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Topic: Nikola Pasic


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  First World War.com - Who's Who - Nikola Pasic
Nikola Pasic (1845-1926) dominated the Serbian political scene for the first two decades of the twentieth century, forming no fewer than 22 cabinets during his numerous periods served as his country's Prime Minister.
Born in Zajecar, on the borders of Serbia and Bulgaria, Pasic engaged himself in radical politics and was elected a member of the Skupstina (National Assembly) in 1878, forming the Radical Party in 1881.
Pasic remained opposed to the notion of a union of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, and would rather have settled for an enlargement of Serbia via territory gains from a beaten Austro-Hungarian empire.
www.firstworldwar.com /bio/pasic.htm   (935 words)

  
 Nikola Pasic
Nikola Pasic was born in Zajecar on the borders of Serbia and Bulgaria in 1845.
Pasic escaped to Austria and on the accession of King Peter in 1904 became prime minister of Serbia and held power for most of the next twenty years.
Dragutin Dimitrijevic, the chief of the Intelligence Department in the Serbian Army and the man behind the assassination was arrested and on 23rd May 1917, Dimitrijevic was found guilty of treason and sentenced to death.
www.world-war-1.info /figures/nikola-pasic.php   (479 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Nikola Pasic (Yugoslavian History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
Nikola Pasic[both: nE´kOlA pA´shich] Pronunciation Key, 1845?–1926, Serbian statesman.
Exiled (1899) by King Alexander, he returned to power after the accession (1903) of Peter I and virtually controlled Serbia in the years preceding World War I. Strongly pro-Russian and advocating the creation of a greater Serbia, he adopted a violently anti-Austrian policy after the annexation by Austria of Bosnia and Hercegovina.
Pasic and his party grew increasingly conservative in the latter part of his career.
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/P/Pasic.html   (344 words)

  
 The Kosovo Chronicles, by Dusan Batakovic (Part 2e)
Pasic then evaluated it was wiser to intervene immediately than wait for a bulk army to muster in Albania with which an entire Serbian army would be forced to fight.
Pasic replied to protests from the allies that a temporary action was at stake and that the Serbian troops would withdraw as soon as Essad Pasha's rule was consolidated.
Pasic pointed out to Essad Pasha that the Entante Powers considered him a friend and a "kind of ally", and that after their victory his alliance would be rewarded with guarantees from the powers.
www.snd-us.com /history/dusan/kc_part2e.htm   (8040 words)

  
 First World War.com - Encyclopedia - The Corfu Declaration
Chiefly responsible for devising the Corfu Declaration was the Serbian Prime Minister Nikola Pasic and the Croatian exile Ante Trumbic.
The agreement was a triumph for the latter who had worked to convince Pasic's Serbian government to sponsor the notion of a union of the Croats, Slovenes and Slavs, an idea regarded with great mistrust by Pasic who remained intent upon the simple expansion of Serbia via territorial gains from a beaten Austro-Hungarian empire.
Under pressure, Pasic compromised with the agreement of the Corfu Declaration of July 1917, although he subsequently worked behind the scenes in an attempt to discredit the Yugoslav Committee, fearful that the Allied governments would regard the Committee as the rightful government in exile once the war was over.
www.firstworldwar.com /atoz/corfudeclaration.htm   (347 words)

  
 World War I - Outbreak of the War   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
At the same time Nikola Pasic, The Prime Minister of Serbia, was being informed of this plot by Major Voja Tankosic.
Pasic gave orders for the three men to be arrested when they tried to leave the country.
On the 25th of July 1914, Nikola Pasic, the Prime Minister of Serbia, said he would be violating "Serbia's Constitution and criminal in law" and could not hand over these men.
techcenter.davidson.k12.nc.us /Group9/outbreak.htm   (1070 words)

  
 Carl Savich | Columns | serbianna.com
Moreover, Pasic and Serbian minister in Vienna, Jovan Jovanovic, were convinced that ãSerbia needed a long period of peace---perhaps a generation or more---in order to consolidate its territorial gains before completing the process of Yugoslav unification.(65)äThe Balkan Wars had devastated the economy and the army.
Pasic preferred a style that was indecisive, that dragged on and did not require a decision, dilatory and stalling tactics, and procrastination.
Pasic was engaged in an election campaign at the time of the assassination and had to take a strong nationalist line.Luigi Albertini,however, maintained that Serbia was willing to accept all of the Austrian terms and that only after receiving notice of Russian support on June 25 did Serbia argue for no violation of sovereignty.
www.serbianna.com /columns/savich/009.html   (3419 words)

  
 AIM | DOSSIERS > MONARCHS IN THE BALKAN
At the time, unitarian supporters in Montenegro, who were mostly educated in Belgrade, assisted by Serbian Premier Nikola Pasic and the Karadjordjevic dynasty, succeeded in including Montenegro as part of Serbia in the newly formed kingdom of Yugoslavia.
King Nikola's attempts to restore his influence and Montenegro from exile, through his remaining diplomatic relations with the leading European countries, were in vain.
Prince Nikola II Petrovic-Njegos, however, would see another Montenegro after the remains of the royal couple were transferred from San Remo, Italy, to Cetinje, in October, 1989.
www.aimpress.ch /dyn/dos/archive/data/2001/10719-dose-01-02.htm   (1136 words)

  
 Serbian nationalism from the "Nacertanije" to the Yugoslav Kingdom
In the 1890s Pasic was Serbian ambassador to Russia, sent there by the king as a way to get him far away from the levers of power in Belgrade.
Actually, Pasic regarded the army as a dangerous rival and his Radical Party was to blame for arrears in pay, but the officers were not sophisticated enough to see this.
Prime Minister Pasic secured the votes of forty Slovene and Bosnian Muslim representatives by promising jobs for their co-nationals on the state railways, and the 1921 Constitution passed by a vote of 223 to 35.
www.lib.msu.edu /sowards/balkan/lect13.htm   (4590 words)

  
 Prelude To World War I: Balkan Wars and Serbo-Albanian Relations
When Serbia's prime minister, Nikola Pasic, asked what they should do in the face of Austrian intransigence, Sazonov replied: "We are ready to defend the political and economic emancipation of Serbia and its exit to the sea across Albanian territory [meaning free transit]...
Nikola Pasic of Serbia told King Nikola of Montenegro: "The sacrifice is difficult, but it must be borne when the whole of Europe demands it." And Tsar Nicholas II of Russia advised the same thing.
Nikola, the king of Montenegro, did not believe it when, from his mountain view of the sea, he observed an international naval force (Austria-Hungary, France, and England) poised in the blue waters.
www.srpska-mreza.com /bookstore/kosovo/kosovo5.htm   (4747 words)

  
 Sitzfleisch as Policy: Nikola Pasic and the Consequences of Procrastination   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
  In this sense, Pasic's failure to act proactively to prevent the assassination can be seen not as a failure, but simply as the standard political habit of a professional politician who was unlucky enough to become a focal point of angry disputes and long-held grudges that would explode into the First World War.
  As part of this denial, Pasic claimed that Jovanovic had accused him of making the warning during a cabinet meeting, but Jovanovic stated that he had made no such claim and that Pasic had told Jovanovic and a select few others of the matter in the course of a private conversation.
           Pasic was at the time a prominent politician from the Radical Party and the new regime installed him as prime minister.
www.libarts.ucok.edu /swssr/Journal/landolfi2.htm   (3404 words)

  
 [No title]
Thus the conference to commemorate Nikola Pasic, one of the chief figures in the unification of Yugoslavia in 1918, served the purpose of promoting patriotism and unity among Serbs.
As the first conference devoted to Pasic held in Serbia, it represented also atonement for the negative and condemnatory approach towards Pasic and the Karadjordjevic dynasty prevalent during the Tito era.
As the sole participant from the United States, I read or summarized in Serbian portions of a paper on "Nikola Pasic, the 'Black Hand,' and the Salonika Trial of 1917." The only other foreign participants were Sofija Skoric, a librarian from Toronto, Canada, and two talented young Russian doctoral candidates from Moscow.
coursesa.matrix.msu.edu /~fisher/bosnia/readings/MacKenzie1.html   (3317 words)

  
 1996/07/08 20:08 WHAT DO SERB PARTIES IN RS HAVE TO OFFER?
Dr Nikola Poplasen, is in favour of the most urgent union with Serbia, whatever it may cost.
Back in 1993, National Radical Party "Nikola Pasic" was founded from a faction of this party, and then Radical Party "Nikola Pasic" was founded in the second half of 1995, headed by Banja Luka oil dealer Branko Djukic, a man who publicly brags that he has not even regularly completed elementary school.
The SLS of Miodrag Zivanovic has no candidate for the highest posts in the state and the parliament in RS and B&H. The name of the leader of SNS Milorad Dodik is not on the list either, nor is the president of JUL for RS Mile Ivosevic, nor any member from the NRS RS.
www.aimpress.ch /dyn/trae/archive/data/199607/60708-007-trae-sar.htm   (1690 words)

  
 Montenet - History of Montenegro: Podgorica's Assembly 1918
During the WW1 the unification of Montenegro and Serbia was the primary task of supporters of Greater Serbia project, led by Serbian Prime Minister Nikola Pasic.
Pasic's aim was to just annex Montenegro without much public discussion and eventual negotiations.
For that reason the Serbian government, and Pasic personally, formed the 'movement for unification' and embarked on a campaign (1916 and 1917), that was to show necessity and inevitability of unification.
www.montenet.org /history/podgskup.htm   (1013 words)

  
 June 11, 1996 Vreme News Digest Agency No 244
The changes were to introduce an increase in the number of districts to 27 in Serbia and 12 in Montenegro.
The Nikola Pasic Radical Party shied away and without their votes the authorities don't even have a simple majority.
The session was rescheduled for June 4 but the bargaining with the Pasic Radicals wasn't done by then and we don't know when the chamber of citizens will convene.
www.scc.rutgers.edu /serbian_digest/244/t244-2.htm   (659 words)

  
 Yugoslavia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
The Yugoslav idea, that is the idea of the union of all South Slavs in a common state on the basis of linguistic and cultural similarities, was made popular in the 1830s and 1840s by Croatian intellectuals like linguist Ljudevit Gaj and Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer.
These differing conceptions of what Yugoslavia should be would lead to its unraveling, the first one in the late 1930s and the second one in the early 1990s.
Exiled on the island of Corfu and stunned by the defeat of Russia, Serbian Prime Minister Nikola Pasic signed the Declaration of Corfu in July 1917 which called for the creation of a "Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes".
www.geohistory.com /GeoHistory/GHMaps/GeoWorld/yugo.html   (2338 words)

  
 Trenches on the Web - Timeline: Jul-1914: The July Crisis
Serbian Prime Minister Nikola Pasic renounces the Black Hand and orders all public meeting places closed.
Pasic and many of his cabinet are in the southern provinces on a political tour.
Pasic and the cabinet are called back to Belgrade.
www.worldwar1.com /tlplot.htm   (2611 words)

  
 TOB - Trg Nikole Pašića (Nikola Pasic Square)
TOB - Trg Nikole Pašića (Nikola Pasic Square)
The monument to the great statesman Nikola Pašić was erected in 1998 at the center of the square that also bears his name.
The building followed the style of Italian renaissance with some antiquity-styled decorations.
www.tob.co.yu /english/zasto_bg/bg_amb/centar/pasicev.htm   (400 words)

  
 The Life Story of Bishop Nikolaj Velimirovic - New Chrysostom
At the beginning of the World War I, in 1915, he was sent, under the government of Nikola Pasic, to England and the U.S.A. to suppress the propaganda against the Serbs and to propagate the just fight of the Serbs.
Pasic answered, "You will know when the time comes"!
During the next four years (1915-1919), Nikolaj was in, in churches, schools, universities, hotel rooms, and other places of England and the U.S.A., trying to explain the just fight of Serbian people, for freedom and against the Austrians.
www.pnhz-sabac.org.yu /nikolaj_eng.htm   (801 words)

  
 First World War: Lesson 3 (Austro-Hungary and Serbia)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Read about (i) Nikola Pasic (ii) Milan Ciganovic (iii) Dragutin Dimitrijevic (iv) Voja Tankosic and then provide an answer to each of the following statements.
(a) Nikola Pasic and the Serbian government knew there was a plot to kill Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo.
(c)Nikola Pasic and the Serbian government was guilty of complicity in the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand.
www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk /A3FWW.htm   (423 words)

  
 Main library "Svetozar Markovic" in Zajecar
On 24th of September was held literary evening dedicated to poet Zivorad Nedeljkovic, winner of "Zmajeva nagrada" and awarded with "Branko Miljkovic" prize for book "Tačni stihovi" published by National library "Stefan Prvovencani" from Kraljevo, in Nikola Pasic's memorial.
Danilo Nikolic, winner of "Mesa Selimovic prize" for novel "Jesenja svila", prezented Zajecar's public his new novel on an literary evening held in Nikola Pasic's Memorial.
Vasa Pavkovic, literary critic spoke of novel "Hobo", and Nikola Djurickov, an actor, read parts from it.
www.biblio-za.org.yu /english/promotions   (215 words)

  
 SRNA REVIEW OF DAILY NEWS, April 25, 1996
BANJALUKA - The president of the RS People's Radical Party "Nikola Pasic", Dubravko Prstojevic, stated that forcible Muslim attempts to enter the RS territory represent the violation of the Dayton agreement and that instigate the renewal of fighting.
He emphasised that the medical institutions in Banjaluka during the war provided health care for a large number of soldiers and civilians, and because of that this city is chosen as a place for organising this meeting.
BELGRADE - The president of the Serbian Liberal Party, Nikola Milosevic, stated that the entrance of Croatia in the Council of Europe testifies about another great triumph of Croa tian diplomacy and at the same time about catastrophic defeat of Yugoslav foreign policy.
www.hri.org /news/balkans/srna/1996/96-04-25.srna.html   (443 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Nikola Pashitch (Yugoslavian History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
AllRefer.com - Nikola Pashitch (Yugoslavian History, Biography) - Encyclopedia
You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Yugoslavian History, Biographies > Nikola Pashitch
More articles from AllRefer Reference on Nikola Pashitch
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/X/X-Pashitch.html   (112 words)

  
 Best Fountains of Eastern Europe: The Poll - SkyscraperCity   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Nikola Pasic Square Fountain (Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro)
In ancient times, fountains served as places to get water for city dwellers.
This will refresh them in your mind, allowing you to make a wiser choice.
www.skyscrapercity.com /showthread.php?t=221073   (835 words)

  
 Nikola Pasic's Square photo - Vlado Marinkovic photos at pbase.com
Nikola Pasic's Square photo - Vlado Marinkovic photos at pbase.com
all galleries >> Belgrade, Serbia (Beograd, Srbija)) > Nikola Pasic's Square
Situated between Terazije, Bulevar Kralja Aleksandra and Decanska Street, it is the youngest Belgrade square.
www.pbase.com /image/28885809   (342 words)

  
 [No title]
1895 - 1896 Nikola D. Stevanovic 1852 - 1922 1896 - 1897 Nikola Pasic 1845 - 1926 1897 - 189.
In 1870 the southern parts were detached to become the second Eparchy of Boka Kotorska and in 1873 both Eparchies, which till then had been subject to the Patriarchate of Sremski Karlovci in Hungary, were transferred to the - mainly Romanian - Metropolitanate of Czernowitz.
Eparchs 1853 - 1890 Stefan Knezevic 1806 - 1890 1890 - 1911 Nikodim (Nikola) Milas 1845 - 1915 1911 - 1913...
www.geocities.com /CapitolHill/Rotunda/2209/Yugoslavia_notes.html   (1596 words)

  
 Table of contents for Library of Congress control number 2005467110   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-15)
Table of contents for Selected essays on Serbian and Russian literatures and history / Nikola Moravéceviâc.
Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog.
59 The Portrait of Nikola Pasic in Dobrica (osic's Novel Time of Death......................
www.loc.gov /catdir/toc/fy055/2005467110.html   (195 words)

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