Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T02:11:40.022Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Serbs as an Integrating and Disintegrating Factor

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2009

Dimitrije Djordjević
Affiliation:
Historical Institute, Belgrade

Extract

The development of nineteenth century Europe was marked by the evolution of the principle of nationalism, the democratization of political and social life, an economic boom, the progress of technology, and a spirit of realism and materialism in both science and culture. The diffusion of new national, social, and political ideas inevitably seriously disturbed the established order. Whereas in countries with a relatively homogeneous population from the point of view of nationality the resulting conflicts assumed the form of internal social and political crises, in multinational states such as the Habsburg and Ottoman empires national movements became disintegrating forces. Under the pressure of self-conscious nationalities, the old nationally heterogeneous monarchies entered their final period of crisis and gave way before those national forces which represented the dominant movements and ideas of a new era. The old integrating forces—the socially dominant feudal nobility and the army and bureaucracy, which were the most cohesive political elements and which were permeated with absolutism and legitimism—were destroyed by new and disintegrative nationalist and democratic movements that championed ideas of national, social, and political freedom. All the great national liberation movements of nineteenth century Europe from the time of the unification of the Italian and German nations and the liberation of the peoples of the Balkans until the collapse of the Habsburg and Ottoman empires took place at the expense of these two empires. The national crisis caused by the disintegrative aspirations of the various peoples within its boundaries made it difficult for the Habsburg monarchy to adjust to the new currents of democracy and social reform. As a result, the nationality question became more and more closely linked with the growing internal social and economic crisis. At the beginning of the twentieth century these three forces merged into a violent centrifugal force.

Type
The South Slavs
Copyright
Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 1967

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 Čubrilović, Vaso, Seobe i etničke promene u jugoslovenskim zemljama od XV do XIX veka [Migrations and Ethnic Changes in the South Slav Lands from the Fifteenth to the Nineteenth Centuries]. In Istorija naroda Jugoslavije [The History of the Peoples of Yugoslavia] (2 vols., Belgrade: Prosveta, 1960), Vol. II, pp. 790801Google Scholar; Ivić, Aleksa, Migracije Srba M Hrvatsku tokom XVI, XVII, i XVIII stoleća [The Migration of the Serbs into Croatia in the Course of the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries]. In Srpski etnografski zbornik Srpske kralj. Akademije nauka, Vol. XXVIII (Subotica: Srpska akademija nauka, 1923)Google Scholar; Ivić, Aleksa, Migracije Srba u Slavoniju tokom XVI, XVII, XVIII stoleća [The Migrations of the Serbs into Slavonia in the Course of the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth Centuries]. In Srpski etnografski zbornik Srpske kralj. Akademije nauka, Vol. XXXVI (Subotica: Srpska akademija nauka, n. d.)Google Scholar; Popovic, Dusan, Srbi u Banatu do kraja XVIII veka [The Serbs in the Banat up to the End of the Eighteenth Century] (Belgrade: SAN, Naučna knjiga, 1952)Google Scholar; Cvijić, Jovan, Balkansko poluostrvo i jugoslovenske zemlje [The Balkan Peninsula and the South Slav Lands] (2 vols., Belgrade: Drž. štamparija SHS, 1922), Vol. I, pp. 183203.Google Scholar

2 Popović, Dušan, Srbi u Vojvodini (3 vols., Novi Sad: Matica Srpska, 1963), Vol. III, p. 8Google Scholar. For the history of the Military Frontier, see Istorija naroda Jugoslavije, Vol. II, pp. 390397, 443444, and 650670Google Scholar; Rothenberg, Gunther, The Military Border in Croatia, 1740–1881 (Chicago, III.: University of Chicago Press, 1966)Google Scholar; Valentić, Mirko, “O nekim problemima Vojne Krajine u XIX stoleću” [Several Problems concerning the Military Frontier in the Nineteenth Century], Historiski Zbornik Jugoslavenske akademije znanosti i umjetnosti (Zagreb), Vol. XVII (1964), pp. 359383Google Scholar; Moačanin, Fedor, “Periodizacija Vojne Krajine XV–XIX stoleća” [The Periodization of the Military Frontier from the Fifteenth to the Nineteenth Century]Google Scholar, ibid., Vol. XIII (1960), pp. 111–117; and Kostić, Strahinja, “Etnografska slika Slavonske vojne granice Spiridona Jovića” [The Ethnographic Portrayal of the Slavonian Military Frontier by Spiridon Jović], Zbornik Matice srpske za književnost i jezik (Novi Sad), Vol. IX–X (19611962), pp. 114165.Google Scholar

3 During the war between Austria and the Ottoman empire in 1788–1789 57,000 Granićari were killed. See Popović, , Srbi u Vojvodini, Vol. III, p. 8.Google Scholar

4 Radonić, Jovan and Kostić, Mita, Srpske privilegije od 1690 do 1792 [Serbian Privileges from 1690 to 1792] (Belgrade: Srpska akademija nauka, 1954).Google Scholar

5 Zwitter, Fran, Šidak, Jaroslav, and Bogdanov, Vaso, Nacionalni problemi v habsburški monarhiji [Nationality Problems in the Habsburg Monarchy] (2nd ed., Ljubljana: Slovenska matica, 1962), pp. 217219.Google Scholar

6 Cvijić, , Balkansko poluostrvo i jugoelovenske zemlje, Vol. I, pp. 204247Google Scholar; Čubrilović, Vaso, Istorija političke misli u Srbiji XIX veka [The History of Political Thought in Serbia in the Nineteenth Century] (Belgrade: Prosveta, 1958), pp. 2849Google Scholar; Djurdjev, Branislav, “Uloga srpske crkve u borbi protiv osmanske vlasti” [The Role of the Serbian Church in the Struggle against Ottoman Rule], Pregled (Sarajevo), 1953, No. 1, pp. 3542.Google Scholar

7 Valentić, , “O nekim problemima Vojne Krajine u XIX stoleću,” p. 364.Google Scholar

8 With a few exceptions the commanders were all German. See Lopašić, Radoslav, Karlovac, Vol. VI (Zagreb: Matica Hrvatska, 1879), pp. 175214 and 225226.Google Scholar

9 Kostić, Mita, Carski duhovnici, propagatori Unije medju Srbima [Tsarist Priests, Propagators of Unity among the Serbs] (Sremski Karlovci: Srpska manastirska štamparija, 1922)Google Scholar; Grujić, Radoslav, Marčanska unija i unija u Zumberku [The Marcanski Union and the Union in Zumberk] (Sremski Karlovci: Patrijaršiska štamparija, 1938)Google Scholar; Ivić, Aleksa, Seoba Srba u Hrvatsku i Slavoniju, prilog ispitivanju srpske proślosti tokom 16 i 17 veka [The Migration of the Serbs into Croatia and Slavonia. A Contribution to the Investigation of the Serbian Past in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries] (Sremski Karlovci: Srpska manastirska štamparija, 1909), pp. 4547, 56, 64, and 6972.Google Scholar

10 Celap, Lazar, “Držanje Srba graničara za vreme rusko-turskog rata 1768–1774” [The Behavior of Serbian Frontier Guards during the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774], Zbornik Matice srpske za drustvene nauke (Novi Sad), Vol. XII (1956), pp. 6566.Google Scholar

11 Radojčić, Nikola, “Sava Tekelija,” Istorijski časopis (Belgrade), Vol. XII–XIII (1963), p. 9Google Scholar; Dimitrijević, Stevan, Stevana Stratimirovica mitropolita karlovačkog plan za oslobodjenje srpskog naroda [The Plan of Stevan Stratimirović, Metropolitan of Karlowitz, for the Liberation of the Serbian People] (Belgrade: Zadruga štamparskih radnika, 1926).Google Scholar

12 Djordjević, Dimitrije, Les révolutions nationales des peuples balkaniques 1804–1914 (Belgrade: Istorijski Institut, 1965), pp. 2436.Google Scholar

13 Gavrilović, Slavko, Gradja o Sremu i njegovim vezama sa Srbijom 1804–1815 [Material concerning Srem and its Relations with Serbia, 1804–1815], Vol. II (Sremski Karlovci: Istorijski archiv AP Vojvodine, 1965)Google Scholar; Čubrilović, Vaso, Prvi srpski ustanak i Bosanski Srbi [The First Serbian Uprising and the Serbs of Bosnia] (Belgrade: Geca Kon, 1939).Google Scholar

14 Vučo, Nikola, Privredna istorija Srbije [The Economic History of Serbia] (Belgrade: Naučna knjiga, 1955), p. 171.Google Scholar

15 Zwitter, , Šidak, , and Bogdanov, , Nacionalni problemi v habsburški monarhiji, pp. 216219Google Scholar; Popović, , Srbi u Vojvodini, Vol. III, pp. 7, 200201, and 305.Google Scholar

16 Novak, Grga, Prošlost Dalmacije [Dalmatia's Past] (2 vols., Zagreb: Hrvatski izdavalački zavod, 1944), Vol. II, p. 349.Google Scholar

17 Zwitter, , Šidak, , and Bogdanov, , Nacionalni problemi v habsburški monarhiji, pp. 226227.Google Scholar

18 Ibid., pp. 219 and 226; Vučo, , Privredna istorija Srbije, p. 171.Google Scholar

19 Statistički godišnjak Kraljevine Srbije [The Statistical Yearbook of the Kingdom of Serbia], Vol. XII (19071908) (Belgrade: Državna štamparija, 1913), pp. 3536 and 207.Google Scholar

20 Unfortunately, Serbian statistics give no information on the immigration into Serbia. The greater part of it undoubtedly came from the areas under Ottoman control. According to some sources, between 150,000 and 400,000 persons moved from Kosovo and Metohija into Serbia between 1876 and 1912. See Jovanović, Jovan, Južna Srbija od XVIII veka do oslobodjenja [Southern Serbia from the Eighteenth Century to the Liberation]. In Srpski narod u XIX veku, Vol. XVI (Belgrade: Geca Kon, n. d.), pp. 39 and 41Google Scholar; and Cvijić, Jovan, Balkanski rat i Srbija [The Balkan War and Serbia] (Belgrade: Državna štamparija, 1912), p. 8.Google Scholar

21 Statisticki godišnjak Kraljevine Srbije, Vol. XII (19071908), pp. 231232 and 234.Google Scholar

22 Jovanović, Slobodan, Ustavobranitelji i njihova vlada [The Constitutionalists and their Administration] (Belgrade: Geca Kon, 1933), p. 65.Google Scholar

23 In 1833 merchants from the Habsburg monarchy were given permission to open retail stores in Serbia. Vučo, Nikola, Raspadanje esnafa u Srbiji [The Collapse of the Retail Trade in Serbia] (2 vols., Belgrade: Istoriski Institut SAN, 1954), Vol. I, pp. 148149.Google Scholar

24 Vučković, Vojislav, “Nacionalno-revolucionarna akcija Srbije u Vojnoj Granici” [The National Revolutionary Activity of Serbia in the Military Border], Zbornik Matice srpske za drustvene nauke (Novi Sad), Vol. IX (1954), p. 5Google Scholar; Pavlović, Ivan, “Vojna granica i srpska vojska” [The Military Frontier and the Serbian Army], Glasnik istorijskog društva. (Novi Sad), Vol. IX, No. 3 (1936), pp. 335346.Google Scholar

25 Bogdanov, Vaso, Historija političkih stranaka u Hrvatskoj [The History of Political Parties in Croatia] (Zagreb: Novinsko izdavačko preduzeće, 1958), p. 163.Google Scholar

26 Skerlić, Jovan, Istorija nove srpske književnosti [The History of Modern Serbian Literature] (3rd ed., Belgrade: Rad, 1953), p. 345.Google Scholar

27 Šidak, Jaroslav, “Hrvatsko pitanje u Habsburškoj monarhiji” [The Croatian Question in the Habsburg Monarchy], Historijski pregled (Zagreb), Vol. IX, No. 2 (1963), pp. 104109.Google Scholar

28 Bogdanov, , Historija političkih stranaka u Hrvatskoj, pp. 117123Google Scholar. It should be noted that in a memorandum addressed to the Russian government in 1838 Ljudevit Gaj assigned a decisive role in the South Slav liberation movement to the regiments of the Military Frontier.

29 Vučković, Vojislav, “Prilog proučavanju postanka ‘Načertanija’ (1844) i ‘Osnovnih misli’ (1847)” [A Contribution to the Study of the Origin of ‘Načertanije’ and ‘Osnovne misli’], Jugoslovenska revija za medjnuarodno praso (Belgrade), Vol. VIII, No. 1 (1961), pp. 52 and 56.Google Scholar

30 Note, for instance, the following statement in it: “In all events Austria must be regarded as the permanent enemy of the Serbian state. Any political agreement with her is impossible and would be suicidal for Serbia.” Stranjaković, Dragoslav, “Kako je postalo Garašaninovo ‘Načertanije’” [How Garašanin's “Nacertanije” Originated], Spomenik srpske akademije nauka (Belgrade), Vol. XCI (1939), pp. 7677.Google Scholar

31 Čubrilović, , Istorija političke misli u Srbiji XIX veka, pp. 177178.Google Scholar

32 Vučković, , “Nacionalno-revolucionarna akcija u Vojnoj Granici,” pp. 34.Google Scholar

33 Stranjaković, Dragoslav, “Politička propaganda Srbije u jugoslovenskim pokrajinama (I deo)” [The Political Propaganda of Serbia in the South Slav Lands, Pt. 1], Glasnik Istorijskog društva u Novom Sadu, Vol. IX, Pt. 2, No. 24 (1936), pp. 155171Google Scholar; Vučković, Vojislav, “Neuspela politička akcija Matije Bana 1860–1861” [The Unsuccessful Political Action of Ban Matija in 1860–1801], Istorijski časopis (Belgrade), Vol. IX–X (1959), pp. 382384.Google Scholar

34 Lebl, Arpad, Revolucionarni pokret u Vojvodini 1848–1849. nacrt studije [The Revolutionary Movement in the Vojvodina, 1848–1849. An Outline] (Novi Sad: Matica Srpska, 1960), pp. 2223Google Scholar; Popović, , Srbi u Vojvodini, Vol. III, pp. 199200Google Scholar; Perović, Radoslav, Gradja za istoriju srpskog pokreta u Vojvodini 1848–1849 [Material concerning the History of the Serbian Movement in the Vojvodina in 1848–1849] (Belgrade: Istoriski Institut, 1952), pp. xixliGoogle Scholar; Gavrilović, Slavko, Srem u revoluciji 1848–1849 [Srem in the Revolution of 1848–1849] (Belgrade: Srpska akademija nauka, 1963).Google Scholar

35 Pavlović, Dragoljub, Srbija i srpski pokret u Južnoj Ugarskoj 1848–1849 [Serbia and the Serbian Movement in South Hungary in 1848–1849] (Belgrade: Srpska akademija nauka, 1904).Google Scholar

36 Krestić, Vasilije, Vojvodjanske izbeglice u Srbiji 1849 godine [Refugees from the Vojvodina in Serbia in 1849] (Novi Sad: Zbornik Matice srpske za društvene, 1961), p. 107.Google Scholar

37 Valentić, , “O nekim problemima Vojne Krajine u XIX stoledu,” pp. 368369.Google Scholar

38 Djordjević, , Lea révolutions nationales des peuples balkaniques 1804–1914, pp. 91100.Google Scholar

39 Ekmečić, Milorad, “Pokušaj organizovanja ustanka u Bosni 1860–1862 godine” [The Attempt to organize an Uprising in Bosnia in 1860–1862], Godišnjak istorijskog društva Bosne i Hercegovine (Sarajevo), Vol. IX (1957), pp. 73106Google Scholar; Durković-Jakšić, Ljubomir, “Prilog proučavanju propagandnog rada za oslobodjenje i ujedinjenje Jugoslovena 1860–1862” [A Contribution to the Study of the Propaganda Work on behalf of the Liberation and Unification of the South Slavs in 1860–1862], Istorijski zapisi (Cetinje), Vol. XXI, No. 1 (1964), pp. 1144Google Scholar; Jakšić, Grgur and Vučković, Vojislav, Spoljna politika Srbije za vlade kneza Mihaila [The Foreign Policy of Serbia during the Reign of Prince Michael] (Belgrade: Istorijski Institut, 1963), pp. 130135.Google Scholar

40 Kallay, to Beust, , Belgrade, , 05 18, 1868Google Scholar, Archives of the Serbian Academy of Sciences, Doc. No. 7940.

41 Novak, Grga, “Političke prilike u Dalmaciji 1862–1865” [Political Conditions in Dalmatia in 1862–1865], Radovi Instituta Jugoslavenske akademije u Zadru (Zadar), 1959, No. 4–5, pp. 533.Google Scholar

42 As it was stated in the journal Nazionale on 06 16, 1866Google Scholar, “The Dalmatian Slavs realized that their ties with Austria were also ties which linked 16 million Slavs together under the scepter of a single dynasty.” As cited in Novak, Grga, “Politicke prilike u Dalmaciji 1866–1876” [Political Conditions in Dalmatia from 1866 to 1876], Radovi JAZU u Zadru, 1960, No. 6–7, p. 37Google Scholar. See also Gross, Mirjana, “O nekim aspektima razvoja nacionalne ideje za vrijeme narodnog preporoda u Dalmaciji” [Several Aspects of the Development of the National Idea during the National Revival in Dalmatia], Historijski pregled (Zagreb), 1963, No. 1, pp. 1118.Google Scholar

43 Milutinović, Kosta, “Veze Srbije i Dalmacije u doba Narodnog preporoda” [The Relations between Serbia and Dalmatia during the Period of the National Revival], Zadarska reyija (Zadar), 1961, No. 4–5, pp. 268391Google Scholar; Bakotić, Lujo, Srbi u Dalmaciji od pada Mletačke republike do ujedinjenje [The Serbs in Dalmatia from the Fall of the Venetian Republic to Unification] (Belgrade: Geca Kon, n. d.), pp. 4264Google Scholar; Novak, Grga, “Podvojene narodne snage u Dalmaciji” [Dissenting National Forces in Dalmatia], Radovi Instituta JAZU u Zadru (Zadar), 1963, No. 10. pp. 1325.Google Scholar

44 Petrović, Nikola, Svetozar Miletić (Belgrade: Nolit, 1958).Google Scholar

45 Ibid., pp. 112–115, 122–125, and 169–180. See also Stajić, Vasa, Svetozar Miletić (Belgrade: Jugo-Istok, n. d.)Google Scholar; and Vučković, Vojislav, “Svetozar Miletić i Srbija (1861–1869)” [Svetozar Miletić and Serbia, 1861–1869], Godisnjak istorijskog društva Vojvodine (Novi Sad), 1951, pp. 7989.Google Scholar

46 Polith, Mihailo, Die Orientalische Frage und ihre organische Lösung (Vienna: Franz Leo's Verlagsexpedition, 1862)Google Scholar; Miletić, Svetozar, Die Orientfrage (Neusatz: Sip. nar. stamparija, 1877).Google Scholar

47 Skerlić, Jovan, Omladina i njena književnost 1848–1871 [The Omladina and Its Literature, 1848–1871] (2nd ed., Belgrade: Napredak, 1925)Google Scholar; Čubrilović, , Istorija političke misli u Srbiji XIX veka, pp. 240255Google Scholar; Jovanović, Slobodan, Druga vlada Miloša i Mihaila [The Second Reign of Miloš and Michael] (Belgrade: Geca Kon, 1933), pp. 393403Google Scholar; Milutinović, Kosta, “Crna Gora i Primorje u Omladinskom pokretu” [Montenegro and the Littoral in the Omladina Movement], Istoriski zapisi (Cetinje), Vol. IX, No. 1 (1953), pp. 145.Google Scholar

48 Marković, Svetozar, Srbija na Istoku [Serbia in the East] (Belgrade: Prosveta, 1946), p. 180Google Scholar; Masleša, Veselin, Dela. Svetozar Marković [The Works of Svetozar Marković], Vol. III (Sarajevo: Svjetlost, 1956), pp. 6471.Google Scholar

49 Čubrilović, Vaso, Prvi srpaki ustanak i bosanski Srbi [The First Serbian Uprising and the Serbs of Bosnia] (Belgrade: Geca Kon, 1939)Google Scholar; Vojno-istorijski institut JNA, Bune i ustanci u Bosni i Hercegovini u XIX veku [Rebellions and Uprisings in Bosnia and Herzegovina in the Nineteenth Century] (Belgrade: Vojno-istorijski Institut, 1962)Google Scholar; Pavićević, Branko, Crna Gora u ratu 1862 [Montenegro in the War of 1862] (Belgrade: Istorijski Institut, 1963)Google Scholar; Vojvodić, Vasa, “Rad Srbije na političkoj propagandi u Bosni i Hercegovini 1867–1872” [The Political Propaganda Work of Serbia in Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1867–1872], Istoriski Glasnik (Belgrade), 1960, No. 1–2, pp. 350; and No. 3–4, pp. 354.Google Scholar

50 Šišić, Ferdo, Pregled povijesti hrvatskoga naroda [A Survey of the History of the Croatian People] (3rd ed., Zagreb: Matica Hrvatska, 1962), p. 458Google Scholar. For Serbian activities in Bosnia from 1875 to 1878, see Ekmečić, Milorad, Ustanak u Bosni 1875–1878 [The Insurrection in Bosnia, 1875–1878] (Sarajevo: Veselin Maslesa, 1960).Google Scholar

51 Petrović, , Svetozar Miletić, p. 205.Google Scholar

52 Čubrilović, Vaso, Politička prošlost Hrvata [The Political Past of the Croatians] (Belgrade: Politika, 1939), pp. 9394.Google Scholar

53 Ekmečić, Milorad, “Spoljni faktori u balkanskim revolucijama 1849–1878” [Outside Factors in the Balkan Revolutions, 1849–1878], Jugoslovenski istorijski časopis (Belgrade), 1964, No. 3, p. 35.Google Scholar

54 Skarić, Vladislav, Nuri-Hadžić, Osman, and Stojanović, Nikola, Bosna i Hercegovina pod austro-ugarskom upravom [Bosnia and Herzegovina under Austro-Hungarian Rule]. Vol. XV of Srpski narod u XIX veku (Belgrade: Geca Kon, n. d.), p. 106.Google Scholar

55 Grdjić, Šćepan, Napor Bosne i Hercegovine za oslobodjenje i ujedinjenje [The Struggle of Bosnia and Herzegovina for Liberation and Unification] (Sarajevo: Narodna Odbrana, 1929), pp. 107123Google Scholar; Cvijić, Jovan, “Aneksija Bosne i Hercegovine i srpsko pitanje” [The Annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Serbian Question], in Autobiografija i drugi spisi [Autobiography and Other Writings] (Belgrade: Srpska knjiž. zadruga, 1965), pp. 212 and 216.Google Scholar

56 Kapidžic, Hamdija, Hercegovački ustanak 1882 [The Uprising of 1882 in Herzegovina] (Sarajevo: Veselin Masleša, 1958).Google Scholar

57 Skarić, , Nuri-Hadžić, , and Stojanović, , Bosna i Hercegovina pod austro-ugarskom npravom, pp. 33101.Google Scholar

58 Bakotić, , Srbi w Dalmaciji od pada Mletačke republike do ujedinjenja, p. 67.Google Scholar

59 Ibid., pp. 89, 126, and 133.

60 Prodanović, Jaša, “Srpska narodna samostalna stranka u Hrvatskoj” [The Serbian National Independence Party in Croatia], in Enciklopedija St. Stanojevica, Vol. IV (Zagreb: Bibliografski Zavod, 1929), pp. 348350Google Scholar; Prodanović, Jaša, “Radikalna stranka u Ugarskoj” [The Radical Party in Hungary]Google Scholar, ibid., pp. 627–628.

61 Narodna radikalna stranka [National Radical Party], Program i Statut [Program and Statutes] (Belgrade: Glavni Odbor, 1881), pp. 910.Google Scholar

62 Djordjević, Dimitrije, Carinski rat Austro-Ugarske i Srbije 1906–1911 [The Customs War between Austria-Hungary and Serbia, 1906–1911] (Belgrade: Istorijski Institut, 1962), pp. 4694 and 267275Google Scholar; Aleksić, Ljiljana, Rad sprske vlade na zajmu 1904–1906 godine [The Work of Serbian Governments in the Field of Credit, 1904–1906]. In Zbornik radova: Istorija XX veka, Vol. IV (Belgrade: Institut društvenih nauka, 1962), pp. 141249.Google Scholar

63 Djordjević, Dimitrije, “Austro-srpski sukob oko projekta Novopazarske železnice” [The Austro-Serbian Conflict over the Novi Pazar Railroad Project], Istoriski časopis (Belgrade), Vol. VII (1957), pp. 213248Google Scholar; Djordjević, Dimitrije, “Projekt Jadranske železnice u Srbiji 1896–1912” [The Adriatic Railroad Project in Serbia, 1896–1912], Istoriski glasnik (Belgrade), 1956, No. 3–4, pp. 333.Google Scholar

64 Note dated January 19, 1912, Serbian State Archives (Belgrade), The Papers of Milovanović, Carton X/1.

65 Skerlić, Jovan, “Omladinski kongresi” [The Congresses of the Omladina], Srpski književni glasnik (Belgrade), No. 2 (09 16, 1904), pp. 123127.Google Scholar

66 Djordjević, Dimitrije, Pokusaji srpsko-ugarske saradnje i zajedničke akcije 1908 godine [Attempts at a Serbian-Hungarian Rapprochement and Common Action in 1906]. In Zbornik radova: Istorija XX veka, Vol. II (Belgrade: Institut društvenih nauka, 1961), pp. 353384Google Scholar; Gross, Mirjana, Vladavina hrvatsko-srpske koalicije 1906–1907 [The Rule of the Croatian-Serbian Coalition, 1906–1907] (Belgrade: Institut društvenih nauka, 1960), pp. 1819.Google Scholar

67 Djordjević, Dimitrije, Carinski rat Austro-Ugarske i Srbije, pp. 570571Google Scholar; Djordjević, Dimitrije, Milovan Milovanović (Belgrade: Prosveta, 1962), pp. 156157.Google Scholar

68 Živanović, Milan, “Dve demonstracije u Splitu i šibeniku 1912” [Two Demonstrations in Split and Šibenik in 1912], Radovi Instituta Jugoslavenske akademije u Zadru (Zadar), 1957, No. 3, pp. 327352.Google Scholar