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June 1941 uprising in eastern Herzegovina information


June 1941 uprising in eastern Herzegovina
Part of World War II in Yugoslavia

The capture of the gendarmerie post in Gornji Lukavac was one of the first actions of the uprising
Date23 June – 7 July 1941
Location
Eastern Herzegovina, Independent State of Croatia
43°10′N 18°04′E / 43.16°N 18.07°E / 43.16; 18.07
Result Uprising suppressed
Belligerents
Serb rebels from eastern Herzegovina and Montenegro
  • June 1941 uprising in eastern Herzegovina Independent State of Croatia
  • June 1941 uprising in eastern Herzegovina Italy
Commanders and leaders
  • Bajo Stanišić
  • Minja Višnjić
  • Radojica Nikčević
  • Čedo Milić
  • Independent State of Croatia Ivan Prpić
  • Independent State of Croatia Antun Prohaska
  • Independent State of Croatia Franjo Šimić
  • Independent State of Croatia Jure Francetić
Units involved
No formed units
  • Elements of Adriatic Command
    • six Home Guard battalions
    • one Home Guard company
    • four 100mm howitzers
    • ZNDH ground attack and reconnaissance aircraft
  • Gendarmerie
    • 2nd Regiment (part)
    • 4th Regiment (part)
Strength
1,500–3,000 68 officers,
2,362 men[a]
A map of the NDH showing the location of Nevesinje, eastern Herzegovina in the southeastern corner of the country near the Adriatic coast
A map of the NDH showing the location of Nevesinje, eastern Herzegovina in the southeastern corner of the country near the Adriatic coast
Nevesinje
class=notpageimage|
Location of the town of Nevesinje in eastern Herzegovina. The dashed line denotes the boundary between the German (northeastern) and Italian (southwestern) zones.

In June 1941, Serbs in eastern Herzegovina rebelled against the authorities of the Independent State of Croatia (Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH), an Axis puppet state established during World War II on the territory of the defeated and occupied Kingdom of Yugoslavia. As the NDH imposed its authority, members of the fascist Ustaše ruling party began a genocidal campaign against Serbs throughout the country. In eastern Herzegovina, the Ustaše perpetrated a series of massacres and attacks against the majority Serb population commencing in the first week of June. Between 3 and 22 June 1941, spontaneous clashes occurred between NDH authorities and groups of Serbs in the region.

The German invasion of the Soviet Union began on 22 June. Over the next two days, the sporadic revolts by Serbs against the NDH in eastern Herzegovina erupted into mass rebellion, triggered by Ustaše persecution, Serb solidarity with the Russian people, hatred and fear of the NDH authorities, and other factors. Serb rebels, under the leadership of both local Serbs and Montenegrins, attacked police, gendarmerie, Ustaše and Croatian Home Guard forces in the region. In the first few days, the rebels captured gendarmerie posts in several villages, set up roadblocks on the major roads and ambushed several military vehicles. On the night of 26 June, the rebels mounted a sustained attack on the town of Nevesinje in an attempt to capture it, but the garrison held out until the morning of 28 June when NDH troops broke through the rebel roadblocks.

On 28 June, the rebels ambushed a truckload of Italian soldiers, prompting the Italian Army commander in the NDH to warn the NDH government that he would take unilateral action to secure communication routes. A further gendarmerie post was destroyed by the rebels, and in the evening the rebels captured the village of Avtovac, looting and burning it, and killing dozens of non-Serb civilians. The following day an Italian column cleared the rebels from Avtovac and relieved the hard-pressed NDH garrison in the town of Gacko. From 3 July, an NDH force of over 2,000 fanned out from Nevesinje, clearing towns, villages and routes of rebels. The rebel forces did not put up any significant opposition to the clearing operation, and either retreated into nearby Montenegro, or hid their weapons in the mountains and went home. By 7 July, NDH forces had regained full control of all towns and major transport routes in eastern Herzegovina.

  1. ^ Marijan 2003, pp. 548–549.


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