User:TheUzbek/sandbox
Provincial Committee secretaries
[edit]- Croatia
- Kamilo Horvatin (1919–1920)
- Đuro Cvijić (1919–1928), secretary of the Provincial Executive Committee
- Anton Mavrak, (1928) secretary of the Provincial Committee of the CPY for Croatian and Slavonia
- Matija Brezović (unclear)as secretary of the KPJ Secretariat for Croatia (? – July 1928)
- Tito as secretary of the KPJ Secretariat for Croatia 2 August 1928
- Dragutin Petrovic (unclear) of Croatia
- Dušan Grković (unclear)
- Đuro Špoljarić (1937–1938?)
- Josip Kraš (1938?–1939)
- Dalmatia
- Vicko Jelaska, 1930s
- Serbia
- Milos Markovic (June 1928–February 1929)
- Bracan Bracanović, (February–August 1929)
- Otokar Keršovani, (1929–1930)
- Petko Miletic, (1930–1932)
- Blagoje Parović, (November 1933 – 30 September 1934)
- Trajko Stamenković, (30 September 1934 – November 1935)
- Radovan Vuković, (January–November 1936)
- Aleksandar Rankovic, (May 1937 – 11 September 1941)
- Blagoje Nešković, (11 September 1941 – 12 May 1945)
- Slovenia
- Viktor Koleša, Secretary of the Regional Committee of the CPY for Slovenia (also a member of the POL in 1930)
- Dušan Kermavner (few months in 1928),
- Jakob Zorga,
- Vojvodina
- Zarko Zrenjanin (1936-?)
4th Politburo
[edit]- 1st Plenary Session
- 4th CPY Conference
LCY leaders
[edit]- Đuro Cvijić (April 1925), the Comintern appoints him the leader of the CPY provincial leadership. Became political secretary in 1927
- Đuro Đaković (13 April 1928), the Comintern appoints a new provisional leadership (formally, the Bureau of the Central Committee of the CPY) charged with convening the 4th Congress.
Info
[edit]Filip Filipović – first secretary Živko Topalović – second secretary Vladimir Ćopić – technical secretary Members of the executive council: Filip Filipović, Živko Topalović, Vladimir Ćopić (?), Vlada Bogdanović, Ivan Čolović, Negoslav Ilić Sima Marković, Dušan Pešić, Miloš Trebinjac
Second Congress of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia Vukovar 20-24. VI 1920: Central Council of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia: Pavle Pavlović President Jakov Lastrić President Filip Filipović Secretary Sima Marković Secretary Vladimir Ćopić Technical Secretary
Members of the executive council: In addition to the above: Dušan Cekić, Dragomir Marjanović, Vlado Mirić, Lazar Stefanović
Third party conference – Belgrade 1-4. I 1924: The leftist leadership was elected at the conference Triša Kaclerović - secretary
Third Congress of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia Vienna from 17-22. May 1926: Sima Marković political secretary Radomir Vujović organizational secretary
Members of the Central Committee leadership: Dragutin Gustinčić, Rajko Jovanović, Đuro Salaj, Lazar Stefanović, Marcelj Žorga
- elected at the 3rd CPY Congress
- Đuro Cvijić
- Đuro Đaković
- Jakob Žorga
- Rajko Jovanović
- Sima Marković
- Đuro Salaj
- Lazar Stefanović
- Radomir Vujović
June 1928:
Đuro Đaković political secretary
Jakov Žorga deputy
Members of the Central Committee leadership: Đuro Salaj, Ivan Krndelj, Ladislav Kordić
August 1928: Bureau of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia:
Filip Filipović political secretary Đuro Đaković deputy secretary Ivan Krndelj Đuro Salaj
Fourth Congress of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia Dresden, November 1928: Politburo: Ivan Mališić political secretary Đuro Đaković organizational secretary Žika Pecarski Đuro Salaj Lazar Stefanović
Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia – 1929: Đuka Cvijić Political Secretary August 1930:
Comintern replaces political secretary. Anton Mavrak was appointed organizational secretary, and Filip Filipović was appointed president of the central leadership instance Provisional leadership of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (PR Communist Party of Yugoslavia) – January 1932:
Filip Filipović political secretary Ivan Gržetić Miloš Marković
Provisional leadership of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia January 1933: Josip Čižinski (Milan Gorkić) secretary Vladimir Ćopić Miloš Marković Vladimir Ćopić Đuka Cvijić Kurto Meho Prežihov Voranc Milan Gorkić
Provisional leadership of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia 1933: Milan Gorkić Đuka Cvijić Edvard Kunštek Kurto Meho Štefek Cvijić
Parović Blagoje Vladimir Ćopić Prežihov Voranc Karlo Hudomalj Ivan Gržetić Provisional leadership of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia August 1934: Milan Gorkić Vladimir Ćopić Blagoje Parović Karlo Hudomal Josip Broz
Provisional leadership of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia – September 1934: Milan Gorkić Blagoje Parović Kamilo Horvatin Alfred Bergman Josip Broz Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia
January 1935: Milan Gorkić Kamilo Horvatin Blagoje Parović Ivan Gržetić Prežihov Voranc Adolf Muk Karlo Hudomal Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia -
March 25, 1935: Milan Gorkić Štefek Cvijić Ivo Marić Adolf Muk
Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia - August 1935: Milan Gorkić - Secretary Vladimir Ćopić - Deputy Blagoje Parović
April Plenum of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia – Vienna, April 1936: Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia:
Milan Gorkić Vladimir Ćopić Josip Broz Tito Karlo Hudomal Prežihov Voranc
August Council - Moscow, 1936: Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia Milan Gorkić - Secretary General Josip Broz Tito - organizational secretary Sreten Zujović Rodoljub Colaković Prežihov Voranc Ivan Krndelj
Fifth National Conference of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia - Zagreb, 1923. October 1940 Politburo of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia: Josip Broz Tito - General Secretary Aleksandar Ranković - Organizational Secretary Edvard Kardelj Milovan Đilas Ivan Milutinović Rade Končar Franc Leskošek This list of party leaders between the two wars is not complete, because the leadership was often changed and supplemented between congresses. The names of the leaderships were also changed.
Between the two wars, the political secretaries of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia were: Filip Filipović Sima Marković Triša Kaclerović Duro Dakovic Jovan Malisić Duka Cvijić, Milan Gorkić and Tito
Control/Statury Questions chairs
[edit]- Chairs
No. | Name | Took office | Left office | Tenure | Term of office | Birth | PM | Death | Branch | Ethnicity | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Osman Karabegović | 28 July 1948 | 7 November 1952 | 4 years, 102 days | 5th (1948–1952) |
1911 | 1932 | 1996 | Bosnia-Herzegovina | Muslim | [1] |
2 | Krsto Popivoda | 7 November 1952 | 13 December 1964 | 12 years, 36 days | 6th–7th (1952–1964) |
1910 | 1933 | 1988 | Montenegro | Montenegrin | [2] |
3 | Grujo Novaković | 13 December 1964 | 30 May 1974 | 9 years, 168 days | 8th–9th (1964–1974) |
1913 | 1936 | 1975 | Bosnia-Herzegovina | Serb | [3] |
4 | Milorad-Mičo Zorič | 30 May 1974 | 23 June 1978 | 4 years, 24 days | 10th (1974–1978) |
1913 | 1939 | ? | Montenegro | Montenegrin | [4] |
5 | Dimitar Aleksievski | 23 June 1978 | 29 June 1982 | 4 years, 6 days | 11th (1982–1986) |
1920 | 1941 | ? | Macedonia | Macedonian | [5] |
6 | Budimir Vukašinović | 29 June 1982 | 28 June 1986 | 3 years, 364 days | 12th (1986–1990) |
1921 | 1944 | 1989 | Serbia | Serb | [6] |
7 | Jovo Ugrčić | 28 June 1986 | 22 January 1990 | 3 years, 208 days | 13th (1986–1990) |
1923 | 1942 | 2005 | Croatia | Serb | [7] |
- Secretaries
- Zagorka Umičević
- Krsto Filipović?
- Čedo Vojvodić (1948–1952)
- Grga Jankez (1952–1958)
- Velimir Stojnić (1958–1964)
- Paško Romac (1964–1969)
- Radislav Nedeljkovic (1969–1974, Serb/Serbia)
- Gojko Škrbić (1974–1978, Bosnian Serb)
- Velimir Matić (1978–1982, Serb)
- Slavko Filipi (1982–1986, Croat)
- Members 1954
- Miloš Minić
Auditing/Supervisory chairs
[edit]- Chairs
No. | Name | Took office | Left office | Tenure | Term | Birth | PM | Death | Branch | Ethnicity | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Otmar Kreačić | 28 July 1948 | 7 November 1952 | 4 years, 102 days | 5th (1948–52) |
1913 | 1937 | 1992 | Croatia | Croat | [8] |
2 | Mitar Bakić | 7 November 1952 | 26 April 1958 | 12 years, 36 days | 6th (1952–58) |
1908 | 1932 | 1960 | Montenegro | Montenegrin | [9] |
3 | Grga Jankez | 26 April 1958 | 13 December 1964 | 6 years, 231 days | 7th (1958–64) |
1906 | 1926 | 1974 | Croatia | Croat | [10] |
4 | Ilija Tepavac | 13 December 1964 | 15 March 1969 | 4 years, 92 days | 8th (1964–69) |
1922 | 1941 | ? | Serbia | Serb | [11] |
5 | ? ? | 15 March 1969 | 30 May 1974 | 5 years, 76 days | 9th (1969–74) |
? | ? | ? | |||
6 | Angele Božinovski | 30 May 1974 | 23 June 1978 | 4 years, 24 days | 10th (1974–78) |
1921 | 1945 | ? | Macedonia | Macedonian | [12] |
7 | Paško Romac | 23 June 1978 | 29 June 1982 | 4 years, 6 days | 11th (1982–86) |
1916 | 1937 | 1982 | Serbia | Serb | [13] |
8 | Anica Kuhar | 29 June 1982 | 28 June 1986 | 3 years, 364 days | 12th (1986–90) |
1922 | 1941 | 2018 | Slovenia | Slovene | [14] |
9 | Pero Škrlin | 28 June 1986 | 22 January 1990 | 3 years, 208 days | 13th (1986–90) |
1929 | 1949 | ? | Croatia | Croat |
- Secretaries
- Grga Jankes (1952–1958)
- Bosa Cvetić (1958–1964)
- Gojko Sekuloski (1964–1969)
YPA
[edit]- Ivan Gošnjak (until 1967, as political secretary, with Jefto Šašić and Veljko Kovačević as his secretaries)
- Ante Banina (1967, "secretary of the LCY Central Committee's Section for the Yugoslav People's Army"
Conferences
[edit]- 3rd ? Conference (22 March 1973, Belgrade)
- Committee of the Conference members: Karolj Balog, Enver Cemalovic, Ante DAmic, Stjepan Domanskusic, Miroljub Dragicevic, Filip Jadrijevic, Aleksandar Janic, Milorad Jovanovic, Djuro Kecan, Cedomir Kovacevic, Ante Kranjac, Milan Krdzic, Ismailj Malici, Petar Patic, Lambe Mihajlovski, Milorad Misevic, Dragisa Nikolic, Dane Petkovski, Stane Potocar, Dzemal Sarac, Franc Tavacar, Marko Veljaca, Dusan Vidacic, Djuro Vojvodic, Mirko Vranic and Milan Vranes
- Secretaries of the Conference of the LCY of Army and NAval Districts; Milan Acic, Ljubisa Curgus, Nikola Ivosevic, Vujo Lukic, Veljko Miladinovic, Miha Petric, Petar Ristic, Spasoje Todorovic and Petar Simic.
- Dzemal Sarac is secretary
- Members of the Secretariat: Ante Kranjac, Milan Krdzic, Petar Matic, Veljko Miladinovic, Dane Petkovski, Dzemal Sarac and Djuro Vojvodic.
- 6th Conference (27 December 1978)
- 7th Conference (26 April 1982)
- 8th Conference (22 April 1986)
Composition
[edit]1st Session (1928–?)
[edit]Name | 3rd CC | 4th CO | Birth | PM | Death | Nationality | Gender | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Đuro Đaković | Old | Not | 1886 | 1919 | 1929 | Croat | Male | [15] |
Milan Gorkić | New | Elected | 1904 | 1919 | 1937 | Czech | Male | [16] |
Jovan Mališić | New | Not | 1902 | 1919 | 1939 | Montenegrin | Male | [16] |
Žika Pecarski | New | Not | 1894 | 1919 | ? | Serb | Male | [17] |
Đuro Salaj | Old | Not | 1889 | 1919 | 1958 | Croat | Male | [18] |
Lazar Stefanović | Old | Not | 1885 | 1919 | 1950 | Serb | Male | [19] |
1934–1936
[edit]Name | 4th TL | 5th CC | Birth | PM | Death | Nationality | Gender | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Milan Gorkić | Old | 1904 | 1919 | 1937 | Czech | Male | [16] | |
Kamilo Horvatin | New | Arrested | 1896 | 1919 | 1938 | Croat | Male | [20] |
Karlo Hudomalj | New | Expelled | 1905 | 1927 | 1944 | Slovene | Male | [21] |
Milan Gorkić | Old | Elected | 1910 | 1928 | 1979 | Slovene | Male | [22] |
Blagoje Parović | New | War | 1903 | 1923 | 1937 | Serb | Male | [23] |
Adolf Muk | New | Not | 1893 | 1919 | 1943 | Montenegrin | Male | [24] |
Josip Broz Tito | Old | Elected | 1892 | 1918 | 1980 | Croat | Male | [22] |
1936–1937
[edit]Name | 4th TL | 5th CC | Birth | PM | Death | Nationality | Gender | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rodoljub Čolaković | New | Elected | 1900 | 1919 | 1983 | Serb | Male | [25] |
Milan Gorkić | Old | Elected | 1910 | 1928 | 1979 | Slovene | Male | [22] |
Franc Leskošek | Old | Elected | 1897 | 1926 | 1983 | Slovene | Male | [22] |
Josip Broz Tito | Old | Elected | 1892 | 1918 | 1980 | Croat | Male | [22] |
Sreten Žujović | New | Not | 1899 | 1924 | 1976 | Serb | Male | [26] |
1940–1948
[edit]Name | 4th TL | 5th CC | Birth | PM | Death | Nationality | Gender | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Milovan Đilas | Old | Elected | 1911 | 1933 | 1995 | Montenegrin | Male | [22] |
Edvard Kardelj | Old | Elected | 1910 | 1928 | 1979 | Slovene | Male | [22] |
Rade Končar | New | WWII | 1911 | 1934 | 1942 | Croat | Male | [27] |
Franc Leskošek | Old | Elected | 1897 | 1926 | 1983 | Slovene | Male | [22] |
Ivan Milutinović | New | WWII | 1901 | 1923 | 1944 | Montenegrin | Male | [22] |
Aleksandar Ranković | Old | Elected | 1909 | 1928 | 1983 | Serb | Male | [28] |
Josip Broz Tito | Old | Elected | 1892 | 1918 | 1980 | Croat | Male | [22] |
1st CC LCY
[edit]- 22 April 1919[29]
- 25 May 1919[30]
- 15–16 September 1919[31]
- 5–7 December 1919[31]
- 8 February, Joint Plenary Session of the Central Council of the SRPJ and the United Federation of Workers' Unions of Yugoslavia[32]
2nd CC LCY
[edit]- 1st Plenum – 25 June 1920[33]
- 2nd Plenum – 12–14 September 1920[34]
- 3rd Plenum – 9 November 1920 [35]
- 4th Plenum – 9–12 December 1920 [36]
- 5th Plenum – 1–6 April 1921 [35]
- 6th Plenum – 2–3 June 1921 [37]
- ? Plenum – 20–24 September 1924[38]
3rd CC LCY
[edit]- 1st Plenum – 23 May 1926 [39]
- 2nd Plenum – 5–6 September 1926 [39]
- 3rd Plenary Session (26 or 27 April 1927): Tito 239
- 4th Plenary Session 27 November – 1 December 1927
- Duro Salaj, Secretary of the Central Trade Union Commission on 23 May 1926
- Anton Mavrak, a member of the Organizing Bureau of the CCKPJ (and probably also a member of the Provincial Secretariat of the KPJ for Croatia)
4th CC LCY
[edit]- ? Plenum (April 1936)[40]
- ? Plenum (November 1937)[41]
- ? Plenum (23 October 1940)
- ? Plenum (1 March 1948)[42]
- ? Meeting (6 April 1942)[43]
- ? Plenum (12–13 April 1948)[44]
- ? Plenum (13 April 1948)[45]
- ? Plenum (6 May 1948)[46]
- ? Plenum (25 May 1948)[47]
9th LCY
[edit]- 8th Presidency April 1970
- ? Presidency 3 July 1970
- 11th Presidency September 1970
- 17th Presidency May 1971
- 23rd Presidency 21 December 1971
- 34th Presidency 11–12 July 1972
11th CC
[edit]- 2nd Session 19 December 1978 [1]
- 3rd Session 5 April 1979 [2]
- ?th Session 28 June 1979 [3]
- 8th Session 18 October 1979 [4]
- ?th Session 20 February 1980 [5]
- 11th Session 12 June 1980 [6]
- 13th Session 29 September 1980 [7]
- 15th Session 4 December 1980 [8]
- 16th Session 22 January 1981 [9]
- 22nd Session 17 November 1981 [10]
- 24th Session 16 March 1982 [11]
- 25th Session 8 April 1982 [12]
- 26th Session 20 April 1982 [13]
12th CC LCY
[edit]- 1st Session 29 June 1982[48]
- 2nd Session July 1982
- 3rd Session 24 September 1982 [14]
- 4th Session December 1982[49]
- 5th Session 28 February 1983 [15]
- 6th Session 14 March 1983 [16]
- 7th Session 28 April 1983 [17]
- 8th Session 1 July 1983 [18]
- 9th Session 25 July [19]
- 10th Session 25 October 1983 [20]
- 11th Session 20 December 1983 [21]
- 12th Session 28 February 1984 [22]
- 13th Session 12–13 June 1984 [23]
- 14th Session 16 October 1984 [24]
- 16th Session March 1985
- 17th Session 26 April 1985 [25]
- 18th Session 19 July 1985 [26]
- 19th Session 30 July 1985 [27]
- 20th Session ?
- 21st Session 30–31 October 1985 [28]
- 22nd Session 18 November 1985 [29]
- 23rd Session 6 December 1985 [30]
- 24th Session January 1986
Meeting | Date | Length | Type | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
28th Plenary Session | 24 June 1982 | 1 day | Ordinary | [50] |
13th CC LCY
[edit]- 1st Session 28 June 1986
- 2nd Session
- 3rd Session
- 4th Session
- 5th Session
- 6th Session
- 7th Session 28–29 April 1987 [31]
- 8th Session
- 9th Session 26–27 June 1987 [32]
- 10th Session 25 September 1987 [33]
- 11th Session 7–8 December 1987 [34] [35]
- 12th Session 13 January 1988
- 13th Session 28 February 1988[51]
- 14th Session
- 15th Session
- ? 8 June 1988
- 16th Session 29 July 1988
- 17th Session 17–19 October 1988 [36]
- 18th Session
- 19th Session 12 December 1988 [37]
- 20th Session 30 January – 1 February 1989 [38]
- 21st Session 17 February 1989
- Elected 33 new CC members
- Elected 4 new PRES members: Miomir Grbović and Perko Vuko'tić from Montenegro, Boris Muževič from Slovenia and Dr. Stanko Radmilović from Vojvodina
- Terminate membership: Mato Andrić, Hrvoje Ištuk, Milanko Renovica and Nikola Stojanović [39]
- Withdrawn Montenegrin resignations: Miomir Grbovic, Ahmet Mehovič, Radoslav Bulajić and Milutin Vukašinović, Sućo Bandić
- Petar Matić resigned
- 22nd Session 19 April 1989 [40]
- 23rd Session
- 24th Session 11 July 1989
- 25th Session 30–31 July 1989
- 26th Extraordinary Session 11 September 1989 [41]
- 27th Session 26–27 September 1989
- 28th Session 21 October 1989
- 28th Session 26–27 December 1989 (correct)
- 30th Session 17 January 1990 or 19
- 31st Session 1 March 1990 (unofficial)
- 32nd Session 23 May 1990 (unofficial)
LCY Bosnia
[edit]- 6th Congress (March 1974)
LCY Croatia
[edit]- 7th Congress (April 1974)
- 8th Congress (1978)
LCY Macedonia
[edit]- 1st Congress (29–24 December 1948)
- 2nd Congress (29–24 December 1948)
- 3rd Congress (21–23 May 1959)
- 4th Congress (29–31 March 1965)
- 5th Congress (18–20 November 1968)
- 6th Congress (10–12 April 1974)
- 7th Congress (1978)
- 8th Congress (6–8 May 1982)
- 9th Congress (8–10 May 1986)
- 10th Congress (26–28 November 1989)
- 11th Congress (20–? April 1991)
LCY Montenegro
[edit]- 5th Congress (December 1968)
- 6th Congress (April 1974)
- 7th Congress (April 1978)
LCY Slovenia
[edit]- 5th Congress (March 1965)
- 6th Congress (December 1968)
KCP CC
[edit]
LCY executive secretaries
[edit]- Stane Dolanc (27 January 1972 - 15 May 1979)
- 10th Congress
- Milan Daljevic, Mr Milojko Drulovic, Mr Pavle Gazi, Mr Trpe Jakovlevski, Mr Vlado Janzic, Mr Ferhad Kotoric, Mr Nandor Major, Mr Marko Orlandic and Mr Djuro Trbovic
- 10th Congress
- Dušan Dragosavac (15 May 1979 - 25 May 1981)
- Dobroslav Čulafić (25 May 1981 - 29 June 1982)
- Nikola Stojanović (29 June 1982 - 26 June 1984)
- Dimce Belovski (26 June 1984 - 28 June 1986)
- Radiša Gačić (28 June 1986 - 1988)
- 13th term: Slobodan Filipovic, Mr Marko Lolic, Mr Vukasin Loncar, Mr Boris Muzevic, Mr Stanislav Stojanovic, Mrs Ugljesa Uzelac and Mr Ljubomir Varoslija.
- Slobodan Filipovic (30 June 1988 - 11 January 1989)
- Stefan Korosec (11 January 1989 - 16 February 1990)
- Acting Petar Skundric (16 February 1990 - ?)
12th Presidency
[edit]- Mr Jure Bilic (replaced Bakaric on 1 July 1984)
- Veljko Milatovic (resigned on 30 July 1984) - replaced by Vidoje Zarkovic
- Franjo Herljevic left 26 June 1984 and was replaced by Hamdija Pozderac (Bosnia)
- Dane Cuic left 26 June 1984 and was replaced by Georgije Jovicic (Army)
Conferences
[edit]- 1st Conference of the LCY (29–31 May 1988)
SKS Presidency: 1986–1990
[edit]Name | 4th POL | 6th EXE | Birth | PM | Death | Nationality | Gender | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Radmila Anđelković | Old | Elected | Serb | Female | ||||
Zoran Anđelković | Old | Elected | 1958 | ? | Alive | Serb | Male | |
Jurij Bajec | Old | Elected | 1946 | Alive | Serb | Male | ||
Momčilo Baljak | Old | Elected | 1941 | 1999 | Serb | Male | ||
Dušan Ćatović | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Dobrosav Cvetković | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Bajram Gasi | Old | Elected | Hungarian | Male | ||||
Petar Gračanin | By-election | Reelected | 1923 | 1942 | 2004 | Serb | Male | [52] |
Dušan Ilić | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Borisav Jović | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Jordan Kostić | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Milenko Marković | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Vaso Milinčević | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Slobodan Milošević | New | Reelected | 1941 | 2006 | Serbia | Serb | Male | [53] |
Dragiša Pavlović | Old | Elected | 1943 | 1996 | Serb | Male | ||
Zoran Sokolović | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Rudi Sova | Old | Elected | Serb | Male | ||||
Svetislav Stojakov | By-election | Not | 1936 | ? | Vojvodina | Serb | Male | [54] |
Đorđe Stojšić | Old | Elected | 1928 | 1945 | 2014 | Serb | Male | [55] |
Azem Vlassi | Old | Elected | 1948 | 1965 | Alive | Albanian | Male | [56] |
- ^ Rajović 1970, p. 440 .
- ^ Lewytzkyj & Stroynowski 1978, p. 489.
- ^ Marković & Kržavac 1985, p. 507.
- ^ Rajović 1970, p. 1189.
- ^ Rajović 1970, p. 11.
- ^ Rajović 1970, p. 1165.
- ^ Rajović 1970, p. 1104.
- ^ Staff writer 1965, p. 2190.
- ^ Staff writer 1948, p. 97.
- ^ Nešović 1981, p. 740.
- ^ Staff writer 1965, p. 2209 ; Rajović 1970, p. 1072 .
- ^ Rajović 1970, p. 114 .
- ^ Staff writer 1953, p. 409 ; Rajović 1970, pp. 907–908 .
- ^ Opačić 1968, p. 181 ; Rajović 1970, p. 529 .
- ^ Tito 1980, p. 147 ; Pleterski et al. 1985, p. 105 .
- ^ a b c Pleterski et al. 1985, p. 105 .
- ^ Tito 1980, p. 160 ; Pleterski et al. 1985, p. 105 .
- ^ Zalar 1961, p. 368 ; Pleterski et al. 1985, p. 105 .
- ^ Tito 1980, p. 166 ; Pleterski et al. 1985, p. 105 .
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Great Purge
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Tito 1980, p. 150.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Morača, Bilandžić & Stojanović 1977, p. 89 .
- ^ Morača et al. 1979, p. 33.
- ^ Tito 1980, p. 158.
- ^ "Čolaković, Rodoljub" [Čolaković, Rodoljub] (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Archived from the original on 11 June 2023. Retrieved 11 June 2023.
- ^ Marković 1987, p. 324.
- ^ "Na današnji dan strijeljan je Rade Končar: Prvi narodni heroj Jugoslavije" [On this day, Rade Končar was shot: The first national hero of Yugoslavia] (in Bosnian). Radio Sarajevo. 22 May 2021. Archived from the original on 15 June 2023. Retrieved 15 June 2023.
- ^ Zalar 1961, p. 368 ; Morača, Bilandžić & Stojanović 1977, p. 89 .
- ^ Pirjevec 2018, p. 25 .
- ^ Pirjevec 2018, p. 39 .
- ^ Rusinow 1978, p. 27 .
- ^ Pirjevec 2018, p. 85 .
- ^ Pirjevec 2018, p. 184 ; Rusinow 1978, p. 34 .
- ^ Pirjevec 2018, p. 185 .
- ^ Pirjevec 2018, pp. 186–187 .
- ^ Rusinow 1978, p. 29 .
- ^ Dragnich 1983, p. 370 .
- ^ Johnson 1983, p. 45 .
- ^ "Party congress - New federal government - Changes in republican leadership - Economy - Foreign relations - Developments in Kosovo - Other security affairs". 1 September 1986 – via Keesing’s Record of World Events. Vol. 32 (1986), No. 9 (September) & p. 34629.
- ^ Staff writer 1988, p. 32 .
- ^ Stroynowski 1989a, p. 369.
- ^ Allcock, John B. "Slobodan Milošević: president of Yugoslavia". Britannica Encyclopaedia. Archived from the original on 24 May 2023. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
- ^ Stroynowski 1989c, p. 1129.
- ^ "Meghalt Đorđe Stojšić" [Đorđe Stojšić died] (in Hungarian). Vajma. 8 August 2014. Archived from the original on 24 May 2023. Retrieved 24 May 2023.
- ^ Stroynowski 1989c, p. 1266.