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Black Hand (Serbia)

Unification or Death (Serbian: Ujedinjenje ili smrt, Serbian Cyrillic: Уједињење или смрт), popularly known as the Black Hand (Serbian: Crna ruka, Serbian Cyrillic: Црна рука), was a secret military society formed in 1901 by officers in the Army of the Kingdom of Serbia. It gained a reputation for its alleged involvement in the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo in 1914 and for the earlier assassination of the Serbian royal couple in 1903, under the aegis of Captain Dragutin Dimitrijević (a.k.a. "Apis").[3]

Unification or Death
Ujedinjenje ili smrt
Уједињење или смрт
Unification or Death's logo
Also known asBlack Hand
LeaderDragutin Dimitrijević
FoundationAugust 1901
(as Black Hand Society)
May 1911
(as Unification or Death)[1][2]
Active regionsBalkan Peninsula
IdeologyYugoslavism
Greater Serbia
Serbian nationalism
Notable attacksKilling of Alexander I
Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand
Succeeded by
Serbian Cultural Club (unofficial)

The society formed to unite all of the territories with a South Slavic majority that were not then ruled by either Serbia or Montenegro. It took inspiration primarily from the unification of Italy in 1859–1870, but also from the unification of Germany in 1871.[4][5] Through its connections to the June 1914 assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo, carried out by the members of the youth movement Young Bosnia, the Black Hand is often viewed as instrumental in starting World War I (1914–1918) by precipitating the July Crisis of 1914, which eventually led to Austria-Hungary's invasion of the Kingdom of Serbia in August 1914.[6]

Background edit

Apis' conspiracy group and the May Coup edit

 
Early members of the Black Hand

In August 1901, a group of lower officers headed by captain Dragutin Dimitrijević "Apis" established a conspiracy group (called the Black Hand in literature), against the dynasty.[7] The first meeting was held on 6 September 1901. In attendance were captains Radomir Aranđelović, Milan F. Petrović, and Dragutin Dimitrijević, as well as lieutenants Antonije Antić, Dragutin Dulić, Milan Marinković, and Nikodije Popović.[8] They made a plan to kill the royal couple—King Alexander I Obrenović and Queen Draga. On the night of 28/29 May 1903, Captain Apis personally led a group of Army officers who murdered the royal couple at the Old Palace in Belgrade (Old Style). Along with the royal couple, the conspirators killed Prime Minister Dimitrije Cincar-Marković, Minister of the Army Milovan Pavlović, and General-Adjutant Lazar Petrović. This became known as the May Coup.

National defence edit

On 8 October 1908, just two days after Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbian ministers, officials, and generals held a meeting at the City Hall in Belgrade. They founded a semi-secret society, the Narodna Odbrana ("National Defense") which gave Pan-Serbism a focus and an organization. The purpose of the group was to liberate Serbs under the Austro-Hungarian occupation. They also shared anti-Austrian propaganda and organized spies and saboteurs to operate within the occupied provinces. Satellite groups were formed in Slovenia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, and Istria. The Bosnian group became deeply associated with local groups of pan-Serb activists such as Mlada Bosna ("Young Bosnia").[9]

Establishment edit

 
Ritual cross of the Black Hand
 
Signatures

Unification or Death was established at the beginning of May 1911,[10] and the original constitution of the organization was signed on 9 May.[11] Ljuba Čupa, Bogdan Radenković, and Vojislav Tankosić wrote the constitution of the organization,[12] modeled after similar German secret nationalist associations and the Italian Carbonari.[12][13] The organization was mentioned in the Serbian parliament as the "Black Hand" in late 1911.[14]

By 1911–12, Narodna Odbrana had established ties with the Black Hand, and the two became "parallel in action and overlapping in membership".[15]

1911–13 edit

The organization used the magazine Pijemont (the Serbian name for Piedmont, the kingdom that led the unification of Italy under the House of Savoy) for the dissemination of their ideas.[16] The magazine was founded by Ljuba Čupa in August 1911.[17]

1914 edit

By 1914, the group had hundreds of members, many of them Serbian Army officers. The goal of uniting Serb-inhabited territories was implemented by training guerilla fighters and saboteurs. The Black Hand was organized at the grassroots level in cells of three to five members, supervised by district committees and by a Central Committee in Belgrade, whose ten-member executive committee was primarily led by Colonel Dragutin Dimitrijević "Apis". To ensure secrecy, members rarely knew much more than the other members of their own cell and one superior above them. New members swore the oath:

I (...), by entering into the society, do hereby swear by the Sun which shineth upon me, by the Earth which feedeth me, by God, by the blood of my forefathers, by my honour and by my life, that from this moment onward and until my death, I shall faithfully serve the task of this organisation and that I shall at all times be prepared to bear for it any sacrifice. I further swear by God, by my honour and by my life, that I shall unconditionally carry into effect all its orders and commands. I further swear by my God, by my honour and by my life, that I shall keep within myself all the secrets of this organisation and carry them with me into my grave. May God and my brothers in this organisation be my judges if at any time I should wittingly fail or break this oath.[18]

The Black Hand took over the terrorist actions[which?] of Narodna Odbrana and deliberately worked to obscure any distinctions between the two groups, trading on the prestige and network of the older organization. Black Hand members held important army and government positions. Crown Prince Alexander was an enthusiastic financial supporter.[19] The group held influence over government appointments and policies. The Serbian government was fairly well-informed of Black Hand activities.

Friendly relations had fairly well cooled by 1914. The Black Hand was displeased with Prime Minister Nikola Pašić and thought that he did not act aggressively enough for the Pan-Serb cause. The Black Hand engaged in a bitter power struggle over several issues, such as who would control territories that Serbia had annexed during the Balkan Wars. By then, disagreeing with the Black Hand was dangerous, as political murder was one of its tools.

In 1914, Apis allegedly decided that Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the heir-apparent of Austria, should be assassinated, as he was trying to pacify the Serbians, which would prevent a revolution if he was successful. Towards that end, three young Bosnian Serbs were allegedly recruited to kill the Archduke. They were certainly trained in bomb throwing and marksmanship by current and former members of the Serbian military. Gavrilo Princip, Nedeljko Čabrinović, and Trifko Grabež were smuggled across the border back into Bosnia by a chain of contacts similar to the Underground Railroad. The decision to kill the Archduke was initiated by Apis and not sanctioned by the full Executive Committee (if Apis was involved at all, a question that remains in dispute[20]).

Those involved probably realised that their plot would result in war between Austria and Serbia and had every reason to expect that Russia would side with Serbia. They likely did not, however, anticipate that the assassination would start the chain of events leading to World War I. Others in the government and some of the Black Hand Executive Council were not as confident of Russian aid since Russia had recently let them down.

When word of the plot allegedly percolated through Black Hand leadership and the Serbian government (Prime Minister Pašić was informed of two armed men being smuggled across the border, but it is not clear if Pašić knew of the planned assassination), Apis was supposedly told not to proceed. He may have made a half-hearted attempt to intercept the young assassins at the border, but they had already crossed. Other sources say the attempted 'recall' began only after the assassins had reached Sarajevo. The 'recall' appears to have made Apis look like a loose cannon and the young assassins like independent zealots. The 'recall' took place fully two weeks before the Archduke's visit. The assassins idled in Sarajevo for a month. Nothing more was done to stop them.

Ideology edit

The group encompassed a range of ideological outlooks, from conspiratorially-minded army officers to idealistic youths, sometimes tending towards republicanism, despite their patrons in nationalistic royal circles. The movement's leader, Apis, had been instrumental in the June 1903 coup which had brought King Petar Karađorđević to the Serbian throne following 45 years of rule by the rival Obrenović dynasty. The group was denounced as nihilist by the Austro-Hungarian press and compared to the Russian People's Will and the Chinese Assassination Corps.[citation needed]

Legacy edit

In 1938, Konspiracija, a conspiracy group to overthrow the Yugoslav regency was founded by, among others, members of the Serbian Cultural Club (SKK).[21] The organization was modeled after the Black Hand, including the recruitment process.[22] Two members of the Black Hand, Antonije Antić and Velimir Vemić, were the organization's military advisors.[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Martel, Gordon (2014). The Month that Changed the World: July 1914 and WWI. Oxford University Press. pp. 58–60. ISBN 978-0191643279.
  2. ^ Newman, John Paul (2015). Yugoslavia in the Shadow of War. Cambridge University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-1107070769.
  3. ^ "Black Hand | secret Serbian society". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 21 February 2019.
  4. ^ Gavrilo Princip and the Black Hand organization. Bookrags.
  5. ^ Alan Cassels (1996). Ideology and international relations in the modern world. Psychology Press. pp. 122–. ISBN 978-0415119269.
  6. ^ David Stevenson (2012). 1914–1918: The History of the First World War. Penguin. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-141-90434-4.
  7. ^ Borislav Ratković; Mitar Đurišić; Savo Skoko (1972). Srbija i Crna Gora u balkanskim ratovima 1912–1913. Beogradski izdavačko-grafički zavod. Y августу 1901. нижи официри су, под руководством капетана Драгутина Димитр^евиhа – Аписа, створили заверенички покрет против ди- насти е ("Црна рука").
  8. ^ Antić & 2010-11-20.
  9. ^ Clark, Christopher (2012). The Sleepwalkers: How Europe Went to War in 1914. Penguin UK. p. 69. ISBN 978-0718192952.
  10. ^ Đorđe Radenković (1997). Pašić i Srbija. Službeni list SRJ. p. 462. ISBN 978-8635503332.
  11. ^ Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti (1955). Posebna izdanja. Vol. 243. p. 199. Оригинални Устав истого, друштва од 9/22 ма]а 1911 год. са своеручним потписила опт.
  12. ^ a b Stanoje Stanojević (1929). Narodna enciklopedija srpsko-hrvatsko-slovenačka, knjiga 2 (in Serbo-Croatian). Zagreb. p. 181.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  13. ^ Trotsky, Leon (1916). "The Big Lie: The Defence of Small Nations". Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  14. ^ Olga Popović-Obradović (1998). Parlamentarizam u Srbiji od 1903. do 1914. godine. Službeni list SRJ. p. 158. ISBN 978-8635504032.
  15. ^ Victor Roudometof (2001). Nationalism, Globalization, and Orthodoxy: The Social Origins of Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 170–. ISBN 978-0313319495.
  16. ^ NIN. nedeljne informativne novine. Politika. 2004.
  17. ^ "Пијемонт". Veliki rat. National Library of Serbia.
  18. ^ Pressonline.rs 12 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Press (7 October 2011). Retrieved on 2011-11-08. (in Serbian)
  19. ^ "Šta je bila Crna ruka i ko je bio Dragutin Dimitrijević Apis". BBC News na srpskom (in Serbian (Latin script)). 2 April 2021. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  20. ^ Vladimer Dedijer, The Road to Sarajevo
  21. ^ Kazimirović 1995, p. 653.
  22. ^ Kazimirović 1995, p. 654.
  23. ^ Zečević 2003, p. 335.

Sources edit

  • Antić, Antonije (20 November 2010). "Škola gnezdo zavere". Novosti.
  • Apis, Dragutin T. Dimitrijević (1918). Tajna prevratna organizacija. Velika Srbija.
  • Dedijer, Vladimir (1966). The Road to Sarajevo. Simon and Schuster.
  • Kazimirović, Vasa (1995). Srbija i Jugoslavija, 1914–1945: Srbija i Jugoslavija između dva svetska rata. Prizma. ISBN 978-8670840010.
  • Kazimirović, Vasa (1997). Crna ruka: ličnosti i događaji u Srbiji od prevrata 1903. do Solunskog procesa 1917. godine. Prizma. ISBN 978-8670840164.
  • MacKenzie, David (1995). The "Black Hand" on Trial: Salonika, 1917. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0880333207.
  • MacKenzie, David (1998). The Exoneration of the "Black Hand," 1917–1953. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0880334143.
  • MacKenzie, David (1989). Apis, the Congenial Conspirator: The Life of Colonel Dragutin T. Dimitrijević. East European Monographs. ISBN 978-0880331623.
  • MacKenzie, David (1982). "Serbian Nationalist and Military Organizations and the Piedmont Idea, 1844–1914". East European Quarterly. 16 (3): 323–.
  • Remak, Joachim (1971). The Origins of World War I: 1871–1914. Holt, Rinehart and Winston. ISBN 978-0136427445.
  • Zečević, Momčilo (2003). Prošlost i vreme: iz istorije Jugoslavije. Prosveta. ISBN 978-8607013937.

Further reading edit

  • Bataković, Dušan T. (2006). "Nikola Pašić: The Radicals and the "Black hand" challenges to parliamentary democracy in Serbia 1903–1917". Balcanica (37): 143–69. doi:10.2298/BALC0637143B.
  • Blakley, Patrick R. F. "Narodna Odbrana (The Black Hand): Terrorist Faction that Divided the World" (PDF). Oswego Historical Review. 2: 13–34. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022.
  • Gilfond, Henry (1975). The Black Hand at Sarajevo. Bobbs-Merrill. ISBN 0672520702. OCLC 1692249.
  • Jelavich, Barbara (1991). "What the Habsburg Government Knew about the Black Hand". Austrian History Yearbook. 22: 131–50. doi:10.1017/S0067237800019913. S2CID 146532495.
  • Nešković, Borivoje (1953). Istina o solunskom procesu. Narodna knjiga.

External links edit

  • "The Constitution of the Ujedinjenje ili Smrt (Unification or Death)". "Black Hand over Europe" by Henri Pozzi, 1935. Projekat Rastko. 1935 [1911].
  • Lutz, Hermann. "The Serbian 'Black Hand'," The Freeman, Vol. 7, N°. 164, pp. 179–81, 2 May 1923.
  • John Paul Newman: Black Hand, in: .

black, hand, serbia, unification, death, serbian, ujedinjenje, smrt, serbian, cyrillic, Уједињење, или, смрт, popularly, known, black, hand, serbian, crna, ruka, serbian, cyrillic, Црна, рука, secret, military, society, formed, 1901, officers, army, kingdom, s. Unification or Death Serbian Ujedinjenje ili smrt Serbian Cyrillic Uјediњeњe ili smrt popularly known as the Black Hand Serbian Crna ruka Serbian Cyrillic Crna ruka was a secret military society formed in 1901 by officers in the Army of the Kingdom of Serbia It gained a reputation for its alleged involvement in the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo in 1914 and for the earlier assassination of the Serbian royal couple in 1903 under the aegis of Captain Dragutin Dimitrijevic a k a Apis 3 Unification or DeathUjedinjenje ili smrtUјediњeњe ili smrtUnification or Death s logoAlso known asBlack HandLeaderDragutin DimitrijevicFoundationAugust 1901 as Black Hand Society May 1911 as Unification or Death 1 2 Active regionsBalkan PeninsulaIdeologyYugoslavismGreater SerbiaSerbian nationalismNotable attacksKilling of Alexander IAssassination of Archduke Franz FerdinandSucceeded bySerbian Cultural Club unofficial The society formed to unite all of the territories with a South Slavic majority that were not then ruled by either Serbia or Montenegro It took inspiration primarily from the unification of Italy in 1859 1870 but also from the unification of Germany in 1871 4 5 Through its connections to the June 1914 assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo carried out by the members of the youth movement Young Bosnia the Black Hand is often viewed as instrumental in starting World War I 1914 1918 by precipitating the July Crisis of 1914 which eventually led to Austria Hungary s invasion of the Kingdom of Serbia in August 1914 6 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Apis conspiracy group and the May Coup 1 2 National defence 2 Establishment 3 1911 13 4 1914 5 Ideology 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground editApis conspiracy group and the May Coup edit This section needs expansion with events occurring in the long time span between the described regicide and the events of the next subsection You can help by adding to it April 2017 See also May Coup Serbia nbsp Early members of the Black Hand In August 1901 a group of lower officers headed by captain Dragutin Dimitrijevic Apis established a conspiracy group called the Black Hand in literature against the dynasty 7 The first meeting was held on 6 September 1901 In attendance were captains Radomir Aranđelovic Milan F Petrovic and Dragutin Dimitrijevic as well as lieutenants Antonije Antic Dragutin Dulic Milan Marinkovic and Nikodije Popovic 8 They made a plan to kill the royal couple King Alexander I Obrenovic and Queen Draga On the night of 28 29 May 1903 Captain Apis personally led a group of Army officers who murdered the royal couple at the Old Palace in Belgrade Old Style Along with the royal couple the conspirators killed Prime Minister Dimitrije Cincar Markovic Minister of the Army Milovan Pavlovic and General Adjutant Lazar Petrovic This became known as the May Coup National defence edit Main article Narodna Odbrana On 8 October 1908 just two days after Austria annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina Serbian ministers officials and generals held a meeting at the City Hall in Belgrade They founded a semi secret society the Narodna Odbrana National Defense which gave Pan Serbism a focus and an organization The purpose of the group was to liberate Serbs under the Austro Hungarian occupation They also shared anti Austrian propaganda and organized spies and saboteurs to operate within the occupied provinces Satellite groups were formed in Slovenia Bosnia Herzegovina and Istria The Bosnian group became deeply associated with local groups of pan Serb activists such as Mlada Bosna Young Bosnia 9 Establishment edit nbsp Ritual cross of the Black Hand nbsp Signatures Unification or Death was established at the beginning of May 1911 10 and the original constitution of the organization was signed on 9 May 11 Ljuba Cupa Bogdan Radenkovic and Vojislav Tankosic wrote the constitution of the organization 12 modeled after similar German secret nationalist associations and the Italian Carbonari 12 13 The organization was mentioned in the Serbian parliament as the Black Hand in late 1911 14 By 1911 12 Narodna Odbrana had established ties with the Black Hand and the two became parallel in action and overlapping in membership 15 1911 13 editThe organization used the magazine Pijemont the Serbian name for Piedmont the kingdom that led the unification of Italy under the House of Savoy for the dissemination of their ideas 16 The magazine was founded by Ljuba Cupa in August 1911 17 1914 editBy 1914 the group had hundreds of members many of them Serbian Army officers The goal of uniting Serb inhabited territories was implemented by training guerilla fighters and saboteurs The Black Hand was organized at the grassroots level in cells of three to five members supervised by district committees and by a Central Committee in Belgrade whose ten member executive committee was primarily led by Colonel Dragutin Dimitrijevic Apis To ensure secrecy members rarely knew much more than the other members of their own cell and one superior above them New members swore the oath I by entering into the society do hereby swear by the Sun which shineth upon me by the Earth which feedeth me by God by the blood of my forefathers by my honour and by my life that from this moment onward and until my death I shall faithfully serve the task of this organisation and that I shall at all times be prepared to bear for it any sacrifice I further swear by God by my honour and by my life that I shall unconditionally carry into effect all its orders and commands I further swear by my God by my honour and by my life that I shall keep within myself all the secrets of this organisation and carry them with me into my grave May God and my brothers in this organisation be my judges if at any time I should wittingly fail or break this oath 18 The Black Hand took over the terrorist actions which of Narodna Odbrana and deliberately worked to obscure any distinctions between the two groups trading on the prestige and network of the older organization Black Hand members held important army and government positions Crown Prince Alexander was an enthusiastic financial supporter 19 The group held influence over government appointments and policies The Serbian government was fairly well informed of Black Hand activities Friendly relations had fairly well cooled by 1914 The Black Hand was displeased with Prime Minister Nikola Pasic and thought that he did not act aggressively enough for the Pan Serb cause The Black Hand engaged in a bitter power struggle over several issues such as who would control territories that Serbia had annexed during the Balkan Wars By then disagreeing with the Black Hand was dangerous as political murder was one of its tools In 1914 Apis allegedly decided that Archduke Franz Ferdinand the heir apparent of Austria should be assassinated as he was trying to pacify the Serbians which would prevent a revolution if he was successful Towards that end three young Bosnian Serbs were allegedly recruited to kill the Archduke They were certainly trained in bomb throwing and marksmanship by current and former members of the Serbian military Gavrilo Princip Nedeljko Cabrinovic and Trifko Grabez were smuggled across the border back into Bosnia by a chain of contacts similar to the Underground Railroad The decision to kill the Archduke was initiated by Apis and not sanctioned by the full Executive Committee if Apis was involved at all a question that remains in dispute 20 Those involved probably realised that their plot would result in war between Austria and Serbia and had every reason to expect that Russia would side with Serbia They likely did not however anticipate that the assassination would start the chain of events leading to World War I Others in the government and some of the Black Hand Executive Council were not as confident of Russian aid since Russia had recently let them down When word of the plot allegedly percolated through Black Hand leadership and the Serbian government Prime Minister Pasic was informed of two armed men being smuggled across the border but it is not clear if Pasic knew of the planned assassination Apis was supposedly told not to proceed He may have made a half hearted attempt to intercept the young assassins at the border but they had already crossed Other sources say the attempted recall began only after the assassins had reached Sarajevo The recall appears to have made Apis look like a loose cannon and the young assassins like independent zealots The recall took place fully two weeks before the Archduke s visit The assassins idled in Sarajevo for a month Nothing more was done to stop them Ideology editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message The group encompassed a range of ideological outlooks from conspiratorially minded army officers to idealistic youths sometimes tending towards republicanism despite their patrons in nationalistic royal circles The movement s leader Apis had been instrumental in the June 1903 coup which had brought King Petar Karađorđevic to the Serbian throne following 45 years of rule by the rival Obrenovic dynasty The group was denounced as nihilist by the Austro Hungarian press and compared to the Russian People s Will and the Chinese Assassination Corps citation needed Legacy editIn 1938 Konspiracija a conspiracy group to overthrow the Yugoslav regency was founded by among others members of the Serbian Cultural Club SKK 21 The organization was modeled after the Black Hand including the recruitment process 22 Two members of the Black Hand Antonije Antic and Velimir Vemic were the organization s military advisors 23 See also editBlack Hand Mandatory Palestine Secret society Serb revolutionary organizations Serbian Chetnik Organization Young Bosnia Black Hand Slovenia References edit Martel Gordon 2014 The Month that Changed the World July 1914 and WWI Oxford University Press pp 58 60 ISBN 978 0191643279 Newman John Paul 2015 Yugoslavia in the Shadow of War Cambridge University Press p 29 ISBN 978 1107070769 Black Hand secret Serbian society Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 21 February 2019 Gavrilo Princip and the Black Hand organization Bookrags Alan Cassels 1996 Ideology and international relations in the modern world Psychology Press pp 122 ISBN 978 0415119269 David Stevenson 2012 1914 1918 The History of the First World War Penguin p 12 ISBN 978 0 141 90434 4 Borislav Ratkovic Mitar Đurisic Savo Skoko 1972 Srbija i Crna Gora u balkanskim ratovima 1912 1913 Beogradski izdavacko graficki zavod Y avgustu 1901 nizhi oficiri su pod rukovodstvom kapetana Dragutina Dimitr eviha Apisa stvorili zaverenichki pokret protiv di nasti e Crna ruka Antic amp 2010 11 20 Clark Christopher 2012 The Sleepwalkers How Europe Went to War in 1914 Penguin UK p 69 ISBN 978 0718192952 Đorđe Radenkovic 1997 Pasic i Srbija Sluzbeni list SRJ p 462 ISBN 978 8635503332 Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti 1955 Posebna izdanja Vol 243 p 199 Originalni Ustav istogo drushtva od 9 22 ma a 1911 god sa svoeruchnim potpisila opt a b Stanoje Stanojevic 1929 Narodna enciklopedija srpsko hrvatsko slovenacka knjiga 2 in Serbo Croatian Zagreb p 181 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Trotsky Leon 1916 The Big Lie The Defence of Small Nations Retrieved 6 November 2022 Olga Popovic Obradovic 1998 Parlamentarizam u Srbiji od 1903 do 1914 godine Sluzbeni list SRJ p 158 ISBN 978 8635504032 Victor Roudometof 2001 Nationalism Globalization and Orthodoxy The Social Origins of Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans Greenwood Publishing Group pp 170 ISBN 978 0313319495 NIN nedeljne informativne novine Politika 2004 Piјemont Veliki rat National Library of Serbia Pressonline rs Archived 12 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Press 7 October 2011 Retrieved on 2011 11 08 in Serbian Sta je bila Crna ruka i ko je bio Dragutin Dimitrijevic Apis BBC News na srpskom in Serbian Latin script 2 April 2021 Retrieved 17 September 2021 Vladimer Dedijer The Road to Sarajevo Kazimirovic 1995 p 653 Kazimirovic 1995 p 654 Zecevic 2003 p 335 Sources editAntic Antonije 20 November 2010 Skola gnezdo zavere Novosti Apis Dragutin T Dimitrijevic 1918 Tajna prevratna organizacija Velika Srbija Dedijer Vladimir 1966 The Road to Sarajevo Simon and Schuster Kazimirovic Vasa 1995 Srbija i Jugoslavija 1914 1945 Srbija i Jugoslavija između dva svetska rata Prizma ISBN 978 8670840010 Kazimirovic Vasa 1997 Crna ruka licnosti i događaji u Srbiji od prevrata 1903 do Solunskog procesa 1917 godine Prizma ISBN 978 8670840164 MacKenzie David 1995 The Black Hand on Trial Salonika 1917 East European Monographs ISBN 978 0880333207 MacKenzie David 1998 The Exoneration of the Black Hand 1917 1953 East European Monographs ISBN 978 0880334143 MacKenzie David 1989 Apis the Congenial Conspirator The Life of Colonel Dragutin T Dimitrijevic East European Monographs ISBN 978 0880331623 MacKenzie David 1982 Serbian Nationalist and Military Organizations and the Piedmont Idea 1844 1914 East European Quarterly 16 3 323 Remak Joachim 1971 The Origins of World War I 1871 1914 Holt Rinehart and Winston ISBN 978 0136427445 Zecevic Momcilo 2003 Proslost i vreme iz istorije Jugoslavije Prosveta ISBN 978 8607013937 Further reading editBatakovic Dusan T 2006 Nikola Pasic The Radicals and the Black hand challenges to parliamentary democracy in Serbia 1903 1917 Balcanica 37 143 69 doi 10 2298 BALC0637143B Blakley Patrick R F Narodna Odbrana The Black Hand Terrorist Faction that Divided the World PDF Oswego Historical Review 2 13 34 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Gilfond Henry 1975 The Black Hand at Sarajevo Bobbs Merrill ISBN 0672520702 OCLC 1692249 Jelavich Barbara 1991 What the Habsburg Government Knew about the Black Hand Austrian History Yearbook 22 131 50 doi 10 1017 S0067237800019913 S2CID 146532495 Neskovic Borivoje 1953 Istina o solunskom procesu Narodna knjiga External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Black Hand The Constitution of the Ujedinjenje ili Smrt Unification or Death Black Hand over Europe by Henri Pozzi 1935 Projekat Rastko 1935 1911 Lutz Hermann The Serbian Black Hand The Freeman Vol 7 N 164 pp 179 81 2 May 1923 John Paul Newman Black Hand in 1914 1918 online International Encyclopedia of the First World War Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Black Hand Serbia amp oldid 1221157443, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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