Vojislav Grgur Pavlovic

Vojislav Grgur Pavlovic
  • Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts

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14
Publications
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Introduction
Skills and Expertise
Current institution

Publications

Publications (14)
Article
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Josip Broz vint a Moscou en février 1935 pour parfaire son parcours de révolutionnaire au sein du Komintern, le passage obligé pour tous les cadres du Parti communiste yougoslave. Or, son séjour a Moscou n’avait rien d’habituel, car il y devint le confident du tout-puissant Département des cadres de l’Internationale communiste dans le Parti yougosl...
Article
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Tito vécut les purges staliniennes principalement en dehors de l’Union soviétique, ce qui lui permit de survivre, mais aussi d’en profiter pour devenir le principal dirigeant du parti. Les séjours a Moscou, en 1938 et 1939 furent des rudes épreuves pour lui, mais par un savant mélange d’opportunisme politique et de l’égoisme personnel il sut se dis...
Article
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L’arrivée du général Franchet d’Espèrey à Salonique, en tant que commandant des troupes alliées sur le front d’Orient, en juin 1918 a créé les conditions pour que les armées alliées, menées par les divisions serbes et françaises, réussissent à percer la ligne du front le 15 septembre et obligent la Bulgarie à signer l’armistice le 29 septembre. La...
Chapter
The war in Yugoslavia led to the partition of the country and the emergence of a variety of small states upon which a common Communism legacy has left its mark. Today, their common objective is to join the European Union. As a preliminary stage, the Western Balkans (Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro and the Former Yugoslav Republi...
Article
The historiography considered the Treaty of London 1915 as the main obstacle for the creation of Yugoslavia, since Italy's territorial claims as expressed in the Treaty were in opposition to the creation of a common state of South Slavs. However, the threat that Italy's territorial aspirations in the Adriatic represented was also an important motiv...
Article
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La guerre victorieuse de la Serbie et la dissolution de l?Autriche-Hongrie avaient permis l?union du Royaume du Pierre I avec les provinces orientales de la partie hongroise de l?Empire des Habsbourg. Or, avant que leur union fut accept?e par les Alli?s, selon les termes de l?armistice ? Villa Giusti, une administration temporaire est mise en place...
Article
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La défaite italienne à Caporetto et la révolution bolchevique ont obligés les Alliés à modifier leurs buts de guerre, voire de tenter d’affaiblir le camp adverse par une paix séparée avec l’Autriche-Hongrie. Les Alliées anglo-saxons notamment voulaient ainsi prévenir la prolongation de la guerre, mais les différents pourparlers avec les représentan...
Article
La mémoire et l’identité nationale : la mémoire de la grande guerre en Serbie In Serbia commemoration of the First World War is flanked by the commemoration of two important political events : the Balkan wars and the creation of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Hence a dilemma whether commemoration of the First World War should be a p...
Article
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The initial phase of the First World War in the Balkans 1914-1915 was a natural continuation of the conflicts opened during the Balkan Wars, but national fervor now encompassed all of the Balkans, from Rijeka and Ljubljana to Athens, Sofia and Bucharest, because the role of the Dual Monarchy had changed from that of an arbiter to that of a particip...
Article
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The French government and statesmen had never considered the creation of a unified South-Slav state as an objective of the Great War. Officially acquainted with the project through the Niš Declaration in December 1914 they remained silent on the issue, as it involved both the dissolution of the Dual Monarchy and, following the Treaty of London in M...
Article
Full-text available
The conflict between France and Italy in the Balkans in fact was an attempt at reorganizing the Balkans and Central Europe following the disappearance of the Habsburg and Romanoff. The two Latin powers now had a unique opportunity to dictate a rearrangement of the Balkans, but their positions were diametrically opposed. Italy sought to establish do...
Article
Viscount de Fontenay was the French minister to the Royal Court of Serbia from September 1917 to March 1921. On several issues, such as the creation of the state of Yugoslavia and the Little Entente, his position varied considerably from the official policy of the Quai d'Orsay. A centralised Yugoslavia under Serbian leadership had his wholehearted...