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  1. Marshal of Yugoslavia. Shoulder boards for the Ground Forces, Air Force and the Navy. Marshal of Yugoslavia was the highest military distinction, rather than a military rank of the Yugoslav People's Army. In military hierarchy it was equivalent to Marshal ( field marshal ), and, simultaneously, a Yugoslav honorific title.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › YugoslaviaYugoslavia - Wikipedia

    Western attempts to reunite the Partisans, who denied the supremacy of the old government of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and the émigrés loyal to the king led to the Tito-Šubašić Agreement in June 1944; however, Marshal Josip Broz Tito was in control and was determined to lead an independent communist state, starting as a prime minister. He ...

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    Tito was born in Komrovec, Croatia, where his parents had a small farm. He went to the village elementary school until 1905. In 1907 he was machinist's apprentice in Sisak. In 1910 he joined the union of workers and social-democratic party of Croatia and Slavonia. In 1913 he entered the Austro–Hungarian Army and later was imprisoned for anti-war pr...

    In 1937 Tito came back to Yugoslavia. During the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in World War II, a civil war erupted between the collaborationists of Axis occupators (Ustaše, Croatian Home Guard, Slovene Home Guard, Serbian State Guards), royalist Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland who wanted to bring back the monarchy, and the self-organized guerilla fo...

    Tito, under various positions, ruled Yugoslavia from 1945 to 1980. To be safe from assassination attempts, he was dramatically supported by the spy ring OZNA and political police UDBA. Following the Tito-Stalin split in 1948, Yugoslavia heavily opposed the influence of Soviet Union. His rule supressed all non-Titoist parties from forming, including...

    Tito became ill over the course of 1979. On 7 January and again on 11 January 1980, Tito was admitted to the Medical Centre in Ljubljana, the capital city of the SR Slovenia, with circulation problems in his legs. His left leg was amputated soon afterward due to arterial blockages and he died of gangrene at the Medical Centre Ljubljana on 4 May 198...

    Accusations of culpability are related with crimes perpetrated during and after WWII, in pursuit of fleeing Nazi collaborators, such as the massacres of Foibe and Kočevski Rog butchery. Mass graves are evidences of massacres; accusations of genocide and ethnic cleansing by historians. Accusations of guilt in the Bleiburg massacre, the repression of...

    The funeral of Josip Tito, President of Yugoslavia, was held on 8 May 1980, four days after his death on 4 May. His funeral was visited by most of world statesmen. They included four kings, 31 presidents, six princes, 22 prime ministers and 47 ministers of foreign affairs. They came from both sides of the Cold War, from 128 different countries out ...

    Carter, April (1989). Marshal Tito: A Bibliography. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-28087-0.
    Dedijer, Vladimir. Tito. New York: Arno Press, 1980 ISBN 978-0-405-04565-3
    Djilas, Milovan (2000). Tito: The Story from Inside. Phoenix. ISBN 978-1-84212-047-7.

    Media related to Josip Broz Titoat Wikimedia Commons 1. Josip Tito Reference Archiveat the Marxists Internet Archive 2. Unseen pictures from US Archives Archived 2017-09-21 at the Wayback Machine 3. Sign the first virtual memorial of Marshal Tito Archived 2010-05-13 at the Wayback Machine '

  4. Jul 1, 1995 · The Comintern appointed Tito secretary-general of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia, probably in 1937. From 1944-45, when the communists came to power in Yugoslavia, until his death, Tito was for much of the time simultaneously head of the party, marshal of Yugoslavia, head of government, commander in chief, and president of the country.

  5. Communist leader of Yugoslavia. Josip Broz—"Tito" was his wartime party code name—was born in the village of Kumrovec on the Croatia-Slovenia border, in Austria-Hungary. His mother was Slovene, but he always spoke the language of his Croat father in public. Tito, their seventh child, showed no aptitude for education, and in 1907 he became a ...

  6. May 29, 2018 · Born May 7, 1892. Kumrovec, Croatia, Austria-Hungary. Died May 4, 1980. Ljubljana, Yugoslavia. President of Yugoslavia and revolutionary. J osip Broz Tito established a communist government in the country then known as Yugoslavia. Fiercely independent, Tito managed to successfully distance himself and his country from Soviet leader Joseph ...

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