Stjepan Sarkotić

Stjepan Freiherr Sarkotić von Lovćen (also Stefan Sarkotić, Stjepan Sarkotić, or Stephan Sarkotić; 4 October 1858 16 October 1939) was an Austro-Hungarian Army generaloberst who served as Governor of Bosnia and Herzegovina and military commander of Dalmatia and Montenegro during the World War I.

Baron

Stjepan Sarkotić
Stjepan Sarkotić in a uniform of a lieutenant field marshal in 1915
9th Governor of Bosnia and Herzegovina
In office
22 December 1914  3 November 1918
Appointed byFranz Joseph I of Austria
Preceded byOskar Potiorek
Succeeded byOffice abolished
(Atanasije Šola as President of the People's Government of Bosnia and Herzegovina)
Personal details
Born(1858-10-04)4 October 1858
Otočac, Croatia, Austrian Empire
Died16 October 1939(1939-10-16) (aged 81)
Vienna, Nazi Germany
Resting placeZentralfriedhof, Simmering, Vienna, Austria
NationalityCroat
Alma materTheresian Military Academy
ProfessionSoldier
AwardsOrder of the Iron Crown
Order of Leopold
Military service
Allegiance Austria-Hungary
Branch/serviceAustro-Hungarian Army
Years of service1884–1918
RankGeneraloberst
UnitKöniggrätz Regiment
16th Infantry Regiment
1st Mountain Brigade
Intelligence Department of General Staff
Commands7th Infantry Division
XII Corps
5th Infantry Brigade
88th Land Rifle Regiment
44th Home Guard Infantry Division
VI. Royal Military District
42nd Home Guard Infantry Division
Battles/warsWorld War I

Early life and education

Stjepan Sarkotić was born in Sinac near the Croatian town of Otočac on 4 October 1858 as one of four siblings. His father was Lieutenant Matija Sarkotić of the Otočac Border Regiment Nr.2. After he attended gymnasium in Senj, he entered in Military School in Sankt Pölten, and later he attended Theresian Military Academy in Wiener Neustadt.

Military career

In 1884 he got his first military post in the Königgrätz Regiment, and later he was transferred to 16th Infantry Regiment in Trebinje, Herzegovina. In 1886, he was stationed in Mostar in the 1. Mountain Brigade. Until 1887 he was involved in military actions that occurred in Bosnia and Herzegovina and in Krivošije in Montenegro. By 1889 he was promoted to the rank of captain and assigned to the General Staff Corps in Vienna. He was hereafter assigned to obtain intelligence on foreign nations. To this end he travelled abroad to Serbia, Bulgaria and Macedonia, Russian city Kazan, where he learned to speak Russian. After his return, he worked in Intelligence Service of General Staff, and after that he worked with troops in the field.

As soon as he became major, he was assigned to be commander of staff of the 7th Infantry Division in Osijek, where he remained for four years. After that, he was assigned to Regiment in Prague as lieutenant colonel. Between 1900 and 1903 he was chief of Staff at the port city of Pula during which time he became colonel in 1901. After his service in Pula, he was assigned to be commander of the staff of XII Corps in Sibiu in Transilvania. In 1907 he became commander of the 5th Infantry Brigade in Linz, and in the same year he was promoted to major general. In 1908 he became commander of the 88th Lands Rifle Regiment, and in 1910 he was assigned to be a commander of 44th Home Guard Division. On 2 November 1911 he was promoted to feldmarschalleutnant. Emperor Franz Joseph appointed him to the nobility in 1908.[1]

On 10 April 1912 Sarkotić became general of the VI Royal Hungarian Honvéd District, succeeding his countryman Svetozar Boroević in this post. Sarkotić was also commander of the Home Guard of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia with headquarters in Zagreb.

Governor of Bosnia and Herzegovina

With the start of World War I, Sarkotić was one of the chief commanders of the Austrian-Hungarian forces on the Serbian campaign, commanding the 42nd Home Guard Infantry Division, which was part of the XII Corps. He handled his duties well despite overall setbacks on the part of the Austrian-Hungarians. In 1914 he was decorated with Order of the Iron Crown 2nd Class.

Due to unsuccessful resistance to the Serbian army, Oskar Potiorek was replaced by Sarkotić as Governor of Bosnia and Herzegovina on 22 December 1914. At the same time, he was named commander of 15th and 16th division,[2] and promoted to the rank of a general of infantry. With this appointment, Sarkotić held both military and civil power in Bosnia and Herzegovina. As governor of Bosnia and Herzegovina he understood the need for reforms in the region by both Austria and Hungary due to what he saw as the danger of a Yugoslav state. Sarkotić formally dissolved the Diet of Bosnia in February 1915. The last time the Diet convened until then was 29 June 1914.[3]

In 1916 Sarkotić commanded the Western wing of the campaign into Montenegro from the naval base in Kotor. His troops attacked the Montenegrin forces at Mount Lovćen. Within two days his forces took Lovćen and three days after that the Montenegrin capital, Cetinje, was also under their control. For the success of this operation, Sarkotić was awarded the Order of Leopold First Class with War Decoration and Swords and the Bronze Military Merit Medal with Swords. He was also made a Hungarian baron, accepting the style of von Lovćen, and was afterwards officially styled Stefan Baron Sarkotić von Lovćen at the Austrian court.[1] Although his title of baron was Hungarian, Sarkotić was often referred to as Freiherr Sarkotić von Lovćen in German.

In 1917 he was promoted to Generaloberst (Colonel General). He continued at his position in Bosnia and Herzegovina until 1918. With the dissolution of the Dual Monarchy, he retired in December 1918. However, Sarkotić was incarcerated by officials from the newly proclaimed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes along with other political opponents of the state. Sarkotić was strongly anti-Serbian and anti-Yugoslav. During his tenure as governor of Bosnia and Herzegovina he suggested the unification of Croatia-Slavonia with Dalmatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina. However, Austria-Hungary's political elite never took the threat of a South Slav state very seriously. István Tisza, Prime Minister of Hungary suggested a plebiscite be held, but the actions were too little too late. On Sarkotić's recommendation Tisza met with Ivo Pilar and Josip Vancaš, anti-Yugoslav members of the Croat People's Union in the Diet of Bosnia and Herzegovina, during his visit to Sarajevo in September 1918.[4]

Emigration

Sarkotić's tomb in Vienna

After his release he returned to Vienna. Here he was involved with Croatian émigré groups. He frequently wrote against the ruling Serb Karađorđević dynasty in the Austrian Reichspost. He also formed and was head of a group known as the Croatian Committee. Even though at the beginning, Croat émigrés were united, they divided later into two groups, one being the legitimists, led by Sarkotić and Stjepan Duić, and the republicans, led by Ivo Frank. The legitimists, mostly former Austrian-Hungarian officers, supported re-unification of Austria-Hungary. Sarkotić considered that Croats were endangered in Yugoslavia because of strong Serbian nationalism and huge influence of the Serbian Orthodox Church. However, since there were no sympathies for the old Austrian-Hungarian Monarchy amongst Croats, the Committee had little influence in Croatia.[5]

In 1932, a right-wing Croatian politician Ante Pavelić founded the Ustaša – Croatian Revolutionary Movement in Italy. Pavelić's organisation overshadowed Sarkotić's Committee both numerically and with fanaticism, which led to eventual diminishing of Sarkotić's influence amongst the Croatian émigrés. Sarkotić died in Vienna in 1939.[6]

Notes

  1. Tucker 2005, p. 1053.
  2. Grijak 2001, p. 528.
  3. Donia 2006, p. 128.
  4. Matijević 2009, p. 95.
  5. Tomasevich 2010, p. 17.
  6. Tomasevich 2010, p. 33.

References

Books

  • Donia, Robert J. (2006). Sarajevo: A Biography. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 9780472115570.
  • Grijak, Zoran (2001). Politička djelatnost vrhbosanskog nadbiskupa Josipa Stadlera (in Croatian). Zagreb: Hrvatski institut za povijest. ISBN 9789536491582.
  • Tomasevich, Jozo (2002). War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941 - 1945. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804779241.
  • Tucker, Spencer C. (2005). World War I. 1. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9781851094202.

Papers

  • Matijević, Zlatko (2009). "Ivo Pilar and the Art of the Possible: Croatia Between Central Europe and the Balkans". Review of Croatian History. 5.
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