Vojislav Tankosić

vojvoda
Vojislav Tankosić

Vojislav Tankosić
Nickname(s) Voja
Born 20 September 1880
Ruklada, Principality of Serbia
Died 2 November 1915 (aged 35)
Trstenik, Kingdom of Serbia
Buried at New Cemetery, Belgrade
Allegiance
Years of service 1904–1915
Rank vojvoda, major
Battles/wars
Awards
Signature

Vojislav Tankosić (Serbian Cyrillic: Војислав Танкосић, September 20, 1880 – November 2, 1915) was a Serbian military officer, vojvoda of the Serbian Chetnik Organization, major of the Serbian Army, member of the Black Hand, having participated in events from the May Coup to the Assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria.

Overview

He was born in Ruklada, in the Tamnava region near Valjevo. His family came from Bosnian Krajina.[1] He finished six grades of gymnasium and military academy.[2] He showed high national consciousness, and gained the trust of Milorad Gođevac and the other Chetnik leaders.[2] He was sent as a secret agent, undercover, into Ottoman Macedonia to study the terrain and people for future action.[2] As Dragutin Dimitrijević Apis' trustee, he executed Queen Draga's two brothers, in 1903, in the May Coup,[2] which saw the murder (and overthrowing) of King Alexander Obrenović. He participated in the Battle of Čelopek (April 1905) under Savatije Milošević.[2] Young Bosnia received arms from him for their actions.[2] Sources say that he entertained with shooting apples from the heads of his Chetnik fighters.[2] Once, when they crossed the Sava bridge, he ordered all to jump, and they did.[2]

He was rude and bold.[2] He was arrested by the Serbian government when Gavrilo Princip killed Archduke Franz Ferdinand (28 June 1914), but was forgiven when Austria attacked Serbia; the Chetniks of Voja Tankosić and Jovan Babunski prevented that Belgrade fell into Austrian hands at the first night of the war.[2] He then fought at the Drina (September 6–October 4, 1914).[2] His unit retreated lastly as protection before the Austrians and Germans, and he was fatally wounded near Veliki Popović.[2] He lived for two days then died in Trstenik on November 2, 1915.[2] When the Austrians occupied the town they excavated his body from the grave to make sure he was indeed dead.[2] A photography of his body was featured on the front pages of Croatian, Hungarian, Bulgarian and Austrian newspapers.[2] He was re-buried in Trstenik, then his mother and friends had his body transferred to Belgrade for an honorable burial on the New Cemetery in 1923.[2]

May Coup

Further information: May Coup (Serbia)
Vojislav Tankosić in Chetnik gear.

In a period of great national fervour among the Serb youth organizations, he tried to gain the trust of General Jovan Atanacković, who had begun to gather volunteers for insurgency in Old Serbia and Macedonia. As a sublieutenant he participated in the conspiracy against King Alexander Obrenović, and the May Coup (1903). He had previously helped the leaders of the March demonstrations (1903) to flee with boats to Zemun.[3] He led the execution of Queen Draga's brothers,[3] Nikola and Nikodije.

Guerilla fighting

Further information: Serbian Chetnik Organization

As a member of the Serbian Chetnik Organization, he went to Skopje, Bitola and Thessaloniki in the winter of 1903–04, where he worked on the organization of Chetnik action in Macedonia.[4] Tankosić was one of the most important Chetnik voivodes, and was an excellent shot. He participated in the great victory on Čelopek near Kumanovo on April 16, 1905, part of the četa (unit) of vojvoda Savatije Milošević.[3] There was a pause in action due to the Serbian-Bulgarian customs union concluded on July 6, 1905, thus Tankosić was brought back to Serbia, where he was awarded the Order of the Star of Karađorđe.[3] From the second half of 1905 to October 1907 he attended and graduated from the Military Academy in Belgrade. In 1907–08 he was the Chief of Staff of Eastern Povardarje, which meant that he commanded all units which were active from the Serbian border to the Vardar. He led the attack on Bulgarian bands in the village of Stracin in 1908, which nearly caused a Serbian-Bulgarian war. He returned to Belgrade in July 1908.

Black Hand

Further information: Black Hand (Serbia)
Chetniks during the Bosnian crisis (1908), Tankosić is noted as (1).
Some of the members of the Black Hand, Apis and Tankosić seen lying down.

Following the Austro-Hungarian annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (October 6, 1908), he established a Chetnik school in Prokuplje, in which volunteers were prepared to execute special operations in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[3] He spread the network throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina, and recruited volunteers for a conflict he believed was inevitable.[3] This was made contrary to the policy of the Serbian government, which feared Austro-Hungary.[3] Some 5,000 volunteers were organized in Serbia.[3] Austrian and Hungarian newspapers reported that there were 1,000 bands in Serbia, with 20 good-armed fighters in each, and that each fighter had two guns in order to give the other to rebels in Bosnia.[3] However, when Serbia recognized the annexation in 1909, the training camp in Ćuprija was closed down; the military knowledge that was gained was however useful in the coming war.[3] He was a member of the Young Bosnia and one of the founders of the Unification or Death (popularly known as the "Black Hand"). Together with Bogdan Radenković and Ljuba Jovanović-Čupa, he wrote the constitution of the organization, whose aim was to fight for the unification of Serbdom.[3]

Balkan Wars

Further information: Balkan Wars

Before the outbreak of the war in March 1912, he was transferred to the headquarters of the border troops, with the task to train volunteers.[3] Volunteers arrived from all Serb-inhabited regions. Tankosić was very strict in his selection, and out of 2,000 he chose only 245 volunteers.[3] One who was declined was Gavrilo Princip, due to his weak stature.[3] The Serbian government tried to use the Albanians against the Turks, and sent Tankosić to Kosovo where he slipped weapons to Albanian leaders.[3] Together with Isa Boletini, he led local Albanians in June and July 1912 in their conflict with Turks around Mitrovica.[3]

In the First Balkan War he commanded the Laplje Chetnik detachment. The detachment began operations in the Turkish background two days before the outbreak of the war, at the border post (karaula) at Merdar, where the Chetniks and Albanians skirmished into the first battle of the war. It seems that they began fighting on their own initiative, without the approval of superiors.[3] There is a possibility that the Black Hand feared agreement between Turkey and the Balkan allies, which would hold back the liberation of Serb-inhabited territories.[3] The Chetniks fought for three days by themselves, until the regular Serbian Army joined in.[3] The Serbian Army brought victory, and Tankosić's Chetniks were the first to enter Pristina. Tankosić's Chetniks thus opened the door for the Serbian Army to liberate Kosovo, and Tankosić was awarded the Order of the Star of Karađorđe with Swords and promoted to major.[3]

World War I

Further information: World War I
Tankosić as a major.

Together with the other members of the Black Hand, he pressured the Serbian government of Nikola Pašić before the Treaty of Bucharest (1913). The government tried to retire Tankosić and Apis, however, the King disagreed. A conflict between the military and civilian authorities simmered during 1913 and escalated during 1914, with open threats made to certain ministers.[3] He participated in the training of the assassins of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, moving them across the Drina, where an agent gave them weapons.[3] After the assassination (1914), the Austro-Hungarian government gave an ultimatum to the Serbian government, whom they held responsible for the assassination; Tankosić was thus imprisoned in the headquarters of the Danube Division I.[3] He was forgiven when Austria attacked Serbia.[2]

After the outbreak of World War I, he became the commander of the Volunteer Squad in Belgrade, and then the Rudnik Volunteer Squad. By the time of the Battle of Drina (1914), he commanded a special band of volunteers and Chetniks in the Lim detachment in Eastern Bosnia, then at Loznica, Krupanj, at Mačkov Kamen and other battlefields.[3] With the outbreak of World War I, Jovan Babunski formed the Sava Chetnik detachment, which was then placed under the command of Major Vojislav Tankosić. The unit went on to fight the Austro-Hungarians in the late summer of 1914 and later destroyed a railway bridge on the Sava River to prevent Austro-Hungarian forces from crossing it.[5]

1915 operations and death

Austro-Hungarians opening the grave of Vojislav Tankosić.

During the Serbian Army withdrawal in 1915, he was mortally wounded in Igrište near Veliki Popović on October 31, 1915, while commanding a battalion. He died from his wounds on November 2, 1915 at the age of 35 in Trstenik.[3] His soldiers took his body and buried him secretly at the local cemetery.[3] The Austrians managed to find the burial place, then dug up his body, and after identifying him, took pictures for the media to convince the public that he was indeed dead. The article, with the title "The End of Tankosić", mentioned the Serbian throne, the ultimatum to Serbia, and the detail that with the death Tankosić, the Balkan Offensive saw their opponents paying a penalty. The remains were relocated by his mother Milja, with the help of the Association of Serb Chetniks, and buried in the Belgrade New Cemetery in 1922.[3] The tomb is now located at the IV parcel, in the third row, grave no. 6.[6]

Awards

Tankosić received several awards and orders for his courage. Among which were:

Legacy

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Vojislav Tankosić.

Streets in the Vračar neighbourhood in Belgrade,[7] the Medijana neighbourhood in Niš,[8] and Kisač neighbourhood in Novi Sad[9] bears his name.

References

  1. Историја Југославије, група аутора, Просвета, Београд 1972. pp. 376
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 2.14 2.15 2.16 Simo Živković (December 1998). "Sakupi se jedna četa mala". Srpsko-nasledje.rs. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 3.24 3.25 3.26 Milorad Belić (2005). "Komitetski vojvoda Vojislav Tankosić" (PDF) (in Serbian). Valjevo: Međuopštinski istorijski arhiv.
  4. Krakov 1930, pp. 103-104
  5. Pejčić 2007, p. 74.
  6. "Vojislav Tankosić". Znamenite ličnosti. Belgrade: Javno komunalno preduzeće "Pogrebne usluge". 2009.
  7. "Vojvode Tankosića - Vračar". mapa.in.rs.
  8. "Vojvode Tankosića - Niš". mapa.in.rs.
  9. "Indeks ulica › Novi Sad". Planplus.

Sources

Books
Newspaper articles