Title
Italija i Srbija u Prvom svetskom ratu 1915-1918
Creator
Videnović, Milan, 1990-
CONOR:
26895719
Copyright date
2025
Object Links
Select license
Autorstvo-Nekomercijalno-Bez prerade 3.0 Srbija (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0)
License description
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Language
Serbian
Cobiss-ID
Theses Type
Doktorska disertacija
description
Datum odbrane: 17.06.2025
Other responsibilities
Academic Expertise
Društveno-humanističke nauke
University
Univerzitet u Nišu
Faculty
Filozofski fakultet
Group
Departman za istoriju
Alternative title
Italy and Serbia in the First world war 1915-1918
Publisher
[M. Videnović]
Format
619 listova
description
Biografija autora: list 619.
Bibliografija: listovi 596-618.
description
Political history
Abstract (en)
The The Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Serbia before the
Balkan Wars had no critical points of contention. Their relations were
first put to a real test when the Serbian army occupied the Albanian
coast. At that moment, Italy, acting in its own interests, alongside
Austria–Hungary, supported the creation of an autonomous Albania at
the London Conference. During the Great War, particularly after the
signing of the Treaty of London on April 26, 1915, the irreversible
deterioration of relations between Italy and Serbia began, culminating
in outright hostility by the end of the global conflict. The central issue
between Rome and Belgrade during this period was the struggle over
the Habsburg legacy – that is, conflicting visions for the future of the
Balkans and the Danube region after the war. The inability of Pašić
and Sonnino to reach an agreement during the war meant that
unresolved issues became the root of conflicts between Italy and
Yugoslavia in the interwar period. Based on an analysis of
unpublished and published archival materials, diaries, memoirs, and
selected literature, the doctoral dissertation traces the formation and
development of this conflict
Authors Key words
Italija, Srbija, Prvi svetski rat, Londonski ugovor,
Jugoslavija, Albanija, Balkan, Jadransko more, diplomatija,
Sonino, Pašić
Authors Key words
Italy, Serbia, The First World War, Treaty of London, Србија,
Yugoslavia, The Balkans, Albania, Adriatic sea, diplomacy , Sonnino,
Pašić
Classification
94(450:497.11)"1915/1918"(043.3)
Subject
H 250;
H 271
Type
Tekst
Abstract (en)
The The Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Serbia before the
Balkan Wars had no critical points of contention. Their relations were
first put to a real test when the Serbian army occupied the Albanian
coast. At that moment, Italy, acting in its own interests, alongside
Austria–Hungary, supported the creation of an autonomous Albania at
the London Conference. During the Great War, particularly after the
signing of the Treaty of London on April 26, 1915, the irreversible
deterioration of relations between Italy and Serbia began, culminating
in outright hostility by the end of the global conflict. The central issue
between Rome and Belgrade during this period was the struggle over
the Habsburg legacy – that is, conflicting visions for the future of the
Balkans and the Danube region after the war. The inability of Pašić
and Sonnino to reach an agreement during the war meant that
unresolved issues became the root of conflicts between Italy and
Yugoslavia in the interwar period. Based on an analysis of
unpublished and published archival materials, diaries, memoirs, and
selected literature, the doctoral dissertation traces the formation and
development of this conflict
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