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{{Short description|Puppet state of Nazi Germany and protectorate of Fascist Italy within occupied Yugoslavia}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2012}}
{{Redirect|NDH}} {{Redirect|NDH}}
{{About|the Nazi puppet state|the nation which gained independence in 1991|Croatia}} {{About|the puppet state during World War II|the history of how Croatia gained independence in 1991|independence of Croatia}}
{{pp-semi-indef}}
{{Infobox Former Country
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2023}}
|native_name = ''Nezavisna Država Hrvatska''
{{Infobox country
|conventional_long_name = Independent State of Croatia
|common_name = Croatia | native_name = {{native name|hr|Nezavisna Država Hrvatska}}
| conventional_long_name = Independent State of Croatia
|continent = Europe
|region = Balkans | common_name =
|country = Croatia | era = ]
| government_type = {{nowrap|] ]<br>] ]<br>(1941–1945) under a<br>]<br>(1941–1943){{NoteTag|], accepted nomination on 18 May 1941 as "Tomislav II", abdicated 31 July 1943 and renounced all claims on 12 October 1943.<ref name="Rodogno"/><ref name="Pavlowitch-p289">], </ref><ref name="Massock">Massock, Richard G.; ''Italy from Within''; p. 306; Seabrook Press, 2007; {{ISBN|1-4067-2097-6}}</ref> Subsequently, the state was no longer a technical monarchy. ] became head of state, and his title as leader of the ruling ] movement, ''Poglavnik'', officially became the title of the NDH head of state.}}}}
|era = World War II
| status = ]
|government_type = ] <small>(1941–43)</small>, <br/>Fascist ]
| status_text = {{nowrap|] of ]<br>(1941–1945)<br>] of ]<br>(1941–1943)}}
|status = Puppet state
| empire =
|status_text = ] of ] <small>(1941–1943)</small> <br/>''De facto'' ] of ] <small>(1941–45)</small>
|empire = | event_start = ]
|event_start = | year_start = 1941
|year_start = 1941 | date_start = 10 April
|date_start = 10 April | event1 = ]
|event_ent = | date_event1 = 18 May 1941
|year_end = 1945 | event2 = ]
|date_end = 8 May | date_event2 = 15 June 1941
| event3 = {{nowrap|] ] }}
|p1 = Kingdom of Yugoslavia
|flag_p1 = Flag of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.svg | date_event3 = {{nowrap|10 September 1943}}
|s1 = Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia | event4 = ]
|flag_s1 = Flag of SFR Yugoslavia.svg | date_event4 = 30 August 1944
|image_flag = Flag of Independent State of Croatia.svg | event5 = ]
|flag = Flag of Croatia | date_event5 = 8 May 1945
|image_coat = Coat of arms of the Independent State of Croatia.svg | event6 = {{nowrap|] ] }}
|symbol = Coat of arms of Croatia | date_event6 = 15 May
|image_map = | event_end = ]
|image_map_alt = | year_end = 1945
|image_map_caption = | date_end = 25 May
| p1 = Kingdom of Yugoslavia{{!}}{{nowrap|'''1941:'''<br>Kingdom of<br>Yugoslavia}}
|image_map2 = NezavisnaDrzavaHrvatska - infobox collage.png
| flag_p1 = Flag of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.svg
|image_map2_alt =
| p2 = Governorate of Dalmatia{{!}}{{nowrap|'''1943:'''<br>Governorate<br>of Dalmatia}}
|image_map2_caption = Independent State of Croatia, with administrative divisions: 1941-43 (above); 1943-45 (below)
|capital = Zagreb |latd=44|latm=48|latNS=N|longd=15|longm=58|longEW=E | flag_p2 = Flag of Italy (1861-1946) crowned.svg
| s1 = Democratic Federal Yugoslavia
|common_languages = ]
| flag_s1 = Flag of the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia.svg
|religion = Catholic,<br>], Islam,<br>]
|currency = ] | image_flag = Flag of Independent State of Croatia.svg
|government = ] | flag = Flag of Croatia
|title_leader = ] | image_coat = Coat of arms of Croatia (1941–1945).svg
| symbol_type_article = Coat of arms of Croatia
|leader1 = ]<ref name="Rodogno">Rodogno, Davide; Fascism's European empire: Italian occupation during the Second World War; p.95; Cambridge University Press, 2006 ISBN 0-521-84515-7</ref><ref name="Pavlowitch">Pavlowitch, Stevan K.; ''Hitler's new disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia''; p.289; Columbia University Press, 2008 0-231-70050-4 </ref><ref name="Massock">Massock, Richard G.; ''Italy from Within''; p.306; READ BOOKS, 2007 ISBN 1-4067-2097-6 </ref>*
|year_leader1 = 1941–1943 | symbol_type = Coat of arms
| coa_size = 70px
|title_representative = ]
| image_map = Independent State of Croatia (1943).svg
|representative1 = ]
| image_map_caption = The Independent State of Croatia in 1943
|year_representative1 = 1941–1945
|title_deputy = ] | capital = ]
| motto = "]"<ref>{{cite web |last1=Dragčević |first1=Vitomir |title='Za dom spremni' je isto što i 'Sieg Heil'! |url=https://net.hr/danas/crna-kronika/za-dom-spremni-je-isto-sto-i-sieg-heil-b33811a0-b1c8-11eb-9e47-0242ac150023 |website=danas |date=9 January 2012}}</ref><br />"For the home—Ready!"
|deputy1 = ]
|year_deputy1 = 1941–1943
|deputy2 = ]
|year_deputy2 = 1943–1945
|legislature = ]
|stat_year1 = 1941
|stat_area1 = 115133
|stat_pop1 = 6966729
|footnotes = * ] accepted nomination on 18 May 1941, abdicated 31 July 1943 and renounced all claims on 12 October 1943.<ref name="Rodogno" /><ref name="Pavlowitch" /><ref name="Massock" /> Subsequently, the state was no longer a technical monarchy. ] became head of state, and his title as leader of the ruling ] movement, "Poglavnik", officially became the title of the NDH head of state.
|today = {{flag|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}<br>{{flag|Croatia}}<br>{{flag|Montenegro}}<br>{{flag|Serbia}}<br>{{flag|Slovenia}}
}}


| national_anthem = '']''<br />"Our Beautiful Homeland"<ref>{{cite book|last=Carmichael|first=Cathie|year=2015|title=A Concise History of Bosnia|publisher=Cambridge University Press|location=Cambridge, England|isbn=978-1-10701-615-6|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rMfSCQAAQBAJ|page=105}}</ref>{{parabr}}{{center|]}}
The '''Independent State of Croatia''' ({{lang-sh|''Nezavisna Država Hrvatska,'' Независна Држава Хрватска}}, NDH; {{lang-de|Unabhängiger Staat Kroatien}}; {{lang-it|Stato Indipendente di Croazia}}) was a World War II ] of ],<ref>"". Britannica Online Encyclopedia. Accessed 8 September 2009.
| official_languages = ]
*"". Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia. Accessed 8 September 2009.
| religion = {{nowrap|]|]{{sfn|Ramet|2006|p=|ps=: "For the Ustaše, religion and nationality were closely linked; Catholicism and Islam were declared to be the national religions of the Croatian people, while Orthodoxy was initially described as inherently incompatible with the Croatian state project. ... Starčević's idea that the Bosnian Muslims were the "purest" Croats was resurrected, and Muslims were given permission to build mosques in Zagreb and elsewhere in the country."}}}}
*"". ''Holocaust Encyclopedia''. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Accessed 8 September 2009. 31 October 2009.</ref> established on a part of ]-occupied ]. The NDH was founded on 10 April 1941, after the ] by the Axis powers. All of ] was annexed to NDH, together with some parts of ].
| currency = ]

| title_leader = ]
The state was technically a monarchy and ] ] from the signing of the Rome agreements on 19 May 1941 until the ] on 8 September 1943, but the would-be king, appointed by ], Prince ], refused to assume the crown in opposition to the Italian annexation of the ] and ]-populated Yugoslav region of ].<ref name="Rodogno" /><ref name="Pavlowitch" /><ref name="Massock" />
| leader1 = ]<ref name="Rodogno">Rodogno, Davide; Fascism's European empire: Italian occupation during the Second World War; p. 95; Cambridge University Press, 2006 {{ISBN|0-521-84515-7}}</ref>

| year_leader1 = 1941–1943
The state was actually controlled by the governing fascist ] movement and its ''Poglavnik'',<ref group=note>"''Poglavnik''" was a term coined by the ], and it was originally used as the title for the leader of the movement. In 1941 it was institutionalized in the NDH as the title of first the Prime Minister (1941–43), and then the head of state (1943–45). It was at all times held by ] and became synonymous with him. The translation of the term varies. The root of the word is the ] word "''glava''", meaning "head" ("''Po''-''glav(a)''-''nik''"). The more literal translation is "head-man", while "leader" captures more of the meaning of the term (in relation to the German "''Führer''" and Italian "''Duce''").</ref> ], which in turn were primarily under German influence. For its first two years up to 1943, the state was also a territorial ] of Germany and Italy.<ref>Tomasevich, Jozo (2001). ''War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945''. p. 60. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0-8047-3615-4. "Thus on 15 April 1941, Pavelić came to power, albeit a very limited power, in the new Ustasha state under the umbrella of German and Italian forces. On the same say Hitler and Mussolini granted recognition to the Croatian state and declared that their governments would be glad to participate with the Croatian government in determining its frontiers."
| title_representative = '']''

| representative1 = ]
*Stephen R. Graubard (1993). ''Exit from Communism''. p. 153. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 1-56000-694-3. "Mussolini and Hitler installed the Ustašas in power in Zagreb, making them the nucleus of a dependent regime of the newly created Independent State of Croatia, an Italo-German condominium predicated on the abolition of Yugoslavia."
| year_representative1 = 1941–1945
*Frucht, Richard C. (2005). ''Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture''. p. 429. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 1-57607-800-0. "The NDH was in fact an Italo-German condominium. Both Nazi Germany and fascist Italy had spheres of influence in the NDH and stationed their own troops there."
| title_deputy = ]
*Banac, Ivo (1988). ''With Stalin Against Tito: Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Communism''. p. 4. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-2186-1.</ref> Additionally, central Dalmatia was annexed directly into Italian territory as part of the ] agenda of an Italian '']'' (Our Sea). Italian influence collapsed in 1943, with the ousting of Italian fascist leader ].
| deputy1 = ]

| year_deputy1 = 1941–1943
Racial targets of the NDH were ], ] and ] people, against whom large-scale genocide campaigns were conducted in places such as the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/Jasenovac.html |title=Jasenovac |publisher=Jewishvirtuallibrary.org |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref name="books.google.com">{{cite book|title=Hitler's new disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia|author=Stevan K. Pavlowitch|isbn=0-231-70050-4|year=2008|page=ix|url=http://books.google.com/?id=R8d2409V9tEC&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=tomislav+dulic+ndh&q=victim|publisher=Columbia University Press}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|title=Hitler's new disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia|author=Stevan K. Pavlowitch|isbn=0-231-70050-4|year=2008|page=34|url=http://books.google.com/?id=R8d2409V9tEC&pg=PA34&lpg=PA34&dq=tomislav+dulic+ndh&q=tomislav%20dulic%20ndh|publisher=Columbia University Press}}</ref>
| deputy2 = ]

| year_deputy2 = 1943–1945
==Government==
| legislature =
The absolute leader of the NDH was ], who was known by his Ustaše title, '']'', throughout the war, regardless of his official government post. From 1941 to 1943, while the country was a '']'' monarchy, Pavelić was its powerful Prime Minister (or "President of the Government"). After the capitulation of Italy, Pavelić became the ] in the place of ] ("Tomislav II") and retained the position of Prime Minister until early 1944, when he appointed ] to replace him.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vojska.net/eng/world-war-2/independent-state-of-croatia/government/5/ |title=Fifth government of NDH |publisher=Vojska.net |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref>
| stat_year1 = 1941

| stat_area1 = 115133<ref name="Lohse">{{cite book|last=Lohse|first=Alexandra|editor1-last=Megargee|editor1-first=Geoffrey P.|editor2-last=White|editor2-first=Joseph R.|year=2018|series=The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945|title=Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany|chapter=Croatia|volume=III|publisher=Indiana University Press|location=Bloomington, Indiana|isbn=978-0-25302-386-5|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8nBTDwAAQBAJ|page=47}}</ref>
===Monarchy===
| stat_pop1 = 6,500,000<ref name="Lohse"/>
Upon the formation of the NDH, Pavelić conceded to the accession of Aimone, the 4th Duke of Aosta, as a ] King of Croatia under his new royal name, Tomislav II. Tomislav II was not interested in being the figurehead King of Croatia,<ref name="autogenerated5">The Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War II, New York – London, 1980, Pages 394–395</ref> never actually visited the country and had no influence over the government. In the summer of 1941, Tomislav II declared that he would accept his position as King, only if certain demands were met:
| today = {{ubl|]|]|]|]}}
#that he should be informed about all Italian activities on NDH territory;
| demonym = ]
#that his reign should be confirmed by the NDH Croatian State Parliament; and
#that politics should play no part in the Croatian armed forces.<ref>Stevan K. Pavlowich:The King Who</ref>
The demands for German and Italian military departures were obviously impossible to be met by the Italian and German governments, and Tomislav II thus avoided taking up his position in Croatia.
{{Fascism sidebar}}
Following the dismissal of Italian leader ] on 25 July 1943, Tomislav II abdicated on 31 July on the orders of King ]. Shortly after the ] in September 1943, Ante Pavelić declared that Tomislav II was no longer King of Croatia.<ref>International documents of NDH</ref> Tomislav II formally renounced his title in October 1943 after the birth of his son ], to whom he gave the name Zvonimir II.<ref name="one">{{cite web|author=Ben Cahoon |url=http://www.worldstatesmen.org/Croatia.html |title=Croatia |publisher=Worldstatesmen.org |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news| title =Royal House of Italy| newspaper =]|url =http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/italygen.htm| postscript =<!--None-->}}</ref>

Tomislav II's full title was "King of Croatia, Prince of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Voivode of Dalmatia, Tuzla and Knin, Duke of Aosta (from 1942), Prince of Cisterna and of Belriguardo, Marquess of Voghera, and Count of Ponderano."

===Parliament===
]
The NDH Parliament was established by the ''Legal Decree on the Croatian State Parliament'' on 24 January 1942.<ref name="Peric259">Perić, Ivo. ''Vladko Macek: Politicki portret''. Golden marketing-Tehnicka knjiga. Zagreb, 2003 (pg.259–260)</ref> The parliament members were not elected and meetings were convened just over a dozen times after the initial session in 1942. Its president vas ].

This decree established five categories of individuals who would receive an invitation to be a member of parliament from the Ustaše-appointed government: living Croatian representatives from the Croatian Parliament of 1918, living Croatian representatives elected in the ], members of the ] prior to 1919, certain officials of the Supreme Ustaše Headquarters and two members of the German national assembly.<ref name="Peric259" /> The responsibility for assembling all eligible members of parliament was given to the head of the Supreme Court, Nikola Vukelić, who found 204 people to be eligible.<ref name="Peric259" /> In accordance with the decree, Vukelić ruled that those who had received the position of senator in 1939, had been part of ]'s government, or had been part of the Yugoslav government-in-exile forfeited their eligibility.<ref name="Peric259" /> Two hundred and four people were declared eligible for the parliament, with 141 actually attending parliamentary meetings. Of the 204 eligible parliament members, 93 were members of the ], 56 of whom attended meetings.<ref name="Peric259" />

The Parliament was only a deliberatory body and was not empowered to enact legislation. However, during the eighth session of the parliament in February 1942, the Ustaše regime was put on the defensive when a joint Croatian Peasant Party-Croatian Party of Rights motion, supported by 39 members of parliament, questioned about the whereabouts of the Peasant Party's leader ].<ref name="Peric259" /> The following session, Ante Pavelić responded that Maček was being kept in isolation to prevent him from coming into contact with Yugoslav government officials. In less than a month, Maček was moved from the ] and put on house arrest at his property in Kupinec.<ref name="Peric259" /> Maček was later called upon by foreigners to take a stand and counteract the Pavelić government, but he refused. Maček fled the country in 1945, with the help of Ustaše General Ante Moškov.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vojska.net/eng/biography/m/moskov/ante/ |title=Ante Moskov (Moškov)|publisher=Vojska.net |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref>

After its February 1942 session, the Parliament met only a few more times, and the decree was not renewed in 1943.

===Court system===
{{Main|Invasion of Yugoslavia}}
{{multiple image
|align=right
|direction=vertical
|width=220
|header=
|image1=Axis occupation of Yugoslavia 1941-43.png|caption1=Occupation and partition of Yugoslavia, 1941–43.
|image2=Axis occupation of Yugoslavia 1943-44.png|caption2=Occupation and partition of Yugoslavia, 1943–44.
}} }}
The NDH retained the court system of the ], but restored the courts' names to their original forms. The state had 172 local courts (''kotar''), 19 district courts (''judicial tables''), an administrative court and an appellate court (''Ban's Table'') in both ] and ], as well as a supreme court (Table of Seven) in Zagreb and a supreme court in Sarajevo.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pravst.hr/zbornik.php?p=12&s=40 |title=Pravni fakultet Split – Zbornik |publisher=Pravst.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> The state maintained men's penitentiaries in ], Hrvatska Mitrovica, Stara Gradiška and Zenica, and a women's penitentiary in Zagreb.<ref>Kovačić, Darko. '''', 2008.</ref>


The '''Independent State of Croatia''' ({{langx|sh|Nezavisna Država Hrvatska}}, '''NDH''') was a ]–era ] of ]<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090822010755/http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761577939_7/Croatia.html |date=22 August 2009 }}. Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia; retrieved 8 September 2009.</ref><ref>, ''Holocaust Encyclopedia''. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum; retrieved 8 September 2009. 31 October 2009.</ref> and ]. It was established in parts of ] on 10 April 1941, after ] by the ]. Its territory consisted mostly of modern-day ] and ], as well as some parts of modern-day ] and ], but also excluded many ]-populated areas in ] (until late 1943), ], and ] regions (which today are part of Croatia).
===Military===
{{See also|Army of the Independent State of Croatia|Ustaše|Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia}}
The NDH founded the ] ({{lang-hr|Hrvatsko domobranstvo}}) and ] in April 1941 with the consent of the German armed forces ('']''). The task of the armed forces was to defend the state against both foreign and domestic enemies.<ref>Tomasevich, 2001, p. 419</ref> The Army included an ]. The NDH also created the ''Ustaška Vojnica'', which was conceived as a party militia, and a ].


During its entire existence, the NDH was governed as a ] by the ] ] organization. The Ustaše was led by the '']''<ref group="note"> ]."'']''" was coined by the ] and originally a title for the movement's leader. In 1941 it was institutionalized in the NDH as the title of first the Prime Minister (1941–1943), and then the head of state (1943–1945). It was at all times held by ] (1889–1959) and became synonymous with him. The translation of the term varies. The root of the word is the ] word "''glava''", meaning "head" ("''Po''-''glav(a)''-''nik''"). The more literal translation is "head-man", while "leader" captures more of the meaning of the term (in relation to the German "'']''" and Italian "'']''").</ref> The regime targeted ], ] and ] as part of a large-scale campaign of genocide, as well as anti-fascist or dissident Croats and ].<ref name="fischer">{{cite book|editor-last=Fischer|editor-first=Bernd J.|editor-link=Bernd Jürgen Fischer|year=2007|title=Balkan Strongmen: Dictators and Authoritarian Rulers of South-Eastern Europe|publisher=Purdue University Press|isbn=978-1-55753-455-2|pages=207–208, 210, 226}}</ref><ref>
The Army was originally limited to 16 ] ] and 2 ] ] – 16,000 men in total. The original 16 battalions were soon enlarged to 15 infantry regiments of two battalions each between May and June 1941, organised into five divisional commands, some 55,000 men.<ref>Thomas, 1995, p.12</ref> Support units included 35 light tanks supplied by Italy,<ref>Tomasevich, 2001, p. 420</ref> 10 artillery battalions (equipped with captured ] weapons of Czech origin), a cavalry regiment in Zagreb and an independent cavalry battalion at Sarajevo. Two independent motorized infantry battalions were based at Zagreb and Sarajevo respectively.<ref>Thomas, 1995, p.13</ref>
* {{cite news |work=] |url=https://balkaninsight.com/2024/07/04/croatia-must-stop-downplaying-the-genocidal-crimes-of-the-ustasa |title=Croatia Must Stop Downplaying the Genocidal Crimes of the Ustasa |date=July 4, 2024 |access-date=October 18, 2024 |quote= hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Jews, and ] as well as antifascists systematically murdered by the Croatian fascist Ustasa regime between 1941 and 1945 majority of ] in the NDH had already been murdered in the ] before the Nazi leadership had embarked on the ']'.}}
* {{cite web |website=] |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Ustasa |title=Ustaša |access-date=October 18, 2024}}
* {{cite news |work=] |url=https://english.elpais.com/eps/2020-04-03/visnja-pavelic-the-daughter-of-a-croatian-dictator-who-spent-50-years-as-a-recluse-in-madrid.html |title=Višnja Pavelić: The daughter of a Croatian dictator who lived as a recluse in Madrid |date=April 3, 2020 |access-date=October 18, 2024 |quote=The 92-year-old woman worshiped her late father, ], whose regime was responsible for the ] of more than 300,000 people in the Nazi puppet state of Croatia. Before her death, she invited us into her home where there was no remorse, only a deeply entrenched hatred}}</ref> According to Stanley G. Payne, "crimes in the NDH were proportionately surpassed only by Nazi Germany, the ] in ] and several of the extremely ] African regimes."{{sfn|Payne|2006|pp=409-415}} In the territory controlled by the Independent State of Croatia, between 1941 and 1945, there existed 22 concentration camps. The largest camp was ].<ref>
* {{harvnb|Dulić|2006}}
* {{cite web|url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Holocaust/Jasenovac.html|title=Jasenovac |work=Jewish Virtual Library|access-date=3 June 2011}}
* , Holocaustresearchproject.org; accessed 4 December 2015.
* {{cite journal|journal=Balcanica|title=The Role of Concentration Camps in the Policies of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) in 1941|url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=308602|first=Milan|last=Koljanin|publisher=Balkanološki institut - Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti|year=2015|issue=46|pages=315–340|doi=10.2298/BALC1546315K |access-date=October 19, 2024}}</ref><ref>
* {{cite journal|journal=Genocide Studies and Prevention|title=The United States' Response to Genocide in the Independent State of Croatia, 1941–1945|url=https://www.utpjournals.press/doi/abs/10.3138/gsp.3.1.75|last=McCormick|first=Rob|volume=3|issue=1|year=2008|pages=75–98|doi=10.3138/gsp.3.1.75|access-date=October 19, 2024}}
* {{cite book|title=The Independent State of Croatia 1941-45|url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/books/edit/10.4324/9781003060970/independent-state-croatia-1941-45-sabrina-ramet|author=Sabrina P. Ramet|editor-first1=Sabrina P. |editor-last1=Ramet |edition=1|year=2008|isbn=9781003060970|publisher=]|doi=10.4324/9781003060970|access-date=October 19, 2024}}
* {{cite book|title=The Routledge Handbook of Balkan and Southeast European History|url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780429464799-51/usta%C5%A1a-regime-politics-terror-independent-state-croatia|chapter=The Ustaša regime and the politics of terror in the independent state of Croatia, 1941–1945|last=Yeomans|first=Rory|year=2020|pages=383–391 |publisher=]|isbn=9780429464799|edition=1|doi=10.4324/9780429464799-51 |access-date=October 19, 2024}}</ref> Two camps, ] and ], held only children.<ref name="fischer"/><ref name="Pavlowitch-p34">{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R8d2409V9tEC&pg=PA34|title=Hitler's New Disorder: The Second World War in Yugoslavia|first=Stevan K.|last=Pavlowitch|date=2017|publisher=Columbia University Press|isbn=9780231700504}}</ref>


The state was officially a monarchy after the signing of the ''Laws of the ]'' on 15 May 1941.<ref name="Hrvatski Narod 2">Hrvatski Narod (newspaper)16.05.1941. no. 93. p. 1., Public proclamation of the''Zakonska odredba o kruni Zvonimirovoj'' (Decrees on the crown of Zvonimir), tri članka donesena 15.05.1941.</ref><ref name="Montashefte">Die Krone Zvonimirs, Monatshefte fur Auswartige Politik, Heft 6 (1941) p. 434.</ref> ], who had been appointed by ], initially refused to assume the crown in opposition to the Italian annexation of the Croat-majority populated region of Dalmatia, annexed as part of the ] agenda of creating a '']'' ("Our Sea").{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=300}} The Duke later briefly accepted the throne due to pressure from Victor Emmanuel III and was titled ], but never moved from Italy to reside in Croatia.<ref name="Rodogno"/>
Under the terms of the Rome Agreement with Italy, the NDH navy was restricted to a few coastal and patrol craft, which mostly patrolled ]s.


From the signing of the ] on 18 May 1941 until the ] on 8 September 1943, the state was a ] of Germany and Italy.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=60}} "Thus on 15 April 1941, Pavelić came to power, albeit a very limited power, in the new Ustasha state under the umbrella of German and Italian forces. On the same day German '']'' ] and Italian '']'' ] granted recognition to the Croatian state and declared that their governments would be glad to participate with the Croatian government in determining its frontiers."<ref>Graubard, Stephen R. (1993). ''Exit from Communism''. p. 153. Transaction Publishers; {{ISBN|1-56000-694-3}}<br>"Mussolini and Hitler installed the Ustašas in power in Zagreb, making them the nucleus of a dependent regime of the newly created Independent State of Croatia, an Italo-German condominium predicated on the abolition of Yugoslavia."</ref><ref name="Frucht-p. 429">Frucht, Richard C. (2005). ''Eastern Europe: An Introduction to the People, Lands, and Culture''. p. 429. ABC-CLIO; {{ISBN|1-57607-800-0}}<br>"The NDH was in fact an Italo-German condominium. Both Nazi Germany and fascist Italy had spheres of influence in the NDH and stationed their own troops there."</ref><ref>] (1988). ''With Stalin Against Tito: Cominformist Splits in Yugoslav Communism''. Cornell University Press, p. 4; {{ISBN|0-8014-2186-1}}</ref> In its judgement in the ], the ] concluded that NDH was not a sovereign state. According to the Tribunal, "Croatia was at all times here involved an occupied country".{{sfn|Deutschland Military Tribunal|1950|pp=1302–1303}}
When established in 1941, the ] ({{lang-hr|Zrakoplovstvo Nezavisne Države Hrvatske}}) (ZNDH), consisted of captured Royal Yugoslav aircraft (seven operational fighters, 20 bombers and about 180 auxiliary and training aircraft) as well as paratroop, training and anti-aircraft artillery commands. During the course of the war on the ] it was supplemented with several hundred new or overhauled German, Italian and French fighters and bombers, until receiving the final deliveries of new aircraft from Germany in April 1945.<ref>Lisko, T. and Canak, D., Hrvatsko Ratno Zrakoplovstvo u Drugome Svejetskom Ratu (The Croatian Air force in the Second World War) Zagreb, 1998</ref>
] (HZL) aircrew pose in front of their ]Z bomber in recognition of the unit's 1,000th sortie over the ], 16 September 1942. The unit returned to Croatia in December 1942.]]
The Croatian Air Force Legion ({{lang-hr|Hrvatska Zrakoplovna Legija}}), or HZL, was a military unit of the ] which fought alongside the ] on the ] from 1941 to 1943 and then back on Croatian soil. The unit was sent to Germany for training on 15 July 1941 before heading to the Eastern Front. Many of the pilots and crews had previously served in the ] during the ] in April 1941. Some of them also had experience in the two main types that they would operate, the ] and ], with two fighter pilots having actually shot down ] aircraft.<ref>Savic, D. and Ciglic, B. Croatian Aces of World War II Osprey Aircraft of the Aces – 49, Oxford, 2002</ref>


In 1942, Germany suggested Italy take military control of all of Croatia out of a desire to redirect German troops from Croatia to the ]. Italy, however, rejected the offer as it did not believe that it could on its own handle the unstable situation in the Balkans.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Steinberg |first1=Jonathan |title=All or Nothing: The Axis and the Holocaust 1941-43 |date=2003 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=9781134436552 |page=44 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-lKBAgAAQBAJ}}</ref> After the ] and the Kingdom of Italy's ], Tomislav II abdicated from his Croatian throne: the NDH on 10 September 1943 declared that the Treaties of Rome were ] and annexed the portion of Dalmatia that had been ceded to Italy. The NDH attempted to annex ] (modern-day ], Croatia), which had been a recognized territory of Italy since 1920 and long an object of Croatian irredentism, but Germany did not allow it.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=300}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}}<ref>
During operations over the Eastern Front, the unit's fighters scored a total of 283 kills while its bombers participated in some 1,500 combat missions. Upon return to Croatia from December 1942, the unit's aircraft proved a welcome addition to the strike power of the ] forces fighting the ] on the ] right up to the end of 1944.<ref>Lisko, et al., 1998, p. 34.</ref>
* {{cite book |title=The Independent State of Croatia 1941-45 |chapter=The NDH's Relations with Italy and Germany |url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9781003060970-5/ndh-relations-italy-germany-mario-jareb |last=Jareb |first=Mario |year=2008 |edition=1 |publisher=] |doi=10.4324/9781003060970-5 |doi-broken-date=1 November 2024 |isbn=9781003060970 |access-date=October 19, 2024}}

* {{cite journal |title=A Recurrent Tragedy: Ethnic Cleansing as a Tool of State Building in the Yugoslav Multinational Setting |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/nationalities-papers/article/abs/recurrent-tragedy-ethnic-cleansing-as-a-tool-of-state-building-in-the-yugoslav-multinational-setting/E99E10EADF2B45F96147663BEDEACD87 |year=2008 |last=Mulaj |first=Klejda |journal=Nationalities Papers |volume=34 |pages=21–50 |publisher=] |doi=10.1080/00905990500504830 |access-date=October 19, 2024}}
Because of low morale among Army conscripts and their increasing disaffection with the Ustaša regime as the war progressed, the ] came to regard them as a key element in their supply line. According to William Deakin, who led one of the British missions to the Partisan commander-in-chief ], in some areas, Partisans would release Army soldiers after disarming them, so they could come back into the field with replacement weapons, which would again be seized.<ref>F W D Deakin: Embattled Mountain, Oxford University Press (London 1971)</ref> Other Army soldiers either defected or actively channelled supplies to the Partisans—particularly after the NDH ceded ] to Italy. Army troop numbers dwindled from 130,000 in early 1943 to 70,000 by late 1944, at which point the NDH government amalgamated the Army with the Ustaše Army and was organised into eighteen divisions, including artillery and armoured units.<ref>Tomasevich, 2001, p. 459</ref>
* {{cite journal |journal=Security Dimensions. International and National Studies |title=The creation of the Kingdom of Croatia in 1941 on the pages of the periodical "L'Illustrazione Italiana" |url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=539349 |publisher=Wyższa Szkoła Bezpieczeństwa Publicznego i Indywidualnego "Apeiron" w Krakowie |last=Violante |first=Antonio |year=2013 |issue=10 |pages=46–58 |access-date=October 19, 2024}}</ref>

Despite these difficulties, the Army, along with the German-commanded XV ] Corps, was able to assist the ] to hold its lines in ], ] and ] against the combined ], Bulgarian and Partisan offensives from late 1944 to shortly before the NDH collapse in May 1945.

The ] provided some level of air support (attack, fighter and transport) right up until May 1945, encountering and sometimes defeating opposing aircraft from the British ], ] and the ]. The final deliveries of up-to-date German ]G and K fighter aircraft were still taking place in April 1945.<ref>Ciglic, et al., 2007, p. 150</ref>

By the end of March 1945, it was obvious to the Croatian Army Command that, although the front remained intact, they would eventually be defeated by sheer lack of ammunition. For this reason, the decision was made to retreat into Austria, in order to surrender to the British forces advancing north from Italy.<ref>Shaw, 1973, p.101</ref> The German Army was in the process of disintegration and the supply system lay in ruins.<ref>Ambrose, 1998, p.335</ref>

The Croatian Army remained engaged in battle a week after the capitulation of Germany on 8 May 1945. At that time, the combined fighting forces numbered some 200,000 troops.<ref>Munoz, A.J., For Croatia and Christ: The Croatian Army in World War II 1941–1945 Axis Europa Books (Bayside NY, 1996)</ref>

===Currency===
The NDH currency was the ]. The Croatian State Bank was the ], responsible for issuing currency.

===Railways===
The NDH formed the Croatian State Railways after the ] was dissolved, and Serbian State Railways in Serbia was devolved.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/11118 |title=Organization of the Croatian State Railways |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref>

==Occupation zones==
{{Main|German occupation zone of the Independent State of Croatia|Italian occupation zone of the Independent State of Croatia}}
From 1941 to 1943, territory of the Independent State of Croatia was occupied by German and Italian Axis troops and was divided into two occupation zones. After capitulation of Italy in 1943, the Italian occupation zone of the Independent State of Croatia was abolished and the German occupation zone was expanded to the whole Independent State of Croatia.

==Politics==
Under the Independent State of Croatia all parties but the Ustaše party were banned.<ref>{{cite book|last=Bosworth |first=R.J.B.|title=The Oxford Handbook of Fascism|year=2009|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-929131-1|page=431}}</ref>

===Foreign relations===
The NDH was granted full recognition by the Axis Powers and by countries under Axis occupation, it was also recognized by ].<ref>{{cite book|title=International Law Reports
|author=Hersch Lauterpacht|page=57|publisher=]|year=1957|isbn=0-521-46366-1}}</ref> The state ] in several countries, all in Europe. Embassies of Nazi Germany, Italy, ], Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Finland, Spain, and Japan, as well as the consulates of Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, Denmark, Portugal, Argentina and ] were located in Zagreb.<ref name="Vojinovic">Vojinović, Aleksandar. '' NDH u Beogradu'', P.I.P, Zagreb 1995. (pgs. 18–20)</ref><ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref>

In 1941, the county was admitted to the ]. On 10 August 1942 an agreement was signed at ] which re-established the Society of Railways Danube-Sava-Adriatic between the Independent State of Croatia, ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/11118 |title=Makeup of Croatian State Railways |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> After the 11 December 1941 declaration of war by the Germany against United States, the Independent State of Croatia declared war on the United States and the United Kingdom on 14 December.<ref>Nada Kisić-Kolanović. ''NDH i Italija: političke veze i diplomatski odnosi''. Ljevak. Zagreb, 2001. (pg. 119)</ref>

The Independent State of Croatia signed the ] on 20 January 1943.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pravnadatoteka.hr/pdf/Kaznenopravni%20aspekti%20bleiburskog%20zlocina.pdf |title=Kaznenopravni i povijesni aspekti Bleiburškog zlocina |format=PDF |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref>

==Economy==
===German influences===

In the Independent State of Croatia, which the Germans formally treated as a sovereign state, most, if not all, industrial and economic activity was either monopolized, or given a high priority for exploitation, by Germany.

Agreements between the two governments in mid 1941 regulated foreign trade and payments and the export of Croatian labour to Germany. Germany already controlled a large number of industrial and mining enterprises in Croatia that were owned in part or in full by German citizens or citizens of German-occupied countries. Many other enterprises in Croatia, especially in the bauxite mining and timber industries, were leased to the Germans for the duration of the war. The Germans also held large interests in Croatian commercial banks, exercised either directly by banks in Berlin and ], or indirectly, by German banks that had large interests in ] and ] banks.<ref>Tomasevich, 2001, p. 621</ref>

From the beginning, the Germans showed great interest in the high-quality iron ore mines of Ljubija in northwest ], in the industrial complex (steel, coal and heavy chemicals) in the ]–]–] triangle in northeast Bosnia, and in bauxite. As the war advanced and German military involvement in Croatia expanded, more and more Croatian industry was put to work for the Germans. The bauxite mines in ], ] and western ], were in the Italian zone of occupation, but their total production was earmarked for German needs for the duration of the war under the German-Italian agreement of 1941.<ref>Tomasevich, 2001, p. 641</ref>

Other Croatian industrial assets utilized by the Germans included the production of brown coal and lignite, cement (major plants in ] and ]), oil and salt.
Crude oil production, from fields to the east of Zagreb developed by the American Vacuum Oil Company, only started in November 1941 and never reached a high level, averaging {{convert|24000|oilbbl}} a month in mid 1944.

The most important commodities manufactured in Croatia for German use were prefabricated barracks (utilizing the large Croatian timber industry), clothing, dry-cell batteries, bridge construction parts and ammunition (grenades).

The ] iron ore mine supplied the steel mill at Zenica, which had a capacity of 120,000 tons of steel annually. The Zenica mill, in turn, supplied the state arsenal in Sarajevo and the machinery and railroad car factory in ], both of which produced various items for the ] during the war, including grenades and shell casings. Some Vares iron ore was also exported to Italy, Hungary and ].<ref>Tomasevich, 2001, p. 646</ref>

===Italian influence===

The region of the NDH controlled by Italy had few natural resources and little industry.{{Dubious|date=September 2011}} There were some important timber stands, several cement plants, an aluminium plant at Lozovac, a carbide and chemical fertilizer plant at Dugi Rat, and a ferromanganese and cast iron plant near ], ship building operations in Split, a few brown coal mines supplying fuel to railways, shipping and industry, and rich bauxite fields.<ref>Tomasevich, 2001, p. 660</ref>


==Geography== ==Geography==
Geographically, the NDH encompassed most of modern-day ], all of ], and part of modern-day ]. It bordered the ] to the north-west, ] to the north-east, ] (a joint German-Serb government) to the east, ] (an Italian protectorate) to the south-east and ] along its coastal area. Geographically, the NDH encompassed most of modern-day ], all of ], part of modern-day ],<ref name="Megargee & White">{{cite book |last1=Megargee |first1=Geoffrey P. |last2=White |first2=Joseph R. |title=The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, Volume III: Camps and Ghettos under European Regimes Aligned with Nazi Germany |date=2018 |publisher=Indiana University Press |isbn=978-0-253-02386-5 |page=47 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8nBTDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA47}}</ref> and a small portion of modern-day ] in the ]. It bordered ] to the north-west, the ] to the north-east, the ] (a joint German-Serb government) to the east, ] (an Italian protectorate) to the south-east and ] along its coastal area.<ref name="Megargee & White" />


===Establishment of borders=== ===Establishment of borders===
The exact borders of the Independent State of Croatia were unclear when it was established.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://public.mzos.hr/fgs.axd?id=10921 |title=Rise and fall of the NDH |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> Approximately one month after its formation, significant areas of Croat-populated territory were ceded to its ] allies, the Kingdoms of ] and ]. The exact borders of the Independent State of Croatia were unclear when it was established.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://public.mzos.hr/fgs.axd?id=10921|title=Rise and fall of the NDH|access-date=3 June 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717114852/http://public.mzos.hr/fgs.axd?id=10921|archive-date=17 July 2011}}</ref> Approximately one month after its formation, significant areas of Croat-populated territory were ceded to its ] partners, including the Kingdoms of ] and ].
*On 13 May 1941, the NDH government signed an agreement with ] which demarcated their borders.<ref name="Prebeg">{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> *On 13 May 1941, the NDH government signed an agreement with ] which demarcated their borders.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Documente über die Bildung des Unabhängigen Staates Kroatien|url=https://www.zaoerv.de/11_1942_43/11_1942_1_b_122_2_142.pdf}}</ref><ref name="Prebeg">{{cite web|url=http://povijest.net/v5/hrvatska/hrvatska-2-svjetski-rat/2007/gospodarstvo-nezavisne-drzave-hrvatske-1941-1945-1|title=Gospodarstvo Nezavisne Države Hrvatske 1941–1945. (1)|trans-title=Business of the Independent State of Croatia|language=hr|access-date=15 April 2014|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140416205706/http://povijest.net/v5/hrvatska/hrvatska-2-svjetski-rat/2007/gospodarstvo-nezavisne-drzave-hrvatske-1941-1945-1/|archive-date=16 April 2014}}</ref>
*On 19 May the ''Rome contracts'' were signed by diplomats of the NDH and Italy. Large parts of Croatian lands were occupied (annexed) by Italy, including most of ] (including ] and ]), nearly all the Adriatic islands (including ], ], ], ], ]), and some smaller areas such as the ], parts of the Hrvatsko Primorje and ] areas. *On 18 May the ] were signed by diplomats of the NDH and Italy. Large parts of Croatian lands were occupied (annexed) by Italy, including most of ] (including ] and ]), nearly all the Adriatic islands (including ], ], ], ], ]), and some smaller areas such as the ], parts of the ] and ] areas.<ref name=":0" />
*On 7 June the NDH government issued a decree that demarcated its eastern border with Serbia.<ref name="Prebeg"/> *On 7 June the NDH government issued a decree that demarcated its eastern border with Serbia.<ref name="Prebeg"/>
*On 27 October the NDH and Italy reached an agreement on the Independent State of Croatia's border with ]. *On 27 October the NDH and Italy reached an agreement on the Independent State of Croatia's border with ].<ref name=":0" />
*On 8 September 1943, Italy capitulated and the NDH officially considered the Rome contracts to be void, along with the ] of 1920 which had given Italy ], ] and ].<ref name="Kisic">Kisić-Kolanović, Nada. ''Mladen Lorković-ministar urotnik'', Golden Marketing, Zagreb 1997. (pg. 304–306)</ref> German foreign minister ] approved of the NDH retaking the territory from the Rome contracts.<ref name="Kisic"/> By now most of the territory was controlled by the ], since the cessions of these areas made them strongly anti-NDH (a third of the total population of Split is documented to have joined the Partisans).{{Citation needed|date=March 2008}} By 11 September 1943, NDH foreign minister Mladen Lorković received word from German consul ] that the NDH should wait before moving on Istria. Germany's central government had already annexed Istria and Rijeka into the ] a day earlier.<ref name="Kisic"/> Zadar was occupied solely by the Germans, and was probably considered a part of the puppet ]. *On 8 September 1943, Italy capitulated and the NDH officially considered the Treaties of Rome to be void, along with the ] of 1920 which had given Italy ], Fiume (now ]) and Zara (]).<ref name="Kisic">{{cite book |last1=Kisić Kolanović |first1=Nada |title=Mladen Lorković: ministar urotnik |date=1998 |publisher=Golden marketing |isbn=9789536168514 |pages=304–306}}</ref>


] and southern ] were annexed (occupied) by the Kingdom of Hungary. NDH disputed this and continued to lay claim to both, naming the administrative province centred in Osijek as ''Great Parish Baranja'', despite none of the region lying within its control. This border was never legislated, although Hungary may have considered the ] to be in effect, which delineated the two nation's borders along the ] river. German foreign minister ] approved the NDH acquisition of the Dalmatian territories gained by Italy at the time of the Treaties of Rome.<ref name="Kisic"/> By now, most such territory was actually controlled by the ], since the ceding of those areas had made them strongly anti-NDH (more than one third of the total population of Split is documented to have joined the Partisans).<ref>, Ratnakronikasplita.com; accessed 4 December 2015. {{in lang|hr}}</ref> By 11 September 1943, NDH foreign minister ] received word from German consul ] that the NDH should wait before moving on Istria. Germany's central government had already annexed Istria and Fiume (]) into the ] a day earlier.<ref name="Kisic"/> ] and southern ] were ]. NDH disputed this and continued to lay claim to both, naming the administrative province centred in Osijek as ''Great Parish Baranja''. This border was never legislated, although Hungary may have considered the ] to be in effect, which delineated the two nation's borders along the ] river.{{citation needed|reason=No such thing is mentioned in the Pacta Conventa article. Could it be an attempt to restore the pre-1918 border instead?|date=July 2012}}


When compared to the republican borders established in the ] after the war, the NDH encompassed the whole of ], with its majority of non-Croat (] and ]) populations, as well as some 20&nbsp;km² of ] (villages ], ], ], ] and ])<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.dnevnik.si/tiskane_izdaje/dnevnik/121558 |title=Mejo so zavarovali z žico in postavili mine |language=Slovene |trans_title=They Protected the Border with Wire and Set up Mines |newspaper=Dnevnik.si |first=Ernest |last=Sečen |date=16 April 2005}}</ref> and the whole of ] (part of which was previously in the ]). When compared to the republic borders established in the ] after the war, the NDH encompassed the whole of Bosnia and Herzegovina, with its non-Croat (] and ]) majority, as well as some 20&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> of Slovenia (the villages of ], ], ], ], and ])<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.dnevnik.si/tiskane_izdaje/dnevnik/121558|title=Mejo so zavarovali z žico in postavili mine|language=sl|trans-title=They Protected the Border with Wire and Set up Mines|newspaper=Dnevnik.si|first=Ernest|last=Sečen|date=16 April 2005|access-date=13 April 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150321045008/http://www.dnevnik.si/tiskane_izdaje/dnevnik/121558|archive-date=21 March 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref> and the whole of ] (part of which was previously in the ]).


===Administrative divisions=== ===Administrative divisions===
{{See also|Counties of the Independent State of Croatia|Districts of the Independent State of Croatia}} {{See also|Counties of the Independent State of Croatia|Districts of the Independent State of Croatia}}
The Independent State of Croatia had three levels of administrative divisions: great parishes (Velika Zhupa), districts and municipalities. At the time of its foundation, the state had 22 great parishes, 142 kotars and 1006 municipalities.<ref>Pusić, Eugen. ''Hrvatska središnja državna uprava i usporedni upravni sustavi''. Školska knjiga, Zagreb 1997. (pg. 173)</ref> The highest level of administration were the great parishes (Velike župe),<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> each of which was headed by a ]. The Independent State of Croatia had four levels of administrative divisions: great parishes (velike župe), districts (kotari), cities (gradovi) and municipalities (opcine). At the time of its foundation, the state had 22 great parishes, 142 districts, 31 cities<ref>{{cite web|url=http://jagor.srce.hr/~zheimer/flags/descr/hr-sub.htm|title=The FAME: Croatia Subdivisions of Croatia through the History|date=10 February 2001|access-date=2 September 2017|url-status=bot: unknown|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010210045742/http://jagor.srce.hr/~zheimer/flags/descr/hr-sub.htm#ndh|archive-date=10 February 2001}}</ref> and 1006 municipalities.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pusić |first1=Eugen |title=Hrvatska središnja državna uprava i usporedni upravni sustavi |date=1997 |publisher=Školska knjiga |isbn=9789530304017 |page=173}}</ref>


The highest level of administration were the great parishes (Velike župe), each of which was headed by a ]. After the capitulation of Italy, NDH were permitted by the Germans to annex parts of the areas of Yugoslavia previously occupied by Italy. To accommodate this, parish boundaries were changed and the new parish of Sidraga-Ravni Kotari was created. In addition, on 29 October 1943, the Kommissariat of Sušak-Krk (Croatian: Građanska Sušak-Rijeka) was created separately by the Germans to act as a buffer zone between the NDH and RSI in the Fiume area to "perceive the special interests of the local population against the talians"<ref>, Books.google.com; accessed 4 December 2015.</ref>
{| style="background:none;"

{|
|- valign="top" |- valign="top"
| <!--column 1--> | <!--column 1-->
{|
{| style="background:none;"
|- |-
| 1 || '''Baranja'''</tr> | 1 || '''Baranja'''</tr>
| 2 || '''Bilogora'''</tr> | 2 || '''Bilogora'''</tr>
| 3 || '''Bribir and Sidraga'''</tr> | 3a || '''Bribir-Sidraga'''<ref name="Parish until 1943">Until 10/09/43</ref></tr>
| 3b || '''Bribir'''<ref name="Parish after 1943">After 10/09/43</ref></tr>
| 4 || '''Cetina'''</tr> | 4 || '''Cetina'''</tr>
| 5 || '''Dubrava'''</tr> | 5 || '''Dubrava'''</tr>
| 6 || '''Gora'''</tr> | 6a || '''Gora'''<ref name="Parish until 1943" /></tr>
| 6b || '''Gora-Zagorje'''<ref name="Parish after 1943" /></tr>
| 7 || '''Hum'''</tr> | 7 || '''Hum'''</tr>
| 8 || '''Krbava – Psat'''</tr>
|} |}
| <!--column 2--> | <!--column 2-->
{|
{| style="background:none;"
|- |-
| 9 || '''Lašva and Glaž'''</tr> | 8 || '''Krbava-Psat'''</tr>
| 10 || '''Lika and Gacka'''</tr> | 9a || '''Lašva-Glaž'''<ref name="Parish until 1943" /></tr>
| 11 || '''Livac and Zapolje'''</tr> | 9b || '''Lašva-Pliva'''<ref name="Parish after 1943" /></tr>
| 10 || '''Lika-Gacka'''</tr>
| 11 || '''Livac-Zapolje'''</tr>
| 12 || '''Modruš'''</tr> | 12 || '''Modruš'''</tr>
| 13 || '''Pliva and Rama'''</tr> | 13 || '''Pliva-Rama'''<ref name="Parish until 1943" /></tr>
| 14 || '''Pokupje'''</tr> | 14 || '''Pokupje'''</tr>
| 15 || ''']'''</tr> | 15 || ''']'''</tr>
|} |}
| <!--column 3--> | <!--column 3-->
{|
{| style="background:none;"
|- |-
| 16 || '''Prigorje'''</tr> | 16 || '''Prigorje'''</tr>
| 17 || '''Sana and Luka'''</tr> | 17 || '''Sana-Luka'''</tr>
| 18 || '''Usora and Soli'''</tr> | 18 || '''Usora-Soli'''</tr>
| 19 || '''Vinodol and Podgorje'''</tr> | 19 || '''Vinodol-Podgorje'''</tr>
| 20 || '''Vrhbosna'''</tr> | 20 || '''Vrhbosna'''</tr>
| 21 || '''Vuka'''</tr> | 21 || '''Vuka'''</tr>
| 22 || '''Zagorje'''</tr> | 22 || '''Zagorje'''<ref name="Parish until 1943" /></tr>
| 23 || '''Sidraga-Ravni Kotari'''<ref name="Parish after 1943" /></tr>
|}
|
{|
|-
| ]|| ]
|} |}
|} |}
]


==History== ==History==
{{See also|Creation of Yugoslavia}}


===Influences on the rise of the Ustaše=== ===Influences on the rise of the Ustaše===
{{See also|Creation of Yugoslavia}}
], self-proclaimed "''Poglavnik''" of the Independent State of Croatia.]]
In 1915 a group of political emigres from Austria-Hungary, predominantly Croats but including some Serbs and a Slovene, formed themselves into a ], with a view to creating a South Slav state in the aftermath of World War I. They saw this as a way to prevent Dalmatia being ceded to Italy under the ]. The committee was succeeded by a ] which in 1918 sent a delegation to the Serbian monarch to offer unification within a ]. The leader of the ], ], warned on their departure for Belgrade that the council had no democratic legitimacy. But a new state, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, was duly proclaimed on 1 December 1918, with no heed taken of legal protocols such as the signing of a new ''Pacta Conventa'' in recognition of historic Croatian state rights.<ref>Ferdo Šišić: ''Ljetopis Jugoslavenske akademije'', Vol.49 (Zagreb 1936) p279</ref><ref>Srdja Trifkovic: ''Ustaša'', Lord Byron Foundation for Balkan Studies (London 1998) pp20 ff</ref> In 1915 a group of political emigres from Austria-Hungary, predominantly Croats but including some Serbs and a Slovene, formed themselves into a ], with a view to creating a South Slav state in the aftermath of World War I.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Vuckoviv |first1=Gojko |title=Ethnic Cleavages and Conflict: The Sources of National Cohesion and Disintegration: the Case of Yugoslavia |date=1997 |publisher=Ashgate |isbn=978-1-85972-640-2 |page=74}}</ref> They saw this as a way to prevent Dalmatia being ceded to Italy under the ]. In 1918, the ] sent a delegation to the Serbian monarch to offer unification of the ] with the ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bennett |first1=Christopher |title=Yugoslavia's Bloody Collapse: Causes, Course and Consequences |date=1997 |publisher=New York University Press |isbn=9780814712887 |page=29 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6mQVCgAAQBAJ&pg=PA29}}</ref> The leader of the ], ], warned on their departure for Belgrade that the council had no democratic legitimacy. But a new state, the ], was duly proclaimed on 1 December 1918, with no heed taken of legal protocols such as the signing of a new '']'' in recognition of historic Croatian state rights.<ref>Ferdo Šišić: ''Ljetopis Jugoslavenske akademije'', Vol.49 (Zagreb 1936) p. 279</ref><ref>Srdja Trifkovic: ''Ustaša'', Lord Byron Foundation for Balkan Studies (London 1998)<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref>


Croats were at the outset politically disadvantaged with the centralized political structure of the kingdom, which was seen as favouring the Serb majority. The political situation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes was fractious and violent. In 1927, the ], which represented the ], turned its back on the centralist policy of King Alexander. On 20 June 1928, Stjepan Radić and four other Croat deputies were shot while in the Belgrade parliament by a member of the ]. Three of the deputies, including Radić, died. Resultant outrage threatened to destabilise the kingdom. In January 1929, ] responded by proclaiming a royal dictatorship, under which all dissenting political activity was banned and renaming the state the "Kingdom of Yugoslavia". Croats were at the outset politically disadvantaged with the centralized political structure of the kingdom, which was seen as favouring the Serb majority. The political situation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes was fractious and violent. In 1927, the ], which represented the ], turned its back on the centralist policy of King Alexander and entered into a coalition with the Croatian Peasant Party.<ref>{{cite book |editor1-last=Kideckel |editor1-first=David A. |editor2-last=Halpern |editor2-first=Joel M. |title=Neighbors at War: Anthropological Perspectives on Yugoslav Ethnicity, Culture, and History |date=2000 |publisher=Penn State Press |isbn=978-0-27104-435-4 |page=133 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EEBkON-ySQUC&pg=PA133}}</ref>


On 20 June 1928, Stjepan Radić and four other Croat deputies were shot while in the Belgrade parliament by a member of the ]. Three of the deputies, including Radić, died. The outrage that resulted from the ] threatened to destabilise the kingdom.{{citation needed|date=September 2017}} In January 1929, ] responded by proclaiming a royal dictatorship, under which all dissenting political activity was banned and the state was renamed the "Kingdom of Yugoslavia". The ] was created in principle in 1929.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Meier |first1=Viktor |title=Yugoslavia: A History of Its Demise |date=2005 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-13466-511-2 |page=125 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lRCDR464ut0C&pg=PA125}}</ref>
One consequence of Alexander's 1929 proclamation and the repression and persecution of Croatian nationalists was a rise of support for the Croatian extreme nationalist, ], who had been a Zagreb deputy in the Yugoslav parliament and who was to be implicated in Alexander's assassination in 1934, went into exile in Italy and gained support for his vision of liberating Croatia from Serb control and racially "purifying" Croatia. While residing in Italy, Pavelić and other Croatian exiles founded the ] insurgency.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.moljac.hr/biografije/pavelic.htm |title=Ante Pavelić on Croatian |publisher=Moljac.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref>


One consequence of Alexander's 1929 proclamation and the repression and persecution of Croatian nationalists was a rise of support for the Croatian extreme nationalist, ], who had been a Zagreb deputy in the Yugoslav parliament, He was later implicated in Alexander's assassination in 1934, went into exile in Italy and gained support for his vision of liberating Croatia from Serb control and racially "purifying" Croatia. While residing in Italy, Pavelić and other Croatian exiles planned the Ustaša insurgency.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.moljac.hr/biografije/pavelic.htm|title=Ante Pavelić on Croatian|publisher=Moljac.hr|access-date=3 June 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616044509/http://www.moljac.hr/biografije/pavelic.htm|archive-date=16 June 2011}}</ref>{{better source needed|date=September 2015}}
===Establishment of NDH===
Following the attack of the ] on the ] in 1941, and the quick defeat of the Yugoslav Army (''Jugoslavenska Vojska''), the country was occupied by Axis forces. ], deputy leader of the ] proclaimed the establishment of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH – Nezavisna Država Hrvatska) on 10 April 1941. Pavelić, who was known by his Ustaše title, "''Poglavnik''" returned to ] from exile in Italy on 17 April and became the absolute leader of the NDH throughout its existence (the Axis powers had offered Vladko Maček the opportunity to form a government, since Maček and his party, the ] (Croatian: Hrvatska seljačka stranka – HSS) had the greatest electoral support among Yugoslavia's Croats. Maček refused that offer.)<ref>, Yugoslavia Partition and Terror</ref><ref>, Adding Insult to Injury: Washington Decorates a Nazi Collaborator</ref>


===Establishment of the NDH===
Acceding to the demands of ] ] regime in the ], Pavelić reluctantly accepted ] as a ] King of the NDH under his new royal name, Tomislav II. Tomislav II never visited the NDH and had no influence over the government, which was dominated by Pavelić. Tomislav II was not interested in being the figurehead King of Croatia.<ref name="autogenerated5" /> On learning that he had been named King of Croatia, he told close colleagues that he thought his nomination was a bad joke by his cousin King ] though he accepted the crown out of a sense of duty.<ref name="Petacco">{{cite book| last =Petacco| first =Arrigo| title =A Tragedy Revealed: The Story of the Italian Population of Istria, Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia| publisher =University of Toronto Press| year =2005| pages =26, 27| isbn =0-8020-3921-9 }}</ref> Tomislav II's position was intended by the Italian Fascist regime to legitimize the presence of Italian armed forces on Croatian soil.
] and ] to surrender their weapons at the risk of being severely condemned]]
Following the attack of the Axis powers on the ] in 1941, and the quick defeat of the ] (''Jugoslavenska Vojska''), the country was occupied by Axis forces. The Axis powers offered ] the opportunity to form a government, since Maček and his party, the Croatian Peasant Party ({{langx|hr|links=no|Hrvatska seljačka stranka – HSS}}) had the greatest electoral support among Yugoslavia's Croats – but Maček refused that offer.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.jutarnji.hr/globus/knjiga-koje-se-boje-i-crveni-i-crni-4092738|language=hr|newspaper=]|title=Knjiga koje se boje i crveni i crni|quote=Dr Jozo Tomasevich "Rat i revolucija u Jugoslaviji 1941.-1945." Vladko Maček, prvak HSS-a, koji je u travnju 1941. zastupao većinu Hrvata, nije bio voljan prihvatiti "nezavisnost" koja se tada nudila po cijeni koju je Hitler nametnuo|access-date=7 April 2021|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130619221007/http://globus.jutarnji.hr/zivot/knjiga-koje-se-boje-i-crveni-i-crni|archive-date=19 June 2013}}</ref>


On 10 April 1941 the German army took control in Zagreb. With their support, retired lieutenant-colonel ], deputy leader of the Ustaše, declared the creation of the Independent State of Croatia (Nezavisna Država Hrvatska – NDH) "in the name of Croats and the header{{sic}} (poglavnik) Ante Pavelić".<ref name="Logos 16">{{Cite web|last=Logos|first=Aleksandar A.|title=Jasenovac in Croatia or a short story about a war and mass killing in it|page=16|url=https://www.academia.edu/83102584|access-date=2022-09-28}}</ref> A few days later on 15 April 1941, Ante Pavelić returned to Zagreb from exile in Italy, and on 16 April 1941 he took power as the State Leader, or the "Leader" (Poglavnik), holding the office of prime minister.<ref name="Logos 16"/>
From a strategic perspective, establishment of the NDH was a means by Mussolini and Hitler to pacify the Croats, while reducing the use of Axis resources, which were more urgently needed for ]. Meanwhile, Mussolini used his long-established support for Croatian independence as leverage to coerce Pavelić into signing an agreement on 19 May 1941, under which central ] and parts of ] and ] were ceded to Italy.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,765632,00.html |title=Foreign News: Crown of Zvonimir |work=TIME |date=26 May 1941 |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> Under the same agreement, the NDH was restricted to a minimal ] and Italian forces were granted military control of the entire Croatian coastline. After Pavelić signed the agreement, other Croatian politicians rebuked him. Pavelić publicly defended the decision and thanked Germany and Italy for supporting Croatian independence.<ref>Tanner, Pp. 147</ref> This concession to Italy sowed the seeds of discontent between the "home" and "emigre" elements of the Ustaša that continued through the lifetime of the NDH.


Acceding to the demands of ] and the Fascist regime in the Kingdom of Italy, Pavelić reluctantly accepted ] as a ] King of the NDH under his new royal name, Tomislav II. Aosta was not interested in being the figurehead King of Croatia:<ref name="autogenerated5"/>
After refusing leadership of the NDH, Maček called on all to obey and cooperate with the new government. The Roman Catholic Church was also openly supportive of the government. According to Maček, the new state was greeted with a "wave of enthusiasm" in Zagreb, often by people "blinded and intoxicated" by the fact that the Germans had "gift-wrapped their occupation under the euphemistic title of ''Independent State of Croatia''". But in the villages, Maček wrote, the peasantry believed that "their struggle over the past 30 years to become masters of their homes and their country had suffered a tremendous setback". (''Maček pp.&nbsp;220–231'').
Upon learning he had been named King of Croatia, he told close colleagues that he thought his nomination was a bad joke by his cousin King ] though he accepted the crown out of a sense of duty.<ref name="Petacco">{{cite book|last=Petacco|first=Arrigo|title=A Tragedy Revealed: The Story of the Italian Population of Istria, Dalmatia, and Venezia Giulia| publisher=University of Toronto Press|year=2005|pages=26–27|isbn=0-8020-3921-9}}</ref> He never visited the NDH and had no influence over the government, which was dominated by Pavelić.


From a strategic perspective, the establishment of the NDH was an attempt by Mussolini and Hitler to pacify the Croats, while reducing the use of Axis resources, which were more urgently needed for ]. Meanwhile, Mussolini used his long-established support for Croatian independence as leverage to coerce Pavelić into signing an agreement on 18 May 1941 at 12:30, under which central Dalmatia and parts of ] and ] were ceded to Italy.<ref>{{cite magazine|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,765632,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070626132957/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,765632,00.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=26 June 2007|title=Foreign News: Crown of Zvonimir|magazine=TIME|date=26 May 1941|access-date=3 June 2011}}</ref>
Dissatisfied with the Pavelić regime in its early months, the Axis Powers in September 1941 asked Maček to take over, but Maček again refused. Perceiving Maček as a potential rival, Pavelić subsequently had him arrested and imprisoned in the Jasenovac concentration camp. The Ustaše initially did not have an army or administration capable of controlling all the territory of the NDH. The Ustaše movement had fewer than 12,000 members when the war started. While the Ustaše's own estimates put the number of their sympathizers even in the early phase at around 40,000.<ref> Pavlowitch, Stevan K. "Hitler's New Disorder" Columbia University Press, 2008</ref> The northeastern half of NDH territory was in the so-called "German Zone of Influence" where the German armed forces ('']'') exercised ''de facto'' control. The southwestern portion of the NDH was controlled by the Italian army until capitulation of ] in 1943, when the NDH acquired control of northern Dalmatia (Split and ]).

Under the same agreement, the NDH was restricted to a minimal ] and Italian forces were granted military control of the entire ]. After Pavelić signed the agreement, other Croatian politicians rebuked him. Pavelić publicly defended the decision and thanked Germany and Italy for supporting Croatian independence.<ref name="Tanner-p147">], p. 147</ref> After refusing leadership of the NDH, Maček called on all to obey and cooperate with the new government. The ] was also openly supportive of the government. According to Maček, the new state was greeted with a "wave of enthusiasm" in Zagreb, often by people "blinded and intoxicated" by the fact that the Nazi Germany had "gift-wrapped their occupation under the euphemistic title of ''Independent State of Croatia''". But in the villages, Maček wrote, the ]ry believed that "their struggle over the past 30 years to become masters of their homes and their country had suffered a tremendous setback".<ref>Maček, pp. 220–231</ref>

]

On 16 August 1941, the ] was established, consisting of four departments, the ''Ustasha Police'', the ''Ustasha Intelligence Service'', ''Ustasha Defense'', and ''Personnel'', for the suppression of activities against the Ustasha, the Independent State of Croatia, and the Croatian people. The Service was eliminated as a separate agency in January 1943 and functions were transferred to the Ministry of Interior under the ''Directorate of Public Order''.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=341}} Dissatisfied with the Pavelić regime in its early months, the Axis Powers in September 1941 asked Maček to take over, but Maček again refused. Perceiving Maček as a potential rival, Pavelić subsequently had him arrested and interned in the ]. The Ustaše initially did not have an army or administration capable of controlling all the territory of the NDH. The Ustaše movement had fewer than 12,000 members when the war started. While the Ustaše's own estimates put the number of their sympathizers even in the early phase at around 40,000.<ref>] {{page needed|date=July 2012}}</ref>


====Role of existing organizations====
{{History of Croatia}} {{History of Croatia}}
To act against Serbs and Jews with genocidal measures, the Ustase introduced widespread measures that Croats themselves were victim to. Jozo Tomasevich in his book, ''War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941–1945'', states, ''"never before in history had Croats been exposed to such legalized administrative, police and judicial brutality and abuse as during the Ustasha regime."'' Decrees enacted by the regime allowed it to get rid of all 'unwanted' employees in state and local government and in state enterprises. The 'unwanted' (being all Jews, Serbs, and Yugoslav-oriented Croats) were all thrown out except for some deemed specifically needed by the government. This left a multitude of jobs to be filled by Ustashas and pro-Ustasha adherents and led to government jobs being filled by people with no professional qualifications.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|pp=381–382}}
Previously important organizations, the ] (HSS) and the Catholic Church, were relatively uninvolved in the creation and maintenance of the Independent State of Croatia. Many organizations that opposed or threatened the Ustaše were eventually outlawed.{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} For example, the Croatian Peasant Party was banned on 11 June 1941 in an attempt by the Ustaše to displace the party as the primary representative of the Croatian peasantry{{Citation needed|date=April 2008}} and its leader, ], was sent to the Jasenovac concentration camp. The Catholic Church initially participated in state mandated religious conversions, but eventually the main branches of the Church stopped when it became obvious that these conversions were merely a form of punishment for the ''undesirable'' population.


====Italian influence==== ===Italian influence===
]'' ] (left) with Italy's '']'' ] (right) in Rome, Italy on 18 May 1941, during the ceremony of Italy's recognition of Croatia as a sovereign state under official Italian protection, and to agree upon Croatia's borders with Italy]]
] known as King Tomislav II (1941–1943).]]
Mussolini and Ante Pavelić had close relations prior to the war. Mussolini and Pavelić both despised the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Italy had been promised, in the Treaty of London (1915), that it would receive Dalmatia from Austria-Hungary at the end of World War I. The peace negotiations in 1919, however, influenced by the ] proclaimed by US President ] (1856–1924), called for national self-determination and determined that the Yugoslavs rightfully deserved the territory in question. Italian nationalists were enraged. Italian nationalist ] raided ] (which held a mixed population of Croats and Italians) and proclaimed it part of the ]. D'Annunzio declared himself "]" of Carnaro and his ] revolutionaries held control over the town. D'Annunzio was known for engaging in passionate speeches aimed to draw Croatian nationalists to support his actions and to oppose Yugoslavia.<ref>Bosworth, Richard J.B. ''Mussolini's Italy'' (2005). New Work: Allen Lane. pp. 112–113.<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref>
]'' ] (left) with Italy's '']'' ] (right) in Rome, Italy on 18 May 1941, during the ceremony of Italy's recognition of Croatia as a sovereign state under official Italian protection, and to agree upon Croatia's borders with Italy.]]
Italian Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini and Ante Pavelić had close relations prior to the war. Mussolini and Pavelić both despised the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Italy had been promised, in the ] of 1915, that it would receive Dalmatia from Austria-Hungary at the end of World War I. The peace negotiations in 1919, however, influenced by the ] proclaimed by Woodrow Wilson, called for national self-determination and determined that the Yugoslavs rightfully deserved the territory in question. Italian nationalists were enraged. Italian nationalist ] raided the Croatian town of ] (which held a mixed population of Croats and Italians) and proclaimed it part of the ]. D'Annunzio declared himself "]" of Carnaro and his blackshirted revolutionaries held control over the town. D'Annunzio was known for engaging in passionate speeches aimed to draw Croatian nationalists to support his actions and to oppose Yugoslavia.<ref>Bosworth, Richard J. B. 2005. ''Mussolini's Italy''. New Work: Allen Lane. pp112-113</ref> Croatian nationalists, such as Pavelić, opposed the border changes that occurred after World War I. Not only was D'Annunzio's symbolism copied by Mussolini but also D'Annunzio's appeal to Croatian support for the dismantling Yugoslavia was copied and implemented as a foreign policy approach to Yugoslavia by Mussolini.


Pavelić had been in negotiations with Fascist Italy since 1927 that included advocating a territory-for-sovereignty swap in which he would tolerate Italy annexing its claimed territory in Dalmatia in exchange for Italy supporting the sovereignty of an independent Croatia.<ref>Bernd Jürgen Fischer (ed.). ''Balkan strongmen: dictators and authoritarian rulers of South Eastern Europe''. Purdue University Press, 2007. Pp. 210.</ref> In the 1930s, upon Pavelić and the Ustaše being forced into exile by the Yugoslav government, Mussolini offered Pavelić and the Ustaše sanctuary in Italy and allowed them to use training grounds to prepare for war against Yugoslavia. In exchange for this support, Mussolini demanded that Pavelić agree that ] would become part of Italy if Italy and the Ustaše successfully waged war on Yugoslavia. Although Dalmatia was a largely Croat-populated territory, it had been part of various Italian states, such as the ] and the ], for centuries and was part of ]'s irredentist claims. In exchange for this concession, Mussolini offered Pavelić the right for Croatia to annex all of ], which had only a minority Croat population. Pavelić agreed to this controversial exchange. Croatian nationalists, such as Pavelić, opposed the border changes that occurred after World War I. Not only was D'Annunzio's symbolism copied by Mussolini but also D'Annunzio's appeal to Croatian support for the dismantling of Yugoslavia, as a foreign policy approach to Yugoslavia by Mussolini. Pavelić had been in negotiations with Italy since 1927 that included advocating a territory-for-sovereignty swap in which he would tolerate Italy annexing its claimed territory in Dalmatia in exchange for Italy supporting the sovereignty of an independent Croatia.<ref>Bernd Jürgen Fischer (ed.). ''Balkan strongmen: dictators and authoritarian rulers of South Eastern Europe''. Purdue University Press, 2007, p. 210.<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref>


In the 1930s, upon Pavelić and the Ustaše being forced into exile by the Yugoslav government, they were offered sanctuary in Italy by Mussolini, who allowed them to use training grounds to prepare for war against Yugoslavia. In exchange for this support, Mussolini demanded that Pavelić agree that Dalmatia would become part of Italy if Italy and the Ustaše successfully waged war on Yugoslavia. Although Dalmatia was a largely Croat-populated territory, it had been part of various Italian states, such as the ] and the ] in prior centuries and was part of ]'s irredentist claims.
After the invasion and occupation of Yugoslavia, Italy annexed numerous Adriatic islands and a portion of ] that was formed into the Italian ] including territory from the provinces of ], ], and ].<ref name="Davide Rodogno 2006. Pp. 80-81">Davide Rodogno. Fascism's European empire: Italian occupation during the Second World War. Cambridge, England, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2006. Pp. 80–81.</ref> Though Italy had initially larger territorial aims that extended from the ] to the ], Mussolini decided against annexing further territories due to a number of factors, including that Italy held economically valuable territory within its possession while the northern Adriatic coast had no important railways or roads and because a larger annexation would have included hundreds of thousands of Slavs who were hostile to Italy, within its national borders.<ref name="Davide Rodogno 2006. Pp. 80-81"/>


In exchange for this concession, Mussolini offered Pavelić the right for Croatia to annex all of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which had only a minority Croat population. Pavelić agreed. After the invasion and occupation of Yugoslavia, Italy annexed numerous ] and a portion of Dalmatia, which all combined to become the Italian ] including territory from the provinces of ], ], and ].<ref name="Davide Rodogno 2006. Pp. 80-81">Rodogno, Davide. ''Fascism's European empire: Italian occupation during the Second World War'', Cambridge University Press, UK (2006), pp. 80–81.<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref>
Italy intended to keep the NDH within its sphere of influence by forbidding it to build any significant navy.<ref>Tanner, Marcus. 1997. ''Croatia: A Nation Forged in War.'' New Haven: Yale University Press. Pp. 147</ref> Italy only permitted small patrol boats to be used by NDH forces. This policy forbidding the creation of NDH warships was part of the Italian Fascists' policy of '']'' (Latin for "Our Sea") in which Italy was to dominate the Mediterranean as the ] had done centuries earlier.


Although Italy had initially larger territorial aims that extended from the ] to the ], Mussolini decided against annexing further territories due to a number of factors, including that Italy held the economically valuable portion of that territory within its possession while the northern Adriatic coast had no important railways or roads and because a larger annexation would have included hundreds of thousands of Slavs who were hostile to Italy, within its national borders.<ref name="Davide Rodogno 2006. Pp. 80-81"/>
Italian armed forces assisted the Ustaše government in persecuting Serbs. In 1941, Italian forces captured and interned the Serbian Orthodox ] of ].<ref name="autogenerated4">Tanner, Pp. 151</ref>


Italy intended to keep the NDH within its sphere of influence by forbidding it to build any significant navy.<ref name="Tanner-p147"/> Italy only permitted small patrol boats to be used by NDH forces. This policy forbidding the creation of NDH warships was part of the Italian Fascists' policy of '']'' (Latin for "Our Sea") in which Italy was to dominate the ] as the Roman Empire had done centuries earlier. Italian armed forces assisted the Ustaše government in persecuting Serbs. In 1941, Italian forces captured and interned the ] Bishop Irinej (Đorđević) of ].<ref name="Tanner-p151">Tanner, p. 151</ref>
====German influence====
]'' ] (left) with ''Poglavnik'' Ante Pavelić (right) at the ] outside of ], Germany.]]
At the time of the invasion of Yugoslavia by Germany, ] was uneasy with Mussolini's agenda of creating a puppet Croatian state, and preferred that areas outside of Italian territorial aims become part of Hungary as an autonomous territory.<ref name="autogenerated1">{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> This would appease Germany's ally Hungary and its nationalist territorial claims and would also avoid the creation of a Slavic puppet state, as Hitler viewed all Slavs as racially degenerate.


===Influence of Nazi Germany===
The German position on Croatia changed after the invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941. The invasion was spearheaded by a strong German invasion force which was largely responsible for the capture of Yugoslavia. Military forces from other Axis powers, including Italy, Hungary, and Bulgaria made few gains during the invasion. The invasion was precipitated by the need for German forces to reach Greece to save Italian forces, which were failing on the battlefield against the Greek armed forces. Upon rescuing Italian forces in Greece and having conquered Yugoslavia and Greece almost single handedly, Hitler became frustrated with Mussolini and Italy's military incompetence. Germany improved relations with the Ustaše and supported the NDH claims to annex the Adriatic Coast in order reduce Italy's planned territorial gains.<ref name="autogenerated1" /> Nevertheless, Italy annexed a significant central portion of Dalmatia and various Adriatic Islands. This was not what had been agreed with Pavelić prior to the invasion; Italy had expected to annex all of Dalmatia as part of its irredentist claims.
], outside the ], Germany]]
At the time of the invasion of Yugoslavia by Nazi Germany, ] was uneasy with Mussolini's agenda of creating a puppet Croatian state, and preferred that areas outside of Italian territorial aims become part of ] as an autonomous territory. This would appease Nazi Germany's ally Hungary and its nationalist territorial claims. Germany's position on Croatia changed after its ] in 1941. The invasion was spearheaded by a strong German invasion force which was largely responsible for the ]. Military forces from other Axis powers, including ], ], and ] made few gains during the invasion.{{citation needed|date=September 2017}}


]'' (SS) recruitment propaganda poster used in the NDH]]
Hitler sparred with his army commanders over what policy should be undertaken in Croatia regarding the Serbs. German military officials thought that Serbs could be rallied to fight against the ]. Hitler disagreed with his commanders, but pointed out to Pavelić that the NDH could create a completely Croat state only if it followed a constant policy of persecution of the non-Croat population for at least fifty years.<ref>Tanner, p147</ref>
The invasion was precipitated by the need for German forces to reach Greece to save Italian forces, which were failing on the battlefield against the ]. Upon rescuing Italian forces in Greece and having conquered Yugoslavia and Greece almost single-handedly, Hitler became frustrated with Mussolini and Italy's military incompetence. Germany improved relations with the Ustaše and supported the NDH claims to annex the Adriatic Coast in order reduce Italy's planned territorial gains. Nevertheless, Italy annexed a significant central portion of Dalmatia and various Adriatic Islands. This was not what had been agreed with Pavelić prior to the invasion; Italy had expected to annex all of Dalmatia as part of its irredentist claims.{{cn|date=May 2024}}


Hitler sparred with his army commanders over what policy should be undertaken in Croatia regarding the Serbs. German military officials thought that Serbs could be rallied to fight against the Partisans. Hitler disagreed with his commanders, but pointed out to Pavelić that the NDH could create a completely Croat state only if it followed a constant policy of persecution of the non-Croat population for at least fifty years.<ref name="Tanner-p147"/> The NDH was never fully sovereign, but it was a ] that enjoyed greater autonomy than any other regime in ].{{sfn|Payne|2006|p=}}
According to reports by General Glaise-Horstenau, Hitler was angry with Pavelić, whose policy inflamed the rebellion in Croatia, thwarting any prospect of deploying NDH forces on the Eastern Front.<ref name="zvonko">Hebrang, by Zvonko Ivanković – Vonta, Scientia Yugoslavica 1988 Pages 169–170</ref> Moreover, Hitler was forced to engage large forces of his own to keep the rebellion in check. For that reason, Hitler summoned Pavelić to his war headquarters in ] (Ukraine) on 23 September 1942. Consequently, Pavelić replaced his minister of the Armed Forces, Slavko Kvaternik, with the less zealous Jure Francetić. Kvaternik was sent into exile in Slovakia – along with his son ], who was blamed for the persecution of the Serbs in Croatia.<ref>Jozo Tomasevich: War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration,Stanford University Press, 2001 page 440</ref> Before meeting Hitler, to appease the public, Pavelić published an "Important Government Announcement" (»Važna obavijest Vlade«), in which he threatened those who were spreading the news "about non-existent threats of disarmament of the Ustashe units by representatives of one foreign power, about the Croatian Army replacement by a foreign army, about the possibility that a foreign power would seize the power in Croatia ..."<ref>Hrvatski narod, 3 September 1942</ref>


As early as 10 July 1941, Wehrmacht General ] reported the following to the German High Command, the ] (OKW):{{blockquote|Our troops have to be mute witnesses of such events; it does not reflect well on their otherwise high reputation I am frequently told that German occupation troops would finally have to intervene against Ustaše crimes. This may happen eventually. Right now, with the available forces, I could not ask for such action. Ad hoc intervention in individual cases could make the German Army look responsible for countless crimes which it could not prevent in the past.|General Edmund Glaise von Horstenau, German military attaché in Zagreb}}
<!--See talk. Hans Helm, the appointed head of the ] in the Independent State of Croatia, wrote in his confidential 14 January 1943 report (titled as "Basis of the partisan danger" and sent to General Kasche):
The ] report to Reichsführer SS ], dated 17 February 1942, states:<ref>{{cite book |last1=Goñi |first1=Uki |title=The Real Odessa: Smuggling the Nazis to Perón's Argentina |date=2002 |publisher=Granta |isbn=9781862075818 |page=202}}</ref> {{blockquote|Increased activity of the bands is chiefly due to atrocities carried out by Ustaše units in Croatia against the Orthodox population. The Ustaše committed their deeds in a bestial manner not only against males of conscript age, but especially against helpless old people, women and children. The number of the Orthodox that the Croats have ]d and sadistically tortured to death is about three hundred thousand.|Gestapo report to Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler, 17 February 1942.}}


According to reports by General Glaise-Horstenau, Hitler was angry with Pavelić, whose policy inflamed the rebellion in Croatia, thwarting any prospect of deploying NDH forces on the Eastern Front.<ref name="zvonko">Ivanković, Zvonko. ''Hebrang'', Scientia Yugoslavica 1988, pp. 169–170<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref> Moreover, Hitler was forced to engage large forces of his own to keep the rebellion in check. For that reason, Hitler summoned Pavelić to his war headquarters in ] (Ukraine) on 23 September 1942. Consequently, Pavelić replaced his minister of the Armed Forces, Slavko Kvaternik, with the less zealous Jure Francetić. Kvaternik was sent into exile in Slovakia – along with his son ], who was blamed for the persecution of the Serbs in Croatia.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=440}} Before meeting Hitler, to appease the public,{{clarify|date=September 2017}} Pavelić published an "Important Government Announcement" (»Važna obavijest Vlade«), in which he threatened those who were spreading the news "about non-existent threats of disarmament of the Ustashe units by representatives of one foreign power, about the Croatian Army replacement by a foreign army, about the possibility that a foreign power would seize the power in Croatia "<ref>Hrvatski narod, 3 September 1942.</ref>
{{cquote|The new regime in Croatia started programs of annihilation and destruction of the Serbs, which '''' are publicly supported by the highest ranks of the Croatian government, and adopted as the main government goal. The fact that different talk is coming from the official Ustaše side – under pressure by the rebellion and due to the course of events, even a reconciliation was mentioned – leaves no possibility to compensate the harm caused by, for example, Dr. ], the actual '''' minister in Berlin....<ref name="zvonko"/>}}-->
]
General Glaise-Horstenau reported: "The Ustaše movement is, due to the mistakes and atrocities they have committed and the corruption, so compromised that the government executive branch (the home guard and the police) shall be separated from the government – even for the price of breaking any possible connection with the government."


<!--See talk. Hans Helm, the appointed head of the ] in the Independent State of Croatia, wrote in his confidential 14 January 1943 report (titled as "Basis of the partisan danger" and sent to General Kasche):{{cquote|The new regime in Croatia started programs of annihilation and destruction of the Serbs, which '''' are publicly supported by the highest ranks of the Croatian government, and adopted as the main government goal. The fact that different talk is coming from the official Ustaše side – under pressure by the rebellion and due to the course of events, even a reconciliation was mentioned – leaves no possibility to compensate the harm caused by, for example, Dr. ], the actual '''' minister in Berlin <ref name="zvonko"/>}}-->
Reichsführer-SS ] is quoted characterizing the Independent State of Croatia as "ridiculous": "our beloved German settlements will be secured. I hope that the area south of Srem will be liberated by the ] so that we can at least restore partial order in this ridiculous (Croatian) state."<ref>"Himmler's Bosnian Division" by Georg Lepre, p17.</ref>
General Glaise-Horstenau reported: "The Ustaše movement is, due to the mistakes and atrocities they have committed and the corruption, so compromised that the government executive branch (the home guard and the police) shall be separated from the government – even for the price of breaking any possible connection with the government."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zukunft-braucht-erinnerung.de/das-kroatische-kz-jasenovac/|title=Das kroatische Konzentrationslager Jasenovac – ZbE|website=Zukunft-braucht-erinnerung.de|date=6 November 2004|access-date=2 September 2017}}</ref>


The Ustaše gained German support for plans to eliminate the Serb population in Croatia. One plan involved an exchange in 1941 between Germany and the NDH, in which 20,000 Catholic Slovenes would be deported from German-held Slovenia and sent to the NDH where they would be assimilated as Croats. In exchange, 20,000 Serbs would be deported from the NDH and sent to the ].<ref name="autogenerated4" /> The German occupation forces allowed the expulsion of Serbs to Serbia, but instead of sending the Slovenes to Croatia, they were also deported to Serbia.<ref name="autogenerated4" /> In total, about 300,000 Serbs had been deported or fled from the NDH to Serbia by the end of World War II.<ref name="autogenerated4" /> Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler is quoted characterizing the Independent State of Croatia as "ridiculous": "our beloved German settlements will be secured. I hope that the area south of Srem will be liberated by the ] so that we can at least restore partial order in this ridiculous (Croatian) state."<ref>Georg Lepre, ''Himmler's Bosnian Division'', p. 17.<!-- ISSN/ISBN, publishing info needed --></ref> The Ustaše gained German support for plans to eliminate the Serb population in Croatia. One plan involved an exchange in 1941 between Germany and the NDH, in which 20,000 Catholic Slovenes would be deported from ] and sent to the NDH where they would be assimilated as Croats. In exchange, 20,000 Serbs would be deported from the NDH and sent to the German-occupied territory of Serbia.<ref name="Tanner-p151" /> On the meeting with Hitler on 6 June 1941 in ], Pavelić agreed to receive 175,000 deported Slovenes. The agreement provided that the number of Serbs deported from NDH to Serbia could exceed the number of Slovenes received by 30,000. During the talks, Hitler stressed the necessity and desirability of deportations of Slovenes and Serbs, and advised Pavelic that NDH, in order to become stable, should carry on ethnically intolerant policy for the next 50 years.{{sfn|Krizman|1980|pp=47–49}} The German occupation forces allowed the expulsion of Serbs to Serbia, but instead of sending the Slovenes to Croatia, they were also deported to Serbia. In total, about 300,000 Serbs had been deported or fled from the NDH to Serbia by the end of World War II.<ref name="Tanner-p151"/>


The atrocities committed by the Ustaše stunned observers, Brigadier ], Chief of the British military mission to the Partisans commented, "Some Ustaše collected the eyes of Serbs they had killed, sending them, when they had enough, to the Poglavnik '''' for his inspection or proudly displaying them and other human organs in the cafés of Zagreb."<ref>]; ''Extradition, politics, and human rights''; ], 2001 ISBN 1-56639-823-1; pp. 132. </ref> The atrocities committed by the Ustaše stunned observers; Brigadier ], Chief of the British military mission to the Partisans, commented "Some Ustaše collected the eyes of Serbs they had killed, sending them, when they had enough, to the Poglavnik '''' for his inspection or proudly displaying them and other human organs in the cafés of Zagreb."<ref>{{cite book |last1=Pyle |first1=Christopher H. |title=Extradition, Politics, and Human Rights |date=2001 |publisher=Temple University Press |isbn=978-1-56639-823-7 |page=132 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8iEWsWUjHA8C&pg=PA132}}</ref>


The Nazi regime demanded that the Ustaše adopt anti-Semitic racial policies, persecute Jews and set up concentration camps. Pavelic and the Ustaše accepted Nazi demands, but their racial policy focused primarily on eliminating the Serb population. When the Ustaše needed more recruits to help exterminate the Serbs, and the state broke away from Nazi anti-Semitic policy by promising honorary Aryan citizenship, and thus freedom from persecution, to Jews who were willing to fight for the NDH.<ref name="autogenerated2">Tanner, Pp. 149</ref> As this was the only legal means allowing Jews to escape persecution, a number of Jews joined the NDH's armed forces. This aggravated the German SS, which claimed that the NDH let 5,000 Jews survive via service in the NDH's armed forces.<ref name="autogenerated2" /> German anti-Semitic objectives for Croatia were further undermined by Italy's reluctance to adhere to a strict anti-Semitic policy, which resulted in Jews in Italian-held parts of Croatia avoiding the same persecution facing Jews in German-held eastern Croatia.<ref>Tanner, pp 149–150</ref> The Nazi regime demanded that the Ustaše adopt ] racial policies, persecute ] and set up ]. Pavelic and the Ustaše accepted Nazi demands, but their racial policy focused primarily on eliminating the Serb population. When the Ustaše needed more recruits to help exterminate the Serbs, the state broke away from Nazi antisemitic policy by promising honorary Aryan citizenship, and, thus, freedom from persecution, to Jews who were willing to fight for the NDH.<ref name="Tanner-149">], p. 149</ref> As this was the only legal means allowing Jews to escape persecution, a number of Jews joined the NDH's armed forces. This aggravated the German SS, which claimed that the NDH let 5,000 Jews survive via service in the NDH's armed forces. German anti-Semitic objectives for Croatia were further undermined by Italy's reluctance to adhere to a strict antisemitic policy, which resulted in Jews in Italian-held parts of Croatia avoiding the same persecution facing Jews in German-held eastern Croatia.<ref>], pp. 149–150</ref> After Italy abandoned the war in 1943, German forces occupied western Croatia and the NDH annexed the territory ceded to Italy in 1941.{{citation needed|date=September 2017}}


Within just a few days of the creation of the NDH, Croatian workers were requisitioned by the Reich for cheap forced labour and slave labour. From 1942 onward, German and Croat authorities cooperated more closely in deporting "unwanted" Croats and Serbs to concentration camps in the Reich and Norway for forced labour, such people were to be rounded up and deported by the General ] for Labour Deployment to the Reich (]).<ref name="HS">{{cite book |author1=Alexander von Plato |author2=Almut Leh |author3=Christoph Thonfeld |year=2010 |title=Hitler's Slaves: Life Stories of Forced Labourers in Nazi-Occupied Europe |publisher=Berghahn Books |isbn=978-1845459901 |pages=153–156|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FUjRhscAaToC&q=Blitzkrieg+1941&pg=PA251}}</ref>
After Italy abandoned the war in 1943, German forces occupied western Croatia and the NDH annexed the territory ceded to Italy in 1941.


Between 1941 and 1945, some 200,000<ref name="Goldstein">{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/croatia00ivog|url-access=registration|title=Croatia: A History|first=Ivo|last=Goldstein|author-link=Ivo Goldstein|year=1999|publisher=]|location=Montreal, Quebec|isbn=978-0-7735-2017-2|page=139 }}</ref> Croatian citizens of the NDH (including ethnic Croats as well as ethnic Serbs with Croatian nationality and Slovenes) were sent to Germany to work as slave and forced labourers, mostly working in mining, agriculture and forestry. It is estimated that 153,000 of these labourers were said to have been "voluntarily" recruited, however in many instances this was not the case, as the workers that may have initially volunteered were forced to work longer hours and were paid less than their contracts had stipulated, they were also not allowed to return home after their yearly contract had ended, at which point their labour was no longer voluntary, but forced. Forced and slave labour were also conducted in Nazi concentration camps, such as in ] and ].<ref name="HS"/> From 1941 to 1945, 3.8% of the population of Croatia had been sent to the Reich to work, which was higher than the European average.<ref name="HS"/>
=== Partisans and the Yugoslav front ===
{{Main|Yugoslav Front}}


===Partisan resistance===
The Ustaše's genocidal onslaught on its minorities provoked mass movements of resistance, inspired in part by royalist (]) and – more effectively – communist (]) ideologies, but driven primarily by a determination to fight back by any means. The uprisings were particularly strong in rural areas where many village populations fled from the terror and then mounted guerilla operations from vantage points in the mountains and forests. On 22 June 1941, the ] was formed in the ] near ], Croatia; this was to be celebrated as the first armed resistance unit formed in occupied Europe during World War II. Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, and citizens of all nationalities and backgrounds began joining the pan-Yugoslav ] led by ]. The Partisan movement was soon able to control a large percentage of the NDH (and Yugoslavia) and before long the cities of occupied ] and ] in particular were surrounded by these Partisan-controlled areas, with their garrisons living in a ''de-facto'' state of siege and constantly trying to maintain control of the rail-links.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref>
{{Main|Resistance in Yugoslavia}}
On 22 June 1941, the ] was formed in ] near ]; this was to be celebrated as the first armed resistance unit formed in occupied Yugoslavia during World War II. Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, and citizens of all nationalities and backgrounds began joining the pan-Yugoslav Partisans led by ]. The Partisan movement was soon able to control a large percentage of the NDH (and Yugoslavia) and before long the cities of occupied Bosnia and Dalmatia in particular were surrounded by these Partisan-controlled areas, with their garrisons living in a ''de facto'' state of siege and constantly trying to maintain control of the rail-links.{{citation needed|date=September 2016}}


In 1944, the third year of the war in Yugoslavia, Croats formed 61% of the Partisan operational units originating from the ].<ref name=strugar>{{cite book|last=Strugar|first=Vlado|title=Jugoslavija 1941–1945|publisher= Vojnoizdavački zavod|year=1969}}</ref><ref name=anic>{{cite book|last1=Anić|first1=Nikola|last2= Joksimović|first2=Sekula|last3=Gutić|first3=Mirko|title=Narodnooslobodilačka vojska Jugoslavije| publisher=Vojnoistorijski institut|year=1982}}</ref><ref name=vukovic>{{cite book|last1=Vuković| first1=Božidar|last2=Vidaković|first2=Josip|title=Putevim Glavnog štaba Hrvatske|year=1976}}</ref>
Croats were significantly more numerous than Serbs among the Partisan ranks.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vojska.net/eng/world-war-2/yugoslavia/detachment/partisan/ |title=Partisans detachments of Yugoslavia 1941–45 |publisher=Vojska.net |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vojska.net/eng/world-war-2/yugoslavia/statistics/partisans/ |title=Strength of People's Liberation Army and Partisan Detachments |publisher=Vojska.net |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> In 1944, the third year of the war in Yugoslavia, Croats formed 60% of the Partisan operational units originating from the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vojska.net/eng/world-war-2/yugoslavia/statistics/partisans/ |title=Strength of Yugoslav partisans |publisher=Vojska.net |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> The Partisan movement was generally multiethnic, although at least one Croatian unit was overwhelmingly Serbian (the 6th Lika Proletariat Division "Nikola Tesla").<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vojska.net/hrv/drugi-svjetski-rat/jugoslavija/divizija/6/ |title=Sixth Lika Proletariat Division Nikola Tesla |publisher=Vojska.net |date=11 December 2006 |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> FS Croatia also had the highest number of detachments and brigades among the federal units, and together with the forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Partisan resistance in the NDH made up the majority of the movement's military strength. The Partisan commander, Marshall Josip Broz Tito, was half Slovene, half Croatian.


The Federal State of Croatia also had the highest number of detachments and brigades{{citation needed|date=August 2017}} among the federal units, and together with the forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Partisan resistance in the NDH made up the majority of the movement's military strength.{{citation needed|date=August 2017}}
=== Relations with the Chetniks ===

===Relations with the Chetniks===
{{See also|Chetniks}} {{See also|Chetniks}}
], ], and ] meet in occupied Bosnia]] ], ], and ] meet in occupied Bosnia]]
After the 1941 split between the ] and the ] in Serbia, the Chetnik groups in central, eastern, and northwestern ] found themselves caught between the German and ] (NDH) forces on one side and the Partisans on the other. In early 1942 Chetnik Major ] approached the Germans in an attempt to arrive at an understanding, but was unsuccessful, and the local Chetnik leaders were forced to look for another solution. The Chetnik groups were in fundamental disagreement with the Ustaše on practically all issues, but they found a common enemy in the Partisans, and this was the overriding reason for the collaboration which ensued between the ] authorities of the Independent State of Croatia and Chetnik detachments in Bosnia. The first formal agreement between Bosnian Chetniks and the ] was concluded on 28 May 1942, in which Chetnik leaders expresseed their loyalty as "citizens of the Independent State of Croatia" both to the state and its Poglavnik (]). During the next three weeks, three additional agreements were signed, covering a large part of the area of Bosnia (along with the Chetnik detachments within it). By the provision of these agreements, the Chetniks were to cease hostilities against the Ustaše state, and the Ustaše would establish regular administration in these areas.<ref name="autogenerated2">Tomasevich, Jozo; ''War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945: The Chetniks'', Volume 1; Stanford University Press, 1975 ISBN 978-0-8047-0857-9 </ref><ref name="autogenerated3">Cohen, Philip J., Riesman, David; ''Serbia's secret war: propaganda and the deceit of history''; Texas A&M University Press, 1996 ISBN 0-89096-760-1 </ref> The main provision, Art. 5 of the agreement, states as follows: After the 1941 split between the Partisans and the ] in Serbia, the Chetnik groups in central, eastern and northwestern Bosnia found themselves caught between the German and Ustaše (NDH) forces on one side and the Partisans on the other. In early 1942 Chetnik Major ] approached the Germans in an attempt to arrive at an understanding, but was unsuccessful, and the local Chetnik leaders were forced to look for another solution. Although the Ustaše and Chetniks were rival nationalists (Croatian and Serbian), they found a common enemy in the Partisans, and thwarting Partisan advances became the overriding reason for the collaboration which ensued between the Ustaše authorities of the Independent State of Croatia and Chetnik detachments in Bosnia.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Christia |first1=Fotini |title=Alliance Formation in Civil Wars |date=2012 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-13985-175-6 |pages=206–207 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=psYgAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA206}}</ref>


<blockquote>As long as there is danger from the Partisan armed bands, the Chetnik formations will cooperate voluntarily with the Croatian military in fighting and destroying the Partisans and in those operations they will be under the overall command of the Croatian armed forces. Chetnik formations may engage in operations against the Partisans on their own, but this they will have to report, on time, to the Croatian military commanders.<ref name="autogenerated2" /></blockquote> The first formal agreement between Bosnian Chetniks and the Ustaše was concluded on 28 May 1942, in which Chetnik leaders expressed their loyalty as "citizens of the Independent State of Croatia" both to the state and its Poglavnik (Ante Pavelić). During the next three weeks, three additional agreements were signed, covering a large part of the area of Bosnia (along with the Chetnik detachments within it). By the provision of these agreements, the Chetniks were to cease hostilities against the Ustaše state, and the Ustaše would establish regular administration in these areas.{{sfn|Tomasevich|1975|p=226}}{{sfn|Cohen|1996|p=40}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}} The main provision, Article 5 of the agreement, states as follows:<blockquote>As long as there is danger from the Partisan armed bands, the Chetnik formations will cooperate voluntarily with the Croatian military in fighting and destroying the Partisans and in those operations they will be under the overall command of the Croatian armed forces. Chetnik formations may engage in operations against the Partisans on their own, but this they will have to report, on time, to the Croatian military commanders.{{sfn|Tomasevich|1975|p=226}}</blockquote>


The necessary ammunition and provisions were supplied to the Chetniks by the Ustaše military. Chetniks who were wounded in such operations would be cared for in NDH hospitals, while the orphans and widows of Chetniks killed in action would be supported by the Ustaše state. Persons specifically recommended by Chetnik commanders would be returned home from the Ustaše concentration camps (Jasenovac concentration camp). These agreements covered the majority of Chetnik forces in Bosnia east of the German-Italian demarcation line, and lasted throughout most of the war. Since Croatian forces were immediately subordinate to the German military occupation, collaboration with Croatian forces was, in fact, indirect collaboration with the Germans.<ref name="autogenerated2" /><ref name="autogenerated3" /> The necessary ammunition and provisions were supplied to the Chetniks by the Ustaše military. Chetniks who were wounded in such operations would be cared for in NDH hospitals, while the orphans and widows of Chetniks killed in action would be supported by the Ustaše state. Persons specifically recommended by Chetnik commanders would be returned home from the Ustaše concentration camps. These agreements covered the majority of Chetnik forces in Bosnia east of the German-Italian demarcation line, and lasted throughout most of the war. Since Croatian forces were immediately subordinate to the German military occupation, collaboration with Croatian forces was, in fact, indirect collaboration with the Germans.{{sfn|Tomasevich|1975|p=226}}{{sfn|Cohen|1996|p=40}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}}


===End of the war=== ===End of the war===
In August 1944, there was an attempt by the NDH Foreign ] Mladen Lorković and Minister of War ] to execute a ] against Ante Pavelić so as to separate from the Axis and align with the Allies. The ] failed and its conspirators were executed. By early 1945, the NDH army withdrew towards Zagreb with German and ] troops. They were overpowered and the advance of Tito's Partisan forces, joined by the ] ], caused a mass retreat of the Ustaše towards Austria and effectively an end to the Independent State of Croatia.{{citation needed|date=September 2016}} Pavelić himself, too, fled, even though he had vowed to fight in Zagreb till the bitter end.<ref>''Croatia Under Ante Pavelić: America, the Ustase and Croatian Genocide'' by Robert B. McCormick, 2014, Publisher: I.B. Tauris {{ISBN|9780857725356}}</ref>
<!-- Deleted image removed: ] -->
In August 1944, there was an attempt by the NDH Foreign ] ] and Minister of War ] to execute a coup d'état against Ante Pavelić. The ] failed and its conspirators were executed.


In May 1945, a large column composed of NDH Home Guard troops, Ustaša, Cossacks, ], some Chetniks and the ], as well as numerous civilians, retreated from the Partisan forces heading northwest towards Italy and Austria. The ] was signed on 8 May, but the Germans put Pavelić in sole command of NDH forces, and he ordered to continue fighting as the columns tried to reach the British forces to negotiate passage into ]. The British Army, however, refused them entry and turned them over to the Partisan forces. The ] from Austria resulted in mass executions. On 25 May 1945, the final battle of the Second World War in Europe, the ], ended with the fall of the Independent State of Croatia, whose territory became part of the ], and the demise of the Independent State of Croatia.
By early 1945, the NDH army withdrew towards Zagreb with German and ] troops, and continued fighting for a week after the German surrender on 9 May 1945.{{Citation needed|date=November 2008}} They were soon overpowered and the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) effectively ceased to exist in May 1945.


Meanwhile, Pavelić had detached from the group and fled to Austria, Italy, ] and finally Spain, where he would die in 1959. Several other members of the NDH government were captured in May and June 1945, and sentenced to death or long-term imprisonment in the ]. The end of the war resulted in the establishment of the Democratic Republic of Yugoslavia, which later became the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, with the ] officially making the ] and the ] two of the six constituent republics of the new state.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Walker |first1=Gregory Piers Mountford |title=Official Publications of the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe, 1945-1980: A Select Annotated Bibliography |date=1982 |publisher=Mansell |isbn=9780720116410 |page=152}}</ref>
The advance of Tito's partisan forces, joined by the ] ], caused mass retreat of the Ustaše towards Austria. In May 1945, a large column composed of ]s, Chetniks, Ustaša followers, NDH Army troops and civilians retreated from the partisan forces, heading northwest towards Italy and Austria. Ante Pavelić detached from the group and fled to Austria, Italy, ] and finally Spain, where he died in 1959. The rest of the group, consisting of over 150,000 soldiers (including Cossak troops) and civilians, negotiated with the British forces for passage to the Austrian side of the Austrian-Slovenian border. The British Army, however, turned disarmed soldiers and civilians over to the partisan forces.

The end of the war resulted in the establishment of the Democratic Republic of Yugoslavia (which later became the ]), with the ] officially making each of ] and ] one of the six constituent republics of the new state.


===Aftermath=== ===Aftermath===
Although ] inspired by the former NDH reemerged during the ], the current ] does not recognize the Independent State of Croatia as the historical or legitimate ] of the current Croatian republic.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.sabor.hr/Default.aspx?art=2406&sec=729 | work = The Constitution of the Republic of Croatia (consolidated text) | title = Historical Foundations | quote = in the establishment of the foundations of state sovereignty during the course of the Second World War, as expressed in the decision of the Territorial Antifascist Council of the National Liberation of Croatia (1943) in opposition to proclamation of the Independent State of Croatia (1941), and then in the Constitution of the People’s Republic of Croatia (1947) and in all subsequent constitutions of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1963–1990), at the historic turning-point characterized by the rejection of the communist system and changes in the international order in Europe, in the first democratic elections (1990), the Croatian nation reaffirmed, by its freely expressed will, its millennial statehood | publisher = ] | accessdate =16 February 2011}}</ref> Despite this, upon declaring independence from Yugoslavia, the Republic of Croatia rehabilitated the ], who now receive a state pension.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/25853 |title=The Political Economy of Pension Reforms in Croatia 1991–2006 |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> German soldiers who died on Croatian territory were not commemorated until Germany and Croatia reached an agreement on marking their grave sites in 1996.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nn.hr/clanci/medjunarodni/1997/111.htm |title=Uredba o potvrðivanju Ugovora izmeðu Vlade Republike Hrvatske i Vlade Savezne Republike Njemaèke o njemaèkim ratnim grobovima u Republici Hrvatskoj |publisher=Nn.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}{{dead link|date=April 2012}}</ref> The ] maintains two large cemeteries in Zagreb and Split. Although ] inspired by the former NDH reemerged during the ], the current ] does not officially recognize the Independent State of Croatia as the historical or legitimate ] of the current Croatian republic.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sabor.hr/Default.aspx?art=2406&sec=729|work=The Constitution of the Republic of Croatia (consolidated text)|title=Historical Foundations|quote=n the establishment of the foundations of state sovereignty during the course of the Second World War, as expressed in the decision of the Territorial Antifascist Council of the National Liberation of Croatia (1943) in opposition to proclamation of the Independent State of Croatia (1941), and then in the Constitution of the People's Republic of Croatia (1947) and in all subsequent constitutions of the Socialist Republic of Croatia (1963–1990), at the historic turning-point characterized by the rejection of the communist system and changes in the international order in Europe, in the first democratic elections (1990), the Croatian nation reaffirmed, by its freely expressed will, its millennial statehood|publisher=]|access-date=16 February 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721102014/http://www.sabor.hr/Default.aspx?art=2406&sec=729|archive-date=21 July 2011|url-status=dead}}</ref> Despite this, upon declaring independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, the Republic of Croatia rehabilitated the ], whose veterans have since received state pensions.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/25853|title=The Political Economy of Pension Reforms in Croatia 1991–2006|via=]|access-date=3 June 2011 |journal=Financial Theory and Practice |volume=31 |issue=2 |pages=96–151 |year=2007}}{{better source needed|date=April 2021}}</ref>{{Synthesis inline|date=April 2021}} German soldiers who died on Croatian territory were not commemorated until Germany and Croatia reached an agreement on marking their grave sites in 1996.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://hidra.srce.hr/webpac-hidra-murh2-pregled/?rm=results&last_PAGER_offset=0&filter=hidra-murh&show_full=1&v=Njema%E8ka%20%5Bkao%20potpisnik%5D%20025313&f=SubjectIndexHR&path=hidra-murh%231240|language=hr|title=Ugovor između Vlade Republike Hrvatske i Vlade Savezne Republike Njemačke o njemačkim ratnim grobovima u Republici Hrvatskoj – (Uredba o potvrđivanju Ugovora između Vlade Republike Hrvatske i Vlade Savezne Republike Njemačke o njemačkim ratnim grobovima u Republici Hrvatskoj, NN-MU 017/1997)|journal=]|issue=17/1997|access-date=23 July 2012}}</ref> The ] maintains two large cemeteries, in Zagreb and Split.{{cn|date=October 2024}}


==Demographics== ==Government==
{{main|Government of the Independent State of Croatia}}
=== Population ===
The absolute leader of the NDH was Ante Pavelić, who was known by his Ustaše title, '']'', throughout the war, regardless of his official government post. From 1941 to 1943, while the country was a '']'' monarchy, Pavelić was its powerful Prime Minister (or "President of the Government"). After the capitulation of Italy, Pavelić became the ] in the place of ] (also known as Tomislav II){{citation needed|date=June 2021}} and retained the position of Prime Minister until September 1943, when he appointed ] to replace him.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Roszkowski |first1=Wojciech |title=Biographical Dictionary of Central and Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century |date=2016 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-31747-593-4 |page=1997 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RnKlDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA1997}}</ref>
According to data calculated by the ] during the creation of the state the population was approximately 6,285,000 of which 3,300,000 were ], 1,925,000 were ], 700,000 were ], 150,000 ], 65,000 ] and ], 40,000 Jews, and 30,000 ]. Croats comprised slightly over half of the population of the Independent State of Croatia. With Muslims treated as Croats the Croat share of the total population was still less than two-thirds.<ref>{{cite book |last=Hoare |first=Marko Attila |title=Genocide and Resistance in Hitler's Bosnia: The Partisans and the Chetniks |year=2006 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=0-19-726380-1 |page=19}}</ref>


===Monarchy===
=== Displacement of people ===
{|style="margin: 0 auto;"
A large number of people were displaced due to internal fighting within the former Yugoslav republic. The NDH had to accept more than 200,000 ]n refugees who were forcefully evicted from their homes as part of the German plan of annexing parts of the Slovenian territories. As part of this deal, the Ustaše were to deport 200,000 Serbs from Croatia military regions; however, only 182,000 had been deported when German high commander Bader stopped this mass transport of people because of the uprising of Chetniks and partisans in ]{{Citation needed|date=July 2007}}. Because of this, 25,000 Slovenian refugees ended in Serbia.
| ]
| ]
| ]
|}


Upon the formation of the NDH, Pavelić conceded to the accession of Aimone, the 4th Duke of Aosta, as a figurehead King of Croatia under his new royal name, Tomislav II. Tomislav II was not interested in being the figurehead King of Croatia,<ref name="autogenerated5">The Marshall Cavendish Illustrated Encyclopedia of World War II, New York – London, 1980, pp. 394–395</ref> never actually visited the country and had no influence over the government. In the summer of 1941, Tomislav II declared that he would accept his position as King, only if certain demands were met:
Internal colonization to the region of ] was encouraged during this period from ], ], ] and ].<ref>I. Balta. ''Kolonizacija u Slavoniji od početka XX. stoljeća s posebnim osvrtom na razdoblje 1941. – 1945. godine'', Rad. Zavoda povij. znan. HAZU Zadru, sv. 43/2001 (p. 464)</ref> The state maintained an Office of Colonization in Mostar, Osijek, Petrinja, Sarajevo, Sremska Mitrovica, and Zagreb.<ref>I. Balta. ''Kolonizacija u Slavoniji od početka XX. stoljeća s posebnim osvrtom na razdoblje 1941. – 1945. godine'', Rad. Zavoda povij. znan. HAZU Zadru, sv. 43/2001 (p. 473)</ref>
#that he should be informed about all Italian activities on NDH territory;
#that his reign should be confirmed by the NDH Croatian State Parliament; and
#that politics should play no part in the Croatian armed forces.<ref>Stevan K. Pavlowich: The King Who</ref>
The demands for German and Italian military departures were obviously impossible to be met by the Italian and German governments, and Tomislav II thus avoided taking up his position in Croatia. Aimone initially refused to assume the crown in opposition to the Italian annexation of the Croat-majority populated region of Dalmatia, however he later accepted the throne upon being pressured to do so by Victor Emmanuel III; however he never moved from Italy to reside in Croatia.<ref name="Rodogno"/>
{{Fascism sidebar}} Following the ] on 25 July 1943, Tomislav II abdicated on 31 July on the orders of Victor Emmanuel III.<ref name="STPT">{{cite news |title = Duke gives up puppet throne|newspaper=]|date=21 August 1943|page=10}}</ref><ref name="Lawbook Exchange">{{cite book|last1=Lemkin|first1= Raphael|last2=Power |first2= Samantha |title= Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals For Redress|year=2005|publisher=Lawbook Exchange|isbn=1584775769|page=253 }}</ref><ref name="Foreign News: Hotel Balkania">{{cite news|title=Foreign News: Hotel Balkania |newspaper=]|date=9 August 1943|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,766956,00.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080308122825/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,766956,00.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=8 March 2008|access-date=4 December 2009 }}</ref>{{sfn|Krizman|1980|p=102}} Shortly after the ] in September 1943, Ante Pavelić declared that Tomislav II was no longer King of Croatia.<ref>International documents of NDH</ref> Tomislav II formally renounced his title, "King of Croatia, Prince of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Voivode of Dalmatia, Tuzla and Knin, Duke of Aosta (from 1942), Prince of Cisterna and of Belriguardo, Marquess of Voghera, and Count of Ponderano",{{citation needed|date=August 2017}} in October 1943 after the birth of his son, ], to whom he gave, amongst his middle names, the name 'Zvonimir'.<ref>{{Cite news|title=Royal House of Italy |newspaper=]|url=http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/italygen.htm|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080415191639/http://www.chivalricorders.org/royalty/gotha/italygen.htm|archive-date=15 April 2008}}</ref>{{better source|date=October 2024}}


===Parliament===
== Racial legislation ==
The NDH Parliament was established by the ''Legal Decree on the Croatian State Parliament'' on 24 January 1942.<ref name="Peric259">{{cite book |last1=Perić |first1=Ivo |title=Vladko Maček: politički portret |date=2003 |publisher=Golden marketing-Tehnička knjiga |isbn=9789532121551 |pages=259–260 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C3AtAQAAIAAJ}}</ref> The parliamentarians were not elected and meetings were convened just over a dozen times after the initial session in 1942. Its president was ]. This decree established five categories of individuals who would receive an invitation to be a member of parliament from the Ustaše-appointed government: (1) living Croatian representatives from the Croatian Parliament of 1918, (2) living Croatian representatives elected in the ], (3) members of the ] prior to 1919, (4) certain officials of the Supreme Ustaše Headquarters and (5) two members of the German national assembly.<ref name="Peric259"/> The responsibility for assembling all eligible members of parliament was given to the head of the Supreme Court, Nikola Vukelić, who found 204 people to be eligible.<ref name="Peric259" /> In accordance with the decree, Vukelić ruled that those who had received the position of senator in 1939, had been part of ]'s government, or had been part of the Yugoslav government-in-exile forfeited their eligibility.<ref name="Peric259" /> Two hundred and four people were declared eligible for the parliament, with 141 actually attending parliamentary meetings. Of the 204 eligible parliament members, 93 were members of the Croatian Peasant Party, 56 of whom attended meetings.<ref name="Peric259" />
{{See also|World War II persecution of Serbs|The Holocaust in Croatia|Porajmos}}
]
On the first day of his arrival in Zagreb, ] proclaimed a law that remained in effect during the entire period of the Independent State of Croatia. The law, which was enacted on 17 April 1941, declared that all people who offend, or try to offend, the Croatian nation are guilty of treason—a crime punishable by death.<ref name="autogenerated3">{{cite web|url=http://www.crohis.com/izvori/ustzk.pdf |title=Independent State of Croatia laws on Croatian – Zakonske osnove progona politickih protivnika i rasno nepodobnih u NDH |format=PDF |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> One day later, the first Croatian ] racial law was published. This law did not create panic among the Jewish population, because they believed it was merely a continuation of the antisemitic laws of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, which were proclaimed in 1939.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://web.ceu.hu/jewishstudies/pdf/02_goldstein.pdf | title=Jews in Yugoslavia 1918–41: Antisemitism and the Struggle for Equality | last=Goldstein | first=Ivo | authorlink=Ivo Goldstein | publisher=] | accessdate=7 February 2010}}</ref> However, the situation quickly changed on 30 April, with the publication of the ] laws.


The Parliament was only a deliberatory body and was not empowered to enact legislation. However, during the eighth session of the parliament in February 1942, the Ustaše regime was put on the defensive when a joint Croatian Peasant Party-] motion, supported by 39 members of parliament, questioned about the whereabouts of the Peasant Party's leader Vladko Maček.<ref name="Peric259"/> The following session, Ante Pavelić responded that Maček was being kept in isolation to prevent him from coming into contact with Yugoslav government officials. In less than a month, Maček was moved from the Jasenovac concentration camp and put on house arrest at his property in Kupinec.<ref name="Peric259"/> Maček was later called upon by foreigners to take a stand and counteract the Pavelić government, but he refused. Maček fled the country in 1945, with the help of Ustaše General Ante Moškov. After its February 1942 session, the Parliament met only a few more times, and the decree was not renewed in 1943.{{citation needed|date=September 2017}}
A notable part of the racial legislation was the religious conversion laws, the implications of which were not understood by the majority of the population when they were published on 3 May 1941. The implications become clear following the July speech of the minister of education, ], in which he declared: "We will kill one third of all Serbs. We will deport another third, and the rest of them will be forced to convert to Catholicism." Racial laws were enforced until 3 May 1945, when they were abolished.<ref name="autogenerated3" />


===Court system===
The NDH government cooperated with Nazi Germany in ] and exercised their own version of the ] against ethnic Serbs living within their borders. State policy regarding Serbs was first declared in the words of Miroslav Žanić, the minister of the NDH Legislative council on 2 May 1941: "This country can only be a Croatian country, and there is no method we would hesitate to use in order to make it truly Croatian and cleanse it of Serbs, who have for centuries endangered us and who will endanger us again if they are given the opportunity."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB159.pdf |title=Deciphering the Balkan Enigma: Using History to Inform Policy |format=PDF |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref>
{{Main|Invasion of Yugoslavia}}
{{multiple image
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The NDH retained the court system of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, but restored the courts' names to their original forms. The state had 172 local courts (''kotar''), 19 district courts (''judicial tables''), an administrative court and an appellate court (''Ban's Table'') in both Zagreb and ], as well as a supreme court (Table of Seven) in Zagreb and a supreme court in Sarajevo.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pravst.hr/zbornik.php?p=12&s=40 |title=Pravni fakultet Split – Zbornik|publisher=Pravst.hr|access-date=3 June 2011}}</ref> The state maintained men's penitentiaries in ], Hrvatska Mitrovica, Stara Gradiška and Zenica, and a women's penitentiary in Zagreb.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/68151|author=Davor Kovačić|title=KAZNENO ZAKONODAVSTVO I SUSTAV KAZNIONICA I ODGOJNIH ZAVODA U NEZAVISNOJ DRŽAVI HRVATSKOJ|via=]|access-date=2 September 2017 |journal=Scrinia Slavonica |issue=8 |year=2008 |pages=280–300}}</ref>


===Military===
At least 330,000 Serbs, 30,000 Jews and 30,000 Roma were killed during the NDH, particularly in the Jasenovac concentration camp<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005449 |title=United States Holocaust Memorial Museum about Jasenovac and Independent State of Croatia |publisher=Ushmm.org |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref>''Genocide and Resistance in Hitler's Bosnia: The Partisans and the Chetniks, 1941–1943'' pp20</ref> and the same number of Serbs were forced out of the NDH. Although the Ustase's main target for persecution were the Serbs, it also participated in the destruction of the Jewish population. The NDH deviated from Nazi anti-Semitic policy by promising honorary Aryan citizenship to some Jews, if they were willing to enlist and fight for the NDH.<ref name="autogenerated2" />
{{Main|Croatian Armed Forces (Independent State of Croatia)|Croatian Home Guard (World War II)|Ustaše Militia|Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia|
Navy of the Independent State of Croatia|Hadžiefendić Legion}}
The NDH founded the Army of the Independent State of Croatia ({{langx|sh|Hrvatsko domobranstvo}}) and Navy of the Independent State of Croatia in April 1941 with the consent of the German armed forces ('']''). The task of the armed forces was to defend the state against both foreign and domestic enemies.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=419}} The Army included an ]. The NDH also created the ''Ustaška Vojnica'' (]) which was conceived as a party militia, and a ].{{citation needed|date=September 2016}} The Army was originally limited to 16 ] ]s and 2 ] ] – 16,000 men in total. The original 16 battalions were soon enlarged to 15 infantry ]s of two battalions each between May and June 1941, organised into five ] commands, some 55,000 men.<ref>Thomas, 1995, p. 12</ref> Support units included 35 light tanks supplied by Italy,{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=420}} 10 artillery battalions (equipped with captured Royal Yugoslav Army weapons of Czech origin), a cavalry regiment in Zagreb and an independent cavalry battalion at Sarajevo. Two independent ] battalions were based at Zagreb and Sarajevo respectively.<ref>Thomas, 1995, p. 13</ref> Under the terms of the ] with Italy, the NDH navy was restricted to a few coastal and patrol craft, which mostly patrolled ]s.


When established in 1941, the Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia ({{langx|sh|Zrakoplovstvo Nezavisne Države Hrvatske}}) (ZNDH), consisted of captured Royal Yugoslav aircraft (seven operational fighters, 20 bombers and about 180 auxiliary and training aircraft) as well as paratroop, training and anti-aircraft artillery commands. During the course of ], it was supplemented with several hundred new or overhauled German, Italian and French fighters and bombers, until receiving the final deliveries of new aircraft from Germany in April 1945.<ref>Likso & Čanak 1998{{page needed|date=April 2021}}</ref> The ] ({{langx|sh|Hrvatska Zrakoplovna Legija}}), or HZL, was a military unit of the Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia which fought alongside the ] on the ] from 1941 to 1943 and then back on Croatian soil. The unit was sent to Germany for training on 15 July 1941 before heading to the Eastern Front. Many of the pilots and crews had previously served in the ] during the Invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941. Some of them also had experience in the two main types that they would operate, the ] and ], with two fighter pilots having actually shot down Luftwaffe aircraft.<ref>Savic, D. and Ciglic, B. ''Croatian Aces of World War II Osprey Aircraft of the Aces – 49'', Oxford, 2002<!-- ISSN/ISBN, page(s) needed --></ref>
According to the 1931 and 1948 census, the Serb population declined in Croatia and increased in Bosnia:


During operations over the Eastern Front, the unit's fighters scored a total of 283 kills while its bombers participated in some 1,500 combat missions. Upon return to Croatia from December 1942, the unit's aircraft proved a strong addition to the strike power of the Axis forces fighting the Partisans right up to the end of 1944.<ref>Likso & Čanak 1998, p. 34</ref> Because of low morale among army conscripts and their increasing disaffection with the Ustaša regime as the war progressed, the Partisans came to regard them as a key element in their supply line. According to William Deakin, who led one of the British missions to the Partisan commander-in-chief Josip Broz Tito, in some areas, Partisans would release army soldiers after disarming them, so they could come back into the field with replacement weapons, which would again be seized.<ref>Deakin, FWD. ''Embattled Mountain'', Oxford University Press (London 1971)<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref> Other army soldiers either defected or actively channelled supplies to the Partisans{{snd}}particularly after the NDH ceded Dalmatia to Italy. Army troop numbers dwindled from 130,000 in early 1943 to 70,000 by late 1944, at which point the NDH government amalgamated the army with the Ustaše army and was organised into eighteen divisions, including artillery and armoured units.<ref>], p. 459</ref> Despite these difficulties, the army, along with the German-commanded ], was able to assist the Wehrmacht to hold its lines in Syrmia, ] and Bosnia against the combined Soviet, Bulgarian and Partisan offensives from late 1944 to shortly before the NDH collapse in May 1945.

The Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia provided some level of air support (attack, fighter and transport) right up until May 1945, encountering and sometimes defeating opposing aircraft from the British ], ] and the ]. The final deliveries of up-to-date German Messerschmitt Bf 109G and K fighter aircraft were still taking place in April 1945.<ref>Ciglic, et al., 2007, p. 150</ref> By the end of March 1945, it was obvious to the Croatian Army Command that, although the front remained intact, they would eventually be defeated by sheer lack of ammunition. For this reason, the decision was made to retreat into Austria, in order to surrender to the British forces advancing north from Italy.<ref>Shaw, 1973, p. 101</ref> The German Army was in the process of disintegration and the supply system lay in ruins.<ref>Ambrose, 1998, p. 335</ref> However, the British, not having resources to accommodate non-German POWs, forced them to surrender to the ]. About 120,000 NDH troops surrendered that way, and about half of these were killed shortly afterward (see ]).<ref name=":9">{{Cite book |last=Moore |first=Bob |url=https://academic.oup.com/book/43087 |title=Prisoners of War: Europe: 1939-1956 |date=2022-05-05 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-187597-7 |language=en |doi=10.1093/oso/9780198840398.001.0001}}</ref>{{Rp|page=281}}

===Currency===
The NDH currency was the ]. The Croatian State Bank was the ], responsible for issuing currency. The kuna adhered to the ] at approximately 17.91 milligrams of ] gold per kuna. The State Bank authorized the exchange of defunct ] banknotes at par to kuna banknotes. Only Croat nationals could have held bank accounts in the NDH.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Lemkin |first1=Raphael |last2=Power |first2=Samantha |title=Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals for Redress |date=2005 |publisher=The Lawbook Exchange |location=United States of America |isbn=9781584775768 |page=259}}</ref> On 10 December 1941, postal bank accounts belonging to Serbs, Jews and Gypsies were confiscated.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Weiss-Wendt |first1=Anton |title=The Nazi Genocide of the Roma: Reassessment and Commemoration |date=2013 |publisher=Berghahn Books |location=United States of America |isbn=978-0-85745-842-1 |page=93}}</ref> From April 1941 to May 1945, there was a thirty-two-fold increase in the currency circulation across the NDH.{{sfn|Pavlowitch|2008|p=243}} Up until 1942, 7.55 billion ]s were replaced by the ] at an exchange rate of 1 dinar for 1 kuna. Afterwards, the government kept printing money and its amount in circulation increased rapidly, resulting in high inflation rates. By the end of 1943 there were 43.6 billion kunas in circulation and in August 1944, 76.8 billion kuna.<ref>Tomašević, Jozo. ''Rat i revolucija u Jugoslaviji 1941–1945'', 2010, p. 783</ref> Constant printing of money was a way of financing huge government spending, especially on the upkeep of German and Italian troops in the NDH, which could not be covered by increased taxation and long-term borrowing.<ref>Tomašević, p. 785</ref> The NDH inherited 42% or 32.5 million ]s of the total debt which Yugoslavia owed to Germany.<ref>Jozo Tomašević: Rat i revolucija u Jugoslaviji 1941–1945, 2010, p. 697</ref> According to official data, the total debt of NDH on clearing accounts at the end of 1944 amounted to 969.8 million kunas.<ref name=Tomasevic>Tomašević, pp. 765–766</ref>

On 6 May 1945, days prior to the dissolution of the NDH government, the Ustaše regime cleared out the vaults of the National Bank of Croatia, including the NDH ]. In total, approximately 200 kilograms of gold bars, 12 thousand ], ] gold coins, two thousand gold plates, foreign banknotes worth several million kunas and diamonds of various sizes was taken.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bulajić |first1=Milan |title=Jasenovac: The Jewish Serbian Holocaust (the Role of the Vatican) in Nazi-Ustasha Croatia (1941-1945) |date=2002 |publisher=Fund for Genocide Research |location=Serbia |isbn=9788641902211 |page=242}}</ref>

===Railways===
The NDH formed the Croatian State Railways after the ] was dissolved, and Serbian State Railways in Serbia was devolved.<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917164401/http://www.slo-zeleznice.si/en/about_us/the_history_of_slovenske_zeleznice/ |date=17 September 2008 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/11118 |title=Organization of the Croatian State Railways|via=] |access-date=3 June 2011 |journal=Archival Gazette |volume=46 |issue=1 |year=2003 |pages=101–129}}</ref> In May 1943, German authorities began deporting Croatian Jews from the NDH by ] to ], where nearly all victims were gassed upon arrival.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/stories/the-holocaust-in-croatia.html | title=The Holocaust in Croatia }}</ref>

=={{anchor|Occupation zones}} Zones of influence==
From 1941 to 1943, territory of the Independent State of Croatia was divided into German and Italian zones, sometimes described as zones of influence{{sfn|Baumann|Gawrych|Kretchik|2004|p=13}}<ref name="Frucht-p. 429"/><ref>], p. 15</ref> and sometimes as occupation zones:{{sfn|Cohen|1996|p=91}}<ref>], p. 15</ref>
*The German zone, which included the northeastern part of NDH, bordering ] in the north, ] in the east, the Italian zone in the south, and ] in the north-west.<ref name="demarcation-map">{{cite web|url=http://terkepek.adatbank.transindex.ro/kepek/netre/211.gif|format=GIF|title=Map of the zone|language=hu|website=Terkepek.adatbank.transindex.ro|access-date=2 September 2017}}</ref> There, the German armed forces ('']'') exercised ''de facto'' control.
*The Italian zone, which included the southwestern part of the NDH, bordering the German zone in the north-east, ] in the east, and Yugoslav territories annexed by ] in the south-west.<ref name="demarcation-map"/>

After the capitulation of Italy in 1943, the Italian zone of influence was abolished and the German zone of influence was expanded to the whole Independent State of Croatia. At the same time, the NDH acquired control of northern Dalmatia (Split and ]).{{citation needed|date=September 2016}}

==Politics==
Under the Independent State of Croatia all parties but the Ustaše party were banned.<ref>{{cite book|last=Bosworth |first=R.J.B.|title=The Oxford Handbook of Fascism|year=2009 |publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-929131-1|page=431}}</ref>

===Foreign relations===
The NDH was granted full recognition by the Axis Powers and by countries under Axis occupation, it was also recognized by ].<ref>{{cite book|title=International Law Reports|author=Hersch Lauterpacht|page=57|publisher=]|year=1957|isbn=0-521-46366-1}}</ref> The state ] in several countries, all in Europe. The countries that maintained embassies in Zagreb were Nazi Germany, Italy, ], Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Finland, Spain, and Japan.<ref>{{cite journal |journal=Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions |title=The NDH's Relations with Southeast European Countries, Turkey and Japan, 1941–45 |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/14690760600963248 |author=Nada Kisić Kolanović |date=2006 |pages=473–492 |volume=7 |issue=4 |doi=10.1080/14690760600963248 |access-date=October 19, 2024}}</ref> There were also consulates of Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, Denmark, Portugal, Argentina and ].<ref name="Vojinovic">Vojinović, Aleksandar. '' NDH u Beogradu'', P.I.P, Zagreb 1995. (pp. 18–20)</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vjesnik.hr/Html/2002/05/23/Clanak.asp?r=sta&c=2|title=Vjesnik on-line – Stajališta|date=11 April 2008|access-date=2 September 2017|url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080411223943/http://www.vjesnik.hr/Html/2002/05/23/Clanak.asp?r=sta&c=2|archive-date=11 April 2008}}</ref>{{better source|date=October 2024}}<ref>{{cite journal |journal=Balcanica |title=A Croatian and Catholic State. The Ustasha Regime and Religious Communities in the Independent State of Croatia |url=https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=1208985 |last=Stojanović |first=Aleksandar |publisher=Balkanološki institut - Srpska akademija nauka i umetnosti |issue=54 |pages=193–222 |isbn=9781003060970 |year=2023 |doi=10.2298/BALC2354193S |access-date=October 19, 2024|doi-access=free }}</ref> Despite fears by the ] that the Soviet Union would establish diplomatic relations with the NDH after it broke diplomatic ties with ], full recognition by the Soviet Union never came to fruition.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Životić |first1=Aleksandar |title=Sovjetska diplomacija o nastanku Nezavisne Države Hrvatske |journal=Časopis za suvremenu povijest |date=2019 |volume=51 |issue=2 |pages=465–479 |url=https://hrcak.srce.hr/clanak/328262 |access-date=14 February 2024}}</ref>

In 1941, the country was admitted to the ]. On 10 August 1942 an agreement was signed at ] which re-established the Society of Railways Danube-Sava-Adriatic between the Independent State of Croatia, ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/11118 |title=Makeup of Croatian State Railways|via=] |access-date=3 June 2011 |journal=Archival Gazette |volume=46 |issue=1 |year=2003 |pages=101–129}}</ref> After the 11 December 1941 ], the Independent State of Croatia declared war on the United States and the United Kingdom on 14 December.<ref>Nada Kisić-Kolanović. ''NDH i Italija: političke veze i diplomatski odnosi''. Ljevak. Zagreb, 2001. (p. 119)<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref> The ] was established in 1941, with Kurt Hühn serving as its president.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hck.hr/?path=hr/static/page/Tko_smo.Povijest|title=History of the Croatian Red Cross|publisher=Hck.hr|access-date=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref name="Kevo">{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/48460|title=Posjet poslanika Međunarodnog odbora Crvenog križa logorima Jasenovac i Stara Gradiška u ljeto 1944|author=Mario Kevo|via=] |access-date=2 September 2017 |journal=Časopis za suvremenu povijest |volume=40 |issue=2 |year=2008 |pages=547–584}}</ref> The NDH signed the ] on 20 January 1943,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pravnadatoteka.hr/pdf/Kaznenopravni%20aspekti%20bleiburskog%20zlocina.pdf|title=Kaznenopravni i povijesni aspekti Bleiburškog zlocina|access-date=3 June 2011|archive-date=21 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721101843/http://www.pravnadatoteka.hr/pdf/Kaznenopravni%20aspekti%20bleiburskog%20zlocina.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref> after which the ] named Julius Schmidlin as its representative to the country.<ref name="Kevo"/>

==Genocide policies==
{{See also|Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia|The Holocaust in Croatia|Genocide of Romani people in the Independent State of Croatia|Concentration camps in the Independent State of Croatia}}
]
Historian Irina Ognyanova stated that the similarities between the NDH and the Third Reich included the assumption that terror and genocide were necessary for the preservation of the state.{{sfn|Ognyanova|2000|p=22}} ] explained that the genocide in Croatia began before the Nazis decided to kill Europe's Jews, while ] stated that the crimes against Serbs in the NDH were the "earliest total genocide to be attempted during the World War II".{{sfn|Phayer|2000|p=31}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}} On the first day of his arrival in Zagreb, Ante Pavelić proclaimed a law that remained in effect during the entire period of the Independent State of Croatia. The law, which was enacted on 17 April 1941, declared that all people who offended, or tried to offend, the Croatian nation were guilty of treason{{snd}}a crime punishable by death.<ref name="crohis">{{cite web|url=http://www.crohis.com/izvori/ustzk.pdf|title=Independent State of Croatia laws on Croatian – Zakonske osnove progona politickih protivnika i rasno nepodobnih u NDH|access-date=3 June 2011}}</ref> One day later, on 18 April, the first Croatian antisemitic racial law was published. This law did not create panic among the Jewish population, because they believed it was merely a continuation of the antisemitic laws of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, which were proclaimed in 1939.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://web.ceu.hu/jewishstudies/pdf/02_goldstein.pdf|title=Jews in Yugoslavia 1918–41: Antisemitism and the Struggle for Equality|last=Goldstein|first=Ivo|author-link=Ivo Goldstein|publisher=]|access-date=7 February 2010|archive-date=19 August 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819055051/http://web.ceu.hu/jewishstudies/pdf/02_goldstein.pdf|url-status=dead}}{{better source|date=October 2024|reason=The article’s link seems to be no longer working}}</ref> However, the situation quickly changed on 30 April, with the publication of the ] laws.{{clarification|date=October 2024}} A notable part of the racial legislation was the religious conversion laws, the implications of which were not understood by the majority of the population when they were published on 3 May 1941. The implications became clear following the July speech of the minister of education, ], in which he declared: "We will kill one third of all Serbs. We will deport another third, and the rest of them will be forced to convert to Catholicism". Racial laws were enforced until 3 May 1945.<ref name="crohis"/>

The NDH government cooperated with Nazi Germany in ] and exercised their own version of the ] against ethnic Serbs living within their borders. State policy regarding Serbs was first declared in the words of ], the minister of the NDH Legislative council on 2 May 1941: "This country can only be a Croatian country, and there is no method we would hesitate to use in order to make it truly Croatian and cleanse it of Serbs, who have for centuries endangered us and who will endanger us again if they are given the opportunity."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB159.pdf|title=Deciphering the Balkan Enigma: Using History to Inform Policy|access-date=3 June 2011|archive-date=13 November 2005|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051113184801/http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil/pdffiles/PUB159.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{full citation|date=October 2024|reason=The article’s link is dead}}{{better source|date=October 2024|reason=Same reason thereof}} An estimated 320,000–340,000 Serbs, 30,000 Croatian Jews and 30,000 Roma were killed during the NDH, including between 77,000 and 99,000 Serbs, Bosniaks, Croats, Jews and Roma killed in the Jasenovac concentration camp<ref name="hoare"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005449|title=United States Holocaust Memorial Museum about Jasenovac and Independent State of Croatia|work=Ushmm.org|access-date=3 June 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090916030858/http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/article.php?lang=en&ModuleId=10005449|archive-date=16 September 2009}}</ref> while approximately 300,000 Serbs were forced out of the NDH.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Routledge History of the Holocaust |chapter=Nation-Building and Mass Violence |url=https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780203837443-29/nation-building-mass-violence-alexander-korb |year=2010 |edition=1 |publisher=] |last=Korb |first=Alexander |doi=10.4324/9780203837443-29 |doi-broken-date=1 November 2024 |isbn=9780203837443 |access-date=October 19, 2024}}</ref>

Although the Ustase's main target for persecution were Serbs, it also participated in the destruction of the Jewish and Roma populations. The NDH deviated from Nazi anti-Semitic policy by promising honorary Aryan citizenship to some Jews, if they were willing to enlist and fight for the NDH.{{sfn|Tomasevich|1975|p=226}} Croatian historian ] estimates that 135,000 Croats were also killed in the NDH, mostly as actual or suspected collaborators (killed by the Partisans) with 19,000 perishing in prisons or camps, as opponents of the Ustashe regime, and 45,000 killed as Partisans.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Bideleux |first1=Robert |last2=Jeffries |first2=Ian |title=The Balkans: A Post-Communist History |date=2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-13458-328-7 |page=191 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G6iBAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA191}}</ref>

According to the 1931 and 1948 census, the Serb population declined in Croatia and increased in Bosnia:
::::::::{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:60%;" ::::::::{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:60%;"
!Serbs !Serbs
! class="background: red; color: purple" |]<ref> Retrieved 26 December 2010.</ref> ! class="background: red; color: purple" |]
! class="background: red; color: white" |]<ref>Dubravka Velat, Stanovništvo Jugoslavije u posleratnom periodu /Population in Yugoslavia in the post-war Period/ (Belgrade: SZS, 1988), p. 141. Cited in .</ref> ! class="background: red; color: white" |]<ref>Dubravka Velat, Stanovništvo Jugoslavije u posleratnom periodu /Population in Yugoslavia in the post-war Period/ (Belgrade: SZS, 1988), p. 141. Cited in .</ref>
! class="background: red; color: blue" | ]<ref name="Branislav Bukurov 1978">Dr. Branislav Bukurov, Bačka, Banat i Srem, Novi Sad, 1978.</ref> ! class="background: red; color: blue" | ]<ref name="Branislav Bukurov 1978">Dr. Branislav Bukurov, Bačka, Banat i Srem, Novi Sad, 1978.</ref>
Line 353: Line 350:
|- |-
|class="hintergrundfarbe6"| '''1931 Census''' |class="hintergrundfarbe6"| '''1931 Census'''
| style="text-align:right; width:100px;"| 633.000 | style="text-align:right; width:100px;"| 633,000
| style="text-align:right; width:100px;"| 1.028.139 | style="text-align:right; width:100px;"| 1,028,139
| style="text-align:right; width:100px;"| 210.000 | style="text-align:right; width:100px;"| 210,000
| style="text-align:right; width:80px;"| 1.871.000 | style="text-align:right; width:80px;"| 1,871,000
|- |-
|class="hintergrundfarbe6" | '''1948 Census''' |class="hintergrundfarbe6" | '''1948 Census'''
| style="text-align:right;"| 543.795 | style="text-align:right;"| 543,795
| style="text-align:right;"| 1.136.116 | style="text-align:right;"| 1,136,116
| style="text-align:right;"| unknown<ref name="Branislav Bukurov 1978"/><ref>colonisation of 300,000 Serbian refugees from Croatia, Bosnia and Montenegro altered the demographic balance in Vojvodina and Srem by 1948</ref> | style="text-align:right;"| unknown<ref name="Branislav Bukurov 1978"/><ref group="note">Settlement of 300,000 Serb refugees from Croatia, Bosnia and Montenegro altered the demographic balance in Vojvodina and Srem by 1948</ref>
| style="text-align:right;"| 1.672.000+ | style="text-align:right;"| 1,672,000+
|} |}


Serbs in the NDH suffered among the highest casualty rates in Europe during the World War II.{{sfn|Dulić|2006}} The political scientist ] placed the NDH as one of the most lethal regimes in the 20th century in his book on "]".{{sfn|Charny|1999|pp=18-23}} However, the historian Tomislav Dulić, in a critical analysis of Rummel's estimates for Yugoslavia, said that they are in contrast with Yugoslav demographic research and are too high.<ref>Dulić, Tomislav (2004). "Tito's Slaughterhouse: A Critical Analysis of Rummel's Work on Democide". ''Journal of Peace Research''. '''41''' (1): 85–102. {{doi|10.1177/0022343304040051}}. {{JSTOR|4149657}}. {{S2CID|145120734}}.</ref> Historian ] claimed that direct and indirect executions by NDH regime were an "extraordinary mass crime", which in proportionate terms exceeded any other European regime beside Hitler's Third Reich.{{sfn|Payne|2006|pp=409-415}} He added the crimes in the NDH were proportionately surpassed only by the ] in ] and several of the extremely genocidal African regimes.{{sfn|Payne|2006|pp=409-415}}
== Culture ==

Soon after establishment of the NDH, the Yugoslav Academy of Science and Arts was renamed the ]. The country had four state theatres: ], ], ] and in ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.matica.hr/Vijenac/vijenac338.nsf/AllWebDocs/Povratak_zaboravljene_glumice |title=Matica hrvatska – Povratak zaboravljene glumice |publisher=Matica.hr |date=16 November 2001 |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> The Croatian State Theatre in Zagreb played host to the ] and the ] in the 1941/42 season.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> Volumes two to five of ]'s '']'' were published during this period. The NDH was represented at the 1942 ], where the works of Joza Kljaković, ], Ante Motika, Ivo Režek, Bruno Bulić, Josip Crnobori, Antun Medić, Slavko Kopač and Slavko Šohaj were presented by Vladimir Kirin.
==Economy==
] and ] with the words: "This is their social justice!; Strikes; Unemployment; Hunger and misery"]]
The economy of the Independent State of Croatia was largely subordinated to the economic interests of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, and had to meet significant obligations to them.{{sfn|Matković|2002|p=113}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}} The dominant power was Nazi Germany, which demanded supplies of raw materials from the NDH in order to support the German economy and its war effort. The Croatian workforce was also seen as a potential replacement for some of the German workers who had been recruited into the military and were sent off to war.{{sfn|Matković|2002|p=113}} An economic agreement signed in May 1941 provided Germany with unrestricted access to industrial raw materials in the NDH, and obligated the NDH to bear the costs of German military units stationed on its territory; this was a very large burden given the small size of the Croatian economy.{{sfn|Matković|2002|p=113}} Similar agreements were also concluded with Italy on a more short-term basis (they had to be renewed every three months), which obligated the NDH to support and resupply Italian army units within its borders, to make monthly payments to Italy, and to allow the Italian military to freely cut down trees for lumber.{{sfn|Matković|2002|pp=113–114}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}}

The German and Italian authorities did not coordinate their respective policies towards Croatia, resulting in overlapping and conflicting demands which further burdened the Croatian economy. In particular, both Germany and Italy demanded large quantities of ], ], ] and ].{{sfn|Matković|2002|p=115}} ], the German Plenipotentiary General, blamed Italy for demanding too much from the NDH, while ] wrote in his diary that the Germans had such control over the NDH that the Croatian economy had become an Italian-German problem.{{sfn|Matković|2002|p=115}} Officially, the economy of the NDH was supposed to be reorganized into a new economic order inspired by the German model, which was to be a ] with strong involvement of the state in economic life. However, the new economic order remained only a theoretical goal, unrealized in practice.{{sfn|Matković|2002|p=118}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}}

Upon coming to power, the Ustaša had promised significant social and economic changes, in line with their ideology which held that the Croatian nation had been oppressed by Jews and Serbs, economically as well as politically.{{sfn|Yeomans|2012|p=190}} In 1942, economist Ante Frlić published a report on property ownership in the NDH, which argued that the country found itself in a difficult economic situation because most of the businesses were "in the hands of the Jews, and many were in Serb hands too," while Croats only had small businesses.{{sfn|Yeomans|2012|p=193}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}} The "foreign businesses" – those owned by Jews or Serbs – were placed under the authority of state-appointed commissars, while Frlić called for a "new morally based economic system" that would meet the needs of the Croatian people and the army.{{sfn|Yeomans|2012|p=193}} The new economic system promised by the Ustaša was heavily inspired by Italian Fascist ] and went by several different names; Ustaše theoretician Aleksandar Seitz called it "Croatian socialism".{{sfn|Yeomans|2012|p=196}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}} This idea was opposed to both communism and capitalism and "attempted to create a psychic unity among the peasant in the village, the worker in the town, intellectuals in garrets, white-collar workers in offices, and warriors on the battlefield".{{sfn|Yeomans|2012|p=196}} Seitz declared that the aim was to bring together all classes and estates to work for the national community; this national community was held to be a concept opposed to both ] and ], because "the former knew only of classes, while the latter recognized only free markets."<ref name="books.google.com">Nevenko Bartulin: , Palgrave Macmillan, 2013, p. 63</ref> The desire to build a Croatian national community was seen as a part of a broader European national revolution that was opposed to the ideologies of the ] and the ], two forces accused of seeking the "levelling of all human cultures".<ref name="books.google.com"/>

At the beginning of 1942 the government introduced compulsory work service for all citizens between the age of 18 and 25.{{sfn|Yeomans|2012|p=203}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}} Economic branches of which NDH had most revenue (collected through direct and indirect taxes) included industry, trade and crafts. Around 20% of state's industrial enterprises accounted for wood industry. However, as the war progressed, industrial production in the territory of NDH was constantly decreasing, while inflation continued growing.{{sfn|Matković|2002|pp=119–120}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}}

In 1942, 80% of NDH exports went to Germany (including Austria, ] and the Polish ]) and 12% to Italy. Germany covered 70% of imports, while Italy covered 25%. Other trade partners included Hungary, Romania, Finland, Serbia and Switzerland. Exports from NDH mainly consisted of lumber and wood products, agricultural products (including tobacco), livestock, ore, and strategically important bauxite. NDH mostly imported machinery, tools and other metal products, textiles and fuel.<ref name=Tomasevic/>

===Role of Nazi Germany===
In the Independent State of Croatia, which Nazi Germany formally treated as a sovereign state, most, if not all, industrial and economic activity was either monopolized, or given a high priority for exploitation, by Germany. Agreements between the two governments in mid-1941 regulated foreign trade and payments and the export of Croatian labour to Germany. Germany already controlled a large number of industrial and mining enterprises in Croatia that were owned in part or in full by German citizens or citizens of German-occupied countries. Many other enterprises in Croatia, especially in the bauxite mining and timber industries, were leased to the Germans for the duration of the war. The Germans also held large interests in Croatian commercial banks, exercised either directly by banks in Berlin and ], or indirectly, by German banks that had large interests in ] and ] banks.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=621}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}}

From the beginning, the Germans showed great interest in the high-quality iron ore mines of Ljubija in northwest Bosnia, in the industrial complex (steel, coal and heavy chemicals) in the Sarajevo–]–] triangle in northeast Bosnia, and in bauxite. As the war advanced and German military involvement in Croatia expanded, more and more Croatian industry was put to work for the Germans. The bauxite mines in ], Dalmatia and western Bosnia, were in the Italian zone of occupation, but their total production was earmarked for German needs for the duration of the war under the German-Italian agreement of 1941.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=641}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}} Other Croatian industrial assets utilized by the Germans included the production of brown coal and ], cement (major plants in Zagreb and Split), oil and salt. Crude oil production, from fields to the east of Zagreb developed by the American Vacuum Oil Company, only started in November 1941 and never reached a high level, averaging {{convert|24000|oilbbl}} a month in mid-1944. The most important commodities manufactured in Croatia for German use were prefabricated barracks (utilizing the large Croatian timber industry), clothing, dry-cell batteries, bridge construction parts and ammunition (grenades). The ] iron ore mine supplied the steel mill at Zenica, which had a capacity of 120,000 tons of steel annually. The Zenica mill, in turn, supplied the state arsenal in Sarajevo and the machinery and railroad car factory in ], both of which produced various items for the Wehrmacht during the war, including grenades and shell casings. Some Vareš iron ore was also exported to Italy, Hungary and ].{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=646}}{{full citation|date=October 2024}}

===Italian role===
The region of the NDH controlled by Italy had few natural resources and little industry.{{Dubious|date=September 2011}} There were some important timber stands, several cement plants, an aluminium plant at Lozovac, a carbide and chemical fertilizer plant at Dugi Rat, and a ferromanganese and cast iron plant near ], ship building operations in Split, a few brown coal mines supplying fuel to railways, shipping and industry, and rich bauxite fields.{{sfn|Tomasevich|2001|p=660}}

==Demographics==
===Population===
According to data calculated by the ] during the creation of the state, the population was approximately 6,285,000 of which 3,300,000 (52.5%) were ], 1,925,000 (30.6%) were ], 700,000 (11.1%) were Muslims, 150,000 (2.3%) ], 65,000 (1.0%) ] and ], 40,000 (0.6%) Jews, and 30,000 (0.4%) ]. Croats comprised slightly over half of the population of the Independent State of Croatia. With Muslims treated as Croats, the Croat share of the total population was still less than two-thirds.<ref name="hoare">{{cite book|last=Hoare|first=Marko Attila|title=Genocide and Resistance in Hitler's Bosnia: The Partisans and the Chetniks|year=2006|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=0-19-726380-1|pages=19–20}}</ref><ref>Milan Koljanin; (2019) Pokatoličavanje Srba u Nezavisnoj Državi Hrvatskoj p. 23; Srpsko narodno vijeće, {{ISBN|978-953-7442-46-0}} {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210616065811/https://dev.snv.hr/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Pokatolicavanje_Srba_u_NDH.pdf|date=16 June 2021}}</ref>

===Displacement of people===
A large number of people were displaced due to the internal fighting within Yugoslavia. The NDH had to accept more than 200,000 Slovenian refugees who were forcefully evicted from their homes as part of the German plan of annexing parts of the Slovenian territories. As part of this deal, the Ustaše were to deport 200,000 Serbs from Croatia military regions; however, only 182,000 had been deported when German high commander Bader stopped this mass transport of people because of the uprising of Chetniks and partisans in Serbia. An estimated 120,000 Serbs were deported from NDH to German-occupied Serbia, and 300,000 fled by 1943.{{sfn|Ramet|2006|p=114}}<ref>Filip Škiljan; (2012) ''Organizirano masovno prisilno iseljavanje Srba iz Hrvatske 1941. godine'' pp. 31–32; </ref>

Internal colonization to the region of Slavonia was encouraged during this period from Dalmatia, ], ] and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The state maintained an Office of Colonization in Mostar, Osijek, Petrinja, Sarajevo, Sremska Mitrovica, and Zagreb.<ref>Balta, I. ''Kolonizacija u Slavoniji od početka XX. stoljeća s posebnim osvrtom na razdoblje 1941–1945. godine'', Rad. Zavoda povij. znan. HAZU Zadru, sv. 43/2001, pp. 464, 473.</ref>

==Culture==
Soon after the establishment of the NDH, the Yugoslav Academy of Science and Arts in Zagreb was renamed the ]. The country had four state theatres: in ], ], Dubrovnik and ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.matica.hr/Vijenac/vijenac338.nsf/AllWebDocs/Povratak_zaboravljene_glumice|title=Matica hrvatska – Povratak zaboravljene glumice|publisher=Matica.hr|date=16 November 2001|access-date=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080320111312/http://www.kazaliste-dubrovnik.hr/povijest.shtml |date=20 March 2008 }}</ref> The Croatian State Theatre in Zagreb played host to the ] and the ] in the 1941–42 season.<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070611020505/http://www.ief.hr/lib/attachment.php?id=53 |date=11 June 2007 }}</ref> Volumes two to five of ]'s '']'' were published during this period. The Velebit Publishing House (''Nakladna knjižara "Velebit"''), named for the ], published pro-Axis works, including ''Japanac o Japanu'' by the Japanese ''chargé d'affaires'', Kazuichi Miura.<ref>{{citation |author=Nada Kisić Kolanović |title=The NDH's Relations with Southeast European Countries, Turkey and Japan, 1941–45 |journal=Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions |volume=7 |issue=4, Special Issue: The Independent State of Croatia , 1941–45 |year=2006 |pages=473–492 |doi=10.1080/14690760600963248|s2cid=144204223 }}</ref> The NDH was represented at the 1942 ], where the works of ], ], ], Ivo Režek, Bruno Bulić, ], Antun Medić, Slavko Kopač and Slavko Šohaj were presented by Vladimir Kirin.{{citation needed|date=September 2017}}


The state had one university, the ], then known as the Croatian University. The university established a pharmaceutical faculty in 1942,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pharma.hr/Odsjek.aspx?mhID=3&mvID=58 |title=Povijesni pregled Zavoda za mikrobiologiju Farmaceutsko-biokemijskog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu |publisher=Pharma.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> and a medical faculty in Sarajevo in 1944.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> It also opened the ], which would become the largest in Croatia. The ] was established in 1941, with Kurt Hühn serving as its president.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hck.hr/?path=hr/static/page/Tko_smo.Povijest |title=History of the Croatian Red Cross |publisher=Hck.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref name="Kevo">Kevo, Mario. ''''</ref> After the NDH signed the ] in 1943, the ] named Julius Schmidlin as its representative to the country.<ref name="Kevo"/> The existing ] was renamed the Croatian University ({{langx|sh|Hrvatsko sveučilište}}), and was the only university in the NDH. The university established a pharmaceutical faculty in 1942,<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pharma.hr/Odsjek.aspx?mhID=3&mvID=58 |title=Povijesni pregled Zavoda za mikrobiologiju Farmaceutsko-biokemijskog fakulteta Sveučilišta u Zagrebu |publisher=Pharma.hr |access-date=3 June 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100524165251/http://www.pharma.hr/Odsjek.aspx?mhID=3&mvID=58 |archive-date=24 May 2010 }}</ref> and a medical faculty in Sarajevo in 1944.<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080213125225/http://www.mf.unsa.ba/english/ |date=13 February 2008 }}</ref> It also opened the ], which later became one of the largest hospitals in Croatia.


The state had two secular holidays; the anniversary of its establishment was commemorated on 10 April and the assassination of ] was commemorated on 20 June 1928.<ref name="Pozar">Požar, Petar (editor). ''Ustaša – dokumenti o ustaškom pokretu''. Zagrebačka stvarnost, Zagreb 1995. (pg. 270)</ref> In addition, the state granted holidays to several religious communities: The state had two secular holidays; the anniversary of its establishment was commemorated on 10 April and the assassination of Stjepan Radić was commemorated on 20 June.<ref name="Pozar">Požar, Petar (editor). ''Ustaša – dokumenti o ustaškom pokretu''. Zagrebačka stvarnost, Zagreb 1995. (p. 270)</ref> In addition, the state granted holidays to several religious communities:


*The Catholic community celebrated New Year's Day, ], the feast of the Presentation of the Lord, the feast of Saint Joseph, Easter, the feast of the ], Pentecost, the feast of ], the ], the feast of ], the feast of the ], and Christmas.<ref name="Pozar"/> *The Catholic community celebrated New Year's Day, ], the feast of the Presentation of the Lord, the feast of Saint Joseph, Easter, the feast of the ], Pentecost, the feast of ], the ], the feast of ], the feast of the ], and Christmas.<ref name="Pozar"/>
*The Eastern Orthodox community celebrated New Year's Day, the Epiphany, the feast of the ], Easter, the feast of the ], Pentecost, the ], and Christmas, all according to the Roman calendar.<ref name="Pozar"/> *The Eastern Orthodox community celebrated New Year's Day, the Epiphany, the feast of the ], Easter, the feast of the ], Pentecost, the ], and Christmas, all according to the Roman calendar.<ref name="Pozar"/>
*The Evangelical community celebrated New Year's Day, Holy Friday, Easter, the feast of the ], Pentecost, ], Christmas Eve, and Christmas.<ref name="Pozar"/> *The Evangelical community celebrated New Year's Day, Holy Friday, Easter, the feast of the ], Pentecost, ], Christmas Eve, and Christmas.<ref name="Pozar"/>
*The Muslim community celebrated ], Mevlud (]), ], and Kurban-Bajram (]).<ref name="Pozar"/> *The Muslim community celebrated ], Mevlud (]), ], and Kurban-Bajram (]).<ref name="Pozar"/>


The state film institute, ''Hrvatski slikopis'', produced many films, including '']'' and '']''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hfs.hr/hfs/ljetopis_clanak_detail_e.asp?sif=1777 |title=The Oldest Attempt of Film Education in Croatia: Zagreb Film Schools 1917–1947 |publisher=Hfs.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> The Croatian cinema pioneer ], was active during this period.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/10999 |title=Filmological Research in the Vienna Film Archive 2004 |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref><ref></ref> In 1943, Zagreb hosted the I. International Congress for ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://infoz.ffzg.hr/afric/MetodeII/Arhiva03_04/UremSandra.htm |title=Propagandni film u okvirima nacističke ideologije |publisher=Infoz.ffzg.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> The state film institute, ''Hrvatski slikopis'', produced many films, including '']'' and '']''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hfs.hr/hfs/ljetopis_clanak_detail_e.asp?sif=1777|title=The Oldest Attempt of Film Education in Croatia: Zagreb Film Schools 1917–1947|publisher=Hfs.hr|access-date=3 June 2011}}</ref> The Croatian cinema pioneer ], was active during this period.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/10999|title=Filmological Research in the Vienna Film Archive 2004|via=]|access-date=3 June 2011 |journal=Arhivski vjesnik |volume=47 |issue=1 |year=2004 |pages=173–176}}</ref><ref>, IMDB.com; accessed 4 December 2015.</ref> In 1943, Zagreb hosted the I. International Congress for ].


On 29 April 1941 the ''Decree on building Croatian workers' family homes'' was issued which resulted in the development of so-called ''Pavelić neighbourhoods'' in the state's larger northern cities: Karlovac, Osijek, Sisak, Varaždin, and Zagreb.<ref>, ]</ref> The neighbourhoods were largely based on similar workers housing in Germany.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/48582 |title=Projekt Marijana Haberlea za Provincijalat franjevaca konventualaca u Sisku iz 1943. godine |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> They are characterized by their wide avenues and lots, and for largely being made up of semi-detached homes.<ref>Martinčić, Julijo. ''Osječka arhitektura 1918.-1945.'', Hrvatska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti. Osijek, 2006. (p. 170)</ref> On 29 April 1941 the ''Decree on building Croatian workers' family homes'' was issued which resulted in the development of so-called ''Pavelić neighbourhoods'' in the state's larger northern cities: Karlovac, Osijek, Sisak, Varaždin, and Zagreb.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.matica.hr/Vijenac/vij227.nsf/AllWebDocs/mhaa|title=Matica hrvatska Dom, krv, tlo|date=27 September 2007|access-date=2 September 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927203959/http://www.matica.hr/Vijenac/vij227.nsf/AllWebDocs/mhaa|archive-date=27 September 2007}}</ref> The neighbourhoods were largely based on similar workers housing in Germany.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/48582 |title=Projekt Marijana Haberlea za Provincijalat franjevaca konventualaca u Sisku iz 1943. godine|via=]|access-date=3 June 2011 |journal=Prostor: Znanstveni Časopis za Arhitekturu i Urbanizam |volume=16 |issue=2 |year=2008 |pages=210–223}}</ref> They are characterized by their wide avenues and lots, and for largely being made up of semi-detached homes.<ref>Martinčić, Julijo. ''Osječka arhitektura 1918–1945.'', Hrvatska akademija znanosti i umjetnosti. Osijek, 2006, p. 170<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed --></ref>


===Media=== ===Media===
The official publication of the government was the ''Narodne novine'' (Official Gazette). Dailies included Zagreb's ''Hrvatski narod'' (Croatian Nation), Osijek's ''Hrvatski list'' (Croatian Paper) and Sarajevo's ''Novi list'' (New Paper).<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> The state's news agency was called the Croatian News Office "Croatia" (Hrvatski dojavni ured "Croatia") which took on the role formerly performed by the Avala news agency in Yugoslavia.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bib.irb.hr/prikazi-rad?&rad=241013 |title=Hrvatska znanstvena bibliografija – Prikaz rada |publisher=Bib.irb.hr |date=14 May 2010 |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> After the war's end, out of 330 registered journalists in the state, 38 were executed, 131 emigrated, and 100 were banned from working as journalists in the ].<ref>Parašcic, Ivan. ''Cenzura u Jugoslaviji od 1945. do 1990. godine'', University of Zagreb. Zagreb, 2007. (p. 15)</ref> The official publication of the government was the ''Narodne novine'' (Official Gazette). Dailies included Zagreb's ''Hrvatski narod'' (Croatian Nation), Osijek's ''Hrvatski list'' (Croatian Paper) and Sarajevo's ''Novi list'' (New Paper). The state's news agency was called the Croatian News Office "Croatia" (Hrvatski dojavni ured "Croatia"), which took on the role formerly performed by the Avala news agency in Yugoslavia.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://bib.irb.hr/prikazi-rad?&rad=241013|title=Hrvatska znanstvena bibliografija – Prikaz rada|journal=Hrvatski Dojavni Ured Croatia, Zagreb (1941-45)|publisher=Bib.irb.hr|date=14 May 2010|access-date=3 June 2011|last1=Heđbeli|first1=Živana|last2=Krvavica|first2=Miroslav}}</ref> After the war's end, out of 330 registered journalists in the state, 38 were executed, 131 emigrated, and 100 were banned from working as journalists in the ].<ref>Parašcic, Ivan. ''Cenzura u Jugoslaviji od 1945. do 1990. godine'', University of Zagreb (2007), p. 15.<!-- ISSn/ISBN needed --></ref>


The state's main radio station was ], known before the war as Radio Zagreb.<ref name="Radio">{{cite web|url=http://free-sk.htnet.hr/radio_museum/Povijest%20radija%20u%20Hrvatskoj.htm |title=History of Radio in Croatia |publisher=Free-sk.htnet.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> The NDH increased the ]'s power to 10&nbsp;kW.<ref name="Radio"/> The radio station was based in Zagreb, but had branches in ], ], ] and ].<ref> {{Dead link|date=March 2009}}</ref> It maintained cooperation with the International Broadcasting Union.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> The state's main radio station was ], known before the war as Radio Zagreb.<ref name="Radio">{{cite web|url=http://free-sk.htnet.hr/radio_museum/Povijest%20radija%20u%20Hrvatskoj.htm|title=History of Radio in Croatia|publisher=Free-sk.htnet.hr|access-date=3 June 2011|archive-date=21 July 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721100436/http://free-sk.htnet.hr/radio_museum/Povijest%20radija%20u%20Hrvatskoj.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> The NDH increased the ]'s power to 10&nbsp;kW.<ref name="Radio"/> The radio station was based in Zagreb, but had branches in ], ], ] and Sarajevo. It maintained cooperation with the ].


=== Sport === ===Sport===
The most popular sport in the NDH was ], which had its own ], with the highest level known as the Zvonimir Group.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.nk-maksimir.hr/prosle_sezone/1942-43_drugi_razred.htm |title=Tomislav Group |publisher=Nk-maksimir.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> Top clubs included ], ] and ]. The ] was accepted into ] on 17 July 1941.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hns-cff.hr/?ln=hr&w=o_hns |title=About the HNS |publisher=Hns-cff.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> The ] played ] representing the NDH as an independent state. The most popular sport in the NDH was ], which had its own ], with the highest level known as the Zvonimir Group, with eight teams in 1942–1943 and 1943–1944.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nk-maksimir.hr/prosle_sezone/1942-43_drugi_razred.htm |title=Tomislav Group |publisher=Nk-maksimir.hr |access-date=3 June 2011 |archive-date=9 March 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130309084325/http://www.nk-maksimir.hr/prosle_sezone/1942-43_drugi_razred.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> Top clubs included ], ] and ]. The ] was accepted into ] on 17 July 1941.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hns-cff.hr/?ln=hr&w=o_hns|title=About the HNS|publisher=Hns-cff.hr|access-date=3 June 2011}}</ref>


The NDH ] played ] against other Axis nations and puppet states between June 1941 and April 1944, winning five.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.fifa.com/associations/association=cro/fixturesresults/gender=m/index.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070629095949/http://www.fifa.com/associations/association=cro/fixturesresults/gender=m/index.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=29 June 2007|title=Fixtures and Results|publisher=FIFA|access-date=31 October 2012}}</ref>
The NDH had other national teams. The ] organized a national handball league, and a ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hrs.hr/savez.php?section=2 |title=History of Handball |publisher=Hrs.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> Its boxing team was led by African-American ].<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> The Croatian Table-Tennis Association organized a national competition as well as a national team which participated in a few international matches.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> The ] was recognized as a special member of the ], with ] acting as its representative.<ref>{{cite web|author=16:31 |url=http://www.index.hr/sport/clanak/redir/216033.aspx |title=History of Croatian Olympic Movement |publisher=Index.hr |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> The Croatian Skiing Association organized a national championship, held on Zagreb's ] mountain.<ref>{{dead link|date=June 2011}}</ref> A national ] competition was held in 1942 in Zagreb which was won by Dušan Balatinac.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.osijek.hr/index.php/cro/Osijek/Osjecki-spomendan/Osjecki-spomendan-12.-travnja2 | title=Osječki spomendan 12. travnja | date=12 April 2011 | work=osijek.hr | publisher=City of Osijek | language=Croatian | accessdate=18 April 2012}}</ref>


The NDH had other national teams. The ] organized a national handball league, and a ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hrs.hr/savez.php?section=2|title=History of Handball|publisher=Hrs.hr|access-date=3 June 2011|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160106050257/http://www.hrs.hr/savez.php?section=2|archive-date=6 January 2016}}</ref> Its boxing team was led by African-American ].<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070630200407/http://www.hoo.hr/izdavastvo/olimpPDF/OLIMP-18-2006.pdf|date=30 June 2007}}</ref>
== See also ==
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


The Croatian Table-Tennis Association organized a national competition as well as a national team which participated in a few international matches.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070504212853/http://www.hsts.hr/history.php|date=4 May 2007}}</ref> The ] was recognized as a special member of the ], with ] acting as its representative.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.index.hr/sport/clanak/redir/216033.aspx|title=History of Croatian Olympic Movement|publisher=Index.hr|access-date=3 June 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080430194120/http://www.index.hr/sport/clanak/redir/216033.aspx|archive-date=30 April 2008|url-status=dead}}</ref>
== Notes ==

The Croatian Skiing Association organized a national championship, held on Zagreb's ] mountain.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070706095320/http://www.zss.hr/110/III-poglavlje.htm|date=6 July 2007}}</ref> A national bowling competition was held in 1942 in Zagreb, which was won by Dušan Balatinac.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.osijek.hr/index.php/cro/Osijek/Osjecki-spomendan/Osjecki-spomendan-12.-travnja2|title=Osječki spomendan 12. travnja|date=12 April 2011|work=osijek.hr|publisher=City of Osijek|language=hr|access-date=18 April 2012|archive-date=13 June 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130613154119/http://www.osijek.hr/index.php/cro/Osijek/Osjecki-spomendan/Osjecki-spomendan-12.-travnja2|url-status=dead}}</ref>

==See also==
{{Portal|Croatia}}
*]
*]
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*]
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*]
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==Notes==
{{Reflist|group=note}} {{Reflist|group=note}}


== References == ==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{reflist|colwidth=30em}}


== Sources == ==Sources==
{{refbegin|2}}
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*Ambrose, S. ''The Victors – The Men of World War II'', Simon & Schuster, London, 1998. {{ISBN|978-0-7434-9242-3}}
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* ''Encyclopædia Britannica, Edition 1991'' Macropædia, Vol. 29, page 1111.
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* Hory, Ladislaus and Broszat, Martin: ''Der Kroatische Ustascha-Staat, 1941–1945'', Stuttgart, 1964.
*{{Cite book|last=Deutschland Military Tribunal|title=Trials of war criminals before the Nuernberg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law no. 10 : Nuernberg Oct. 1946 – April 1949 Vol. 11 The High Command case. The Hostage case. Case 12. US v. von Leeb. Case 7. US v. List|year=1950|url=https://znaci.org/00002/363.htm|publisher=United States Government Printing Office|location=Washington, D.C.|oclc=247746272}}
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* ''Encyclopedia of the Holocaust'', Vol. 2, Independent State of Croatia entry. *''Encyclopædia Britannica, 1943 – Book of the year'', page 215, Entry: Croatia.
*''Encyclopædia Britannica, Edition 1991'' Macropædia, Vol. 29, page 1111.
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* Thomas, N., Mikulan, K. and Pavelic, D. ''Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941–45'' Osprey, London, 1995. ISBN 1-85532-473-3
*Maček, Vlado: ''In the Struggle for Freedom'' Robert Speller & Sons, New York, 1957.<!-- ISSN/ISBN needed, if any -->
* Tomasevich, Jozo. ''War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941–1945: Occupation and Collaboration'', Stanford, Cal., Stanford University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8047-3615-4
*{{cite book|url=https://www.hrstud.unizg.hr/_download/repository/Matkovic_-_Povijest_NDH.pdf|last=Matković|first=Hrvoje|authorlink=Hrvoje Matković|title=Povijest Nezavisne Države Hrvatske|year=2002|edition=2nd|location=Zagreb|publisher=Naklada Pavičić|isbn=953-6308-39-8|language=hr|accessdate=7 April 2021}}
* ''Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations, Europe'', edition 1995, page 91, entry: Croatia.
*Munoz, A.J., ''For Croatia and Christ: The Croatian Army in World War II 1941–1945'', Axis Europa Books, Bayside NY, 1996. {{ISBN|1-891227-33-5}}.
*Neubacher, Hermann: ''Sonderauftrag Suedost 1940–1945, Bericht eines fliegendes Diplomaten, 2. durchgesehene Auflage'', Goettingen 1956.
*{{Cite book|last=Novak|first=Viktor|author-link=Viktor Novak|title=Magnum Crimen: Half a Century of Clericalism in Croatia|volume=1|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=b1jyvQAACAAJ|year=2011|location=Jagodina|publisher=Gambit|isbn=9788676240494}}
*{{Cite book|last=Novak|first=Viktor|author-link=Viktor Novak|title=Magnum Crimen: Half a Century of Clericalism in Croatia|volume=2|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vF9GMwEACAAJ|year=2011|location=Jagodina|publisher=Gambit|isbn=9788676240494}}
* {{cite book |last1=Ognyanova |first1=Irina |chapter=Nationalism and National Policy in Independent State of Croatia (1941–1945) |editor1-last=Rogers |editor1-first= Dorothy |editor2-last=Joshua |editor2-first=Wheeler|editor3-last= Zavacká |editor3-first=Marína |editor4-last=Casebier |editor4-first=Shawna |title=Topics in Feminism, History and Philosophy, IWM Junior Visiting Fellows Conferences, Vol. 6 |year=2000 |publisher=Otto Harrassowitz Verlag |location= Vienna, Austria}}
*{{Cite book|title=Hitler's new disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia|author-link=Stevan K. Pavlowitch|first=Stevan K.|last=Pavlowitch|isbn=978-0-231-70050-4|year=2008|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R8d2409V9tEC|publisher=Columbia University Press}}
*{{Cite book|last=Ramet|first=Sabrina P.|author-link=Sabrina P. Ramet|title=The Three Yugoslavias: State-Building and Legitimation, 1918–2005|publisher=Indiana University Press|year=2006|location=New York|isbn=978-0-25334-656-8}}
*{{Cite book|last=Rivelli|first=Marco Aurelio|year=1998|title=Le génocide occulté: État Indépendant de Croatie 1941–1945|language=fr|trans-title=Hidden Genocide: The Independent State of Croatia 1941–1945|location=Lausanne|publisher=L'age d'Homme|isbn=9782825111529|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QwBnceJfwgUC}}
*{{Cite book|last=Rivelli|first=Marco Aurelio|title=L'arcivescovo del genocidio: Monsignor Stepinac, il Vaticano e la dittatura ustascia in Croazia, 1941-1945|language=it|trans-title=The Archbishop of Genocide: Monsignor Stepinac, the Vatican and the Ustaše dictatorship in Croatia, 1941-1945|location=Milano|publisher=Kaos|year=1999|isbn=9788879530798|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NQtnAAAAMAAJ}}
*{{Cite book|last=Rivelli|first=Marco Aurelio|title="Dio è con noi!": La Chiesa di Pio XII complice del nazifascismo|language=it|trans-title="God is with us!": The Church of Pius XII accomplice to Nazi Fascism|location=Milano|publisher=Kaos|year=2002|isbn=9788879531047|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pwPZAAAAMAAJ}}
*Russo, Alfio: ''Revoluzione in Jugoslavia'', Roma 1944.
*Savic, D. and Ciglic, B. ''Croatian Aces of World War II'', Osprey Aircraft of the Aces −49, Oxford, 2002. {{ISBN|1-84176-435-3}}.
*Shaw, L., ''Trial by Slander: A Background to the Independent State of Croatia'', Harp Books, Canberra, 1973. {{ISBN|0-909432-00-7}}
*{{Cite journal|last=Stojanović|first=Aleksandar|title=A Beleaguered Church: The Serbian Orthodox Church in the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) 1941-1945|journal=Balcanica|year=2017|issue=48|pages=269–287|doi=10.2298/BALC1748269S|url=http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/ft.aspx?id=0350-76531748269S|doi-access=free}}
*<span id="Tanner">Tanner, Marcus. ''Croatia: A Nation Forged in War.'' New Haven: Yale University Press. 1997.</span>
*Thomas, N., Mikulan, K. and Pavelic, D. ''Axis Forces in Yugoslavia 1941–45'' Osprey, London, 1995. {{ISBN|1-85532-473-3}}
*{{Cite book|last=Tomasevich|first=Jozo|title=War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941–1945: The Chetniks, Volume 1|year=1975|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=978-0-8047-0857-9|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=yoCaAAAAIAAJ}}
*{{Cite book|last=Tomasevich|first=Jozo|title=War and Revolution in Yugoslavia 1941-1945: Occupation and Collaboration|year=2001|publisher=Stanford University Press|isbn=0-8047-3615-4}}
*''Worldmark Encyclopedia of the Nations, Europe'', edition 1995, page 91, entry: Croatia.
*{{Cite book|last=Yeomans|first=Rory|title=Visions of Annihilation: The Ustasha Regime and the Cultural Politics of Fascism, 1941–1945|year=2012|location=Pittsburgh|publisher=University of Pittsburgh Press |isbn=978-0-82297-793-3|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Yxv4-iqVe2wC}}
* {{cite book|last=Charny|first=Israel|author-link=Israel Charny|title = Encyclopedia of Genocide: A-H |year=1999|publisher=ABC-CLIO|isbn=9780874369281}}
* {{Cite book|last=Phayer|first=Michael|author-link=Michael Phayer|title=]|year=2000|location=Bloomington and Indianapolis|publisher=Indiana University Press|isbn=9780253337252}}
* {{Cite journal|last= Payne |first=Stanley G. |author-link= Stanley G. Payne |date=2006|title= The NDH State in Comparative Perspective|journal= Totalitarian Movements and Political Religions|volume=7 |issue=4 |pages=409–415|doi= 10.1080/14690760600963198 |s2cid=144782263 }}
* {{Cite journal|last= Dulić|first= Tomislav |date=2006|title= Mass killing in the Independent State of Croatia, 1941–1945: a case for comparative research|journal= Journal of Genocide Research |volume=8 |pages=255–281 |doi=10.1111/nana.12433 |s2cid= 242057219 }}

{{refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
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Latest revision as of 20:14, 9 January 2025

Puppet state of Nazi Germany and protectorate of Fascist Italy within occupied Yugoslavia "NDH" redirects here. For other uses, see NDH (disambiguation). This article is about the puppet state during World War II. For the history of how Croatia gained independence in 1991, see independence of Croatia.

Independent State of CroatiaNezavisna Država Hrvatska (Croatian)
1941–1945
Flag of Flag Coat of arms of Coat of arms
Motto: "Za dom spremni"
"For the home—Ready!"
Anthem: Lijepa naša domovino
"Our Beautiful Homeland"
The Independent State of Croatia in 1943The Independent State of Croatia in 1943
StatusPuppet state of Germany
(1941–1945)
Protectorate of Italy
(1941–1943)
CapitalZagreb
Official languagesCroatian
Religion Roman Catholicism
Demonym(s)Croatian
GovernmentFascist one-party
totalitarian dictatorship
(1941–1945) under a
constitutional monarchy
(1941–1943)
King 
• 1941–1943 Tomislav II
Poglavnik 
• 1941–1945 Ante Pavelić
Prime Minister 
• 1941–1943 Ante Pavelić
• 1943–1945 Nikola Mandić
Historical eraWorld War II
• State proclaimed 10 April 1941
• Treaties of Rome 18 May 1941
• Tripartite Pact 15 June 1941
• Dalmatia annexed 10 September 1943
• Lorković–Vokić plot 30 August 1944
• Government dissolved 8 May 1945
• Armed Forces surrender 15 May
• Battle of Odžak 25 May 1945
Area
1941115,133 km (44,453 sq mi)
Population
• 1941 6,500,000
CurrencyNDH Kuna
Preceded by Succeeded by
1941:
Kingdom of
Yugoslavia
1943:
Governorate
of Dalmatia
Democratic Federal Yugoslavia
Today part of

The Independent State of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH) was a World War II–era puppet state of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy. It was established in parts of occupied Yugoslavia on 10 April 1941, after the invasion by the Axis powers. Its territory consisted mostly of modern-day Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as some parts of modern-day Serbia and Slovenia, but also excluded many Croat-populated areas in Dalmatia (until late 1943), Istria, and Međimurje regions (which today are part of Croatia).

During its entire existence, the NDH was governed as a one-party state by the fascist Ustaše organization. The Ustaše was led by the Poglavnik The regime targeted Serbs, Jews and Roma as part of a large-scale campaign of genocide, as well as anti-fascist or dissident Croats and Bosnian Muslims. According to Stanley G. Payne, "crimes in the NDH were proportionately surpassed only by Nazi Germany, the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia and several of the extremely genocidal African regimes." In the territory controlled by the Independent State of Croatia, between 1941 and 1945, there existed 22 concentration camps. The largest camp was Jasenovac. Two camps, Jastrebarsko and Sisak, held only children.

The state was officially a monarchy after the signing of the Laws of the Crown of Zvonimir on 15 May 1941. Prince Aimone, Duke of Aosta, who had been appointed by King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy, initially refused to assume the crown in opposition to the Italian annexation of the Croat-majority populated region of Dalmatia, annexed as part of the Italian irredentist agenda of creating a Mare Nostrum ("Our Sea"). The Duke later briefly accepted the throne due to pressure from Victor Emmanuel III and was titled Tomislav II of Croatia, but never moved from Italy to reside in Croatia.

From the signing of the Treaties of Rome on 18 May 1941 until the Italian capitulation on 8 September 1943, the state was a territorial condominium of Germany and Italy. "Thus on 15 April 1941, Pavelić came to power, albeit a very limited power, in the new Ustasha state under the umbrella of German and Italian forces. On the same day German Führer Adolf Hitler and Italian Duce Benito Mussolini granted recognition to the Croatian state and declared that their governments would be glad to participate with the Croatian government in determining its frontiers." In its judgement in the Hostages Trial, the Nuremberg Military Tribunal concluded that NDH was not a sovereign state. According to the Tribunal, "Croatia was at all times here involved an occupied country".

In 1942, Germany suggested Italy take military control of all of Croatia out of a desire to redirect German troops from Croatia to the Eastern Front. Italy, however, rejected the offer as it did not believe that it could on its own handle the unstable situation in the Balkans. After the ousting of Mussolini and the Kingdom of Italy's armistice with the Allies, Tomislav II abdicated from his Croatian throne: the NDH on 10 September 1943 declared that the Treaties of Rome were null and void and annexed the portion of Dalmatia that had been ceded to Italy. The NDH attempted to annex Zara (modern-day Zadar, Croatia), which had been a recognized territory of Italy since 1920 and long an object of Croatian irredentism, but Germany did not allow it.

Geography

Geographically, the NDH encompassed most of modern-day Croatia, all of Bosnia and Herzegovina, part of modern-day Serbia, and a small portion of modern-day Slovenia in the Municipality of Brežice. It bordered Nazi Germany to the north-west, the Kingdom of Hungary to the north-east, the Serbian administration (a joint German-Serb government) to the east, Montenegro (an Italian protectorate) to the south-east and Fascist Italy along its coastal area.

Establishment of borders

The exact borders of the Independent State of Croatia were unclear when it was established. Approximately one month after its formation, significant areas of Croat-populated territory were ceded to its Axis partners, including the Kingdoms of Hungary and Italy.

  • On 13 May 1941, the NDH government signed an agreement with Nazi Germany which demarcated their borders.
  • On 18 May the Treaties of Rome were signed by diplomats of the NDH and Italy. Large parts of Croatian lands were occupied (annexed) by Italy, including most of Dalmatia (including Split and Šibenik), nearly all the Adriatic islands (including Rab, Krk, Vis, Korčula, Mljet), and some smaller areas such as the Bay of Kotor, parts of the Croatian Littoral and Gorski kotar areas.
  • On 7 June the NDH government issued a decree that demarcated its eastern border with Serbia.
  • On 27 October the NDH and Italy reached an agreement on the Independent State of Croatia's border with Montenegro.
  • On 8 September 1943, Italy capitulated and the NDH officially considered the Treaties of Rome to be void, along with the Treaty of Rapallo of 1920 which had given Italy Istria, Fiume (now Rijeka) and Zara (Zadar).

German foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop approved the NDH acquisition of the Dalmatian territories gained by Italy at the time of the Treaties of Rome. By now, most such territory was actually controlled by the Yugoslav Partisans, since the ceding of those areas had made them strongly anti-NDH (more than one third of the total population of Split is documented to have joined the Partisans). By 11 September 1943, NDH foreign minister Mladen Lorković received word from German consul Siegfried Kasche that the NDH should wait before moving on Istria. Germany's central government had already annexed Istria and Fiume (Rijeka) into the Operational Zone Adriatic Coast a day earlier. Međimurje and southern Baranja were annexed (occupied) by the Kingdom of Hungary. NDH disputed this and continued to lay claim to both, naming the administrative province centred in Osijek as Great Parish Baranja. This border was never legislated, although Hungary may have considered the Pacta conventa to be in effect, which delineated the two nation's borders along the Drava river.

When compared to the republic borders established in the SFR Yugoslavia after the war, the NDH encompassed the whole of Bosnia and Herzegovina, with its non-Croat (Serb and Bosniak) majority, as well as some 20 km of Slovenia (the villages of Slovenska Vas, Nova Vas pri Mokricah, Jesenice, Obrežje, and Čedem) and the whole of Syrmia (part of which was previously in the Danube Banovina).

Administrative divisions

See also: Counties of the Independent State of Croatia and Districts of the Independent State of Croatia

The Independent State of Croatia had four levels of administrative divisions: great parishes (velike župe), districts (kotari), cities (gradovi) and municipalities (opcine). At the time of its foundation, the state had 22 great parishes, 142 districts, 31 cities and 1006 municipalities.

The highest level of administration were the great parishes (Velike župe), each of which was headed by a Grand Župan. After the capitulation of Italy, NDH were permitted by the Germans to annex parts of the areas of Yugoslavia previously occupied by Italy. To accommodate this, parish boundaries were changed and the new parish of Sidraga-Ravni Kotari was created. In addition, on 29 October 1943, the Kommissariat of Sušak-Krk (Croatian: Građanska Sušak-Rijeka) was created separately by the Germans to act as a buffer zone between the NDH and RSI in the Fiume area to "perceive the special interests of the local population against the talians"

1 Baranja
2 Bilogora
3a Bribir-Sidraga
3b Bribir
4 Cetina
5 Dubrava
6a Gora
6b Gora-Zagorje
7 Hum
8 Krbava-Psat
9a Lašva-Glaž
9b Lašva-Pliva
10 Lika-Gacka
11 Livac-Zapolje
12 Modruš
13 Pliva-Rama
14 Pokupje
15 Posavje
16 Prigorje
17 Sana-Luka
18 Usora-Soli
19 Vinodol-Podgorje
20 Vrhbosna
21 Vuka
22 Zagorje
23 Sidraga-Ravni Kotari
Administrative Divisions (1941–1943)
Administrative Divisions (1943–1945)
Diplomatic passport issued in 1941 to Ante Šoša, employee of NDH's consulte in Vienna

History

Influences on the rise of the Ustaše

See also: Creation of Yugoslavia

In 1915 a group of political emigres from Austria-Hungary, predominantly Croats but including some Serbs and a Slovene, formed themselves into a Yugoslav Committee, with a view to creating a South Slav state in the aftermath of World War I. They saw this as a way to prevent Dalmatia being ceded to Italy under the Treaty of London (1915). In 1918, the National Council of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs sent a delegation to the Serbian monarch to offer unification of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs with the Kingdom of Serbia. The leader of the Croatian Peasant Party, Stjepan Radić, warned on their departure for Belgrade that the council had no democratic legitimacy. But a new state, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, was duly proclaimed on 1 December 1918, with no heed taken of legal protocols such as the signing of a new Pacta conventa in recognition of historic Croatian state rights.

Croats were at the outset politically disadvantaged with the centralized political structure of the kingdom, which was seen as favouring the Serb majority. The political situation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes was fractious and violent. In 1927, the Independent Democratic Party, which represented the Serbs of Croatia, turned its back on the centralist policy of King Alexander and entered into a coalition with the Croatian Peasant Party.

On 20 June 1928, Stjepan Radić and four other Croat deputies were shot while in the Belgrade parliament by a member of the Serbian People's Radical Party. Three of the deputies, including Radić, died. The outrage that resulted from the assassination of Stjepan Radić threatened to destabilise the kingdom. In January 1929, King Alexander responded by proclaiming a royal dictatorship, under which all dissenting political activity was banned and the state was renamed the "Kingdom of Yugoslavia". The Ustaša was created in principle in 1929.

One consequence of Alexander's 1929 proclamation and the repression and persecution of Croatian nationalists was a rise of support for the Croatian extreme nationalist, Ante Pavelić, who had been a Zagreb deputy in the Yugoslav parliament, He was later implicated in Alexander's assassination in 1934, went into exile in Italy and gained support for his vision of liberating Croatia from Serb control and racially "purifying" Croatia. While residing in Italy, Pavelić and other Croatian exiles planned the Ustaša insurgency.

Establishment of the NDH

Message calling on Jews and Serbs to surrender their weapons at the risk of being severely condemned

Following the attack of the Axis powers on the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941, and the quick defeat of the Royal Yugoslav Army (Jugoslavenska Vojska), the country was occupied by Axis forces. The Axis powers offered Vladko Maček the opportunity to form a government, since Maček and his party, the Croatian Peasant Party (Croatian: Hrvatska seljačka stranka – HSS) had the greatest electoral support among Yugoslavia's Croats – but Maček refused that offer.

On 10 April 1941 the German army took control in Zagreb. With their support, retired lieutenant-colonel Slavko Kvaternik, deputy leader of the Ustaše, declared the creation of the Independent State of Croatia (Nezavisna Država Hrvatska – NDH) "in the name of Croats and the header [sic] (poglavnik) Ante Pavelić". A few days later on 15 April 1941, Ante Pavelić returned to Zagreb from exile in Italy, and on 16 April 1941 he took power as the State Leader, or the "Leader" (Poglavnik), holding the office of prime minister.

Acceding to the demands of Benito Mussolini and the Fascist regime in the Kingdom of Italy, Pavelić reluctantly accepted Aimone the 4th Duke of Aosta as a figurehead King of the NDH under his new royal name, Tomislav II. Aosta was not interested in being the figurehead King of Croatia: Upon learning he had been named King of Croatia, he told close colleagues that he thought his nomination was a bad joke by his cousin King Victor Emmanuel III though he accepted the crown out of a sense of duty. He never visited the NDH and had no influence over the government, which was dominated by Pavelić.

From a strategic perspective, the establishment of the NDH was an attempt by Mussolini and Hitler to pacify the Croats, while reducing the use of Axis resources, which were more urgently needed for Operation Barbarossa. Meanwhile, Mussolini used his long-established support for Croatian independence as leverage to coerce Pavelić into signing an agreement on 18 May 1941 at 12:30, under which central Dalmatia and parts of Hrvatsko primorje and Gorski kotar were ceded to Italy.

Under the same agreement, the NDH was restricted to a minimal navy and Italian forces were granted military control of the entire Croatian coastline. After Pavelić signed the agreement, other Croatian politicians rebuked him. Pavelić publicly defended the decision and thanked Germany and Italy for supporting Croatian independence. After refusing leadership of the NDH, Maček called on all to obey and cooperate with the new government. The Roman Catholic Church was also openly supportive of the government. According to Maček, the new state was greeted with a "wave of enthusiasm" in Zagreb, often by people "blinded and intoxicated" by the fact that the Nazi Germany had "gift-wrapped their occupation under the euphemistic title of Independent State of Croatia". But in the villages, Maček wrote, the peasantry believed that "their struggle over the past 30 years to become masters of their homes and their country had suffered a tremendous setback".

An antisemitic poster in Zagreb, advertising an exhibition about the "destructive work of the Jews in Croatia" and the "solution to the Jewish question in the NDH."

On 16 August 1941, the Ustaše Surveillance Service was established, consisting of four departments, the Ustasha Police, the Ustasha Intelligence Service, Ustasha Defense, and Personnel, for the suppression of activities against the Ustasha, the Independent State of Croatia, and the Croatian people. The Service was eliminated as a separate agency in January 1943 and functions were transferred to the Ministry of Interior under the Directorate of Public Order. Dissatisfied with the Pavelić regime in its early months, the Axis Powers in September 1941 asked Maček to take over, but Maček again refused. Perceiving Maček as a potential rival, Pavelić subsequently had him arrested and interned in the Jasenovac concentration camp. The Ustaše initially did not have an army or administration capable of controlling all the territory of the NDH. The Ustaše movement had fewer than 12,000 members when the war started. While the Ustaše's own estimates put the number of their sympathizers even in the early phase at around 40,000.

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To act against Serbs and Jews with genocidal measures, the Ustase introduced widespread measures that Croats themselves were victim to. Jozo Tomasevich in his book, War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941–1945, states, "never before in history had Croats been exposed to such legalized administrative, police and judicial brutality and abuse as during the Ustasha regime." Decrees enacted by the regime allowed it to get rid of all 'unwanted' employees in state and local government and in state enterprises. The 'unwanted' (being all Jews, Serbs, and Yugoslav-oriented Croats) were all thrown out except for some deemed specifically needed by the government. This left a multitude of jobs to be filled by Ustashas and pro-Ustasha adherents and led to government jobs being filled by people with no professional qualifications.

Italian influence

Poglavnik Ante Pavelic (left) with Italy's Duce Benito Mussolini (right) in Rome, Italy on 18 May 1941, during the ceremony of Italy's recognition of Croatia as a sovereign state under official Italian protection, and to agree upon Croatia's borders with Italy

Mussolini and Ante Pavelić had close relations prior to the war. Mussolini and Pavelić both despised the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Italy had been promised, in the Treaty of London (1915), that it would receive Dalmatia from Austria-Hungary at the end of World War I. The peace negotiations in 1919, however, influenced by the Fourteen Points proclaimed by US President Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924), called for national self-determination and determined that the Yugoslavs rightfully deserved the territory in question. Italian nationalists were enraged. Italian nationalist Gabriele D'Annunzio raided Fiume (which held a mixed population of Croats and Italians) and proclaimed it part of the Italian Regency of Carnaro. D'Annunzio declared himself "Duce" of Carnaro and his blackshirted revolutionaries held control over the town. D'Annunzio was known for engaging in passionate speeches aimed to draw Croatian nationalists to support his actions and to oppose Yugoslavia.

Croatian nationalists, such as Pavelić, opposed the border changes that occurred after World War I. Not only was D'Annunzio's symbolism copied by Mussolini but also D'Annunzio's appeal to Croatian support for the dismantling of Yugoslavia, as a foreign policy approach to Yugoslavia by Mussolini. Pavelić had been in negotiations with Italy since 1927 that included advocating a territory-for-sovereignty swap in which he would tolerate Italy annexing its claimed territory in Dalmatia in exchange for Italy supporting the sovereignty of an independent Croatia.

In the 1930s, upon Pavelić and the Ustaše being forced into exile by the Yugoslav government, they were offered sanctuary in Italy by Mussolini, who allowed them to use training grounds to prepare for war against Yugoslavia. In exchange for this support, Mussolini demanded that Pavelić agree that Dalmatia would become part of Italy if Italy and the Ustaše successfully waged war on Yugoslavia. Although Dalmatia was a largely Croat-populated territory, it had been part of various Italian states, such as the Roman Empire and the Republic of Venice in prior centuries and was part of Italian nationalism's irredentist claims.

In exchange for this concession, Mussolini offered Pavelić the right for Croatia to annex all of Bosnia and Herzegovina, which had only a minority Croat population. Pavelić agreed. After the invasion and occupation of Yugoslavia, Italy annexed numerous Adriatic islands and a portion of Dalmatia, which all combined to become the Italian Governorship of Dalmatia including territory from the provinces of Split, Zadar, and Kotor.

Although Italy had initially larger territorial aims that extended from the Velebit mountains to the Albanian Alps, Mussolini decided against annexing further territories due to a number of factors, including that Italy held the economically valuable portion of that territory within its possession while the northern Adriatic coast had no important railways or roads and because a larger annexation would have included hundreds of thousands of Slavs who were hostile to Italy, within its national borders.

Italy intended to keep the NDH within its sphere of influence by forbidding it to build any significant navy. Italy only permitted small patrol boats to be used by NDH forces. This policy forbidding the creation of NDH warships was part of the Italian Fascists' policy of Mare Nostrum (Latin for "Our Sea") in which Italy was to dominate the Mediterranean Sea as the Roman Empire had done centuries earlier. Italian armed forces assisted the Ustaše government in persecuting Serbs. In 1941, Italian forces captured and interned the Serbian Orthodox Bishop Irinej (Đorđević) of Dalmatia.

Influence of Nazi Germany

Adolf Hitler (left) with Ante Pavelić (right) at the Berghof, outside the Berchtesgaden, Germany

At the time of the invasion of Yugoslavia by Nazi Germany, Adolf Hitler was uneasy with Mussolini's agenda of creating a puppet Croatian state, and preferred that areas outside of Italian territorial aims become part of Hungary as an autonomous territory. This would appease Nazi Germany's ally Hungary and its nationalist territorial claims. Germany's position on Croatia changed after its invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941. The invasion was spearheaded by a strong German invasion force which was largely responsible for the capture of Yugoslavia. Military forces from other Axis powers, including Italy, Hungary, and Bulgaria made few gains during the invasion.

Schutzstaffel (SS) recruitment propaganda poster used in the NDH

The invasion was precipitated by the need for German forces to reach Greece to save Italian forces, which were failing on the battlefield against the Greek armed forces. Upon rescuing Italian forces in Greece and having conquered Yugoslavia and Greece almost single-handedly, Hitler became frustrated with Mussolini and Italy's military incompetence. Germany improved relations with the Ustaše and supported the NDH claims to annex the Adriatic Coast in order reduce Italy's planned territorial gains. Nevertheless, Italy annexed a significant central portion of Dalmatia and various Adriatic Islands. This was not what had been agreed with Pavelić prior to the invasion; Italy had expected to annex all of Dalmatia as part of its irredentist claims.

Hitler sparred with his army commanders over what policy should be undertaken in Croatia regarding the Serbs. German military officials thought that Serbs could be rallied to fight against the Partisans. Hitler disagreed with his commanders, but pointed out to Pavelić that the NDH could create a completely Croat state only if it followed a constant policy of persecution of the non-Croat population for at least fifty years. The NDH was never fully sovereign, but it was a puppet state that enjoyed greater autonomy than any other regime in German-occupied Europe.

As early as 10 July 1941, Wehrmacht General Edmund Glaise von Horstenau reported the following to the German High Command, the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW):

Our troops have to be mute witnesses of such events; it does not reflect well on their otherwise high reputation I am frequently told that German occupation troops would finally have to intervene against Ustaše crimes. This may happen eventually. Right now, with the available forces, I could not ask for such action. Ad hoc intervention in individual cases could make the German Army look responsible for countless crimes which it could not prevent in the past.

— General Edmund Glaise von Horstenau, German military attaché in Zagreb

The Gestapo report to Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler, dated 17 February 1942, states:

Increased activity of the bands is chiefly due to atrocities carried out by Ustaše units in Croatia against the Orthodox population. The Ustaše committed their deeds in a bestial manner not only against males of conscript age, but especially against helpless old people, women and children. The number of the Orthodox that the Croats have massacred and sadistically tortured to death is about three hundred thousand.

— Gestapo report to Reichsführer SS Heinrich Himmler, 17 February 1942.

According to reports by General Glaise-Horstenau, Hitler was angry with Pavelić, whose policy inflamed the rebellion in Croatia, thwarting any prospect of deploying NDH forces on the Eastern Front. Moreover, Hitler was forced to engage large forces of his own to keep the rebellion in check. For that reason, Hitler summoned Pavelić to his war headquarters in Vinnytsia (Ukraine) on 23 September 1942. Consequently, Pavelić replaced his minister of the Armed Forces, Slavko Kvaternik, with the less zealous Jure Francetić. Kvaternik was sent into exile in Slovakia – along with his son Eugen, who was blamed for the persecution of the Serbs in Croatia. Before meeting Hitler, to appease the public, Pavelić published an "Important Government Announcement" (»Važna obavijest Vlade«), in which he threatened those who were spreading the news "about non-existent threats of disarmament of the Ustashe units by representatives of one foreign power, about the Croatian Army replacement by a foreign army, about the possibility that a foreign power would seize the power in Croatia "

World War II propaganda poster: "The battle of the united Europe in the east"

General Glaise-Horstenau reported: "The Ustaše movement is, due to the mistakes and atrocities they have committed and the corruption, so compromised that the government executive branch (the home guard and the police) shall be separated from the government – even for the price of breaking any possible connection with the government."

Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler is quoted characterizing the Independent State of Croatia as "ridiculous": "our beloved German settlements will be secured. I hope that the area south of Srem will be liberated by the Bosnian division so that we can at least restore partial order in this ridiculous (Croatian) state." The Ustaše gained German support for plans to eliminate the Serb population in Croatia. One plan involved an exchange in 1941 between Germany and the NDH, in which 20,000 Catholic Slovenes would be deported from German-held Slovenia and sent to the NDH where they would be assimilated as Croats. In exchange, 20,000 Serbs would be deported from the NDH and sent to the German-occupied territory of Serbia. On the meeting with Hitler on 6 June 1941 in Salzburg, Pavelić agreed to receive 175,000 deported Slovenes. The agreement provided that the number of Serbs deported from NDH to Serbia could exceed the number of Slovenes received by 30,000. During the talks, Hitler stressed the necessity and desirability of deportations of Slovenes and Serbs, and advised Pavelic that NDH, in order to become stable, should carry on ethnically intolerant policy for the next 50 years. The German occupation forces allowed the expulsion of Serbs to Serbia, but instead of sending the Slovenes to Croatia, they were also deported to Serbia. In total, about 300,000 Serbs had been deported or fled from the NDH to Serbia by the end of World War II.

The atrocities committed by the Ustaše stunned observers; Brigadier Sir Fitzroy Maclean, Chief of the British military mission to the Partisans, commented "Some Ustaše collected the eyes of Serbs they had killed, sending them, when they had enough, to the Poglavnik for his inspection or proudly displaying them and other human organs in the cafés of Zagreb."

The Nazi regime demanded that the Ustaše adopt antisemitic racial policies, persecute Jews and set up several concentration camps. Pavelic and the Ustaše accepted Nazi demands, but their racial policy focused primarily on eliminating the Serb population. When the Ustaše needed more recruits to help exterminate the Serbs, the state broke away from Nazi antisemitic policy by promising honorary Aryan citizenship, and, thus, freedom from persecution, to Jews who were willing to fight for the NDH. As this was the only legal means allowing Jews to escape persecution, a number of Jews joined the NDH's armed forces. This aggravated the German SS, which claimed that the NDH let 5,000 Jews survive via service in the NDH's armed forces. German anti-Semitic objectives for Croatia were further undermined by Italy's reluctance to adhere to a strict antisemitic policy, which resulted in Jews in Italian-held parts of Croatia avoiding the same persecution facing Jews in German-held eastern Croatia. After Italy abandoned the war in 1943, German forces occupied western Croatia and the NDH annexed the territory ceded to Italy in 1941.

Within just a few days of the creation of the NDH, Croatian workers were requisitioned by the Reich for cheap forced labour and slave labour. From 1942 onward, German and Croat authorities cooperated more closely in deporting "unwanted" Croats and Serbs to concentration camps in the Reich and Norway for forced labour, such people were to be rounded up and deported by the General Plenipotentiary for Labour Deployment to the Reich (Arbeitseinsatz).

Between 1941 and 1945, some 200,000 Croatian citizens of the NDH (including ethnic Croats as well as ethnic Serbs with Croatian nationality and Slovenes) were sent to Germany to work as slave and forced labourers, mostly working in mining, agriculture and forestry. It is estimated that 153,000 of these labourers were said to have been "voluntarily" recruited, however in many instances this was not the case, as the workers that may have initially volunteered were forced to work longer hours and were paid less than their contracts had stipulated, they were also not allowed to return home after their yearly contract had ended, at which point their labour was no longer voluntary, but forced. Forced and slave labour were also conducted in Nazi concentration camps, such as in Buchenwald and Mittelbau-Dora. From 1941 to 1945, 3.8% of the population of Croatia had been sent to the Reich to work, which was higher than the European average.

Partisan resistance

Main article: Resistance in Yugoslavia

On 22 June 1941, the Sisak Partisan Detachment was formed in Brezovica forest near Sisak; this was to be celebrated as the first armed resistance unit formed in occupied Yugoslavia during World War II. Croats, Serbs, Bosniaks, and citizens of all nationalities and backgrounds began joining the pan-Yugoslav Partisans led by Josip Broz Tito. The Partisan movement was soon able to control a large percentage of the NDH (and Yugoslavia) and before long the cities of occupied Bosnia and Dalmatia in particular were surrounded by these Partisan-controlled areas, with their garrisons living in a de facto state of siege and constantly trying to maintain control of the rail-links.

In 1944, the third year of the war in Yugoslavia, Croats formed 61% of the Partisan operational units originating from the Federal State of Croatia.

The Federal State of Croatia also had the highest number of detachments and brigades among the federal units, and together with the forces in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Partisan resistance in the NDH made up the majority of the movement's military strength.

Relations with the Chetniks

See also: Chetniks
Representatives of the Chetniks, Ustaše, and Croatian Home Guard meet in occupied Bosnia

After the 1941 split between the Partisans and the Chetniks in Serbia, the Chetnik groups in central, eastern and northwestern Bosnia found themselves caught between the German and Ustaše (NDH) forces on one side and the Partisans on the other. In early 1942 Chetnik Major Jezdimir Dangić approached the Germans in an attempt to arrive at an understanding, but was unsuccessful, and the local Chetnik leaders were forced to look for another solution. Although the Ustaše and Chetniks were rival nationalists (Croatian and Serbian), they found a common enemy in the Partisans, and thwarting Partisan advances became the overriding reason for the collaboration which ensued between the Ustaše authorities of the Independent State of Croatia and Chetnik detachments in Bosnia.

The first formal agreement between Bosnian Chetniks and the Ustaše was concluded on 28 May 1942, in which Chetnik leaders expressed their loyalty as "citizens of the Independent State of Croatia" both to the state and its Poglavnik (Ante Pavelić). During the next three weeks, three additional agreements were signed, covering a large part of the area of Bosnia (along with the Chetnik detachments within it). By the provision of these agreements, the Chetniks were to cease hostilities against the Ustaše state, and the Ustaše would establish regular administration in these areas. The main provision, Article 5 of the agreement, states as follows:

As long as there is danger from the Partisan armed bands, the Chetnik formations will cooperate voluntarily with the Croatian military in fighting and destroying the Partisans and in those operations they will be under the overall command of the Croatian armed forces. Chetnik formations may engage in operations against the Partisans on their own, but this they will have to report, on time, to the Croatian military commanders.

The necessary ammunition and provisions were supplied to the Chetniks by the Ustaše military. Chetniks who were wounded in such operations would be cared for in NDH hospitals, while the orphans and widows of Chetniks killed in action would be supported by the Ustaše state. Persons specifically recommended by Chetnik commanders would be returned home from the Ustaše concentration camps. These agreements covered the majority of Chetnik forces in Bosnia east of the German-Italian demarcation line, and lasted throughout most of the war. Since Croatian forces were immediately subordinate to the German military occupation, collaboration with Croatian forces was, in fact, indirect collaboration with the Germans.

End of the war

In August 1944, there was an attempt by the NDH Foreign Minister Mladen Lorković and Minister of War Ante Vokić to execute a coup d'état against Ante Pavelić so as to separate from the Axis and align with the Allies. The Lorković-Vokić coup failed and its conspirators were executed. By early 1945, the NDH army withdrew towards Zagreb with German and Cossack troops. They were overpowered and the advance of Tito's Partisan forces, joined by the Soviet Red Army, caused a mass retreat of the Ustaše towards Austria and effectively an end to the Independent State of Croatia. Pavelić himself, too, fled, even though he had vowed to fight in Zagreb till the bitter end.

In May 1945, a large column composed of NDH Home Guard troops, Ustaša, Cossacks, Serbian State Guard, some Chetniks and the Slovene Home Guard, as well as numerous civilians, retreated from the Partisan forces heading northwest towards Italy and Austria. The German Instrument of Surrender was signed on 8 May, but the Germans put Pavelić in sole command of NDH forces, and he ordered to continue fighting as the columns tried to reach the British forces to negotiate passage into Allied-occupied Austria. The British Army, however, refused them entry and turned them over to the Partisan forces. The Bleiburg repatriations from Austria resulted in mass executions. On 25 May 1945, the final battle of the Second World War in Europe, the Battle of Odžak, ended with the fall of the Independent State of Croatia, whose territory became part of the Democratic Federal Yugoslavia, and the demise of the Independent State of Croatia.

Meanwhile, Pavelić had detached from the group and fled to Austria, Italy, Argentina and finally Spain, where he would die in 1959. Several other members of the NDH government were captured in May and June 1945, and sentenced to death or long-term imprisonment in the trial of Mile Budak. The end of the war resulted in the establishment of the Democratic Republic of Yugoslavia, which later became the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, with the Constitution of 1946 officially making the People's Republic of Croatia and the People's Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina two of the six constituent republics of the new state.

Aftermath

Although far right movements in Croatia inspired by the former NDH reemerged during the Croatian War of Independence, the current Constitution of Croatia does not officially recognize the Independent State of Croatia as the historical or legitimate predecessor state of the current Croatian republic. Despite this, upon declaring independence from Yugoslavia in 1991, the Republic of Croatia rehabilitated the Croatian Home Guard, whose veterans have since received state pensions. German soldiers who died on Croatian territory were not commemorated until Germany and Croatia reached an agreement on marking their grave sites in 1996. The German War Graves Commission maintains two large cemeteries, in Zagreb and Split.

Government

Main article: Government of the Independent State of Croatia

The absolute leader of the NDH was Ante Pavelić, who was known by his Ustaše title, Poglavnik, throughout the war, regardless of his official government post. From 1941 to 1943, while the country was a de jure monarchy, Pavelić was its powerful Prime Minister (or "President of the Government"). After the capitulation of Italy, Pavelić became the head of state in the place of Aimone, Duke of Aosta (also known as Tomislav II) and retained the position of Prime Minister until September 1943, when he appointed Nikola Mandić to replace him.

Monarchy

Designation of Aimone Tomislav II as king of Croatia on 18 May 1941. In front of him, Poglavnik Pavelić stands with the Croatian delegation.
Public declaration of the laws on the crown of Zvonimir, which made the state a kingdom, 15 May 1941
Public proclamation of the new Croatian dynasty (Hrvatski Narod, no. 96, 19 May 1941)

Upon the formation of the NDH, Pavelić conceded to the accession of Aimone, the 4th Duke of Aosta, as a figurehead King of Croatia under his new royal name, Tomislav II. Tomislav II was not interested in being the figurehead King of Croatia, never actually visited the country and had no influence over the government. In the summer of 1941, Tomislav II declared that he would accept his position as King, only if certain demands were met:

  1. that he should be informed about all Italian activities on NDH territory;
  2. that his reign should be confirmed by the NDH Croatian State Parliament; and
  3. that politics should play no part in the Croatian armed forces.

The demands for German and Italian military departures were obviously impossible to be met by the Italian and German governments, and Tomislav II thus avoided taking up his position in Croatia. Aimone initially refused to assume the crown in opposition to the Italian annexation of the Croat-majority populated region of Dalmatia, however he later accepted the throne upon being pressured to do so by Victor Emmanuel III; however he never moved from Italy to reside in Croatia.

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Following the dismissal of Mussolini on 25 July 1943, Tomislav II abdicated on 31 July on the orders of Victor Emmanuel III. Shortly after the armistice with Italy in September 1943, Ante Pavelić declared that Tomislav II was no longer King of Croatia. Tomislav II formally renounced his title, "King of Croatia, Prince of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Voivode of Dalmatia, Tuzla and Knin, Duke of Aosta (from 1942), Prince of Cisterna and of Belriguardo, Marquess of Voghera, and Count of Ponderano", in October 1943 after the birth of his son, Amedeo, to whom he gave, amongst his middle names, the name 'Zvonimir'.

Parliament

The NDH Parliament was established by the Legal Decree on the Croatian State Parliament on 24 January 1942. The parliamentarians were not elected and meetings were convened just over a dozen times after the initial session in 1942. Its president was Marko Došen. This decree established five categories of individuals who would receive an invitation to be a member of parliament from the Ustaše-appointed government: (1) living Croatian representatives from the Croatian Parliament of 1918, (2) living Croatian representatives elected in the 1938 Yugoslavian election, (3) members of the Party of Rights prior to 1919, (4) certain officials of the Supreme Ustaše Headquarters and (5) two members of the German national assembly. The responsibility for assembling all eligible members of parliament was given to the head of the Supreme Court, Nikola Vukelić, who found 204 people to be eligible. In accordance with the decree, Vukelić ruled that those who had received the position of senator in 1939, had been part of Dušan Simović's government, or had been part of the Yugoslav government-in-exile forfeited their eligibility. Two hundred and four people were declared eligible for the parliament, with 141 actually attending parliamentary meetings. Of the 204 eligible parliament members, 93 were members of the Croatian Peasant Party, 56 of whom attended meetings.

The Parliament was only a deliberatory body and was not empowered to enact legislation. However, during the eighth session of the parliament in February 1942, the Ustaše regime was put on the defensive when a joint Croatian Peasant Party-Croatian Party of Rights motion, supported by 39 members of parliament, questioned about the whereabouts of the Peasant Party's leader Vladko Maček. The following session, Ante Pavelić responded that Maček was being kept in isolation to prevent him from coming into contact with Yugoslav government officials. In less than a month, Maček was moved from the Jasenovac concentration camp and put on house arrest at his property in Kupinec. Maček was later called upon by foreigners to take a stand and counteract the Pavelić government, but he refused. Maček fled the country in 1945, with the help of Ustaše General Ante Moškov. After its February 1942 session, the Parliament met only a few more times, and the decree was not renewed in 1943.

Court system

Main article: Invasion of Yugoslavia Occupation and partition of Yugoslavia, 1941–1943Occupation and partition of Yugoslavia, 1943–1944

The NDH retained the court system of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, but restored the courts' names to their original forms. The state had 172 local courts (kotar), 19 district courts (judicial tables), an administrative court and an appellate court (Ban's Table) in both Zagreb and Sarajevo, as well as a supreme court (Table of Seven) in Zagreb and a supreme court in Sarajevo. The state maintained men's penitentiaries in Lepoglava, Hrvatska Mitrovica, Stara Gradiška and Zenica, and a women's penitentiary in Zagreb.

Military

Main articles: Croatian Armed Forces (Independent State of Croatia), Croatian Home Guard (World War II), Ustaše Militia, Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia, Navy of the Independent State of Croatia, and Hadžiefendić Legion

The NDH founded the Army of the Independent State of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Hrvatsko domobranstvo) and Navy of the Independent State of Croatia in April 1941 with the consent of the German armed forces (Wehrmacht). The task of the armed forces was to defend the state against both foreign and domestic enemies. The Army included an air force. The NDH also created the Ustaška Vojnica (Ustaše Militia) which was conceived as a party militia, and a gendarmerie. The Army was originally limited to 16 infantry battalions and 2 cavalry squadrons – 16,000 men in total. The original 16 battalions were soon enlarged to 15 infantry regiments of two battalions each between May and June 1941, organised into five divisional commands, some 55,000 men. Support units included 35 light tanks supplied by Italy, 10 artillery battalions (equipped with captured Royal Yugoslav Army weapons of Czech origin), a cavalry regiment in Zagreb and an independent cavalry battalion at Sarajevo. Two independent motorised infantry battalions were based at Zagreb and Sarajevo respectively. Under the terms of the Treaties of Rome (1941) with Italy, the NDH navy was restricted to a few coastal and patrol craft, which mostly patrolled inland waterways.

When established in 1941, the Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Zrakoplovstvo Nezavisne Države Hrvatske) (ZNDH), consisted of captured Royal Yugoslav aircraft (seven operational fighters, 20 bombers and about 180 auxiliary and training aircraft) as well as paratroop, training and anti-aircraft artillery commands. During the course of World War II in Yugoslavia, it was supplemented with several hundred new or overhauled German, Italian and French fighters and bombers, until receiving the final deliveries of new aircraft from Germany in April 1945. The Croatian Air Force Legion (Serbo-Croatian: Hrvatska Zrakoplovna Legija), or HZL, was a military unit of the Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia which fought alongside the Luftwaffe on the Eastern Front from 1941 to 1943 and then back on Croatian soil. The unit was sent to Germany for training on 15 July 1941 before heading to the Eastern Front. Many of the pilots and crews had previously served in the Royal Yugoslav Air Force during the Invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941. Some of them also had experience in the two main types that they would operate, the Messerschmitt Bf 109 and Dornier Do 17, with two fighter pilots having actually shot down Luftwaffe aircraft.

During operations over the Eastern Front, the unit's fighters scored a total of 283 kills while its bombers participated in some 1,500 combat missions. Upon return to Croatia from December 1942, the unit's aircraft proved a strong addition to the strike power of the Axis forces fighting the Partisans right up to the end of 1944. Because of low morale among army conscripts and their increasing disaffection with the Ustaša regime as the war progressed, the Partisans came to regard them as a key element in their supply line. According to William Deakin, who led one of the British missions to the Partisan commander-in-chief Josip Broz Tito, in some areas, Partisans would release army soldiers after disarming them, so they could come back into the field with replacement weapons, which would again be seized. Other army soldiers either defected or actively channelled supplies to the Partisans – particularly after the NDH ceded Dalmatia to Italy. Army troop numbers dwindled from 130,000 in early 1943 to 70,000 by late 1944, at which point the NDH government amalgamated the army with the Ustaše army and was organised into eighteen divisions, including artillery and armoured units. Despite these difficulties, the army, along with the German-commanded XV SS Cossack Cavalry Corps, was able to assist the Wehrmacht to hold its lines in Syrmia, Slavonia and Bosnia against the combined Soviet, Bulgarian and Partisan offensives from late 1944 to shortly before the NDH collapse in May 1945.

The Air Force of the Independent State of Croatia provided some level of air support (attack, fighter and transport) right up until May 1945, encountering and sometimes defeating opposing aircraft from the British Royal Air Force, United States Air Force and the Soviet Air Force. The final deliveries of up-to-date German Messerschmitt Bf 109G and K fighter aircraft were still taking place in April 1945. By the end of March 1945, it was obvious to the Croatian Army Command that, although the front remained intact, they would eventually be defeated by sheer lack of ammunition. For this reason, the decision was made to retreat into Austria, in order to surrender to the British forces advancing north from Italy. The German Army was in the process of disintegration and the supply system lay in ruins. However, the British, not having resources to accommodate non-German POWs, forced them to surrender to the Yugoslav Partisans. About 120,000 NDH troops surrendered that way, and about half of these were killed shortly afterward (see Bleiburg repatriations).

Currency

The NDH currency was the Independent State of Croatia kuna. The Croatian State Bank was the central bank, responsible for issuing currency. The kuna adhered to the gold standard at approximately 17.91 milligrams of fine gold per kuna. The State Bank authorized the exchange of defunct Yugoslav Dinar banknotes at par to kuna banknotes. Only Croat nationals could have held bank accounts in the NDH. On 10 December 1941, postal bank accounts belonging to Serbs, Jews and Gypsies were confiscated. From April 1941 to May 1945, there was a thirty-two-fold increase in the currency circulation across the NDH. Up until 1942, 7.55 billion Yugoslav dinars were replaced by the NDH kuna at an exchange rate of 1 dinar for 1 kuna. Afterwards, the government kept printing money and its amount in circulation increased rapidly, resulting in high inflation rates. By the end of 1943 there were 43.6 billion kunas in circulation and in August 1944, 76.8 billion kuna. Constant printing of money was a way of financing huge government spending, especially on the upkeep of German and Italian troops in the NDH, which could not be covered by increased taxation and long-term borrowing. The NDH inherited 42% or 32.5 million reichsmarks of the total debt which Yugoslavia owed to Germany. According to official data, the total debt of NDH on clearing accounts at the end of 1944 amounted to 969.8 million kunas.

On 6 May 1945, days prior to the dissolution of the NDH government, the Ustaše regime cleared out the vaults of the National Bank of Croatia, including the NDH gold reserve. In total, approximately 200 kilograms of gold bars, 12 thousand Napoléon gold coins, Turkish lira gold coins, two thousand gold plates, foreign banknotes worth several million kunas and diamonds of various sizes was taken.

Railways

The NDH formed the Croatian State Railways after the Yugoslav Railways was dissolved, and Serbian State Railways in Serbia was devolved. In May 1943, German authorities began deporting Croatian Jews from the NDH by cattle car to Auschwitz, where nearly all victims were gassed upon arrival.

Zones of influence

From 1941 to 1943, territory of the Independent State of Croatia was divided into German and Italian zones, sometimes described as zones of influence and sometimes as occupation zones:

  • The German zone, which included the northeastern part of NDH, bordering Hungary in the north, German-occupied Serbia in the east, the Italian zone in the south, and Nazi Germany in the north-west. There, the German armed forces (Wehrmacht) exercised de facto control.
  • The Italian zone, which included the southwestern part of the NDH, bordering the German zone in the north-east, Italian-occupied Montenegro in the east, and Yugoslav territories annexed by Italy in the south-west.

After the capitulation of Italy in 1943, the Italian zone of influence was abolished and the German zone of influence was expanded to the whole Independent State of Croatia. At the same time, the NDH acquired control of northern Dalmatia (Split and Šibenik).

Politics

Under the Independent State of Croatia all parties but the Ustaše party were banned.

Foreign relations

The NDH was granted full recognition by the Axis Powers and by countries under Axis occupation, it was also recognized by Spain. The state maintained diplomatic missions in several countries, all in Europe. The countries that maintained embassies in Zagreb were Nazi Germany, Italy, Tiso's Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Finland, Spain, and Japan. There were also consulates of Italy, Sweden, Switzerland, Denmark, Portugal, Argentina and Vichy France. Despite fears by the Yugoslav government-in-exile that the Soviet Union would establish diplomatic relations with the NDH after it broke diplomatic ties with Yugoslavia, full recognition by the Soviet Union never came to fruition.

In 1941, the country was admitted to the Universal Postal Union. On 10 August 1942 an agreement was signed at Brijuni which re-established the Society of Railways Danube-Sava-Adriatic between the Independent State of Croatia, Germany, Hungary and Italy. After the 11 December 1941 German declaration of war against the United States, the Independent State of Croatia declared war on the United States and the United Kingdom on 14 December. The Croatian Red Cross was established in 1941, with Kurt Hühn serving as its president. The NDH signed the Geneva Conventions on 20 January 1943, after which the International Committee of the Red Cross named Julius Schmidlin as its representative to the country.

Genocide policies

See also: Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia, The Holocaust in Croatia, Genocide of Romani people in the Independent State of Croatia, and Concentration camps in the Independent State of Croatia
An Ustase guard stands among the bodies of prisoners murdered in the Jasenovac concentration camp, 1942

Historian Irina Ognyanova stated that the similarities between the NDH and the Third Reich included the assumption that terror and genocide were necessary for the preservation of the state. Michael Phayer explained that the genocide in Croatia began before the Nazis decided to kill Europe's Jews, while Jonathan Steinberg stated that the crimes against Serbs in the NDH were the "earliest total genocide to be attempted during the World War II". On the first day of his arrival in Zagreb, Ante Pavelić proclaimed a law that remained in effect during the entire period of the Independent State of Croatia. The law, which was enacted on 17 April 1941, declared that all people who offended, or tried to offend, the Croatian nation were guilty of treason – a crime punishable by death. One day later, on 18 April, the first Croatian antisemitic racial law was published. This law did not create panic among the Jewish population, because they believed it was merely a continuation of the antisemitic laws of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, which were proclaimed in 1939. However, the situation quickly changed on 30 April, with the publication of the Aryan race laws. A notable part of the racial legislation was the religious conversion laws, the implications of which were not understood by the majority of the population when they were published on 3 May 1941. The implications became clear following the July speech of the minister of education, Mile Budak, in which he declared: "We will kill one third of all Serbs. We will deport another third, and the rest of them will be forced to convert to Catholicism". Racial laws were enforced until 3 May 1945.

The NDH government cooperated with Nazi Germany in the Holocaust and exercised their own version of the genocide against ethnic Serbs living within their borders. State policy regarding Serbs was first declared in the words of Milovan Žanić, the minister of the NDH Legislative council on 2 May 1941: "This country can only be a Croatian country, and there is no method we would hesitate to use in order to make it truly Croatian and cleanse it of Serbs, who have for centuries endangered us and who will endanger us again if they are given the opportunity." An estimated 320,000–340,000 Serbs, 30,000 Croatian Jews and 30,000 Roma were killed during the NDH, including between 77,000 and 99,000 Serbs, Bosniaks, Croats, Jews and Roma killed in the Jasenovac concentration camp while approximately 300,000 Serbs were forced out of the NDH.

Although the Ustase's main target for persecution were Serbs, it also participated in the destruction of the Jewish and Roma populations. The NDH deviated from Nazi anti-Semitic policy by promising honorary Aryan citizenship to some Jews, if they were willing to enlist and fight for the NDH. Croatian historian Ivo Goldstein estimates that 135,000 Croats were also killed in the NDH, mostly as actual or suspected collaborators (killed by the Partisans) with 19,000 perishing in prisons or camps, as opponents of the Ustashe regime, and 45,000 killed as Partisans.

According to the 1931 and 1948 census, the Serb population declined in Croatia and increased in Bosnia:

Serbs Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina Srem, Serbia Total
1931 Census 633,000 1,028,139 210,000 1,871,000
1948 Census 543,795 1,136,116 unknown 1,672,000+

Serbs in the NDH suffered among the highest casualty rates in Europe during the World War II. The political scientist Rudolph Rummel placed the NDH as one of the most lethal regimes in the 20th century in his book on "democide". However, the historian Tomislav Dulić, in a critical analysis of Rummel's estimates for Yugoslavia, said that they are in contrast with Yugoslav demographic research and are too high. Historian Stanley G. Payne claimed that direct and indirect executions by NDH regime were an "extraordinary mass crime", which in proportionate terms exceeded any other European regime beside Hitler's Third Reich. He added the crimes in the NDH were proportionately surpassed only by the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia and several of the extremely genocidal African regimes.

Economy

Propaganda poster showing Winston Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt with the words: "This is their social justice!; Strikes; Unemployment; Hunger and misery"

The economy of the Independent State of Croatia was largely subordinated to the economic interests of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, and had to meet significant obligations to them. The dominant power was Nazi Germany, which demanded supplies of raw materials from the NDH in order to support the German economy and its war effort. The Croatian workforce was also seen as a potential replacement for some of the German workers who had been recruited into the military and were sent off to war. An economic agreement signed in May 1941 provided Germany with unrestricted access to industrial raw materials in the NDH, and obligated the NDH to bear the costs of German military units stationed on its territory; this was a very large burden given the small size of the Croatian economy. Similar agreements were also concluded with Italy on a more short-term basis (they had to be renewed every three months), which obligated the NDH to support and resupply Italian army units within its borders, to make monthly payments to Italy, and to allow the Italian military to freely cut down trees for lumber.

The German and Italian authorities did not coordinate their respective policies towards Croatia, resulting in overlapping and conflicting demands which further burdened the Croatian economy. In particular, both Germany and Italy demanded large quantities of bauxite, iron ore, wood and grain. Edmund Glaise-Horstenau, the German Plenipotentiary General, blamed Italy for demanding too much from the NDH, while Galeazzo Ciano wrote in his diary that the Germans had such control over the NDH that the Croatian economy had become an Italian-German problem. Officially, the economy of the NDH was supposed to be reorganized into a new economic order inspired by the German model, which was to be a managed economy with strong involvement of the state in economic life. However, the new economic order remained only a theoretical goal, unrealized in practice.

Upon coming to power, the Ustaša had promised significant social and economic changes, in line with their ideology which held that the Croatian nation had been oppressed by Jews and Serbs, economically as well as politically. In 1942, economist Ante Frlić published a report on property ownership in the NDH, which argued that the country found itself in a difficult economic situation because most of the businesses were "in the hands of the Jews, and many were in Serb hands too," while Croats only had small businesses. The "foreign businesses" – those owned by Jews or Serbs – were placed under the authority of state-appointed commissars, while Frlić called for a "new morally based economic system" that would meet the needs of the Croatian people and the army. The new economic system promised by the Ustaša was heavily inspired by Italian Fascist corporatism and went by several different names; Ustaše theoretician Aleksandar Seitz called it "Croatian socialism". This idea was opposed to both communism and capitalism and "attempted to create a psychic unity among the peasant in the village, the worker in the town, intellectuals in garrets, white-collar workers in offices, and warriors on the battlefield". Seitz declared that the aim was to bring together all classes and estates to work for the national community; this national community was held to be a concept opposed to both Marxists and capitalists, because "the former knew only of classes, while the latter recognized only free markets." The desire to build a Croatian national community was seen as a part of a broader European national revolution that was opposed to the ideologies of the United States and the Soviet Union, two forces accused of seeking the "levelling of all human cultures".

At the beginning of 1942 the government introduced compulsory work service for all citizens between the age of 18 and 25. Economic branches of which NDH had most revenue (collected through direct and indirect taxes) included industry, trade and crafts. Around 20% of state's industrial enterprises accounted for wood industry. However, as the war progressed, industrial production in the territory of NDH was constantly decreasing, while inflation continued growing.

In 1942, 80% of NDH exports went to Germany (including Austria, Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia and the Polish General Government) and 12% to Italy. Germany covered 70% of imports, while Italy covered 25%. Other trade partners included Hungary, Romania, Finland, Serbia and Switzerland. Exports from NDH mainly consisted of lumber and wood products, agricultural products (including tobacco), livestock, ore, and strategically important bauxite. NDH mostly imported machinery, tools and other metal products, textiles and fuel.

Role of Nazi Germany

In the Independent State of Croatia, which Nazi Germany formally treated as a sovereign state, most, if not all, industrial and economic activity was either monopolized, or given a high priority for exploitation, by Germany. Agreements between the two governments in mid-1941 regulated foreign trade and payments and the export of Croatian labour to Germany. Germany already controlled a large number of industrial and mining enterprises in Croatia that were owned in part or in full by German citizens or citizens of German-occupied countries. Many other enterprises in Croatia, especially in the bauxite mining and timber industries, were leased to the Germans for the duration of the war. The Germans also held large interests in Croatian commercial banks, exercised either directly by banks in Berlin and Vienna, or indirectly, by German banks that had large interests in Prague and Budapest banks.

From the beginning, the Germans showed great interest in the high-quality iron ore mines of Ljubija in northwest Bosnia, in the industrial complex (steel, coal and heavy chemicals) in the Sarajevo–TuzlaZenica triangle in northeast Bosnia, and in bauxite. As the war advanced and German military involvement in Croatia expanded, more and more Croatian industry was put to work for the Germans. The bauxite mines in Hercegovina, Dalmatia and western Bosnia, were in the Italian zone of occupation, but their total production was earmarked for German needs for the duration of the war under the German-Italian agreement of 1941. Other Croatian industrial assets utilized by the Germans included the production of brown coal and lignite, cement (major plants in Zagreb and Split), oil and salt. Crude oil production, from fields to the east of Zagreb developed by the American Vacuum Oil Company, only started in November 1941 and never reached a high level, averaging 24,000 barrels (3,800 m) a month in mid-1944. The most important commodities manufactured in Croatia for German use were prefabricated barracks (utilizing the large Croatian timber industry), clothing, dry-cell batteries, bridge construction parts and ammunition (grenades). The Vareš iron ore mine supplied the steel mill at Zenica, which had a capacity of 120,000 tons of steel annually. The Zenica mill, in turn, supplied the state arsenal in Sarajevo and the machinery and railroad car factory in Slavonski Brod, both of which produced various items for the Wehrmacht during the war, including grenades and shell casings. Some Vareš iron ore was also exported to Italy, Hungary and Romania.

Italian role

The region of the NDH controlled by Italy had few natural resources and little industry. There were some important timber stands, several cement plants, an aluminium plant at Lozovac, a carbide and chemical fertilizer plant at Dugi Rat, and a ferromanganese and cast iron plant near Šibenik, ship building operations in Split, a few brown coal mines supplying fuel to railways, shipping and industry, and rich bauxite fields.

Demographics

Population

According to data calculated by the German Ministry of Foreign Affairs during the creation of the state, the population was approximately 6,285,000 of which 3,300,000 (52.5%) were Croats, 1,925,000 (30.6%) were Serbs, 700,000 (11.1%) were Muslims, 150,000 (2.3%) Germans, 65,000 (1.0%) Czechs and Slovaks, 40,000 (0.6%) Jews, and 30,000 (0.4%) Slovenes. Croats comprised slightly over half of the population of the Independent State of Croatia. With Muslims treated as Croats, the Croat share of the total population was still less than two-thirds.

Displacement of people

A large number of people were displaced due to the internal fighting within Yugoslavia. The NDH had to accept more than 200,000 Slovenian refugees who were forcefully evicted from their homes as part of the German plan of annexing parts of the Slovenian territories. As part of this deal, the Ustaše were to deport 200,000 Serbs from Croatia military regions; however, only 182,000 had been deported when German high commander Bader stopped this mass transport of people because of the uprising of Chetniks and partisans in Serbia. An estimated 120,000 Serbs were deported from NDH to German-occupied Serbia, and 300,000 fled by 1943.

Internal colonization to the region of Slavonia was encouraged during this period from Dalmatia, Lika, Hrvatsko Zagorje and Bosnia and Herzegovina. The state maintained an Office of Colonization in Mostar, Osijek, Petrinja, Sarajevo, Sremska Mitrovica, and Zagreb.

Culture

Soon after the establishment of the NDH, the Yugoslav Academy of Science and Arts in Zagreb was renamed the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts. The country had four state theatres: in Zagreb, Osijek, Dubrovnik and Sarajevo. The Croatian State Theatre in Zagreb played host to the Berlin Philharmonic and the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma in the 1941–42 season. Volumes two to five of Mate Ujević's Croatian Encyclopedia were published during this period. The Velebit Publishing House (Nakladna knjižara "Velebit"), named for the Velebit uprising, published pro-Axis works, including Japanac o Japanu by the Japanese chargé d'affaires, Kazuichi Miura. The NDH was represented at the 1942 Venice Biennale, where the works of Joza Kljaković, Ivan Meštrović, Ante Motika, Ivo Režek, Bruno Bulić, Josip Crnobori, Antun Medić, Slavko Kopač and Slavko Šohaj were presented by Vladimir Kirin.

The existing University of Zagreb was renamed the Croatian University (Serbo-Croatian: Hrvatsko sveučilište), and was the only university in the NDH. The university established a pharmaceutical faculty in 1942, and a medical faculty in Sarajevo in 1944. It also opened the University Hospital Zagreb, which later became one of the largest hospitals in Croatia.

The state had two secular holidays; the anniversary of its establishment was commemorated on 10 April and the assassination of Stjepan Radić was commemorated on 20 June. In addition, the state granted holidays to several religious communities:

The state film institute, Hrvatski slikopis, produced many films, including Straža na Drini and Lisinski. The Croatian cinema pioneer Oktavijan Miletić, was active during this period. In 1943, Zagreb hosted the I. International Congress for Narrow Film.

On 29 April 1941 the Decree on building Croatian workers' family homes was issued which resulted in the development of so-called Pavelić neighbourhoods in the state's larger northern cities: Karlovac, Osijek, Sisak, Varaždin, and Zagreb. The neighbourhoods were largely based on similar workers housing in Germany. They are characterized by their wide avenues and lots, and for largely being made up of semi-detached homes.

Media

The official publication of the government was the Narodne novine (Official Gazette). Dailies included Zagreb's Hrvatski narod (Croatian Nation), Osijek's Hrvatski list (Croatian Paper) and Sarajevo's Novi list (New Paper). The state's news agency was called the Croatian News Office "Croatia" (Hrvatski dojavni ured "Croatia"), which took on the role formerly performed by the Avala news agency in Yugoslavia. After the war's end, out of 330 registered journalists in the state, 38 were executed, 131 emigrated, and 100 were banned from working as journalists in the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia.

The state's main radio station was Hrvatski Krugoval, known before the war as Radio Zagreb. The NDH increased the transmitter's power to 10 kW. The radio station was based in Zagreb, but had branches in Banja Luka, Dubrovnik, Osijek and Sarajevo. It maintained cooperation with the International Broadcasting Union.

Sport

The most popular sport in the NDH was football, which had its own league system, with the highest level known as the Zvonimir Group, with eight teams in 1942–1943 and 1943–1944. Top clubs included Građanski Zagreb, Concordia Zagreb and HAŠK. The Croatian Football Federation was accepted into FIFA on 17 July 1941.

The NDH national football team played 14 friendly matches against other Axis nations and puppet states between June 1941 and April 1944, winning five.

The NDH had other national teams. The Croatian Handball Federation organized a national handball league, and a national team. Its boxing team was led by African-American Jimmy Lyggett.

The Croatian Table-Tennis Association organized a national competition as well as a national team which participated in a few international matches. The Croatian Olympic Committee was recognized as a special member of the International Olympic Committee, with Franjo Bučar acting as its representative.

The Croatian Skiing Association organized a national championship, held on Zagreb's Sljeme mountain. A national bowling competition was held in 1942 in Zagreb, which was won by Dušan Balatinac.

See also

Notes

  1. Aimone, Duke of Spoleto, accepted nomination on 18 May 1941 as "Tomislav II", abdicated 31 July 1943 and renounced all claims on 12 October 1943. Subsequently, the state was no longer a technical monarchy. Ante Pavelić became head of state, and his title as leader of the ruling Ustaše movement, Poglavnik, officially became the title of the NDH head of state.
  2. Ante Pavelić."Poglavnik" was coined by the Ustaše and originally a title for the movement's leader. In 1941 it was institutionalized in the NDH as the title of first the Prime Minister (1941–1943), and then the head of state (1943–1945). It was at all times held by Ante Pavelić (1889–1959) and became synonymous with him. The translation of the term varies. The root of the word is the Croatian word "glava", meaning "head" ("Po-glav(a)-nik"). The more literal translation is "head-man", while "leader" captures more of the meaning of the term (in relation to the German "Führer" and Italian "Duce").
  3. Settlement of 300,000 Serb refugees from Croatia, Bosnia and Montenegro altered the demographic balance in Vojvodina and Srem by 1948

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