Ivan Šubašić
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
1 June 1944  17 October 1945
MonarchPeter II
PresidentJosip Broz Tito
Prime MinisterJosip Broz Tito
Preceded byBožidar Purić
Succeeded byJosip Smodlaka
18th Prime Minister of Yugoslavia
In office
8 July 1944  2 November 1944
MonarchPeter II
Preceded byBožidar Purić
Succeeded byJosip Broz Tito
Ban of the Croatian Banovina
In office
24 August 1939  13 June 1943
DeputyIvo Krbek
Preceded byPosition established
Succeeded byPosition abolished
Personal details
Born(1892-05-07)7 May 1892
Vukova Gorica, Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-Hungary
(now Croatia)
Died22 March 1955(1955-03-22) (aged 62)
Zagreb, PR Croatia, Yugoslavia
(now Croatia)
NationalityYugoslav
Political partyCroatian Peasant Party (HSS)
AwardsOrder of the White Eagle

Ivan Šubašić (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Иван Шубашић; 7 May 1892 22 March 1955) was a Yugoslav Croat politician, best known as the last Ban of Croatia and Prime Minister of the royalist Yugoslav Government in exile during the Second World War.[1][2]

Early life

He was born in Vukova Gorica, then he lived in Austria-Hungary. He finished grammar and high school in Zagreb, and enrolled onto the Faculty of Theology at the University of Zagreb. During the First World War, he was drafted into Austro-Hungarian Army where he took part in the fighting against Serbian forces on the Drina River. Later he was sent to the Eastern Front where he used the opportunity to defect to the Russians. From there he joined the Yugoslav volunteers fighting within the Serbian army on the Salonica front.

After the war, Šubašić gained his law degree at University of Zagreb, Faculty of Law, and after that, he opened a law office in Vrbovsko. There he met Vladko Maček and joined the Croatian Peasant Party. In 1938, he was elected to the Yugoslav National Assembly.

Political career

With King Peter II in Italy after meeting Tito.

Ban of Croatia

In August 1939, Maček and Yugoslav Prime Minister Dragiša Cvetković reached the deal about the constitutional reconstruction of Yugoslavia and restoration of Croatian statehood in the form of Banovina of Croatia—an autonomous entity which, together with Croatia proper, included large sections of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina and some sections of today's Vojvodina, which contained an ethnic Croat majority. Šubašić was appointed as the first ban, or titular head of this entity, in charge of its government.

The Banovina came to an end together with Kingdom of Yugoslavia, following the invasion by Axis powers in April 1941. Šubašić joined Dušan Simović and his Yugoslav government-in-exile.

Government-in-exile

In emigration, Šubašić first represented the Yugoslav royal government in the United States. Gradually, the widening gap between the royalist government and Yugoslav major resistance movement embodied in Josip Broz Tito and his Communist-dominated Partisans forced Winston Churchill to mediate. Šubašić, a non-Communist Croat, was appointed as the new prime minister[3] in order to reach a compromise between Tito—whose forces represented the de facto government on liberated territories—and the monarchy, which preferred Draža Mihailović and his Serb-dominated Chetniks.

After publicly rejecting Mihailović, Šubašić met with Tito on the island of Vis and signed the Tito–Šubašić agreement, which recognised the Partisans as the legitimate armed forces of Yugoslavia in exchange for Partisans formally recognising and taking part in the new government. Šubašić kept his post until 2 November 1944, when Tito formally became the new prime minister of Yugoslavia. Šubašić was foreign minister in his cabinet until October 1945, when he resigned, disagreeing with Communist policies of the new government.

Later life and death

Šubašić spent the remainder of his life away from the spotlight, dying in 1955 in Zagreb. About 10,000 people attended his funeral.[4] He is buried in Mirogoj Cemetery.[5]

References

Notes

  1. Journal of Croatian Studies, XXVIII-XXIX, 1987–88 - Annual Review of the Croatian Academy of America, Inc. New York, N.Y., Electronic edition by Studia Croatica. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  2. Short biography on the website of the Serbian Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  3. Journal of Croatian Studies, XXIV, 1983 – Annual Review of the Croatian Academy of America, Inc. New York, N.Y., Electronic edition by Studia Croatica. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  4. Radelić, Zdenko, Ivan Šubašić i Juraj Šutej pod paskom Ozne.
  5. Ivan Šubašić at Gradska groblja Archived 2010-03-08 at the Wayback Machine
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