C.A. Nichols Publishing Company.
  • Prit Buttar (2015). Germany Ascendant: The Eastern Front 1915. Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4728-1355-8.

Journals

  • Silberstein, Gerard E. "The Serbian campaign of 1915: Its diplomatic background." American Historical Review 73.1 (1967): 51-69 online
  • Pisarri, Milovan (2013). "Bulgarian Crimes Against Civilians in Occupied Serbia during the First World War". Balcanica (44): 357–390. doi:10.2298/BALC1344357P.
  • Radić, Radmila (2015). "The Serbian Orthodox Church in the First World War". The Serbs and the First World War 1914-1918. Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. pp. 263–285. ISBN 978-86-7025-659-0.
  • Radojević, Mira (2015). "Jovan M. Jovanović on the outbreak of the First World War". The Serbs and the First World War 1914-1918. Belgrade: Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. pp. 187–204. ISBN 978-86-7025-659-0.

External links

  • Bjelajac, Mile: Serbia, in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Tasić, Dmitar: Warfare 1914-1918 (South East Europe), in: 1914-1918-online. International Encyclopedia of the First World War.
  • Years which changed the war - WWI in documents from Archive of Serbia
  • "Jugoslovenska kinoteka" (in Serbian). Kinoteka.
  • Popović, Andra (1926). Збирка књига Универзитетске библиотеке у Београду Ратни албум : 1914-1918 (in Serbian). Digital National Library of Serbia.
  • W. H. Crawfurd Price (1918). Serbia's Part in the War ... Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Company. (Public Domain)
  • Milošević, Krsman (2008). Србија у великом рату (in Serbian). Народна Библиотека Србије, Београд: CIP. ISBN 978-86-82777-16-8.

serbian, campaign, been, suggested, that, this, article, should, split, into, articles, titled, 1914, 1915, discuss, october, 2020, series, military, expeditions, launched, 1914, 1915, central, powers, against, kingdom, serbia, during, first, world, part, balk. It has been suggested that this article should be split into articles titled Serbian campaign 1914 and Serbian campaign 1915 discuss October 2020 The Serbian campaign was a series of military expeditions launched in 1914 and 1915 by the Central Powers against the Kingdom of Serbia during the First World War Serbian campaignPart of the Balkans Theatre of World War ISerbian infantry positioned at Ada Ciganlija Date28 July 1914 24 November 1915 1 year 3 months 3 weeks and 6 days LocationSerbia Montenegro AlbaniaResultSerbian victory in 1914 Central Powers victory in 1915 Serbian retreat through Albania Austro Hungarian occupation Bulgarian occupationBelligerentsCentral Powers Austria Hungary Bulgaria from 1915 Germany from 1915 Allied Powers Serbia MontenegroCommanders and leaders1914 Oskar Potiorek E von Bohm Ermolli L R von Frank1915 August von Mackensen Max von GallwitzH K von Kovesshaza Kliment Boyadzhiev Georgi Todorov1914 1915 Radomir Putnik Zivojin Misic Petar Bojovic Stepa StepanovicPavle Jurisic Sturm Janko VukoticStrength1914 462 000 1 1915 300 000 2 200 000 3 100 000 3 1914 420 597 4 5 50 0001915 260 000 6 48 300Casualties and losses1914 273 804 7 28 276 killed122 122 wounded74 000 captured49 406 sick1915 37 000 8 18 000 9 12 000 8 Total 340 000 battle and non battle casualties1914 163 557 10 22 276 killed96 122 wounded45 159 missing1915 218 00094 000 killed or wounded 6 174 000 captured of which 50 000 wounded 6 23 000 a 13 325 killed missing 11 10 000 wounded 12 Total 405 000 battle casualties450 000 13 to 842 000 14 Serbian civilians died of war related causes from 1914 to 1918 The first campaign began after Austria Hungary declared war on Serbia on 28 July 1914 The campaign to punish Serbia clarification needed was under the command of Austrian Oskar Potiorek It ended after three unsuccessful Austro Hungarian invasion attempts were repelled by the Serbians and their Montenegrin allies The victory of the Serbian Army at the battle of Cer is considered the first Allied victory in World War I while the defeat of the Austro Hungarian Army by Serbia has been called one of the great upsets of modern military history 15 16 The second campaign was launched under German command almost a year later on 6 October 1915 when Bulgarian Austro Hungarian and German forces led by Field Marshal August von Mackensen successfully invaded Serbia from three sides pre empting an Allied advance from Salonica to help Serbia This resulted in the Great Retreat through Montenegro and Albania the evacuation to Greece and the establishment of the Macedonian front 17 The defeat of Serbia gave the Central Powers temporary mastery over the Balkans opening up a land route from Berlin to Constantinople allowing the Germans to re supply the Ottoman Empire for the rest of the war 18 Mackensen declared an end to the campaign on 24 November 1915 Serbia was then occupied and divided between the Austro Hungarian Empire and Bulgaria 19 After the Allies launched the Vardar Offensive in September 1918 which broke through the Macedonian front and defeated the Bulgarians and their German allies a Franco Serbian force advanced into the occupied territories and liberated Serbia Albania and Montenegro Serbian forces entered Belgrade on 1 November 1918 20 The Serbian Army declined severely from about 420 000 4 at its peak to about 100 000 at the moment of liberation The estimates of casualties are various Serb sources claim that the Kingdom of Serbia lost more than 1 200 000 inhabitants during the war including both military and civilian losses which represented more than 29 of its overall population and 60 of its male population 21 22 while Western historians put the number either at 45 000 military and 650 000 civilian deaths 23 or 127 355 military and 82 000 civilian deaths According to estimates prepared by the Yugoslav government in 1924 Serbia lost 265 164 soldiers or 25 of all mobilized troops By comparison France lost 16 8 Germany 15 4 Russia 11 5 and Italy 10 3 24 Contents 1 Background 2 Military forces 2 1 Austro Hungarian 2 2 Serbian 2 3 Comparative strength 2 4 Order of battle 2 4 1 Serbian army 2 4 2 Austro Hungarian army 3 1914 3 1 Battle of Cer 3 2 Battle of Drina 3 3 Battle of Kolubara 4 1915 4 1 Prelude 4 2 Opposing forces 4 3 Course of the campaign 5 Aftermath 5 1 1916 1918 5 2 End of the War 5 3 Casualties 5 4 Attacks against ethnic Serb civilians 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 8 1 Books 8 2 Journals 9 External linksBackground EditMain articles Causes of World War I and July Crisis Austria Hungary precipitated the Bosnian crisis of 1908 09 by annexing the former Ottoman territory of Bosnia and Herzegovina which it had occupied since 1878 This angered the Kingdom of Serbia and its patron the Pan Slavic and Orthodox Russian Empire 25 Russian political manoeuvring in the region destabilised peace accords that were already unravelling in what was known as the powder keg of Europe 25 Gavrilo Princip a member of the Young Bosnia assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand the heir to the Austro Hungarian throne In 1912 and 1913 the First Balkan War was fought between the Balkan League of Greece Bulgaria Serbia and Montenegro and the fracturing Ottoman Empire The resulting Treaty of London further shrank the Ottoman Empire by creating an independent Principality of Albania and enlarging the territorial holdings of Bulgaria Serbia Montenegro and Greece When Bulgaria attacked both Serbia and Greece on 16 June 1913 it lost most of its Macedonian region to those countries and additionally the Southern Dobruja region to Romania and Adrianople the present day city of Edirne to Turkey in the 33 day Second Balkan War which further destabilized the region 26 On 28 June 1914 Gavrilo Princip a Bosnian Serb student and member of an organisation of national revolutionaries called Young Bosnia assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria the heir to the Austro Hungarian throne in Sarajevo Bosnia 27 The political objective of the assassination was the independence of the southern Austro Hungarian provinces mainly populated by Slavs from the Austro Hungarian Empire though it also inadvertently triggered a chain of events that embroiled Russia and the major European powers This began a period of diplomatic manoeuvring among Austria Hungary Germany Russia France and Britain called the July Crisis Austria Hungary delivered the July Ultimatum to Serbia a series of ten demands intentionally made unacceptable in order to provoke a war with Serbia 28 When Serbia agreed to only eight of the ten demands Austria Hungary declared war on 28 July 1914 The Austro Hungarian government s declaration of war in a telegram sent to the government of Serbia on 28 July 1914 signed by Imperial Foreign Minister Count Leopold Berchtold The dispute between Austria Hungary and Serbia escalated into what is now known as World War I and drew in Russia Germany France and the British Empire Within a week Austria Hungary had to face a war with Russia Serbia s patron which had the largest army in the world at the time The result was that Serbia became a subsidiary front in the massive fight that started to unfold along Austria Hungary s border with Russia Serbia had an experienced army but it was also exhausted from the conflicts of the Balkan Wars and poorly equipped which led the Austro Hungarians to believe that it would fall in less than a month Serbia s strategy was to hold on as long as it could and hope the Russians could defeat the main Austro Hungarian Army with or without the help of other allies Serbia constantly had to worry about its hostile neighbor to the east Bulgaria with which it had fought several wars most recently in the Second Balkan War of 1913 Military forces EditAustro Hungarian Edit See also Alfred Redl The standing peacetime Austro Hungarian army had some 36 000 officers and non commissioned officers and 414 000 enlisted personnel During the mobilization this number was increased to a total of 3 350 000 men of all ranks The operational army had over 1 420 000 men and a further 600 000 were allocated to support and logistic units train munition and supply columns etc while the rest around 1 350 000 were reserve troops available for replacing losses and the formation of new units 29 This vast manpower allowed the Austro Hungarian army to replace its losses regularly and keep units at their formation strength According to some sources during 1914 there were on average 150 000 men per month sent to replace the losses in the field army During 1915 these numbers rose to 200 000 per month 30 unreliable source better source needed According to the official Austrian documents in the period from September until the end of December 1914 some 160 000 replacement troops were sent to the Balkan theater of war as well as 82 000 reinforcements as part of newly formed units 31 unreliable source The pre war Austro Hungarian plan for invasion of Serbia envisioned the concentration of three armies 2nd 5th and 6th on the western and northern borders of Serbia with the main goal of enveloping and destroying the bulk of the Serbian army However with the beginning of the Russian general mobilization the Armeeoberkommando AOK Austro Hungarian Supreme Command decided to move the 2nd Army to Galicia to counter Russian forces Due to the congestion of railroad lines towards Galicia the 2nd Army could only start its departure on 18 August which allowed the AOK to assign some units of the 2nd Army to take part in operations in Serbia before that date Eventually the AOK allowed General Oskar Potiorek to deploy a significant part of the 2nd Army around four divisions in fighting against Serbia which caused a delay of transport of these troops to the Russian front for more than a week Furthermore the Austro Hungarian defeats suffered during the first invasion of Serbia forced the AOK to transfer two divisions from the 2nd Army permanently to Potiorek s force By 12 August Austria Hungary had amassed over 500 000 soldiers on Serbian frontiers including some 380 000 operational troops With the departure of the major part of the 2nd Army to the Russian front this number fell to some 285 000 of operational troops including garrisons 32 Apart from land forces Austria Hungary also deployed its Danube River flotilla of six monitors and six patrol boats Many Austro Hungarian soldiers were not of good quality 33 About one quarter of them were illiterate and most of the conscripts from the empire s subject nationalities did not speak or understand German or Hungarian In addition to this most of the soldiers ethnic Czechs Slovaks Poles Romanians and South Slavs had linguistic and cultural links with the empire s various enemies 34 Serbian Edit Uniform of Serbian soldiers from 1914 The Serbian military command issued orders for the mobilization of its armed forces on 25 July and the mobilization began the following day By 30 July the mobilization was completed and the troops began to be deployed according to the war plan Deployments were completed by 9 August when all of the troops had arrived at their designated strategic positions During mobilization Serbia raised approximately 450 000 men of three age defined classes or bans called poziv which comprised all able bodied men between 21 and 45 years of age The operational army consisted of 11 and 1 2 infantry six of 1st and five of the 2nd ban and 1 cavalry division Aged men of the 3rd ban were organized in 15 infantry regiments with some 45 50 000 men designated for use in rear and line of communications duties However some of them were by necessity used as part of operational army as well bringing its strength up to around 250 000 men 35 Serbia was in a much more disadvantageous position when compared with Austria Hungary with regard to human reserves and replacement troops as its only source of replacements were new recruits reaching the age of military enlistment Their maximum annual number was theoretically around 60 000 which was insufficient to replace the losses of more than 132 000 sustained during operations from August to December 1914 This shortage of manpower forced the Serbian army to recruit under and over aged men to make up for losses in the opening phase of the war Maxim MG 10 of Serbian Royal Army Because of the poor financial state of the Serbian economy and losses in the recent Balkan Wars the Serbian army lacked much of the modern weaponry and equipment necessary to engage in combat with their larger and wealthier adversaries There were only 180 000 modern rifles available for the operational army which meant that the Serbian Army lacked between one quarter to one third of the rifles necessary to fully equip even their front line units let alone reserve forces 36 Although Serbia tried to remedy this deficit by ordering 120 000 rifles from Russia in 1914 the weapons did not begin to arrive until the second half of August Only 1st ban troops had complete grey green M1908 uniforms while 2nd ban troops often wore the obsolete dark blue M1896 issue with the 3rd ban having no proper uniforms at all and were reduced to wearing their civilian clothes with military greatcoats and caps 37 The Serbian troops did not have service issued boots at all and the vast majority of them wore everyday footwear made of pig skin called opanak Ammunition reserves were also insufficient for sustained field operations as most of it had been used in the 1912 13 Balkan wars Artillery ammunition was sparse and only amounted to several hundred shells per unit Because Serbia lacked a significant domestic military industrial complex its army was completely dependent on imports of ammunition and arms from France and Russia which themselves were chronically short of supplies The inevitable shortages of ammunition which later would include a complete lack of artillery ammunition reached their peak during decisive moments of the Austro Hungarian invasion Comparative strength Edit These figures detail the number of all Austro Hungarian troops concentrated on the southern Serbian theater of war at the beginning of August 1914 and the resources of the entire Serbian army the number of troops actually available for the operations on both sides was however somewhat less Type Austro Hungarian 29 SerbianBattalions 329 209Batteries 200 122Squadrons 51 44Engineer companies 50 30Field guns 1243 718Machine guns 490 315Total combatants 500 000 344 000 Montenegrin troops outside of Lovcen October 1914 Serbia s ally Montenegro mustered an army of some 45 50 000 men with only 14 modern quick firing field guns 62 machine guns and some 51 older pieces some of them antique models from the 1870s Unlike the Austro Hungarian and the Serbian armies the Montenegrin army was a militia type without proper military training or a career officer s corps note According to AH military formation 38 the average war strength of the following units was Battalion 1000 combatants Battery 196Squadron 180Engineer companies 260Strength of corresponding Serbian units was similar Battalion 1116 combatants and non combatants Battery 169Squadron 130Engineer company 250Heavy artillery Austro Hungarian Serbian12 mobile batteries 4 305 mm mortars5 240 mm mortars20 150 mm howitzers20 120 mm cannonsAdditionally A H fortresses and garrisons near the Serbian and Montenegrin borders Petrovaradin Sarajevo Kotor etc had about 40 companies of heavy fortress artillery of various models 13 mobile batteries 8 150 mm mortars Schneider Canet M9722 120 mm howitzers Schneider Canet M9720 120 mm Schneider Canet M1897 long gunOrder of battle Edit Serbian army Edit Main article Order of battle of the Serbian Army in World War I First Army commanded by general Petar Bojovic Chief of Staff colonel Bozidar Terzic Cavalry division four regiments colonel Branko Jovanovic Timok I division four regiments general Vladimir Kondic Timok II division three regiments Morava II division three regiments Danube II division Branicevo detachment six regiments Army artillery colonel Bozidar Sreckovic Second Army commanded by general Stepa Stepanovic Chief of Staff colonel Vojislav Zivanovic Morava I division colonel Ilija Gojkovic four regiments Combined I division general Mihajlo Rasic four regiments regiment commanders Svetislav Miskovic X X and Dragoljub Uzunmirkovic Sumadija I division four regiments Danube I division colonel Milivoje Anđelkovic four regiments Army artillery colonel Vojislav Milojevic Third Army commanded by general Pavle Jurisic Sturm Chief of Staff colonel Dusan Pesic Drina I division four regiments Drina II division four regiments regiment commanders Miloje Jelisijevic X X and X Obrenovac detachment one regiment two battalions Jadar Chetnik detachment Army artillery colonel Milos Mihailovic Uzice Army commanded by general Milos Bozanovic Sumadija II division colonel Dragutin Milutinovic four regiments Uzice brigade colonel Ivan Pavlovic two regiments Chetnik detachments Lim Zlatibor Gornjak detachments Army artilleryAustro Hungarian army Edit August 1914 Balkan force 5th Army commanded by Liborius Ritter von Frank 9 infantry division 21 landwehr infantry division 36 infantry division 42 Honved Hungarian homeguard infantry division 13 infantry brigade 11 mountain brigade 104 landsturm infantry brigade 13 march brigade 6th Army commanded by Oskar Potiorek 1 infantry division 48 infantry division 18 infantry division 47 infantry division 40 honved infantry division 109 landsturm infantry brigade Banat Rayon and garrisons 107 landsturm infantry brigade sundry units of infantry cavalry and artillery Parts of the 2nd Army commanded by Eduard von Bohm Ermolli 17 infantry division 34 infantry division 31 infantry division 32 infantry division commanded by Andreas von Fail Griessler 29 infantry division 7 infantry division 23 infantry division 10 cavalry division 4 march brigade 7 march brigade 8 march brigade1914 EditThe Serbian campaign started on 28 July 1914 when Austria Hungary declared war on Serbia and bombarded Belgrade the following day 39 On August 12 the Austro Hungarian armies crossed the border the Drina River see map Initially three out of six Austro Hungarian armies were mobilized at the Serbian frontier but due to Russian intervention the 2nd Army was redirected east to the Galician theater However since the railroad lines leading to Galicia were busy with transport of other troops the 2nd Army could only start its departure northward on 18 August In order to make use of the temporary presence of the 2nd Army AOK allowed parts of it to be used in the Serbian campaign until that date Eventually AOK directed significant parts of the 2nd Army around four divisions to assist General Potiorek s main force and postponed their transportation to Russia until the last week of August Defeats suffered in the first invasion of Serbia eventually forced AOK to transfer two divisions from 2nd Army to Potiorek s army permanently The V and VI Austro Hungarian Armies had about 270 000 men who were much better equipped than the Serbs Overall Austro Hungarian command was in the hands of General Potiorek The Austro Hungarian Empire had the third largest population in Europe in 1914 behind Russia and Germany almost twelve times the population of the Kingdom of Serbia giving it an enormous manpower advantage Battle of Cer Edit Main article Battle of Cer First Attack on Serbia August 1914 Potiorek rushed the attack against Serbia from northern Bosnia with his Fifth Army supported by elements of the Second Army from Syrmia The Second Army was due to be transported to Galicia to face the Russians at the end of August but he made use of it until then The Sixth was positioning itself in southern Bosnia and was not yet able to commence offensive operations Potiorek s desire was to win a victory before Emperor Franz Joseph s birthday and to knock Serbia out as soon as possible Thus he made two grave strategic errors by attacking with only just over half of his strength and attacking hilly western Serbia instead of the open plains of the north This move surprised Marshal Putnik who expected attack from the north and initially believed that it was a feint Once it became clear that it was the main thrust the strong Second Army under the command of General Stepa Stepanovic was sent to join the small Third Army under Pavle Jurisic Sturm already facing the Austro Hungarians and expel the invaders After a fierce four day battle the Austro Hungarians were forced to retreat marking the first Allied victory of the war over the Central Powers led by Germany and Austria Hungary Casualties numbered 23 000 for the Austro Hungarians of whom 4 500 were captured and 16 500 for the Serbs Town of Sabac which was on river Sava norther border of Serbia with Austro Hungaria destroyed in bombardment and street fighting in 1914 Battle of Drina Edit Main article Battle of Drina The defeat of the Serbian Timok division an illustration in Wort und Bild A German and Austrian soldiers propaganda magazine published during the war Serbian soldiers during the Battle of the Drina The remain of Serbian in battle of Mackov Kamen Under pressure from its allies Serbia conducted a limited offensive across the Sava river into the Austro Hungarian region of Syrmia with its Serbian First Army The main operational goal was to delay the transport of the Austro Hungarian Second Army to the Russian front The objective was shown to be futile as forces of the Second Army were already in transport Meanwhile the Timok division I of the Serbian Second Army suffered a heavy defeat in a diversionary crossing suffering around 6 000 casualties while inflicting only 2 000 With most of his forces in Bosnia Potiorek decided that the best way to stop the Serbian offensive was to launch another invasion into Serbia to force the Serbs to recall their troops to defend their much smaller homeland The Serbians seasoned war hardened men inspired by the fiercest patriotism the result of generations of torment and struggle awaited undaunted whatever fate might bestow Winston Churchill The Great War 40 7 September brought a renewed Austro Hungarian attack from the west across the river Drina this time with both the Fifth Army in Macva and the Sixth further south 41 The initial attack by the Fifth Army was repelled by the Serbian Second Army with 4 000 Austro Hungarian casualties but the stronger Sixth Army managed to surprise the Serbian Third Army and gain a foothold After some units from the Serbian Second Army were sent to bolster the Third the Austro Hungarian Fifth Army also managed to establish a bridgehead with a renewed attack At that time Marshal Putnik withdrew the First Army from Syrmia against much popular opposition and used it to deliver a fierce counterattack against the Sixth Army that initially went well but finally bogged down in a bloody four day fight for a peak of the Jagodnja mountain called Mackov Kamen in which both sides suffered horrendous losses in successive frontal attacks and counterattacks Two Serbian divisions lost around 11 000 men while Austro Hungarian losses were probably comparable Marshal Putnik ordered a retreat into the surrounding hills and the front settled into a month and a half of trench warfare which was highly unfavourable to the Serbs who had little in the way of an industrial base and were deficient in heavy artillery ammunition stocks shell production and footwear since the vast majority of infantry wore the traditional though state issued opanaks 33 while the Austro Hungarians had waterproof leather boots Most of their war material was supplied by the Allies who were short of such materials themselves In such a situation Serbian artillery quickly became almost silent while the Austro Hungarians steadily increased their fire Serbian casualties reached 100 soldiers a day from all causes in some divisions During the first weeks of trench warfare the Serbian Uzice Army first strengthened division and the Montenegrin Sanjak Army roughly a division conducted an abortive offensive into Bosnia In addition both sides conducted a few local attacks most of which were soundly defeated In one such attack the Serbian Army used mine warfare for the first time the Combined Division dug tunnels beneath the Austro Hungarian trenches that were only 20 30 meters away from the Serbian ones on this sector planted mines and set them off just before an infantry charge Battle of Kolubara Edit Main article Battle of Kolubara Later Operations in Serbia 1914 Austro Hungarian troops entering the Serbian town of Valjevo during the first phase of the battle of Kolubara on 16 November 1914 An illustration in Wort und Bild Serbian artillery in trenches in 1914 Having thus weakened the Serbian army the Austro Hungarian Army launched another massive attack on 5 November The Serbs withdrew step by step offering strong resistance at the Kolubara River but to no avail due to the lack of artillery ammunition It was at that time that General Zivojin Misic was made commander of the battered First Army replacing the wounded Petar Bojovic He insisted on a deep withdrawal in order to give the troops some much needed rest and to shorten the front Marshal Putnik finally relented but the consequence was the abandonment of the capital city of Belgrade After suffering heavy losses the Austro Hungarian Army entered the city on 2 December This action led Potiorek to move the whole Fifth Army into the Belgrade area and use it to crush the Serbian right flank This however left the Sixth alone for a few days to face the whole Serbian army At this point artillery ammunition finally arrived from France and Greece In addition some replacements were sent to the units and Marshal Putnik correctly sensed that the Austro Hungarian forces were dangerously overstretched and weakened in the previous offensives so he ordered a full scale counterattack with the entire Serbian Army on 3 December against the Sixth Army The Fifth hurried its flanking maneuver but it was already too late with the Sixth Army broken the Second and Third Serbian Armies overwhelmed the Fifth Finally Potiorek lost his nerve and ordered yet another retreat back across the rivers into Austria Hungary s territory The Serbian Army recaptured Belgrade on 15 December Zivojin Misic The first phase of the war against Serbia had ended with no change in the border but casualties were enormous compared to earlier wars albeit comparable to other campaigns of World War I The Serbian army suffered 170 000 men killed wounded captured or missing Austro Hungarian losses were approaching 215 000 men killed wounded or missing citation needed Austro Hungarian General Potiorek was removed from command and replaced by Archduke Eugen of Austria C Falls p 54 On the Serbian side a deadly typhus epidemic killed hundreds of thousands of Serb civilians during the winter After the Battle of Kolubara the Serbian Parliament adopted the Nis Declaration 7 December 1914 on the war goals of Serbia Convinced that the entire Serbian nation is determined to persevere in the holy struggle for the defense of their homesteads and their freedom the government of the Kingdom of Serbia considers that in these fateful times its main and only task is to ensure the successful completion of this great warfare which at the moment when it started also became a struggle for the liberation and unification of all our unliberated Serbian Croatian and Slovenian brothers The great success which is to crown this warfare will make up for the extremely bloody sacrifices which this generation of Serbs is making This amounted to announcing Serbia s intention to annex extensive amounts of Austria Hungary s Balkan provinces 1915 EditPrelude Edit Refugee Transport from Serbia 1914 15 in Leibnitz Styria Early in 1915 with Ottoman defeats at the Battle of Sarikamish and in the First Suez Offensive the German Chief of the General Staff Erich von Falkenhayn tried to convince the Austro Hungarian Chief of Staff Conrad von Hotzendorf of the importance of conquering Serbia If Serbia were taken then the Germans would have a direct rail link from Germany through Austria Hungary then down to Istanbul and beyond This would allow the Germans to send military supplies and even troops to help the Ottoman Empire However Russia was the more dangerous enemy and furthermore with the entry of Italy into the war on the Allied side the Austro Hungarians had their hands full see Italian Front World War I On 8 September 1915 Erich von Falkenhayn and Franz Conrad von Hotzendorf signed a military convention in Pless The conference called for an immediate attack on Serbia 42 Both the Allies and the Central Powers tried to get Bulgaria to pick a side in the Great War Bulgaria and Serbia had fought two wars in the last 30 years the Serbo Bulgarian War in 1885 and the Second Balkan War in 1913 The result was that the Bulgarian government and people felt that Serbia was in possession of lands to which Bulgaria was entitled and when the Central Powers offered to give them what they claimed the Bulgarians entered the war on their side With the Allied loss in the Gallipoli campaign and the Russian defeat at Gorlice King Ferdinand of Bulgaria signed a treaty with Germany and on 23 September 1915 Bulgaria began mobilizing for war Opposing forces Edit During the preceding nine months the Serbs had tried and failed to rebuild their battered armies and improve their supply situation Despite their efforts the Serbian Army was only about 30 000 men stronger than at the start of the war around 225 000 and was still badly equipped Although Britain and France had talked about sending serious military forces to Serbia nothing was done until it was too late When Bulgaria began mobilizing the French and British sent two divisions but they arrived late in the Greek town of Salonika Part of the reason for the delay was the National schism in Greek politics of the time that generating conflicting views about the war Against Serbia were marshalled the Bulgarian First Army commanded by Kliment Boyadzhiev the German Eleventh Army commanded by Max von Gallwitz and the Austro Hungarian Third Army commanded by Hermann Kovess von Kovesshaza all under the control of Field Marshal August von Mackensen In addition the Bulgarian Second Army commanded by Georgi Todorov which remained under the direct control of the Bulgarian high command was deployed against Macedonia Austro Hungarian river boat on the Danube and Sava with Kalemegdan fortress during Austrian attack in 1915 Course of the campaign Edit See also Great Retreat Austro Hungarian troops capture Belgrade in 1915 The Austro Hungarians and Germans began their attack on 7 October with their troops crossing the Drina and Sava rivers covered by heavy artillery fire Once they crossed the Danube the Germans and Austro Hungarians moved on Belgrade itself Vicious street fighting ensued 43 and the Serbs resistance in the city was finally crushed on 9 October 44 Then on 14 October the Bulgarian Army attacked from the north of Bulgaria towards Nis and from the south towards Skopje see map The Bulgarian First Army defeated the Serbian Second Army at the Battle of Morava while the Bulgarian Second Army defeated the Serbians at the Battle of Ovche Pole With the Bulgarian breakthrough the Serbian position became untenable the main army in the north around Belgrade could either retreat or be surrounded and forced to surrender In the Battle of Kosovo the Serbs made a last and desperate attempt to join the two incomplete Allied divisions that made a limited advance from the south but were unable to gather enough forces due to the pressure from the north and east They were halted by the Bulgarians under General Todorov and had to pull back Serbian Army during its retreat towards Albania Marshal Putnik ordered the Great Retreat a full retreat south and west through Montenegro and into Albania The weather was terrible the roads poor and the army had to help the tens of thousands of civilians who retreated with them with almost no supplies or food left But the bad weather and poor roads worked for the refugees as well as the Central Powers forces could not press them hard enough so they evaded capture Many of the fleeing soldiers and civilians did not make it to the coast though they were lost to hunger disease and attacks by enemy forces and Albanian tribal bands 45 due to the memory of suppressed rebellions and massacres of Albanians in the Balkan Wars 46 47 48 The circumstances of the retreat were disastrous All told only some 155 000 Serbs mostly soldiers reached the coast of the Adriatic Sea and embarked on Allied transport ships that carried the army to various Greek islands many to Corfu before being sent to Salonika The evacuation of the Serbian army from Albania was completed on 10 February 1916 The survivors were so weakened that thousands of them died from sheer exhaustion in the weeks after their rescue Marshal Putnik had to be carried during the whole retreat and he died around fifteen months later in a hospital in France The French and British divisions had marched north from Thessaloniki in October 1915 under the command of French General Maurice Sarrail The War Office in London was reluctant to advance too deep into Serbia so the French divisions advanced on their own up the Vardar River This advance gave some limited help to the retreating Serbian Army as the Bulgarians had to concentrate larger forces on their southern flank to deal with the threat which led to the Battle of Krivolak October November 1915 By the end of November General Sarrail had to retreat in the face of massive Bulgarian assaults on his positions During his retreat the British at the Battle of Kosturino were also forced to retreat By 12 December all allied forces were back in Greece German and Bulgarian commanders in Serbia on 16 November 1915 From right to left Erich von Falkenhayn Boris of Bulgaria Hans von Seeckt Gerhard Tappen Petar Ganchev Nikola Zhekov and August von Mackensen The Army of Serbia s ally Montenegro did not follow the Serbs into exile but retreated to defend their own country The Austrian Hungarians launched their Montenegrin campaign on 5 January 1916 and despite some success of The Montenegrins in the Battle of Mojkovac they were completely defeated within two weeks This was a nearly complete victory for the Central Powers at a cost of around 67 000 casualties as compared to around 94 000 Serbs killed or wounded and 174 000 captured of which 70 000 were wounded 6 The railroad from Berlin to Istanbul was finally opened The only flaw in the victory was that much of the Serbian Army had successfully retreated although it was left very disorganized and required rebuilding Aftermath Edit1916 1918 Edit Main articles Macedonian front and Liberation of Serbia Albania and Montenegro 1918 A 1976 Yugoslav postage stamp depicting the collapse of the Salonika front by war artist Veljko Stanojevic The Serbian army was evacuated to Greece and joined up with the Allied Army of the Orient They then fought a trench war against the Bulgarians on the Macedonia Front The Macedonian front in the beginning was mostly static French and Serbian forces re took limited areas of Macedonia by recapturing Bitola on 19 November 1916 as a result of the costly Monastir Offensive which brought stabilization of the front French and Serbian troops finally made a breakthrough in the Vardar Offensive in 1918 after most of the German and Austro Hungarian troops had withdrawn This breakthrough was significant in defeating Bulgaria and Austria Hungary which led to the final victory of World War I After the Allied breakthrough Bulgaria capitulated on 29 September 1918 49 Hindenburg and Ludendorff concluded that the strategic and operational balance had now shifted decidedly against the Central Powers and insisted on an immediate peace settlement during a meeting with government officials a day after the Bulgarian collapse 50 On 29 September 1918 the German Supreme Army Command informed Kaiser Wilhelm II and the Imperial Chancellor Count Georg von Hertling that the military situation facing Germany was hopeless 51 German Emperor Wilhelm II in his telegram to Bulgarian Tsar Ferdinand I stated Disgraceful 62 000 Serbs decided the war 52 53 The collapse of the Macedonian front meant that the road to Budapest and Vienna was now opened for the 670 000 strong army of General Franchet d Esperey as the Bulgarian surrender deprived the Central Powers of the 278 infantry battalions and 1 500 guns the equivalent of some 25 to 30 German divisions that were previously holding the line 54 The German high command responded by sending only seven infantry and one cavalry division but these forces were far from enough for a front to be re established 54 In September Entente armies spearheaded by Serbian and French troops broke through the remaining German and Bulgarians defense forcing Bulgaria to exit the war and liberating Serbia two weeks before the ceasefire 55 End of the War Edit The ramifications of the war were manifold When World War I ended the Treaty of Neuilly awarded Western Thrace to Greece whereas Serbia received some minor territorial concessions from Bulgaria Austria Hungary was broken apart and Hungary lost much land to both Yugoslavia and Romania in the Treaty of Trianon Serbia assumed the leading position in the new Kingdom of Yugoslavia joined by its old ally Montenegro Meanwhile Italy established a quasi protectorate over Albania and Greece re occupied Albania s southern part which was autonomous under a local Greek provisional government see Autonomous Republic of Northern Epirus despite Albania s neutrality during the war Casualties Edit The Entente casualties Before the war the Kingdom of Serbia had 4 500 000 inhabitants 56 According to The New York Times 150 000 people are estimated to have died in 1915 alone during the worst typhus epidemic in world history With the aid of the American Red Cross and 44 foreign governments the outbreak was brought under control by the end of the year 57 The number of civilian deaths is estimated by some sources at 650 000 primarily due to the typhus outbreak and famine but also direct clashes with the occupiers 58 Serbia s casualties accounted for 8 of the total Allied military deaths 58 of the regular Serbian Army 420 000 strong perished during the conflict 59 According to the Serb sources the total number of casualties is placed around 1 000 000 60 25 of Serbia s prewar size and an absolute majority 57 of its overall male population 61 L A Times and N Y Times also cited early Serbian sources which claimed over 1 000 000 victims in their respective articles 62 63 Modern western and non Serb historians put the casualties number either at 45 000 military deaths and 650 000 civilian deaths 23 or 127 355 military deaths and 82 000 civilian deaths 24 The remains of Serbs killed by Bulgarian soldiers during the Surdulica massacre It is estimated that 2 000 3 000 Serbian men were killed in the town during the first months of the Bulgarian occupation of southern Serbia 64 The extent of the Serbian demographic disaster can be illustrated by the statement of the Bulgarian Prime Minister Vasil Radoslavov Serbia ceased to exist New York Times summer 1917 65 In July 1918 the US Secretary of State Robert Lansing urged the Americans of all religions to pray for Serbia in their respective churches 66 67 The Serbian Army suffered a staggering number of casualties It was largely destroyed near the end of the war falling from about 420 000 4 at its peak to about 100 000 at the moment of liberation The Serb sources claim that the Kingdom of Serbia lost 1 100 000 inhabitants during the war Of 4 5 million people there were 275 000 military deaths and 450 000 among the ordinary citizenry The civilian deaths were attributable mainly to food shortages and the effects of epidemics such as Spanish flu In addition to the military deaths there were 133 148 wounded According to the Yugoslav government in 1924 Serbia lost 365 164 soldiers or 26 of all mobilized personnel while France suffered 16 8 Germany 15 4 Russia 11 5 and Italy 10 3 citation needed At the end of the war there were 114 000 disabled soldiers and 500 000 orphaned children 68 Attacks against ethnic Serb civilians Edit Main articles Anti Serb riots in Sarajevo and Schutzkorps The assassination in Sarajevo of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his wife Sophie Duchess of Hohenberg was followed by violent anti Serb demonstrations of angry Croats and Muslims 69 in the city during the evening of 28 June 1914 and for much of the following day This happened because most Croats and many Muslims considered the archduke the best hope for the establishment of a South Slav political entity within the Habsburg Empire The crowd directed its anger principally at shops owned by ethnic Serbs and the residences of prominent Serbs Two ethnic Serbs were killed on 28 June by crowd violence 70 That night there were anti Serb demonstrations in other parts of the Austro Hungarian Empire 71 72 Incited by anti Serbian propaganda with the collusion of the command of the Austro Hungarian Army soldiers committed numerous atrocities against the Serbs in both Serbia and Austria Hungary According to the German Swiss criminologist and observer R A Reiss it was a system of extermination In addition to executions of prisoners of war civilian populations were subjected to mass murder and rape Villages and towns were burned and looted Fruit trees were cut down and water wells were poisoned in an effort on the Austro Hungarian part to discourage Serb inhabitants from ever returning 73 74 75 Austro Hungarian propaganda postcard saying Serbs we ll smash you to pieces Anti Serbian propaganda postcard Austro Hungarian soldiers executing Serbian civilians during World War I 1916 76 Austro Hungarian firing squad executing Serbian civilians in 1917 Memorial to military and the concentration camp victims in Jindrichovice Remains of the Stip massacre victimsSee also EditAustro Hungarian occupation of Serbia Bulgarian occupation of Serbia World War I Albania during World War I Momcilo Gavric soldier Serbian army s retreat through Albania World War I World War I casualtiesReferences Edit Number is for total Montenegrin losses in the war including the Macedonian front Osterreich Ungarns letzter Krieg Wien Verlag der Militarwissenschaftlichen Mitteilungen 1930 Vol 1 pg 759 This is the total number of soldiers who served on the Balkans until the middle of December 1914 Prit Buttar 2015 p 594 a b Josephus Nelson Larned 1924 p 9991 a b c Serbian army August 1914 Thomas amp Babac Armies in the Balkans 1914 1918 pg 12 a b c d DiNardo 2015 p 122 Lyon 2015 p 234 a b Georgi Bakalov Istoriya na Blgarite Voenna istoriya na blgarite ot drevnostta do nashi dni p 463 Spencer Tucker Encyclopedia of World War I 2005 pg 1077 ISBN 1 85109 420 2 Lyon 2015 p 235 International Labour Office Enquete sur la production Rapport general Paris etc Berger Levrault 1923 25 Tom 4 II Les tues et les disparus p 29 Military Casualties World War Estimated Statistics Branch GS War Department 25 February 1924 cited in World War I People Politics and Power published by Britannica Educational Publishing 2010 Page 219 Urlanis Boris 1971 Wars and Population Moscow Pages 66 79 83 85 160 171 and 268 Milosevic 2008 p 7 Schindler John R 2002 Disaster on the Drina The Austro Hungarian Army in Serbia 1914 War in History Sage Publications Ltd 9 2 159 95 doi 10 1191 0968344502wh250oa JSTOR 26014058 S2CID 145488166 Rose R A D 2018 History of Europe EDTECH p 195 ISBN 978 1 83947 278 7 Hughes Philpott 2005 p 48 Hart 2013 p 325 gt DiNardo 2015 p 117 Fred Singleton 1985 A Short History of the Yugoslav Peoples Cambridge University Press p 129 ISBN 978 0 521 27485 2 ww1 Serbian army entered belgrade Chedomir Antiћ Sudњi rat Politika od 14 septembra 2008 Vladimir Radomiroviћ Naјveћa srpska pobeda Politika od 14 septembra 2008 a b Sammis 2002 p 32 a b Tucker 2005 p 273 a b Keegan 1998 pp 48 49harvnb error no target CITEREFKeegan1998 help Willmott 2003 pp 2 23 Willmott 2003 p 26 Willmott 2003 p 27 a b Osterreich Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 1918 vol 1 Wienn 1930 p68 http digi landesbibliothek at viewer image AC03568741 1 LOG 0003 Die Entwicklung der ost ung Wehrmacht in den ersten zwei Kriegsjahren 10 http digi landesbibliothek at viewer image AC01351505 1 LOG 0003 Osterreich Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 1918 vol 2 Beilagen Wienn 1930 table I http honsi org literature svejk dokumenty oulk band1 html Osterreich Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 1918 vol 1 Wienn 1930 p68 a b Jordan 2008 p 20 Willmott 2009 p 69 James Lyon A peasant mob The Serbian army in the eve of the Great War JMH 61 1997 p501 James Lyon p496 Thomas Nigel 2001 Armies in the Balkans 1914 18 p 38 ISBN 1 84176 194 X Osterreich Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 1918 vol 1 Wienn 1930 p 82 Gordon Martel The Origins of the First World War Pearson Longman Harlow 2003 p xii f Jordan 2008 p 25 Jordan 2008 p 31 Dinardo Richard L 1 September 2016 The Limits of Envelopment The Invasion of Serbia 1915 The Historian 78 3 486 503 doi 10 1111 hisn 12247 ISSN 0018 2370 Jordan 2008 p 53 Willmott 2008 p 120 Tucker amp Roberts 2005 pp 1075 6harvnb error no target CITEREFTuckerRoberts2005 help DiNardo 2015 pp 117 118 The Muslim population of Serbia had been subject to all manner of mistreatment oat the hands of the Serbian Orthodox majority during the Balkan Wars Lieberman Benjamin 2013 Terrible Fate Ethnic Cleansing in the Making of Modern Europe Rowman amp Littlefield pp 83 84 ISBN 978 1 4422 3038 5 Retrieved 28 March 2020 Driven out of the north and east the Serb retreat ended up in Kosovo in November 1915 This new addition to Serbia the scene of nationalist triumph only three years earlier was not hospitable ground for the fleeing Serbs A large majority of the population was made up of Albanians These Albanians lived with the memory of suppressed rebellions and recent massacres carried out by Serbs during the Blakan wars Eric Sass 19 November 2015 Serbian Great Retreat Begins Mentalfloss Retrieved 28 March 2020 Pack animals struggled to climb mountainsides turned to trackless wastes by several feet of snow and what little shelter there was belonged to hostile Albanian villagers who robbed and killed stragglers perhaps in retribution for Serbian brutality in the First Balkan War Tucker Wood amp Murphy 1999 p 120harvnb error no target CITEREFTuckerWoodMurphy1999 help Robert A DOUGHTY 2005 Pyrrhic Victory Harvard University Press pp 491 ISBN 978 0 674 01880 8 Axelrod 2018 p 260 Editor The Battle of Dobro Polje The Forgotten Balkan Skirmish That Ended WW1 Militaryhistorynow com Retrieved 21 November 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Editor 22 February 2017 The Germans Could no Longer Keep up the Fight historycollection co Retrieved 21 November 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help a b Korsun N The Balkan Front of the World War in Russian militera lib ru Retrieved 27 September 2010 Moal F L 2008 La Serbie du martyre a la victoire 1914 1918 Collection Les nations dans la Grande Guerre in French 14 18 Editions ISBN 978 2 916385 18 1 Serbia in 1914 1 600 000 was raised for the Red Cross PDF The New York Times 29 October 1915 First World War com Feature Articles The Minor Powers During World War One Serbia www firstworldwar com Serbian army August 1914 Politika Online www politika rs Tema nedeљe Naјveћa srpska pobeda Svi srpski triјumfi POLITIKA in Serbian Fourth of Serbia s population dead Archived from the original on 21 July 2013 Retrieved 7 July 2017 Asserts Serbians face extinction PDF Mitrovic 2007 p 223 Serbia restored PDF Serbia and Austria PDF New York Times 28 July 1918 Appeals to Americans to pray for Serbians PDF New York Times 27 July 1918 Banac Ivo 1988 The National Question in Yugoslavia Origins History Politics Cornell University Press p 222 ISBN 978 0 8014 9493 2 its postwar population included some 114 000 invalids and over half a million orphans Christopher Bennett 1995 Yugoslavia s Bloody Collapse Causes Course and Consequences C Hurst amp Co Publishers p 259 ISBN 978 1 85065 232 8 Retrieved 7 September 2013 Robert J Donia 2006 Sarajevo A Biography University of Michigan Press pp 123 ISBN 0 472 11557 X Joseph Ward Swain 1933 Beginning the twentieth century a history of the generation that made the war W W Norton amp Company Inc Christopher Bennett January 1995 Yugoslavia s Bloody Collapse Causes Course and Consequences C Hurst amp Co Publishers pp 31 ISBN 978 1 85065 232 8 How Austria Hungary waged war in Serbia 1915 German criminologist R A Reiss on atrocities by the Austro Hungarian army Augenzeugen Der Krieg gegen Zivilisten Fotografien aus dem Ersten Weltkrieg Anton Holzer Vienna Executions various www ww1 propaganda cards com Honzik Miroslav Honzikova Hana 1984 1914 1918 Leta zkazy a nadeje Czech Republic Panorama Sources EditBooks Edit Babac Dusan M 2016 The Serbian Army in the Great War 1914 1918 Solihull Helion ISBN 978 1 910777 29 9 Batakovic Dusan T ed 2005 Histoire du peuple serbe History of the Serbian People in French Lausanne L Age d Homme ISBN 978 2 8251 1958 7 Buttar Prit 2014 Collision of Empires The War on the Eastern Front in 1914 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 78200 972 6 Cirkovic Sima 2004 The Serbs Malden Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 1 4051 4291 5 Cox John K 2002 The History of Serbia Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 31290 8 DiNardo Richard L 2015 Invasion The Conquest of Serbia 1915 Santa Barbara Praeger ISBN 978 1 4408 0093 1 Đorđevic M P Zivojinovic D R 1991 Srbija i Jugosloveni za vreme rata 1914 1918 Vol 5 Beograd Biblioteka grada Beograda Dragnich Alex N 2004 Serbia Through the Ages Boulder East European Monographs ISBN 978 0 88033 541 6 Falls Cyril The Great War 1960 978 1440800924 Fryer Charles 1997 The Destruction of Serbia in 1915 New York Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 88033 385 6 Gumz Jonathan E 2009 The Resurrection and Collapse of Empire in Habsburg Serbia 1914 1918 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89627 6 Hadzi Vasiljevic Jovan 1922 Bugarska zverstva u Vranju i okolini 1915 1918 Zastava Peter Hart 2013 The Great War A Combat History of the First World War Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 997627 0 M Hughes W Philpott 29 March 2005 The Palgrave Concise Historical Atlas of the First World War Palgrave Macmillan UK ISBN 978 0 230 50480 6 Jordan David 2008 The Balkans Italy amp Africa 1914 1918 From Sarajevo to the Piave and Lake Tanganyika London Amber Books ISBN 978 1 906626 14 3 Lyon James B 2015 Serbia and the Balkan Front 1914 The Outbreak of the Great War London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1 4725 8005 4 Mitrovic Andrej 2007 Serbia s Great War 1914 1918 West Lafayette Purdue University Press ISBN 978 1 55753 476 7 Osterreich Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 1918 vol 1 Wienn 1930 1 Osterreich Ungarns letzter Krieg 1914 1918 vol 2 Beilagen Wienn 1931 2 Pavlowitch Stevan K 2002 Serbia The History behind the Name London Hurst amp Company ISBN 978 1 85065 477 3 Sammis Kathy 2002 Focus on World History The Twentieth Century Vol 5 Walch Publishing p 32 ISBN 978 0 8251 4371 7 Hew Strachan 1998 World War I A History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820614 9 Temperley Harold W V 1919 1917 History of Serbia PDF 2 ed London Bell and Sons Tomac Petar Đurasinovic Radomir 1973 Prvi svetski rat 1914 1918 Vojnoizdavacki zavod Tucker Spencer 2005 World War I Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 273 ISBN 978 1 85109 420 2 Willmott H P 2003 World War I Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 0 7894 9627 0 Willmott H P 2008 World War I Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 1 4053 2986 6 Willmott H P 2009 World War I Dorling Kindersley ISBN 978 0 7566 5015 5 Axelrod Alan 2018 How America Won World War I Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4930 3192 4 Josephus Nelson Larned 1924 The New Larned History for Ready Reference Reading and Research The Actual Words of the World s Best Historians Biographers and Specialists a Complete System of History for All Uses Extending to All Countries and Subjects and Representing the Better and Newer Literature of History C A Nichols Publishing Company Prit Buttar 2015 Germany Ascendant The Eastern Front 1915 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 1 4728 1355 8 Journals Edit Silberstein Gerard E The Serbian campaign of 1915 Its diplomatic background American Historical Review 73 1 1967 51 69 online Pisarri Milovan 2013 Bulgarian Crimes Against Civilians in Occupied Serbia during the First World War Balcanica 44 357 390 doi 10 2298 BALC1344357P Radic Radmila 2015 The Serbian Orthodox Church in the First World War The Serbs and the First World War 1914 1918 Belgrade Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts pp 263 285 ISBN 978 86 7025 659 0 Radojevic Mira 2015 Jovan M Jovanovic on the outbreak of the First World War The Serbs and the First World War 1914 1918 Belgrade Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts pp 187 204 ISBN 978 86 7025 659 0 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Serbia in World War I Bjelajac Mile Serbia in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Tasic Dmitar Warfare 1914 1918 South East Europe in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Years which changed the war WWI in documents from Archive of Serbia Jugoslovenska kinoteka in Serbian Kinoteka Popovic Andra 1926 Zbirka kњiga Univerzitetske biblioteke u Beogradu Ratni album 1914 1918 in Serbian Digital National Library of Serbia W H Crawfurd Price 1918 Serbia s Part in the War Simpkin Marshall Hamilton Kent amp Company Public Domain Milosevic Krsman 2008 Srbiјa u velikom ratu in Serbian Narodna Biblioteka Srbiјe Beograd CIP ISBN 978 86 82777 16 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Serbian campaign amp oldid 1135395405, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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