Skip to content
Category

Yugoslav Partisans

page 1
Yugoslav Partisans
defunct Communist-led Yugoslav resistance against the Axis in WWII (1941-1945)
Republic of Užice
short-lived former country of liberated territory in World War II Europe
Death to fascism, freedom to the people
Yugoslav Partisan motto
Uprising in Montenegro
conflict
National Committee for the Liberation of Yugoslavia
provisional executive body of the Federal Democratic Republic of Yugoslavia
Bihać Republic
Yugoslav territory liberated from the Nazis
Đorđe Andrejević-Kun
Yugoslav painter (1904-1964)
Titovka
Yugoslav side cap
Unitary National Liberation Front
Yugoslavian political organization
Partisan Supreme Headquarters
Shrine to the Revolution
memorial
Sejdo Bajramović
Serbian politician
triglavka
thumb|The triglavka or Triglav cap was part of the Yugoslav Partisan uniform in Croatia, Slovenia and western Bosnia. The type with a long edge at the back was the most practical and the majority of the specimens preserved are of this type. The triglavka or Triglav cap (in Slovenia) or the partizanka or Partizan cap (in Croatia) is a side cap that was a part of the Yugoslav Partisan uniform in Croatia, Slovenia and western Bosnia. There, it was the most characteristic part of Partisan clothing. Despite its common name in Slovenia, the cap's design was not inspired by Mount Triglav, but was a c
Emanuel Čučkov
Macedonian statesman (1901-1967)
Ilya Golenishchev-Kutuzov
Russian writer (1904–1969)
Davorjanka Paunović
Yugoslav partisan and Josip Broz Tito's mistress
Partisan Long March
milirary maneuver in World War II
Macedonian Partisans
Communist and antifascist resistance movement
National Liberation Movement in Croatia
guerrilla force in WWII Yugoslavia
Main Staff of the National Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments of Serbia
Branislav Šoškić
President of Montenegro
Đuro Bošković
Yugoslav lawyer and revolutionary of the National Liberation struggle
German–Yugoslav Partisan negotiations
March 1943 ceasefire and prisoner exchange talks
Sabotage at the General Post Office in Zagreb
political sabotage movement
Bombaši
Čačalica
Čačalica () is a 208m high hill above Požarevac, which contains a memorial park with same name, Memorial Park Čačalica (Спомен парк Чачалица), that was built in 1962 and includes 28 hectares. The authors of the monuments inside the park are architects Branislav Stojanović and sculptor S. Mišić. The memorial complex is built on a place where during World War II over 3,000 Yugoslav Partisans and their supporters were executed. There is a symbolic monument wall with bullet holes in the place where remains of those killed were buried. There is also a monument dedicated to soldiers of the Red Army