Royal Serbian Army

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Royal Serbian Army
Војска Краљевине Србије
Regimental standard
Active1882–1918
Country Kingdom of Serbia
TypeArmy
Motto(s)За веру, краља и отачаство
Za veru, kralja i otačastvo
"For Faith, King, and Fatherland"[1]
Field uniforms of the Royal Serbian Army, 1914.
Parade uniforms of the Royal Serbian Army, 1914.
Military ranks of the Royal Serbian Army.

The Army of the Kingdom of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic: Војска Краљевине Србије, romanizedVojska Kraljevine Srbije), known in English as the Royal Serbian Army, was the army of the Kingdom of Serbia that existed between 1882 and 1918, succeeding the Armed Forces of the Principality of Serbia and preceding the Royal Yugoslav Army.

Organization

Field armies

Orders of battle

Wars

Conflict Allies Adversaries Results
Serbo-Bulgarian War
(1885)
 Austria-Hungary (support)  Bulgaria Defeat
First Balkan War
(1912–1913)
 Bulgaria
 Greece
 Montenegro
Kingdom of Italy Italy (volunteers)
Albania Albanians (volunteers)
Armenia Armenians (volunteers)
 Russia (support)
 Ottoman Empire
Circassians
Albania Albanians (volunteers and irregulars)
 Austria-Hungary (support)
Victory
Ohrid-Debar Uprising
(1913)
 Greece IMRO
Kachaks
Victory
  • Suppression of uprising
Second Balkan War
(1913)
 Romania
 Greece
 Montenegro
 Ottoman Empire
 Bulgaria Victory
Balkans theatre (World War I)
(1914–1918)
 Montenegro
 France (from 1915)
 United Kingdom (from 1915)
 Greece (from 1917)
 Italy (from 1915)
 Russia (1916-1917)
 Austria-Hungary
 Bulgaria (from 1915)
 Germany (from 1915)
 Ottoman Empire (1916–1917)
Victory

Military equipment

Armament

Weapon In use Notes
Rifles
Mauser-Koka 1881–1907+ 110,000 units. Known as kokinka (pl. kokinke). Upgraded Mauser Model 1871.
Mauser-Koka 1884 1884–1918 4,000 units. Upgraded M71/84.
Mauser M1890 1912–1918
Mauser M1893 and Mauser Model 1903 1912–1918
Mauser M1899, M1899/07 and M1899/08 1899–1918
Mauser-Koka-Đurić 1907–18 Upgraded Mauser-Koka.
Mauser Model 1910 1910–1918
Berdan #1 and #2 1890–1918 75,000 units. Known as berdanka (pl. berdanci, berdanke).
Mauser Model 1889 1907–1918 known as belgijanka (pl. belgijanke)
Berthier M1907/15 1915–18
Gras M1874 1880–1918
Lebel M1886 1916–1918
Mosin–Nagant M1891 1914–1918
Machine guns
Chauchat 1916–1918 3,838 units.
Lewis 1915–1918
Maxim 1897–1918 2,500 units.
MG 08 1911–1918
Schwarzlose 1914–1918 [2]
Handguns
Chamelot-Delvigne M1873 and M1874 1887–1918
Gasser M1870 1883–1918
Nagant M1895 1896–1918
Ruby M1914 1916–1918
Grenades
Vasić M1904/12 1904–1918

Uniform

See also

References

  1. ^ MO SCG (2007). "Odbrana". Odbrana: Magazin Ministarstva Odbrane SCG. 3–4 (53–58). Novinsko-izdavački centar "Vojska": 71.
  2. ^ Willbanks, James H. (1 January 2004). Machine Guns: An Illustrated History of Their Impact. ABC-CLIO. p. 57. ISBN 978-1-85109-480-6.

Sources

Books

  • W. H. Crawfurd Price (1918). Serbia's Part in the War ... Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Company. (Public domain Public domain)
  • Milićević, Milić; Popović, Ljubodrag (2003). Генерали војске Кнежевине и Краљевине Србије. Vojnoizdavački zavod.
  • Vasić, Pavle (1980). Uniforme srpske vojske: 1808-1918. Jugoslavija.
  • Milkić, Miljan (2003). "Специфичности верског живота у војсци Кнежевине–Краљевине Србије". Војно дело.

Journals

  • Mijalkovski, Milan. "Četničke (gerilske) jedinice Kraljevine Srbije–borci protiv terora turskog okupatora." Zbornik radova Instituta za savremenu istoriju 09 (2007): 59–81.
  • Becić, Ivan M. "Ratni dugovi Kraljevine Srbije u svetlu politike." Istorija 20. veka 3 (2010): 45–56.
  • Gavrilović, Dejan V. Fizičko vežbanje i vojska Kraljevine Srbije. Diss. Univerzitet u Beogradu-Fakultet sporta i fizičkog vaspitanja, 2016.
  • Đorđević, Branislav D. "Training of the Serbian Army." Vojno delo 51.5-6 (1999): 149–165.
  • Denda, Dalibor. "Српска војска у предвечерје епохе ратова 1912–1920." Zbornik radova Instituta za savremenu istoriju 12 (2014): 423–436.
  • Đukić, Slobodan. "Contribution of the Military Academy to the development of military theory in Serbia in the second half of the 19th century and the first decade of the 20th century." Vojno delo 67.5 (2015): 401–425.
  • Mladenović, Božica. "Vojska Kraljevine Srbije za vreme Balkanskih ratova u ogledalu nemačke štampe." Baština 22 (2007): 161–171.
  • Barović, Vladimir. "Voluntary participation in the armed forces of the Kingdom of Serbia as a possible model of professionalization of the armed forces of the Republic of Serbia." Vojno delo 62.2 (2010): 348–360.
  • Ivetić, Vladimir. Politička uloga ministara vojnih Kraljevine Srbije od 1903. do 1914. godine. Diss. University of Belgrade, Faculty of Political Sciences, 2013.

Symposia

  • Ratković–Kostić, Slavica (2010). "Vojska Kraljevine Srbije 1916. i 1917. godine. Organizacija i formacija" [Armed forces of the Serbian Kingdom 1916 and 1917. Organization and formation]. Prvi svetski rat i Balkan–90 godina kasnije, Tematski zbornik radova. Institut za strategijska istraživanja [First World War and the Balkans–90 years after, Collections of papers, Strategic Research Institute]. Belgrade: 101–117.