1897 - 1947
Jezdimir Dangić Serbian Military
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Details
| First Name |
Jezdimir
|
| Last Name |
Dangić
|
| Alternative Name |
Jezdimir Dangić
|
| Birthday |
5th May, 1897
|
| Birthplace |
Bratunac, Bosnia and Herzegovina
|
| Died |
22nd August, 1947
|
| Place of Death |
Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
|
| Build |
Voluptuous
|
| Hair Color |
Salt and Pepper
|
| Zodiac Sign |
Taurus
|
| Sexuality |
Straight
|
| Ethnicity |
White
|
| Nationality |
Serbian
|
| Occupation |
Military
|
Jezdimir Dangić (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Јездимир Дангић; 4 May 1897 – 22 August 1947) was a Yugoslav and Bosnian Serb Chetnik commander during World War II. He was born in the town of Bratunac in the Austro-Hungarian occupied Bosnia Vilayet of the Ottoman Empire. Imprisoned during World War I for his membership of the revolutionary movement Young Bosnia, he subsequently completed a law degree and became an officer in the gendarmerie of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes at the beginning of 1928. In 1929, the country changed its name to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In 1940 Dangić was appointed to lead the court gendarmerie detachment stationed at the royal palace in the capital, Belgrade. During the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941, Dangić commanded the gendarmerie unit that escorted King Peter II to Montenegro as he fled the country. In August of that year, the leader of the Chetnik movement, Colonel Draža Mihailović, appointed Dangić as the commander of the Chetnik forces in eastern Bosnia. Here, Dangić and his men launched several attacks against the forces of the Independent State of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian Latin: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH). Soon after his appointment, Dangić's Chetniks captured the town of Srebrenica from the occupiers. Afterwards, they became largely inactive in fighting the Germans, choosing instead to avoid confrontation. In December, Chetniks under Dangić's command massacred hundreds of Bosnian Muslims in the town of Goražde. In the same month, his Chetniks captured five nuns and took them with them through Romanija to Goražde, where they later committed suicide to avoid being raped.
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