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Prispevki za novejšo zgodovino

British Diplomatic Reports on the German Minority in Yugoslavia between 1933 and 1945


Author(s):Dušan Biber
Co-author(s):Jasna Fischer (odg. ur.)
Leto:1995
Publisher(s):Inštitut za novejšo zgodovino, Ljubljana
Language(s):slovenščina
Type(s) of material:text
Rights:
CC license

This work by Dušan Biber is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International

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The author has established that the German minority who lived in several separate areas in Yugoslavia, were often the subject of diplomatic reports. In 1935, the reports still described the minority as apolitical, whereas in 1938, they detected a clear shift towards nazism. It was anticipated that the minority could be used as an excuse for a military intervention, especially in Dravska banovina where the German economic influence and propaganda were the strongest. After the occupation of Yugoslavia, the British assessed that the minority, because of its conduct during the war, had no real prospects of being allowed to remain in a reformed country and foresaw its partial or total emigration.

Metadata (12)
  • identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/11686/2097
    • title
      • Britanska diplomatska poročila o nemški manjšini v Jugoslaviji v letih 1933-1945
      • British Diplomatic Reports on the German Minority in Yugoslavia between 1933 and 1945
    • creator
      • Dušan Biber
    • contributor
      • Jasna Fischer (odg. ur.)
    • subject
      • Jugoslavija
      • Dravska banovina
      • nemška manjšina
      • druga svetovna vojna
      • emigracija
    • description
      • The author has established that the German minority who lived in several separate areas in Yugoslavia, were often the subject of diplomatic reports. In 1935, the reports still described the minority as apolitical, whereas in 1938, they detected a clear shift towards nazism. It was anticipated that the minority could be used as an excuse for a military intervention, especially in Dravska banovina where the German economic influence and propaganda were the strongest. After the occupation of Yugoslavia, the British assessed that the minority, because of its conduct during the war, had no real prospects of being allowed to remain in a reformed country and foresaw its partial or total emigration.
      • Avtor ugotavlja, da je nemška manjšina v Jugoslaviji, ki je živela na več ločenih območjih, bila pogosto obravnavana v diplomatskih poročilih. Leta 1935 so jo še opisovali kot nepolitično, 1938 so zapažali njen oster obrat k nacizmu in predvidevali njeno izrabo za povod intervencije, zlasti v Dravski banovini, kjer je bil nemški gospodarski in propagandni vpliv najmočnejši. Po okupaciji Jugoslavije so Britanci ocenjevali, da glede na obnašanje med vojno nemška manjšina nima velikih možnosti, da bi lahko ostala v obnovljeni državi in so predvideli njeno delno ali popolno izselitev.
    • publisher
      • Inštitut za novejšo zgodovino
    • date
      • 1995
    • type
      • besedilo
    • language
      • Slovenščina
    • isPartOf
    • rights
      • license: ccByNcNd