Notes
Slide Show
Outline
1
The Impossible Country: Yugoslavia
  • Vidovdan: Promulgation of the Yugoslav Constitution on 28 June 1921
    • Its acceptance was questionable among Croats, Slovenes, Muslims and Albanians
    • 2 groups were left out:
      • The Croat Republican Peasant Party of Stjepan Radić would not participate.
      • The Communist Party had been declared illegal.
2
The HRSS (Croat Republican Peasant Party)
  • Supported a “federalist” Yugoslavia against Serbian “centralizers”
  • For the first five years of Yugoslavia, the HRSS stood outside the system.
  • Serbians believed that they deserved to be on top because of WWI.
  • The HRSS won most local elections in Croatia in the early 1920s and was not trusted by the Karadjordjević king.
3
Conflict Leading to Cooperation
  • Followers of Yugoslavian federalism broke away from Pašić and the “Greater Serbia” idea and were supported by King Aleksander, but also opposed Croatian nationalists.
  • King Aleksander approached Radić in prison and was able to broker an agreement between Pašić and Radić to form the R-R “Republican-Radical” coalition.
  • The prosperity of the 1920s caused the Croation and Serbian middle classes to favor cooperation between their political leaders.
4
The End of Cooperation
  • Summer 1928: Assassination of Radić by a Serbian Radical
  • On January 6, 1929: Aleksandar seized power and declared the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
5
The Depression and Yugoslavia
  • Yugoslavia had failed to industrialize after World War I, so the 1929 Crash and the Great Depression that followed wreaked havoc on it.
  • 72.3% of the country’s national debt was owned by foreigners.
  • Collapse of the Russian, Austrian, and Ottoman Empires had removed the stable networks of agricultural supply and demand upon which the Balkans depended.
  • Most Balkan banks were underwritten by German and Austrian banks.
  • Balkan economies turned to subsistence.
  • The rise of dictators in uncertain times.
6
King Aleksandar
  • Dictatorship as a “necessary evil”
  • Reliance on the Croation sculptor Mestrovic
  • The rise of Ante Pavelic, who fled Yugoslavia in 1929.
  • Pavelic formed the Ustaše Croatian Revolutionary Organization in exile in Italy.
  • Mussolini backed the Ustaše while negotiating with Aleksandar, who was assassinated in 1934 by the VMRO and the Ustaše
7
Germany vs. Italy in 1930sYugoslavia
  • The Italians pursued expansion on the Adriatic
  • After 1933, Germans focused on Ergänzungswirtschaft (“economic expansion”) in Southeastern Europe as a cornerstone of their policy of European domination.
  • Germany originally was pro-Serb and anti- Ustaše