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Vladimir Ćopić

Vladimir "Senjko" Ćopić (8 March 1891 – 19 April 1939) was a Yugoslav revolutionary, politician, journalist and, as organizational secretary, the second in command of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia from April 1919 to August 1920.

Vladimir Ćopić during Spanish Civil War (1936-1939).

Early life edit

Vladimir Ćopić was born on 8 March 1891 in Senj to Jovan "Jovo" Ćopić and Amalija Ćopić (née Lončarić). His father descended from the village of Suvaja in Lika and was an ethnic Serb, and his mother hailed from an old Croatian merchant family of Senj. Jovo Ćopić was a clerk in Lika, while in Senj he initially worked as a tailor and later on at the local Orthodox church. Vladimir was the second youngest of nine children, the last three of which were baptized Eastern Orthodox.[1]

After graduating from a public elementary school in Senj, Ćopić enrolled at the Senj Gymnasium in 1901. During his time there, he was awarded a stipend by a foundation from Gospić. Ćopić was an average student and was held back in the fourth grade due to a conflict with one of his professors. During high school, he was a supporter of the Croatian nationalist Party of Rights. In April 1909, Ćopić organized his class to attend a memorial service at the Church of St Francis to Croatian nobles Zrinski and Frankopan, executed by the Habsburgs in 1671 in the Magnate conspiracy. Attending the event was strictly forbidden by the school as "anti-dynastic" and "anti-Austrian", and the students were sternly reprimanded with lowered grades in discipline.[2]

Student activism edit

In the autumn of 1910, Ćopić enrolled at the Faculty of Law in Zagreb. Despite retaining his stipend from the foundation, he worked during his studies, first as a manual laborer and later as an office worker. At the university, Ćopić started a friendship and correspondence with his professor, Izidor Kršnjavi. During his studies, Ćopić was still politically active as a Starčević supporter, and was friends and roommates with future high-ranking Ustaše member Mile Budak. In November 1910, soon after arriving in Zagreb, Ćopić attended the general assembly of the Starčevićist Academic Youth where he was made deputy councilor while Budak became the first secretary.[3]

In March 1912, he was an organizer of the pupil's strike against Ban Slavko Cuvaj. On 8 June 1912, former law student Luka Jukić attempted to assassinate Cuvaj in front of an inn where Ćopić was sitting with Budak and Ante Pavelić. He was arrested for this event along with Jukić, Đuro Cvijić and August Cesarec. Ćopić was soon freed due to a lack of evidence. On 4 December 1913, he was voted a member of the board of the Starčevićist magazine Mlada Hrvatska (Young Croatia). Ćopić was also the president of the "Kumičić" Academic Club. Both of these served as fronts for the Party of Rights, which Ćopić would later denounce.[3]

WW1 and captivity edit

In July 1914, Ćopić's studies were interrupted and he was conscripted to fight in World War I. He was initially called for training in Sušak in the Jelačić Regiment of the Austro-Hungarian army, where he stayed until the early fall. Ćopić then served as a cadet in the military barracks in Prague. By late 1914, with three of Ćopić's brothers also conscripted, his family was in a dire financial situation. On 5 January 1915, he joined the 79th Lika Regiment where his material condition improved.[4]

During his 6 months in Prague, Ćopić was initially critical of the local Czechs' lack of enthusiasm for the war. However, his contacts with the Czechs and frequent incidents of anti-Slavic sentiment from his commanders made him an opponent of the war and eventually the monarchy. Increasingly seen as politically unreliable, Ćopić was sent from unit to unit. He finally ended up in the majority Hungarian 31st Jäger Regiment fighting on the Carpathian Front on 24 March 1915. Ćopić was a sergeant in command of a squad which would end up surrendering to the Imperial Russian Army on 8 April.[4][5]

After spending a short while in a POW camp in eastern Ukraine, Ćopić was transferred to a camp in Tashkent. There, he acquainted himself with the writings of Leo Tolstoy and was called an anarchist. He also read his first Marxist theory during this time and became a convinced Bolshevik. In November 1915, the Serbian Royal Military Mission in Russia requested that the Russian government allow the formation of a volunteer detachment from captured Yugoslav fighters. Ćopić arrived in Odesa on 13 March 1916 to join the Serbian volunteer detachment, but was returned to captivity for refusing to swear an oath to King Peter because of his Yugoslavist and revolutionary beliefs. He was held in a camp in Bobrov from October 1917 to March 1918.[6]

October Revolution edit

After the October Revolution, Ćopić would start agitating for the Soviet government among his fellow POWs.[6] On 29 March 1918, Ćopić was allowed freedom of travel by the military-revolutionary committee of the Bobrov Soviet of Soldiers, Workers and Peasants. He would use this to advocate among the prisoners for joining the Red Army in the Russian Civil War.[5] At the time, Ćopić contended with a group of Czechoslovaks in the camp who were advocating joining the Czechoslovak Legion. Already in early April, he was traveling to and from Moscow to work in the Revolutionary Committee of Prisoners of War. There, he also briefly worked at the headquarters of the 4th Army.[7]

On 16 May, Ćopić was one of the founders of the Yugoslav Communist Group along with Vukašin Marković and Lazar Vukičević.[8] He was named a member of the Central Committee of the group on 15 July and became its secretary on 20 July. In the newly formed party, he was tasked with translation and distribution of Bolshevik literature to South Slavs. He translated several works by Vladimir Lenin. Ćopić also worked in journalism and often wrote in the magazine Svjetska revolucija (World Revolution), printed in Moscow in his native language.[9]

At the behest of the Yugoslav Communist Group, the People's Commissariat for Nationalities led by Joseph Stalin opened a department for South Slavs in late June 1918. The department was concerned with the affairs of Yugoslav captives who weren't party members. The president of the department was Vukašin Marković and on 15 August, Ćopić was made vice president and would act on Marković's behalf in his absence.[8][10] Ćopić and Marković disagreed on the treatment of Yugoslav captives, with Marković advocating their execution in case of Lenin's death and Ćopić advocating against it in light of their poverty and low education. During this time, Ćopić would also come into disagreement with Marković due to the latter's advocacy for a Balkan Federation. The department would temporarily replace the Serbian military mission and royal consulate.[10]

In early September, Ćopić was dispatched as part of a commission tasked with investigating anti-Bolshevik agitators in battalions staffed by Serbo-Croatian speakers. The commission surveyed the fighters in Saratov, Tsaritsyn and Astrakhan. Their task was completed successfully, and the Astrakhan unit was dissolved and reformed. Ćopić returned to Moscow on 15 October and became president of the Yugoslav Communist Group on 25 October 1918.[11]

On 5 November, the Yugoslav communists in Moscow decided to form the Communist Party (Bolsheviks) of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The new party leadership was chosen on 7 November, with Lazar Vukičević becoming president and Ćopić his vice president. The party was tasked primarily with inserting its members back into Yugoslavia and would go on to influence the formation and ideological orientation of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. Ćopić left for Zagreb in November, traveling via Smolensk, Minsk, Warsaw, Berlin and Austria with two other party members. He reached Zagreb in December 1918.[12]

Return to Yugoslavia edit

After returning to Zagreb in December 1918 with fellow Bolshevik Nikola Kovačević, Vladimir resided with his brother Milan Ćopić, a sergeant at the time, in the Daughters of Charity hospital. His brother's military rank made his activities inconspicuous to the authorities for a while. Immediately, he established contacts with the left wing of the former Social Democratic Party of Croatia and Slavonia. The first communist groups in Zagreb based on the principles of the Russian Bolsheviks were formed already in December. During this time, Ćopić collaborated with left-wing artists August Cesarec and Miroslav Krleža, as well as later leading party members Simo Miljuš and Đuro Cvijić. Members of the group dispersed to their hometowns to form chapters throughout the region. However, the former leadership of the Social Democratic Party was opposed to their ideas.[13]

From Zagreb, Ćopić went to his hometown of Senj, where he agitated among the local Bolshevik-adjacent social democrats, and tried to unite their organizations in the area in mid-January. During the month of January, Interior Minister Svetozar Pribićević wrote to the local police in Croatia on two occasions to arrest Ćopić at the border, unaware that he was already in the country. His activities around Senj ultimately led to his arrest on 21 January. He was soon released, only to be arrested again on 10 February, but not before establishing contact with Filip Filipović, who had also recently returned to the country with the same goal of forming a communist party.[13]

Unification Congress edit

Apart from Filipović's group which operated in Serbia and Bosnia, and Ćopić's and Kovačević's group which operated in Croatia and Slavonia, a third group of Yugoslav communists returned in February 1919 under the leadership of Nikola Grulović and Lazar Vukičević. They had continued the activities of the Yugoslav group in Russia, but were misinformed about Ćopić and Kovačević's agitation in Yugoslavia, being led to believe that they had united with the local social democrats. For this reason, they returned to form the Yugoslav Communist Revolutionary Alliance "Pelagić", or "Pelagićevci". The group adopted the name of 19th-century revolutionary Vasa Pelagić.[14]

The Pelagićevci were formally constituted on 27 February in Stražilovo, after which they elected an executive committee on 9 March. Ćopić was made part of the committee, though he was unable to join this meeting. The group adopted the platform that they would refuse to cooperate with the local social democrats until they agreed on the necessity of establishing a dictatorship of the proletariat. They operated mainly in Vojvodina, where they spread literature and pamphlets, especially the Budapest-based Crvena Zastava (English: Red Banner) which they imported from the recently formed Hungarian Soviet Republic starting in early April. Filipović's and Ćopić's networks of communist cells had both partial organizational ties to each other, as well as to the Pelagićevci. This led to the formation of a "troika" of agitators in the run-up to the formation of the Communist Party, which was led by Ćopić, Filipović and Kovačević, with Vukičević and Đuro Đaković as their deputies.[14]

From 20 to 23 April 1919, the Unification Congress was held in Belgrade. The congress served to unite the Serbian Social Democratic Party, the left wing of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia and Slavonia, the Social Democratic Party of Bosnia-Herzegovina and the Pelagićevci into a new communist party. Ćopić participated in the congress, having recently been released from prison due to Cvijić's connection to police commissioner Srđan Budisavljević. He was one of the 30 Croatian delegates, and one of the 10 Pelagićevci, along with Nikola Kovačević. The Pelagićevci were the furthest left group at the congress, and insisted on a strictly Bolshevik program, leading to the departure of moderate delegates. At the Unification Congress, the Socialist Labor Party of Yugoslavia (Communists), later to be renamed the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, was formed. A Central Committee was elected with Ćopić becoming organizational secretary, the second in command in the party after political secretary Filip Filipović.[15]

Interwar period edit

He was a chess player and musician and had briefly been a communist deputy in Yugoslavia. Later, under the name of 'Senko', he had been a leading member of the Yugoslav Communist Party in Moscow.[16]

Spanish Civil War edit

In February 1937, Colonel Gal was promoted to General to command a division and was replaced as commander and political commissar[17] of the XV International Brigade by Ćopić.[16] He was one of the highest ranking Yugoslav volunteers in the war.[18]

On the Battle of Jarama, the official report by Ćopić of fighting on 12 February, barely mentioned the appalling level of casualties under his command, but focused on the 'staunch heroism' of his troops repelling 'violent fascist attacks causing heavy losses on the enemy'.[19] The final act of the Battle was the futile attack by the Lincoln Battalion on 27 February. The battalion commander, Captain Robert Hale Merriman begged Ćopić (described as "rather inept") not to launch the attack fearing slaughter. Ćopić insisted it proceed and promised air and armoured support, which never came. Merriman was almost immediately wounded and the Battalion suffered 136 deaths.[20][21]

In August 1937 at the Battle of Belchite, he tasked Peter Daly's unit with capturing the town of Quinto and they were commanded on 25 August to capture Purburrel Hill, a height south of the town, on which 500 Rebel troops were entrenched behind barbed wire and concrete pill-boxes. Finding themselves unsupported and outnumbered against the defenders, the unit took heavy casualties and Peter Daly was wounded in the abdomen. Daly was taken away for aid while Paddy O'Daire took charge refusing the orders of his superior, Ćopić, to continue the suicidal attack, keeping his men dug in on the exposed hillside until nightfall and safe withdrawal. On the 26 August O'Daire, this time supported by the XV International Brigade's anti-tank battery, succeeded in breaking the enemy lines,[22] leading to the capture of 300 troops.

By April 1938 Spanish communist leaders wanted the replacement of many International Brigade commanders due to poor performance, and although André Marty disagreed, he had to compromise and General Walter and Ćopić were replaced.[23]

Death edit

Following the end of the war and Republicans' defeat, he was recalled to Moscow. Due to his Trotskyist views regarding communist governance, he was killed in Stalinist purges in 1939[24] along with many other leading Yugoslav communists in the country.

Personal life edit

His brother, Milan Ćopić, was in the International Brigades' prison at Camp Lucász.[5]

References and sources edit

  1. ^ Očak 1980, pp. 8–11.
  2. ^ Očak 1980, pp. 11–19.
  3. ^ a b Očak 1980, pp. 19–26.
  4. ^ a b Očak 1980, pp. 26–31.
  5. ^ a b c Eby 2007, pp. 66–67.
  6. ^ a b Očak 1980, pp. 31–35.
  7. ^ Očak 1980, pp. 35–45.
  8. ^ a b Požar 1989, pp. 54–60.
  9. ^ Očak 1980, pp. 45–48.
  10. ^ a b Očak 1980, pp. 53–58.
  11. ^ Očak 1980, pp. 58–62.
  12. ^ Očak 1980, pp. 62–68.
  13. ^ a b Očak 1980, pp. 71–77.
  14. ^ a b Očak 1980, pp. 77–80.
  15. ^ Očak 1980, pp. 80–84.
  16. ^ a b Thomas 2012, p. 567.
  17. ^ Baxell 2014, p. 139.
  18. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2020-04-20.
  19. ^ Baxell 2014, p. 149.
  20. ^ Clifford 2020, pp. 93–94.
  21. ^ Baxell 2014, p. 161.
  22. ^ Clifford 2020, pp. 131–132.
  23. ^ Beevor 2001, p. 327.
  24. ^ Thomas 2012, p. 926.

Sources edit

  • Očak, Ivan (1980). Vojnik revolucije: život i rad Vladimira Ćopića (in Croatian). Zagreb: Spektar.
  • Eby, Cecil D. (2007). Comrades and Commissars. University Park, PA: Pennsylvania State University Press. ISBN 9780271029108. Retrieved 16 May 2023.
  • Thomas, Hugh (2012). The Spanish Civil War (50th Anniversary ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-141-01161-5.
  • Baxell, Richard (2014). Unlikely Warriors. London: Aurum Press. ISBN 978-1-78131-233-9.
  • Clifford, Alexander (2020). Fighting for Spain. Yorkshire: Pen & Sword Military. ISBN 978-1-52677-438-5.
  • Beevor, Antony (2001). The Spanish Civil War. London: Cassell Military Paperbacks. ISBN 0-304-35840-1.
  • Požar, Petar (1989). Jugoslaveni - žrtve staljinskih čistki (in Serbian). Belgrade: Nova knjiga.

External links edit

  • Photo of Vladimir Ćopić - Senjko

vladimir, Ćopić, vladimir, senjko, Ćopić, march, 1891, april, 1939, yugoslav, revolutionary, politician, journalist, organizational, secretary, second, command, communist, party, yugoslavia, from, april, 1919, august, 1920, during, spanish, civil, 1936, 1939, . Vladimir Senjko Copic 8 March 1891 19 April 1939 was a Yugoslav revolutionary politician journalist and as organizational secretary the second in command of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia from April 1919 to August 1920 Vladimir Copic during Spanish Civil War 1936 1939 Contents 1 Early life 2 Student activism 3 WW1 and captivity 4 October Revolution 5 Return to Yugoslavia 6 Unification Congress 7 Interwar period 8 Spanish Civil War 9 Death 10 Personal life 11 References and sources 11 1 Sources 12 External linksEarly life editVladimir Copic was born on 8 March 1891 in Senj to Jovan Jovo Copic and Amalija Copic nee Loncaric His father descended from the village of Suvaja in Lika and was an ethnic Serb and his mother hailed from an old Croatian merchant family of Senj Jovo Copic was a clerk in Lika while in Senj he initially worked as a tailor and later on at the local Orthodox church Vladimir was the second youngest of nine children the last three of which were baptized Eastern Orthodox 1 After graduating from a public elementary school in Senj Copic enrolled at the Senj Gymnasium in 1901 During his time there he was awarded a stipend by a foundation from Gospic Copic was an average student and was held back in the fourth grade due to a conflict with one of his professors During high school he was a supporter of the Croatian nationalist Party of Rights In April 1909 Copic organized his class to attend a memorial service at the Church of St Francis to Croatian nobles Zrinski and Frankopan executed by the Habsburgs in 1671 in the Magnate conspiracy Attending the event was strictly forbidden by the school as anti dynastic and anti Austrian and the students were sternly reprimanded with lowered grades in discipline 2 Student activism editIn the autumn of 1910 Copic enrolled at the Faculty of Law in Zagreb Despite retaining his stipend from the foundation he worked during his studies first as a manual laborer and later as an office worker At the university Copic started a friendship and correspondence with his professor Izidor Krsnjavi During his studies Copic was still politically active as a Starcevic supporter and was friends and roommates with future high ranking Ustase member Mile Budak In November 1910 soon after arriving in Zagreb Copic attended the general assembly of the Starcevicist Academic Youth where he was made deputy councilor while Budak became the first secretary 3 In March 1912 he was an organizer of the pupil s strike against Ban Slavko Cuvaj On 8 June 1912 former law student Luka Jukic attempted to assassinate Cuvaj in front of an inn where Copic was sitting with Budak and Ante Pavelic He was arrested for this event along with Jukic Đuro Cvijic and August Cesarec Copic was soon freed due to a lack of evidence On 4 December 1913 he was voted a member of the board of the Starcevicist magazine Mlada Hrvatska Young Croatia Copic was also the president of the Kumicic Academic Club Both of these served as fronts for the Party of Rights which Copic would later denounce 3 WW1 and captivity editIn July 1914 Copic s studies were interrupted and he was conscripted to fight in World War I He was initially called for training in Susak in the Jelacic Regiment of the Austro Hungarian army where he stayed until the early fall Copic then served as a cadet in the military barracks in Prague By late 1914 with three of Copic s brothers also conscripted his family was in a dire financial situation On 5 January 1915 he joined the 79th Lika Regiment where his material condition improved 4 During his 6 months in Prague Copic was initially critical of the local Czechs lack of enthusiasm for the war However his contacts with the Czechs and frequent incidents of anti Slavic sentiment from his commanders made him an opponent of the war and eventually the monarchy Increasingly seen as politically unreliable Copic was sent from unit to unit He finally ended up in the majority Hungarian 31st Jager Regiment fighting on the Carpathian Front on 24 March 1915 Copic was a sergeant in command of a squad which would end up surrendering to the Imperial Russian Army on 8 April 4 5 After spending a short while in a POW camp in eastern Ukraine Copic was transferred to a camp in Tashkent There he acquainted himself with the writings of Leo Tolstoy and was called an anarchist He also read his first Marxist theory during this time and became a convinced Bolshevik In November 1915 the Serbian Royal Military Mission in Russia requested that the Russian government allow the formation of a volunteer detachment from captured Yugoslav fighters Copic arrived in Odesa on 13 March 1916 to join the Serbian volunteer detachment but was returned to captivity for refusing to swear an oath to King Peter because of his Yugoslavist and revolutionary beliefs He was held in a camp in Bobrov from October 1917 to March 1918 6 October Revolution editAfter the October Revolution Copic would start agitating for the Soviet government among his fellow POWs 6 On 29 March 1918 Copic was allowed freedom of travel by the military revolutionary committee of the Bobrov Soviet of Soldiers Workers and Peasants He would use this to advocate among the prisoners for joining the Red Army in the Russian Civil War 5 At the time Copic contended with a group of Czechoslovaks in the camp who were advocating joining the Czechoslovak Legion Already in early April he was traveling to and from Moscow to work in the Revolutionary Committee of Prisoners of War There he also briefly worked at the headquarters of the 4th Army 7 On 16 May Copic was one of the founders of the Yugoslav Communist Group along with Vukasin Markovic and Lazar Vukicevic 8 He was named a member of the Central Committee of the group on 15 July and became its secretary on 20 July In the newly formed party he was tasked with translation and distribution of Bolshevik literature to South Slavs He translated several works by Vladimir Lenin Copic also worked in journalism and often wrote in the magazine Svjetska revolucija World Revolution printed in Moscow in his native language 9 At the behest of the Yugoslav Communist Group the People s Commissariat for Nationalities led by Joseph Stalin opened a department for South Slavs in late June 1918 The department was concerned with the affairs of Yugoslav captives who weren t party members The president of the department was Vukasin Markovic and on 15 August Copic was made vice president and would act on Markovic s behalf in his absence 8 10 Copic and Markovic disagreed on the treatment of Yugoslav captives with Markovic advocating their execution in case of Lenin s death and Copic advocating against it in light of their poverty and low education During this time Copic would also come into disagreement with Markovic due to the latter s advocacy for a Balkan Federation The department would temporarily replace the Serbian military mission and royal consulate 10 In early September Copic was dispatched as part of a commission tasked with investigating anti Bolshevik agitators in battalions staffed by Serbo Croatian speakers The commission surveyed the fighters in Saratov Tsaritsyn and Astrakhan Their task was completed successfully and the Astrakhan unit was dissolved and reformed Copic returned to Moscow on 15 October and became president of the Yugoslav Communist Group on 25 October 1918 11 On 5 November the Yugoslav communists in Moscow decided to form the Communist Party Bolsheviks of Serbs Croats and Slovenes The new party leadership was chosen on 7 November with Lazar Vukicevic becoming president and Copic his vice president The party was tasked primarily with inserting its members back into Yugoslavia and would go on to influence the formation and ideological orientation of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia Copic left for Zagreb in November traveling via Smolensk Minsk Warsaw Berlin and Austria with two other party members He reached Zagreb in December 1918 12 Return to Yugoslavia editAfter returning to Zagreb in December 1918 with fellow Bolshevik Nikola Kovacevic Vladimir resided with his brother Milan Copic a sergeant at the time in the Daughters of Charity hospital His brother s military rank made his activities inconspicuous to the authorities for a while Immediately he established contacts with the left wing of the former Social Democratic Party of Croatia and Slavonia The first communist groups in Zagreb based on the principles of the Russian Bolsheviks were formed already in December During this time Copic collaborated with left wing artists August Cesarec and Miroslav Krleza as well as later leading party members Simo Miljus and Đuro Cvijic Members of the group dispersed to their hometowns to form chapters throughout the region However the former leadership of the Social Democratic Party was opposed to their ideas 13 From Zagreb Copic went to his hometown of Senj where he agitated among the local Bolshevik adjacent social democrats and tried to unite their organizations in the area in mid January During the month of January Interior Minister Svetozar Pribicevic wrote to the local police in Croatia on two occasions to arrest Copic at the border unaware that he was already in the country His activities around Senj ultimately led to his arrest on 21 January He was soon released only to be arrested again on 10 February but not before establishing contact with Filip Filipovic who had also recently returned to the country with the same goal of forming a communist party 13 Unification Congress editApart from Filipovic s group which operated in Serbia and Bosnia and Copic s and Kovacevic s group which operated in Croatia and Slavonia a third group of Yugoslav communists returned in February 1919 under the leadership of Nikola Grulovic and Lazar Vukicevic They had continued the activities of the Yugoslav group in Russia but were misinformed about Copic and Kovacevic s agitation in Yugoslavia being led to believe that they had united with the local social democrats For this reason they returned to form the Yugoslav Communist Revolutionary Alliance Pelagic or Pelagicevci The group adopted the name of 19th century revolutionary Vasa Pelagic 14 The Pelagicevci were formally constituted on 27 February in Strazilovo after which they elected an executive committee on 9 March Copic was made part of the committee though he was unable to join this meeting The group adopted the platform that they would refuse to cooperate with the local social democrats until they agreed on the necessity of establishing a dictatorship of the proletariat They operated mainly in Vojvodina where they spread literature and pamphlets especially the Budapest based Crvena Zastava English Red Banner which they imported from the recently formed Hungarian Soviet Republic starting in early April Filipovic s and Copic s networks of communist cells had both partial organizational ties to each other as well as to the Pelagicevci This led to the formation of a troika of agitators in the run up to the formation of the Communist Party which was led by Copic Filipovic and Kovacevic with Vukicevic and Đuro Đakovic as their deputies 14 From 20 to 23 April 1919 the Unification Congress was held in Belgrade The congress served to unite the Serbian Social Democratic Party the left wing of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia and Slavonia the Social Democratic Party of Bosnia Herzegovina and the Pelagicevci into a new communist party Copic participated in the congress having recently been released from prison due to Cvijic s connection to police commissioner Srđan Budisavljevic He was one of the 30 Croatian delegates and one of the 10 Pelagicevci along with Nikola Kovacevic The Pelagicevci were the furthest left group at the congress and insisted on a strictly Bolshevik program leading to the departure of moderate delegates At the Unification Congress the Socialist Labor Party of Yugoslavia Communists later to be renamed the Communist Party of Yugoslavia was formed A Central Committee was elected with Copic becoming organizational secretary the second in command in the party after political secretary Filip Filipovic 15 Interwar period editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2023 He was a chess player and musician and had briefly been a communist deputy in Yugoslavia Later under the name of Senko he had been a leading member of the Yugoslav Communist Party in Moscow 16 Spanish Civil War editIn February 1937 Colonel Gal was promoted to General to command a division and was replaced as commander and political commissar 17 of the XV International Brigade by Copic 16 He was one of the highest ranking Yugoslav volunteers in the war 18 On the Battle of Jarama the official report by Copic of fighting on 12 February barely mentioned the appalling level of casualties under his command but focused on the staunch heroism of his troops repelling violent fascist attacks causing heavy losses on the enemy 19 The final act of the Battle was the futile attack by the Lincoln Battalion on 27 February The battalion commander Captain Robert Hale Merriman begged Copic described as rather inept not to launch the attack fearing slaughter Copic insisted it proceed and promised air and armoured support which never came Merriman was almost immediately wounded and the Battalion suffered 136 deaths 20 21 In August 1937 at the Battle of Belchite he tasked Peter Daly s unit with capturing the town of Quinto and they were commanded on 25 August to capture Purburrel Hill a height south of the town on which 500 Rebel troops were entrenched behind barbed wire and concrete pill boxes Finding themselves unsupported and outnumbered against the defenders the unit took heavy casualties and Peter Daly was wounded in the abdomen Daly was taken away for aid while Paddy O Daire took charge refusing the orders of his superior Copic to continue the suicidal attack keeping his men dug in on the exposed hillside until nightfall and safe withdrawal On the 26 August O Daire this time supported by the XV International Brigade s anti tank battery succeeded in breaking the enemy lines 22 leading to the capture of 300 troops By April 1938 Spanish communist leaders wanted the replacement of many International Brigade commanders due to poor performance and although Andre Marty disagreed he had to compromise and General Walter and Copic were replaced 23 Death editFollowing the end of the war and Republicans defeat he was recalled to Moscow Due to his Trotskyist views regarding communist governance he was killed in Stalinist purges in 1939 24 along with many other leading Yugoslav communists in the country Personal life editHis brother Milan Copic was in the International Brigades prison at Camp Lucasz 5 References and sources edit Ocak 1980 pp 8 11 Ocak 1980 pp 11 19 a b Ocak 1980 pp 19 26 a b Ocak 1980 pp 26 31 a b c Eby 2007 pp 66 67 a b Ocak 1980 pp 31 35 Ocak 1980 pp 35 45 a b Pozar 1989 pp 54 60 Ocak 1980 pp 45 48 a b Ocak 1980 pp 53 58 Ocak 1980 pp 58 62 Ocak 1980 pp 62 68 a b Ocak 1980 pp 71 77 a b Ocak 1980 pp 77 80 Ocak 1980 pp 80 84 a b Thomas 2012 p 567 Baxell 2014 p 139 Ivan Ocak Jos jednom o Vladimiru Copicu PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2014 08 12 Retrieved 2020 04 20 Baxell 2014 p 149 Clifford 2020 pp 93 94 Baxell 2014 p 161 Clifford 2020 pp 131 132 Beevor 2001 p 327 Thomas 2012 p 926 Sources edit Ocak Ivan 1980 Vojnik revolucije zivot i rad Vladimira Copica in Croatian Zagreb Spektar Eby Cecil D 2007 Comrades and Commissars University Park PA Pennsylvania State University Press ISBN 9780271029108 Retrieved 16 May 2023 Thomas Hugh 2012 The Spanish Civil War 50th Anniversary ed London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 141 01161 5 Baxell Richard 2014 Unlikely Warriors London Aurum Press ISBN 978 1 78131 233 9 Clifford Alexander 2020 Fighting for Spain Yorkshire Pen amp Sword Military ISBN 978 1 52677 438 5 Beevor Antony 2001 The Spanish Civil War London Cassell Military Paperbacks ISBN 0 304 35840 1 Pozar Petar 1989 Jugoslaveni zrtve staljinskih cistki in Serbian Belgrade Nova knjiga External links editPhoto of Vladimir Copic Senjko nbsp nbsp This Spanish history related article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte nbsp nbsp This article about Croatian history is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vladimir Copic amp oldid 1181900093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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