- Research Article
1
- 10.19233/ah.2020.04
- May 21, 2020
- Acta Histriae
- Iva Milovan Delić + 1 more
- Research Article
- 10.19233/ah.2019.08
- Jan 1, 2019
- Acta Histriae
- Igor Duda
- Research Article
- 10.19233/ah.2019.23
- Jan 1, 2019
- Acta Histriae
- Edward Muir
- Research Article
- 10.19233/ah.2018.46
- Aug 8, 2018
- Acta Histriae
- Andreas Guidi
- Research Article
- 10.19233/ah.2018.09
- Jan 1, 2018
- Acta Histriae
- Dragan Bakić
- Research Article
- 10.19233/ah.2018.32
- Jan 1, 2018
- Acta Histriae
- Karlo Ružičić-Kessler
- Research Article
1
- 10.19233/ah.2018.45
- Jan 1, 2018
- Acta Histriae
- Laura Lee Downs
- Research Article
- 10.19233/ah.2018.17
- Jan 1, 2018
- Acta Histriae
- Pavao Nujić
U radu je prikazan proces pokusaja rjesavanja problema popunjenosti Petrovaradinske pukovnije inkorporacijom vlastelinstva Vojka kroz perspektivu kretanja aktivnog vojnog stanja pukovnije. Nakon utvrđivanja temeljnih odrednica i definiranja problema, nastoji se odrediti kretanje pukovnijske popunjenosti i utjecaj koji je na nju izvrsila dodatna teritorijalizacija krajiskog prostora istocnog Srijema. Analizirani serijalni vojni popisi od sijecnja 1765. do prosinca 1768. svjedoce o znacajnom povecanju aktivnog stanja pukovnije kao rezultata promatranog procesa, ali bez postizanja ocekivanog cilja potpune popunjenosti.
- Research Article
1
- 10.19233/ah.2018.42
- Jan 1, 2018
- Acta Histriae
- Gorazd Bajc
In November 1918, at the end of World War I, the new Italian authorities arrested several persons in the territory of Venezia Giulia, Rijeka (Fiume) and some parts of Dalmatia and interned some of them in the interior of Italy. A detailed examination of many documents and lists that are kept in Roman and Trieste archives reveal that around 850 civilians were interned, including women. Internments after the First World War in the Slovenian/Croatian-Italian contact area have still not received in-depth analysis; however, even less is known about the internment of women.
- Research Article
- 10.19233/ah.2018.43
- Jan 1, 2018
- Acta Histriae
- Marta Verginella
The paper addresses Slovene women’s activities in organizations in the Julian March and opens questions associated with their political and national activity after World War I and after the rise of fascism in Italy. Attention has been paid to the transition from legal to illegal activity and the role played by women in the Slovene anti-fascist movement of the 1920s and 1930s. It is evident from police sources that women (particularly students and educated women) often appeared in lists of persons who were deemed a threat to the fascist regime. The extent and features of women’s illegal activities were only partly documented by historiography, which, notably, failed to explore the extent and characteristics of women’s illegal activities. The article sheds light on two remarkable antifascists, Fanica Obid and Ljudmila Rutar, whom the authorities regarded as a grave threat to Mussolini’s regime.