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Oskar Potiorek
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Freepedia
is a series of free encyclopaedias. We currently specialize in history
but we intend to branch out into other areas. This section is about
Oskar Potiorek.
Oskar
Potiorek was born in 1853. He became inspector general of the Austro-Hungarian
Army in 1911 and the following year was appointed Governor of the Austrian
provinces of Bosnia-Herzegovina. This made
Potiorek a target for Serbian nationalists. In early 1914, Dragutin
Dimitrijevic, head of the Black Hand group, recruited Muhamed
Mehmedbasic to kill Potiorek with a poisoned dagger. However, Mehmedbasic
returned to Belgrade after failing to carry out the task.
In early 1914 Potiorek invited Archduke Franz
Ferdinand, Inspector of the Austro-Hungarian
Army, and his wife, Sophie von Chotkovato,
to watch his troops on maneuvers in June, 1914. When Dragutin
Dimitrijevic heard the news he decided to have Ferdinand assassinated.
Just before 10 o'clock on Sunday, 28th June, 1914, Franz
Ferdinand and Sophie von Chotkovato
arrived in Sarajevo by train. Potiorek was waiting with six cars to
take the royal party to the City Hall for the official reception.
Unknown to the Sarajevo police force, seven members of the Black
Hand group lined the route. They were spaced out along the Appel
Quay, each one had been instructed to try and kill Franz
Ferdinand when the royal car reached his position. The first conspirator
on the route to see the royal car was Muhamed
Mehmedbasic. Standing by the Austro-Hungarian Bank, Mehmedbasic
lost his nerve and allowed the car pass without taking action. Mehmedbasic
later said that a policeman was standing behind him and feared he would
be arrested before he had a chance to throw his bomb.
The next man on the route was Nedjelko Cabrinovic.
At 10.15. Cabrinovic stepped forward and hurled his bomb at the archduke's
car. The driver accelerated when he saw the object flying towards him
and the bomb exploded under the wheel of the next car. Two of the occupants,
Eric von Merizzi and Count Boos-Waldeck were seriously wounded. About
a dozen spectators were also hit by bomb splinters.
After throwing his bomb, Nedjelko Cabrinovic
swallowed the cyanide he was carrying and jumped into the River Miljacka.
Four men, including two detectives, followed him in and managed to arrest
him. The poison failed to kill him and he was taken to the local police
station.
Franz Ferdinand's driver, Franz Urban, drove on extremely fast and other
members of the Black Hand group on the
route, Cvijetko Popovic, Gavrilo
Princip, Danilo Ilic and Trifko
Grabez, decided that it was useless to try and kill the archduke
when the car was going at this speed.
After attending the official reception at the City Hall, Franz
Ferdinand asked about the members of his party that had been wounded
by the bomb. When the archduke was told they were badly injured in hospital,
he insisted on being taken to see them. A member of the archduke's staff,
Baron Morsey, suggested this might be dangerous, but Potiorek, who was
responsible for the safety of the royal party, replied, "Do you
think Sarajevo is full of assassins?" However, Potiorek did accept
it would be better if Duchess Sophie remained
behind in the City Hall. When Baron Morsey told Sophie about the revised
plans, she refused to stay arguing: "As long as the Archduke shows
himself in public today I will not leave him."
In order to avoid the city centre, Potiorek decided that the royal car
should travel straight along the Appel Quay to the Sarajevo Hospital.
However, Potiorek forgot to tell the driver, Franz Urban, about this
decision. On the way to the hospital, Urban took a right turn into Franz
Joseph Street. One of the conspirators, Gavrilo
Princip, happened to be was standing on the corner at the time.
Potiorek immediately realised the driver had taken the wrong route and
shouted "What is this? This is the wrong way! We're supposed to
take the Appel Quay!".
The driver put his foot on the brake, and began to back up. In doing
so he moved slowly past the waiting Gavrilo
Princip. The assassin stepped forward, drew his gun, and at a distance
of about five feet, fired several times into the car. Franz
Ferdinand was hit in the neck and Sophie
von Chotkovato in the abdomen. Princip's
bullet had pierced the archduke's jugular vein but before losing consciousness,
he pleaded "Sophie dear! Sophie dear! Don't die! Stay alive for
our children!" Franz Urban drove the royal couple to Konak, the
governor's residence, but although both were still alive when they arrived,
they died from their wounds soon afterwards.
Several members of the Black Hand group
interrogated by the Austrian authorities claimed that three men from
Serbia, Milan Ciganovic, Dragutin
Dimitrijevic and Major Voja Tankosic,
had organised the plot. On 25th July, 1914, the Austro-Hungarian
government demanded that the Serbian government
arrested the men and send them to face trial in Vienna.
On 25th July, 1914, Nikola Pasic, the prime
minister of Serbia, told the Austro-Hungarian
government that he was unable to hand over these three men as it "would
be a violation of Serbia's Constitution and criminal in law". Three
days later Austro-Hungarian declared
war on Serbia.
Poitorek was sent to the Balkan Front where
he was given control of the Fifth and Sixth Armies. He won some early
victories but in December 1914 was forced to retreat after defeats at
Jadar, Drina and Kolubara. Poitorek was relieved of his command in January
1915 and retired from the Austro-Hungarian
Army. Oskar Potiorek died in 1933.
Oskar
Potiorek: Geocites
Oskar
Potiorek: Wikipedia
Oskar
Potiorek:
Spartacus Biography
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Military
Commanders and the First World War
Battle
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Oskar
Potiorek
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