Vojnoistorijski glasnik
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Vojnoistorijski glasnik is a scientific journal of the Institute for Strategic Research. The journal was founded in 1950 as a journal of the Military History Institute and in the meantime has undergone many changes in terms of concept, content, design and frequency of publication.
Pages
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Istvan Vasary, Cumans and Tatars - Oriental Military in the Pre-Оttoman Balkans 1185-1365, Cambridge 2005, pp. 230 + XVI
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Hew Strachan (ed.), The Oxford Illustrated History of the First World War, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2014, 379 pp
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Martin Jarinkovič, Slovensko a Juhoslávia v rokoch II. svetovej vojny, Klub priateľov Múzea SNP, Banská Bystrica 2012, 160 стр.
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Robin Okey, Taming Balkan Nationalism. The Habsburg ‘Civilizing Mission’ in Bosnia, 1878-1914, Oxford 2007
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Hajdu Tibor, Pollmann Ferenc, A régi Magyarország utolsó háborúja 1914–1918, Osiris Kiadó, Budapest 2014, 416 стр.
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Frédéric Le Moal, La Serbie du martyre a la victoire 1914–1918, Paris 2008, 253
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: David Nicolle, Cross and Crescent in the Balkans: The Ottoman Conquest of South-Eastern Europe (14th-15th Centuries), Pen & Sword Books, Barnsley 2010, pp. xvi, 256.
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Драган Богетић, Нова стратегија спољне политике Југославије 1956-1961, Београд 2006, 384.
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Олег Рудољфович Ајрапетов, Генерали, либерали и предузетници: рад за фронт и за револуцију (1907-1917), Удружење за друштвену историју, Београд, 2005., стр. 253
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Todor Kuljić, Sećanje na titoizam – između diktata i otpora, Čigoja štampa, Beograd 2011, 268. str.
- Prikaz
- Summary/Abstract: Prikaz/The review of: Edward J. Erickson, Defeat in detail. The Ottoman Army in the Balkans, 1912 – 1913, Praeger Publishers, London - New York 2003, 345 pp, 31 maps, 50 tables and 3 appendices.
- THE AUSTRO‐HUNGARIAN SHARE IN THE ‘BOXER REBELLION’ IN BEIJING IN 1900
- Summary/Abstract: By the end of the 19th century, the Western powers and Japan had forced China’s dynasty to accept wide foreign control over the country’s economic affairs. In 1900, a Chinese secret organization called the Society of the Righteous and Harmonious Fists led an uprising in northern China against the spread of Western and Japanese influence there. The Western powers and Japan organized a multinational force to crush the rebellion. On August 14, after fighting its way through northern China, an international force of approximately 20,000 troops from eight nations (Austria‐Hungary, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States) arrived to take Beijing and rescue the foreigners and Chinese Christians.