Archival Descriptions

Displaying items 61 to 80 of 121
Country: Croatia
  1. HRVATSKO PJEVAČKO DRUŠTVO "DAVOR"

    • Croatian choir association "Davor"
  2. ŽIDOVSKA BOGOŠTOVNA OPĆINA SLAVONSKI BROD. KOTARSKI RABINAT.

    • The Jewish Religious Community Slavonski Brod. County Rabbinical Office.
  3. HRVATSKO-DOBROTVORNO GOSPOJINSKO DRUŠTVO U BRODU NA SAVI

    • Croatian Charity Association in Brod na Savi
  4. KOTARSKI SUD U BRODU

    • The County Court in Brod
  5. GIMNAZIJA "MATIJA MESIĆ" U SLAVONSKOM BRODU

    • Matija Mesic High School (comprehensive) in Slavonski Brod
  6. Zbirka matičnih knjiga

    • Births registry collection

    Two books provide the lists of Jews living in Sisak (a list of Jewish families from the 19th century, and a registry books with births from each year)

  7. Jugoslavenski zbjeg u Italiji

    • Yugoslav Refugees to Italy
  8. Jugoslavenski zbjeg u Egiptu

    • Yugoslav Refugees to Egypt

    Fleeing the German offensive in late 1943 and early 1944, when Germany occupied Dalmatia, a large number of civilians (over 30,000), fearing reprisals, took refuge on the island of Vis. As Vis already housed the General Staff of the Partisan army and the allied British army, it was not able to accept and feed so many people. Therefore it was decided that the non-combatant population of the island be evacuated as refugees to South Italy, first to Bari and then to Taranto. Refugees mostly consisted of people from the Makarska area (around 6000), as well as from Vodice, the islands of Hvar, Vi...

  9. Vlada za Dalmaciju/ Talijanska okupaciona uprava

    • R. Governo della Dalmatia
    • Italian Administration - Dalmatian Government

    In April 1941, during World War II, the Independent State of Croatia came into being, backed by Fascist Italy (where most Ustasha lived during the 1930s, as they were anti-royalist Yugoslavia in the inter-war period) and Nazi Germany. A month later, large sections of Dalmatia were annexed by the Kingdom of Italy (in the Governatorato di Dalmazia), with the rest being formally left to the Independent State of Croatia, though it was in fact occupied by Italian forces which later supported Chetniks in Serb-populated areas. Many Croats from Dalmatia joined the resistance movement led by Tito's ...

  10. Okružna komisija za ispitivanje zločina okupatora i njihovih pomagača srednje Dalmacije Split

    • • The County Committee for Investigating Crimes Committed by the Occupying Forces and Their Helpers in Central Dalmatia Split

    The various County Commissions on Establishing the Crimes of the Occupying Forces and Their Local Helpers during the war were established throughout Croatia, as well as the region of Dalmatia, following the end of the war. Direct perpetrators (1945/1946) were usually tried in ad hoc trials and executed. The controversy of trials in the immediate after-war period unfortunately sometimes overshadowed the anti-fascist victory.

  11. Okružni narodno-oslobodilački odbor srednje Dalmacije

    • The County Committee of the People's Liberation Army for Central Dalmatia
  12. Gradska komisija za ispitivanje zločina okupatora i njihovih pomagača

    • City Committee for the Investigation of Crimes Committed by the Occupiers and Their Helpers
  13. Glavarstvo građanske uprave za Dalmaciju u Splitu

    • The Civil Administration for Dalmatia in Split
  14. Kotarski narodno-oslobodilački odbor Split

    • National Liberation Committee of Split
  15. Narodni odbor Kotara Koprivnica

    • The People's Committee of Koprivnica county
  16. Narodni odbor Kotara Krapina

    • The People's Committee of Krapina County
  17. Narodni odbor Kotara Varaždin

    • The People's Committee of Varaždin County
  18. Narodni odbor Grada Koprivnica

    • The People's Committee of the City of Koprivnica
  19. Okružni narodni odbor Varaždin

    • The People's Committee of Varaždin County
  20. Dobrotvorno društvo "Prehrana" Zagreb

    • The Jewish charity society "Prehrana" in Zagreb

    Founded by Šandor Alexander pl. Sesvetski (April 5, 1866 – December 17, 1929), a Croatian nobleman, industrialist, and philanthropist; he was the younger brother of Samuel David Alexander and a member of the prominent Alexander family of Zagreb.