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Trenck's Pandurs

Trenck's Pandurs (Croatian: Panduri, German: Panduren, Hungarian: Pandúr) were a light infantry unit of the Habsburg monarchy that was raised by Baron Franz von der Trenck under a charter issued by Maria Theresa of Austria in 1741. The unit was largely composed of volunteers from the Kingdom of Slavonia and Slavonian Military Frontier, and named after security guards otherwise employed to maintain public order. The Pandurs were presented to the empress in May 1741 with the unit's military band earning them a claim of pioneering martial music in Europe. The Pandurs did not use uniforms and had an overall Ottoman appearance. The original organization of the unit was retained until 1745, when it transformed into a regiment. Trenck was relieved of command in 1746 and imprisoned in Spielberg Castle, where he died in 1749. The unit ultimately transformed into the 53rd Infantry Regiment, headquartered in Zagreb, until it was disbanded in 1919. The regiment's commemorative medals bear Trenck's image wearing Pandur attire.

Pandurs
Croatian pandurs from 1742
Active1741–1748 (1756)
Country Habsburg monarchy
TypeInfantry
Rolelight infantry, skirmishers
Size1,000
Motto(s)Vivat Pandur[1]
Engagements
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Baron Franz von der Trenck

The Pandurs took part in the War of the Austrian Succession, including the First and Second Silesian War. They contributed to the capture or destruction of Zobten am Berge, Strehlen, Klaus Castle, Linz, Deggendorf, Diessenstein Castle, Cham, Cosel fortress, and Munich. During the Battle of Soor, the unit looted a Prussian war chest and the belongings of Frederick the Great. The Pandurs earned a reputation as brave, audacious, feared and ruthless soldiers, known for looting and pillaging. They were prone to disobedience, breaches of military discipline and stubbornness. The city of Waldmünchen, located near Cham, celebrates the Pandurs and Trenck as the city's saviors for sparing the city from destruction in 1742. The Pandurs' and Trenck's heritage is also preserved in the city of Požega, Croatia, where an eponymous living history troop and city music band exist.

Etymology edit

The term pandur made its way into military use via the Hungarian language—being used in Hungarian as a loanword, in turn originating from the Croatian term pudar, though the nasal in place of the "u" suggests a borrowing before Croatian innovated its own reflex for Proto-Slavic /ɔ̃/. "Pudar" is still applied to security guards protecting crops in vineyards and fields, and it was coined from the verb puditi (also spelled pudati) meaning to chase or scare away. The meaning of the Hungarian loanword was expanded to guards in general, including law enforcement officers.[2] The word was likely ultimately derived from medieval Latin banderius or bannerius, meaning either a guardian of fields or summoner,[3] or follower of a banner.[4]

 
Trenck's Pandurs living history troop from Požega, Croatia

Another etymology could recall the ancient greek expression "pan" with "ther", which is "great" or "all-beast", already used in ancient times (see the latin word "Panther", often used to refer to occupying troop soldiers of Roman Empire and root of the German word "Panzer" itself).

By the middle of the 18th century, law enforcement in the counties of Croatia included county pandurs or hussars who patrolled roads and pursued criminals.[5][6] In 1740, the term was applied to frontier guard duty infantry deployed in the Croatian Military Frontier (Banal Frontier), specifically its Karlovac and Varaždin Generalcies.[7] The role of the pandurs as security guards was extended to Dalmatia after the establishment of Austrian rule there in the early 19th century.[8] The term has dropped from official use for law enforcement officials, but it is still used colloquially in Croatia and the Western Balkans in a manner akin to the English word cop.[2][9] The unit raised and led by Trenck is also referred to more specifically as Trenck's Pandurs,[10] and less frequently in Croatia than elsewhere, as Croatian Pandurs.[11]

History edit

The Pandurs were a skirmisher unit of the Habsburg monarchy,[12] raised by Baron Franz von der Trenck following a charter (German: Werbepatent) issued by Maria Theresa of Austria on 27 February 1741, permitting Trenck to raise a 1,000-strong troop. The unit was largely composed of men enlisted as volunteers from areas of the Kingdom of Slavonia and Slavonian Military Frontier,[1] consisting of ethnic Croats and Serbs.[13] The Pandurs saw military action in Silesia, Bohemia, Bavaria, and France.[14]

The Pandurs arrived in Vienna for a military parade for the empress on 27 May 1741. The unit was headed by Trenck and included two captains, a senior lieutenant, five lieutenants, a quartermaster, an adjutant, two chaplains (a Catholic and an Orthodox Christian), two medics, forty sergeants, five scribes, eighty corporals, and twelve musicians equipped with flutes, a drum and cymbals. The musicians were called the Turkish band, after Ottoman military bands, and are considered pioneers of martial music in Europe according to Jurica Miletić.[1] The Pandurs did not have specific uniforms as their clothes varied but were of Turkish style. Their oriental appearance was compounded by mandatory head shaving, leaving a rattail, as well as by the use of a horse tail bunchuk instead of a unit banner. Each Pandur carried four single-shot pistols, a fighting knife, and a small utilitarian knife.[14][15]

 
Baron Franz von der Trenck

The Pandurs took part in War of the Austrian Succession, including the First Silesian War. They took part in capturing Zobten am Berge and Strehlen in Lower Silesia from the Prussians, and defending a bridgehead near Vienna after the Battle of Mollwitz. In 1742, the Pandurs took part in capture of Klaus Castle in Styria as well as Linz and Deggendorf, where they defeated French troops before taking part in Austrian recapture of Munich. By the end of that year, the Pandurs had captured Diessenstein Castle and Cham from Bavarian defenders, completely destroying Cham to secure access for Habsburg troops led by Ludwig Andreas von Khevenhüller to Bohemia. In 1743, the Pandurs led by Trenck captured Cosel fortress. In 1745, during the Second Silesian War, the Pandurs took part in the Battle of Soor, where they looted a Prussian war chest containing 80,000 ducats, as well as weapons, horses and a tent belonging to Frederick the Great.[10]

The Pandurs earned a reputation for being brave and audacious,[14] as well as feared and ruthless soldiers, looting and pillaging, but also characterized by disobedience, breaches of military discipline and stubbornness. On the other hand, the City of Waldmünchen, located near Cham, celebrates the Pandurs and Trenck as their savior for sparing the city from destruction in 1742.[10] Since 1950, the city organizes a historical reenactment of the event involving about 300 actors.[16]

The original organization of the unit was retained until 1745, when it was transformed into a Pandur regiment following Trenck's petition to the empress. Trenck was relieved of command in 1746 and tried for unspecified "acts of violence". He was imprisoned in Spielberg Castle, where he died in 1749.[14] After the Peace of Aachen, the regiment was transformed into a Slavonian battalion on 22 December 1748. In 1756, as the Seven Years' War started, the battalion was reformed into the 53rd Infantry Regiment and its headquarters moved to Zagreb ending history of the Pandurs. Still, the regiment kept its Pandur lineage alive through its commemorative medals bearing Trenck's image wearing Pandur attire. The regiment was disbanded in January 1919.[15]

Legacy edit

 
Pandur II infantry fighting vehicle

The achievements of the Pandurs led by Trenck left a lasting mark on the culture and heritage of Croatia as well as Bavaria. An example of the unit's legacy is found in the village of Trenkovo—named after the commander of the Pandurs in 1912. The village is located in area of Trenck's former Velika estate, near Požega, Croatia, where the baron lived. It was the location of a baroque manor once owned by Trenck, which was replaced by another structure in the late 18th or early 19th centuries.[17][18] Pandur heritage is preserved by the Trenck's Pandurs (Croatian: Trenkovi panduri) military band—the official music band of the city of Požega—established on 28 January 1881. In 1997, an eponymous living history troop was established out of members of the band.[19][20] Also, a Trenck festival is held annually in Waldmünchen, commemorating the events of 1742, when the city was spared by Trenck from destruction.[16][21]

The military unit and its leader also give their names to a modern armed force unit and modern military equipment. Special police platoon Trenk, formed in Požega on 8 March 1991, took part in the Croatian War of Independence.[22] Steyr-Daimler-Puch produces the Pandur armoured fighting vehicle.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Jurica Miletić (April 2006). [In service of Maria Theresa]. Hrvatski vojnik (in Croatian). Ministry of Defence (Croatia). Archived from the original on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b Nives Opačić (6 December 2007). "Kurije, vinciliri i panduri" [Manors, guards and pandurs]. Vijenac (in Croatian) (359). Matica hrvatska. ISSN 1330-2787. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  3. ^ "pandour". Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
  4. ^ Giacomo Meyerbeer; Robert Ignatius Letellier (1999). The Diaries of Giacomo Meyerbeer: The Prussian years and Le Prophète, 1840–1849. Associated University Presses. p. 115. ISBN 9780838638439. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
  5. ^ "Povijest karlovačke policije" [History of Karlovac police] (PDF) (in Croatian). Ministry of the Interior (Croatia). Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  6. ^ Stanko Guldescu (1970). The Croatian-Slavonian kingdom, 1526–1792, Opseg 21. Mouton. ISBN 9783111798899. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  7. ^ David Hollins (2005). Austrian Frontier Troops 1740-98. Osprey Publishing. p. 5. ISBN 9781841767017. Retrieved 6 October 2012.
  8. ^ Tado Oršolić (December 2007). "Seoske straže i poljsko redarstvo u kopnenoj Dalmaciji (od 1814. do druge polovine XIX. st.)" [Village guards and field police in mainland Dalmatia (between 1814 and the second half of the 19th cent.)]. Radovi Zavoda Za Povijesne Znanosti HAZU U Zadru (in Croatian). 49. Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts: 467–481. ISSN 1330-0474. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  9. ^ Marko Lopuština (28 December 2010). [Croatian cops and Serbian mischiefs] (in Croatian). Portal dnevno d.o.o. Archived from the original on 1 January 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  10. ^ a b c Jurica Miletić (April 2006). [From glory to defeat]. Hrvatski vojnik (in Croatian). Ministry of Defence (Croatia). Archived from the original on 22 February 2008. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  11. ^ Michael Howard (2010). War in European History [Der Krieg in der europäischen Geschichte] (in German). C.H.Beck. p. 110. ISBN 9783406606335. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  12. ^ Robert A. Pois; Philip Langer (2004). Command Failure in War: Psychology and Leadership. Indiana University Press. p. 9. ISBN 9780253343789. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  13. ^ Charles Jelavich (1990). South Slav nationalisms—textbooks and Yugoslav Union before 1914. Ohio State University Press. p. 115. ISBN 9780814205006. Retrieved 12 June 2012.
  14. ^ a b c d Ferdo Šišić (1906). Hrvatska povijest, drugi dio  [Croatian history, Second volume] (in Croatian). Zagreb: Dionička tiskara. pp. 136–137 – via Wikisource.
  15. ^ a b Kristian Strukić (2008). "53. zagrebačka pješačka pukovnija: spomen-medalje, znak i značka iz fundusa Muzeja grada Zagreba" [53rd Zagreb infantry regiment: commemorative medals, insignia and pennant in collection of the Museum of the city of Zagreb] (PDF). Numizmatičke vijesti (in Croatian) (61). Croatian Numismatic Society: 278–289. ISSN 0546-9422. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  16. ^ a b "Trenckfestspiele in Waldmünchen" [Trenck festival in Waldmünchen] (in German). The city of Waldmünchen. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  17. ^ [Baron Trenck's manor, Trenkovo] (in Croatian). Municipality of Velika Tourist Board. Archived from the original on 10 April 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  18. ^ "Umro Franjo Trenk" [Franz Trenck dies] (in Croatian). Croatian Radiotelevision. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  19. ^ [About us] (in Croatian). Trenkovi panduri. Archived from the original on 3 December 2010. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  20. ^ "Otkrivena spomen ploča za sjećanje na baruna Franju Trenka" [A baron Trenck commemorative plaque unveiled] (in Croatian). City of Požega. 4 November 2011. Archived from the original on 11 September 2012. Retrieved 21 May 2012.
  21. ^ "Trenck der Pandur vor Waldmünchen" [Pandur Trenck at Trenck Waldmünchen]. Trenckfestspiele Waldmünchen e.V. Retrieved 19 May 2012.
  22. ^ "20.obljetnica utemeljenja Specijalne jedinice policije "Trenk" Požega" [20th anniversary of Special police unit "Trenk" Požega] (in Croatian). Radio Požega. 14 October 2011. Archived from the original on 7 September 2012. Retrieved 18 May 2012.
  23. ^ "Steyr gives up on a part of the tender". limun.hr. 12 July 2007. Retrieved 18 May 2012.

trenck, pandurs, this, article, about, habsburg, military, unit, other, uses, pandur, croatian, panduri, german, panduren, hungarian, pandúr, were, light, infantry, unit, habsburg, monarchy, that, raised, baron, franz, trenck, under, charter, issued, maria, th. This article is about the Habsburg military unit For other uses see Pandur Trenck s Pandurs Croatian Panduri German Panduren Hungarian Pandur were a light infantry unit of the Habsburg monarchy that was raised by Baron Franz von der Trenck under a charter issued by Maria Theresa of Austria in 1741 The unit was largely composed of volunteers from the Kingdom of Slavonia and Slavonian Military Frontier and named after security guards otherwise employed to maintain public order The Pandurs were presented to the empress in May 1741 with the unit s military band earning them a claim of pioneering martial music in Europe The Pandurs did not use uniforms and had an overall Ottoman appearance The original organization of the unit was retained until 1745 when it transformed into a regiment Trenck was relieved of command in 1746 and imprisoned in Spielberg Castle where he died in 1749 The unit ultimately transformed into the 53rd Infantry Regiment headquartered in Zagreb until it was disbanded in 1919 The regiment s commemorative medals bear Trenck s image wearing Pandur attire PandursCroatian pandurs from 1742Active1741 1748 1756 CountryHabsburg monarchyTypeInfantryRolelight infantry skirmishersSize1 000Motto s Vivat Pandur 1 EngagementsWar of the Austrian Succession First and Second Silesian WarsCommandersNotablecommandersBaron Franz von der Trenck The Pandurs took part in the War of the Austrian Succession including the First and Second Silesian War They contributed to the capture or destruction of Zobten am Berge Strehlen Klaus Castle Linz Deggendorf Diessenstein Castle Cham Cosel fortress and Munich During the Battle of Soor the unit looted a Prussian war chest and the belongings of Frederick the Great The Pandurs earned a reputation as brave audacious feared and ruthless soldiers known for looting and pillaging They were prone to disobedience breaches of military discipline and stubbornness The city of Waldmunchen located near Cham celebrates the Pandurs and Trenck as the city s saviors for sparing the city from destruction in 1742 The Pandurs and Trenck s heritage is also preserved in the city of Pozega Croatia where an eponymous living history troop and city music band exist Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 3 Legacy 4 See also 5 ReferencesEtymology editThe term pandur made its way into military use via the Hungarian language being used in Hungarian as a loanword in turn originating from the Croatian term pudar though the nasal in place of the u suggests a borrowing before Croatian innovated its own reflex for Proto Slavic ɔ Pudar is still applied to security guards protecting crops in vineyards and fields and it was coined from the verb puditi also spelled pudati meaning to chase or scare away The meaning of the Hungarian loanword was expanded to guards in general including law enforcement officers 2 The word was likely ultimately derived from medieval Latin banderius or bannerius meaning either a guardian of fields or summoner 3 or follower of a banner 4 nbsp Trenck s Pandurs living history troop from Pozega CroatiaAnother etymology could recall the ancient greek expression pan with ther which is great or all beast already used in ancient times see the latin word Panther often used to refer to occupying troop soldiers of Roman Empire and root of the German word Panzer itself By the middle of the 18th century law enforcement in the counties of Croatia included county pandurs or hussars who patrolled roads and pursued criminals 5 6 In 1740 the term was applied to frontier guard duty infantry deployed in the Croatian Military Frontier Banal Frontier specifically its Karlovac and Varazdin Generalcies 7 The role of the pandurs as security guards was extended to Dalmatia after the establishment of Austrian rule there in the early 19th century 8 The term has dropped from official use for law enforcement officials but it is still used colloquially in Croatia and the Western Balkans in a manner akin to the English word cop 2 9 The unit raised and led by Trenck is also referred to more specifically as Trenck s Pandurs 10 and less frequently in Croatia than elsewhere as Croatian Pandurs 11 History editThe Pandurs were a skirmisher unit of the Habsburg monarchy 12 raised by Baron Franz von der Trenck following a charter German Werbepatent issued by Maria Theresa of Austria on 27 February 1741 permitting Trenck to raise a 1 000 strong troop The unit was largely composed of men enlisted as volunteers from areas of the Kingdom of Slavonia and Slavonian Military Frontier 1 consisting of ethnic Croats and Serbs 13 The Pandurs saw military action in Silesia Bohemia Bavaria and France 14 The Pandurs arrived in Vienna for a military parade for the empress on 27 May 1741 The unit was headed by Trenck and included two captains a senior lieutenant five lieutenants a quartermaster an adjutant two chaplains a Catholic and an Orthodox Christian two medics forty sergeants five scribes eighty corporals and twelve musicians equipped with flutes a drum and cymbals The musicians were called the Turkish band after Ottoman military bands and are considered pioneers of martial music in Europe according to Jurica Miletic 1 The Pandurs did not have specific uniforms as their clothes varied but were of Turkish style Their oriental appearance was compounded by mandatory head shaving leaving a rattail as well as by the use of a horse tail bunchuk instead of a unit banner Each Pandur carried four single shot pistols a fighting knife and a small utilitarian knife 14 15 nbsp Baron Franz von der TrenckThe Pandurs took part in War of the Austrian Succession including the First Silesian War They took part in capturing Zobten am Berge and Strehlen in Lower Silesia from the Prussians and defending a bridgehead near Vienna after the Battle of Mollwitz In 1742 the Pandurs took part in capture of Klaus Castle in Styria as well as Linz and Deggendorf where they defeated French troops before taking part in Austrian recapture of Munich By the end of that year the Pandurs had captured Diessenstein Castle and Cham from Bavarian defenders completely destroying Cham to secure access for Habsburg troops led by Ludwig Andreas von Khevenhuller to Bohemia In 1743 the Pandurs led by Trenck captured Cosel fortress In 1745 during the Second Silesian War the Pandurs took part in the Battle of Soor where they looted a Prussian war chest containing 80 000 ducats as well as weapons horses and a tent belonging to Frederick the Great 10 The Pandurs earned a reputation for being brave and audacious 14 as well as feared and ruthless soldiers looting and pillaging but also characterized by disobedience breaches of military discipline and stubbornness On the other hand the City of Waldmunchen located near Cham celebrates the Pandurs and Trenck as their savior for sparing the city from destruction in 1742 10 Since 1950 the city organizes a historical reenactment of the event involving about 300 actors 16 The original organization of the unit was retained until 1745 when it was transformed into a Pandur regiment following Trenck s petition to the empress Trenck was relieved of command in 1746 and tried for unspecified acts of violence He was imprisoned in Spielberg Castle where he died in 1749 14 After the Peace of Aachen the regiment was transformed into a Slavonian battalion on 22 December 1748 In 1756 as the Seven Years War started the battalion was reformed into the 53rd Infantry Regiment and its headquarters moved to Zagreb ending history of the Pandurs Still the regiment kept its Pandur lineage alive through its commemorative medals bearing Trenck s image wearing Pandur attire The regiment was disbanded in January 1919 15 Legacy edit nbsp Pandur II infantry fighting vehicleThe achievements of the Pandurs led by Trenck left a lasting mark on the culture and heritage of Croatia as well as Bavaria An example of the unit s legacy is found in the village of Trenkovo named after the commander of the Pandurs in 1912 The village is located in area of Trenck s former Velika estate near Pozega Croatia where the baron lived It was the location of a baroque manor once owned by Trenck which was replaced by another structure in the late 18th or early 19th centuries 17 18 Pandur heritage is preserved by the Trenck s Pandurs Croatian Trenkovi panduri military band the official music band of the city of Pozega established on 28 January 1881 In 1997 an eponymous living history troop was established out of members of the band 19 20 Also a Trenck festival is held annually in Waldmunchen commemorating the events of 1742 when the city was spared by Trenck from destruction 16 21 The military unit and its leader also give their names to a modern armed force unit and modern military equipment Special police platoon Trenk formed in Pozega on 8 March 1991 took part in the Croatian War of Independence 22 Steyr Daimler Puch produces the Pandur armoured fighting vehicle 23 See also editTudor Vladimirescu commanded a pandur militia in the Wallachian uprising of 1821 Seressaner Pandur Hajduk Uskok Grenz infantry Serbian revolutionReferences edit a b c Jurica Miletic April 2006 U sluzbi Marije Terezije In service of Maria Theresa Hrvatski vojnik in Croatian Ministry of Defence Croatia Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2012 a b Nives Opacic 6 December 2007 Kurije vinciliri i panduri Manors guards and pandurs Vijenac in Croatian 359 Matica hrvatska ISSN 1330 2787 Retrieved 19 May 2012 pandour Merriam Webster Online Dictionary Merriam Webster Retrieved 12 June 2012 Giacomo Meyerbeer Robert Ignatius Letellier 1999 The Diaries of Giacomo Meyerbeer The Prussian years and Le Prophete 1840 1849 Associated University Presses p 115 ISBN 9780838638439 Retrieved 12 June 2012 Povijest karlovacke policije History of Karlovac police PDF in Croatian Ministry of the Interior Croatia Retrieved 19 May 2012 Stanko Guldescu 1970 The Croatian Slavonian kingdom 1526 1792 Opseg 21 Mouton ISBN 9783111798899 Retrieved 19 May 2012 David Hollins 2005 Austrian Frontier Troops 1740 98 Osprey Publishing p 5 ISBN 9781841767017 Retrieved 6 October 2012 Tado Orsolic December 2007 Seoske straze i poljsko redarstvo u kopnenoj Dalmaciji od 1814 do druge polovine XIX st Village guards and field police in mainland Dalmatia between 1814 and the second half of the 19th cent Radovi Zavoda Za Povijesne Znanosti HAZU U Zadru in Croatian 49 Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts 467 481 ISSN 1330 0474 Retrieved 19 May 2012 Marko Lopustina 28 December 2010 Hrvatski panduri i srpski mangupi Croatian cops and Serbian mischiefs in Croatian Portal dnevno d o o Archived from the original on 1 January 2011 Retrieved 19 May 2012 a b c Jurica Miletic April 2006 Od pocasti do propasti From glory to defeat Hrvatski vojnik in Croatian Ministry of Defence Croatia Archived from the original on 22 February 2008 Retrieved 18 May 2012 Michael Howard 2010 War in European History Der Krieg in der europaischen Geschichte in German C H Beck p 110 ISBN 9783406606335 Retrieved 19 May 2012 Robert A Pois Philip Langer 2004 Command Failure in War Psychology and Leadership Indiana University Press p 9 ISBN 9780253343789 Retrieved 18 May 2012 Charles Jelavich 1990 South Slav nationalisms textbooks and Yugoslav Union before 1914 Ohio State University Press p 115 ISBN 9780814205006 Retrieved 12 June 2012 a b c d Ferdo Sisic 1906 Hrvatska povijest drugi dio Croatian history Second volume in Croatian Zagreb Dionicka tiskara pp 136 137 via Wikisource a b Kristian Strukic 2008 53 zagrebacka pjesacka pukovnija spomen medalje znak i znacka iz fundusa Muzeja grada Zagreba 53rd Zagreb infantry regiment commemorative medals insignia and pennant in collection of the Museum of the city of Zagreb PDF Numizmaticke vijesti in Croatian 61 Croatian Numismatic Society 278 289 ISSN 0546 9422 Retrieved 18 May 2012 a b Trenckfestspiele in Waldmunchen Trenck festival in Waldmunchen in German The city of Waldmunchen Retrieved 19 May 2012 Dvorac Baruna Trenka Trenkovo Baron Trenck s manor Trenkovo in Croatian Municipality of Velika Tourist Board Archived from the original on 10 April 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2012 Umro Franjo Trenk Franz Trenck dies in Croatian Croatian Radiotelevision Retrieved 19 May 2012 O nama About us in Croatian Trenkovi panduri Archived from the original on 3 December 2010 Retrieved 18 May 2012 Otkrivena spomen ploca za sjecanje na baruna Franju Trenka A baron Trenck commemorative plaque unveiled in Croatian City of Pozega 4 November 2011 Archived from the original on 11 September 2012 Retrieved 21 May 2012 Trenck der Pandur vor Waldmunchen Pandur Trenck at Trenck Waldmunchen Trenckfestspiele Waldmunchen e V Retrieved 19 May 2012 20 obljetnica utemeljenja Specijalne jedinice policije Trenk Pozega 20th anniversary of Special police unit Trenk Pozega in Croatian Radio Pozega 14 October 2011 Archived from the original on 7 September 2012 Retrieved 18 May 2012 Steyr gives up on a part of the tender limun hr 12 July 2007 Retrieved 18 May 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trenck 27s Pandurs amp oldid 1197939742, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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