Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Place of burial. Mirogoj Cemetery (45°50′5.68″N 15°59′2.62″E, 1996, Division RKT, site 906, #1, Vladko (dr.) Maček) Country of citizenship. Austria-Hungary. State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs. Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Independent State of Croatia. United States of America.

  2. Maček fu giornalista, avvocato e deputato in rappresentanza del Partito Contadino Croato. Nel 1928, dopo la morte di Radic, divenne presidente del partito. Fautore della trasformazione della Jugoslavia in stato federale e sostenitore di una forte autonomia della Croazia dal centralismo serbo, tra il 1929 ed il 1934, durante il regno dispotico ...

  3. 1 de mai. de 2007 · The Croat Peasant Party was arguably the most important Croatian political party during the existence of the first Yugoslavia (1918–41). Under the leadership of Vladko Maček (1879–1964), it entered the most difficult period of its history: it was forced to contend with the royal dictatorship (1929–34) of King Aleksandar Karadjordjević, the Great Depression, growing nationality tensions ...

  4. Maček, Vladko, hrvatski političar (Jastrebarsko, 20. VII. 1879 – Washington, 15. V. 1964). Odvjetnik u Svetom Ivanu Zelini od 1908. Član Hrvatske pučke seljačke stranke (HPSS), u Glavnom odboru od 1906. Časnik u I. svjetskom ratu. Zatočen 1919–20. Potpredsjednik HPSS-a od 1919.

  5. 27 de jun. de 2024 · In the years 1936–41, the Croatian Peasant Party, led by Vladko Maček, operated two militias – the Croatian Peasant Defence (HSZ) in the villages and the Croatian Civil Defence in the cities. The HSZ was intended to protect Croatian peasants from attacks by Serb Chetniks as well as by communists, and was thus itself a symptom of the lawlessness prevailing in the interwar Kingdom of ...

  6. Vladko Macek (i 871-1964) became the leader of the Croatian Peasant Party (HSS) in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia after the assassination of Stjepan Radie (1871-1928). In this capacity, he played a pivotal role in Croatian and Yugoslav politics during the critical years 1928-41, when the clouds of war were gathering over Europe, and during the first ...

  7. Vladko Maček (1879-1964) was born in a small Croatian village and received his law degree in 1903 from the University of Zagreb. One of the early members of the Croatian Peasant Party, he was closely associated with its founders, Ante and Stephen Radic.