Milan Emil Uzelac

Milan Emil Uzelac (August 26, 1867 - January 7, 1954) was a Croatian soldier and military commander who was a leading figure in the air forces of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Kingdom of Yugoslavia and the Independent State of Croatia.[1]

Emil Uzelac was born in Komárom, Hungary, on the 26th of August 1867. He was born into a Serbian Orthodox Christian family.[1][2] He started in the compulsory Austro-Hungarian army in 1888.

In 1912 he was made commander of the Austro-Hungarian Imperial and Royal Aviation Troops, which until then had been mostly a force of balloons.[1] He modernized the force and was subsequently decorated with numerous imperial awards.

After World War I Uzelac joined the Royal Yugoslav Air Force on November 28, 1919, along with two other Austro-Hungarian generals, Rudolf Maister and Ante Plivelić. He retired on August 19, 1923.[3]

In 1941 he was saved by deportation by the Independent State of Croatia, through his friend Edmund Glaise von Horstenau, the Deutscher kommandierender General in Agram.[2] He was made an honorary general of the Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia, within the Croatian Home Guard.[4]

He died in Petrinja on the 7th of January 1954 and was buried in Zagreb's Mirogoj cemetery.[5]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Emil (Milan) Uzelac
  2. 2.0 2.1 Stone, Norman (2001). "Army and Empire". In Emil Brix, Klaus Koch, Elisabeth Vyslonzil. The Decline of Empires. Oldenbourg Verlag. p. 57. ISBN 9783486565942.
  3. Čapo, Hrvoje (December 2009). "Former Austro-Hungarian officers in the Army of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes/Yugoslavia". Review of Croatian History (Zagreb, Croatia: Croatian Institute of History) V (1): 133. ISSN 1845-4380. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  4. Biographies - Home Defense Air Force
  5. Milan Uzelac