Military General Governorate of Serbia explained

Conventional Long Name:Imperial and Royal Military General Governorate of Serbia
Era:First World War
Empire:Austria-Hungary
Population Estimate Year:1916
Currency:Serbian dinar
Title Leader:Military Governor
Leader1:Johann von Salis-Seewis
Year Leader1:1916
Leader2:Adolf von Rhemen
Year Leader2:1916–1918
Leader3:Hermann Kövess
Year Leader3:1918
Population Estimate:1 373 511
Capital:Belgrade
Today:Serbia
Area Km2:23,880
Iso3166code:RS
Image Map2 Caption:Map of the Military Governorate of Serbia
Event End:Territory liberated
Common Name:Austro-Hungarian Military Governorate of Serbia (MGG/S)
Status:Occupied territory
Status Text:Territory under Austro-Hungarian Military administration
Government Type:Occupation authority
Event Start:Established
Year Start:1916
Date Start:1 January
Year End:1918
Image Map Caption:Division of Serbia into an Austro-Hungarian and a Bulgarian occupation zone
Image Map2:Mapofmilitarygovernmentofoccupiedserbiaww1.jpg
Date End:11 November
P1:Kingdom of Serbia
Flag P1:Flag of Serbia (1882–1918).svg
S1:Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Flag S1:Flag of Yugoslavia (1918–1941).svg
Official Languages:German
Recognized National Languages:Serbian

The Military General Governorate of Serbia (German: Militärgeneralgouvernement Serbien, MGG/S for short) was a military administration established by the Austro-Hungarian Army during the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Serbia. The Governorate existed from 1 January 1916 to 1 November 1918 during World War I. Along with Bulgarian occupied Serbia, it was one of the two separate occupation zones created after the Kingdom of Serbia was invaded and partitioned by the Central Powers.

History

See main article: Austro-Hungarian occupation of Serbia. During the unsuccessful Austro-Hungarian Serbian campaign of 1914, a first military governorate was set up in Belgrade by the Austrian Supreme Command. Field-Marshal Stjepan Sarkotić, commander of the Devils's Division, was appointed military governor in November. The Serbian army's counteroffensive a month later liberated the country, ending the short-lived occupation. Following the Central Powers' Serbian campaign of 1915 and the subsequent retreat of the Serbian army, the country was divided into three zones of control, Austria-Hungarian, German and Bulgarian.

The Austro-Hungarian zone encompassed the northwestern part of Serbia, with Belgrade as its administrative centre, to the north-east corner near Negotin. The areas east of the Morava, Macedonia itself and most of Kosovo fell under Bulgarian occupation. The Germans decided not to seek territory for themselves but took control instead of railways, mines, forestry, and agricultural resources in both occupied zones; in the area east of Velika Morava, Južna Morava in Kosovo and the Vardar valley. The Austro-Hungarian occupiers established a similar military administration in the territory of the Kingdom of Montenegro.

The Austro-Hungarian Military Governorate in Serbia was officially started on 1 January 1916 by order of the Austro-Hungarian Supreme Command.

Governance

See also: List of administrators of occupied Serbia during World War I. The MGG/S was directly subordinated to the Austro-Hungarian Army High Command under Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf and later Arthur Arz von Straußenburg.

General Johann Graf von Salis-Seewis, a Croat by ethnicity, was appointed Military Governor-General by the Emperor at the end of 1915, he assumed his position on 6 January 1916. The governor-general was supported by Chief of Staff, Lieutenant Colonel Otto Gellinek, who been military attaché in Belgrade before the war.

General von Salis-Seewis was replaced by General Adolf Freiherr von Rhemen on 6 July 1916, while Colonel Hugo Kerchnawe succeeded Lieutenant Colonel Otto Gellinek.

A civilian commissioner was appointed by the Hungarian government, to assist the military governor-general. Dr. Ludwig (Lajos) Thallóczy, a Hungarian historian and Balkan expert, took office on 17 January 1916. After his accidental death in December 1916, he was succeeded by Teodor Kušević in January 1917.

Military GovernorsTerm
Feldmarschallleutnant Johann Ulrich Graf von Salis-Seewis1 January 1916 – 6 July 1916
Generaloberst Adolf Freiherr von Rhemen zu Barensfeld6 July 1916 – October 1918
Feldmarschall Hermann Kövess von KövessházaOctober 1918 – 1 November 1918
Civilian CommissionersTerm
Ludwig Thallóczy17 January 1916 – 1 December 1916
Teodor KuševićJanuary 1917 – 1 November 1918
Four administrative departments were set up: military, economic, judicial, and political, with the latter under future Ustaše leader Slavko Kvaternik.

Administrative divisions

The administrative divisions initially consisted of five county commands or provinces, based on pre-war Serbia's counties, as established during the brief occupation of 1914. After March 1916 the divisions came up to a total of twelve provinces plus the city of Belgrade: Each of the twelve provinces (German: Kreise), were ruled by a commander (German: Kreiskonimandanten) who was responsible for all military and civil affairs. The provinces were additionally divided into sixty-four districts (German: Bezirkskommandos). Civil administration in towns and villages was done by a Serbian: Predsednik, a community leader chosen from the ranks of the local population.

ProvincePopulation (based on MGG/S 1916 census)Notes
Belgrade city9,000from 1 January 1916
Belgrade province179,173
Valjevo province117,502
Šabac province161,569
Gornji Milanovac province70,029
Kragujevac province155,461
Smederevo province117,254
Kruševac province195,655From 11 February 1916
Čačak province114,783Established on 1 January 1916 and incorporated into the MGG/S in February the same year, with the following districts: Čačak, Kraljevo, Ivanjica, Guča, Ušće and (from August 1917) Raška.
Užice province114,061
Prijepolje province37,826From 15 March 1916
Novi-pazar province71,746
Kosovska Mitrovica province45,912

After the Austro–Bulgarian confrontation of April 1916, an agreement on a demarcation line was signed between the Austro- Hungarian and Bulgarian commands. Bulgaria retained the district containing Prizren and Pristina in Kosovo, while Austria-Hungary kept Elbasan.

Dissolution

In mid October 1918, overwhelmed by the Allies offensive spearheaded by Serbian and French troops, Governor Hermann von Kövess ordered a retreat of all the remaining Austro-Hungarian personal behind the Danube, Save and Drina rivers; Belgrade was liberated on 30 October, thus ending the Military General Governorate of Serbia.

See also

References

Sources