Ilija Čolak-Antić

Ilija Čolak-Antić, (4 July 1836 – 12 October 1894) was a Serbian Army officer of the late nineteenth century. Čolak-Antić commanded a Serbian army during the Serbian–Turkish Wars, the conflict leading to the nation's independence from the Ottoman Empire. Following the war he served as military attaché to the newly independent kingdom.

Ilija Čolak-Antić
Born(1836-07-04)July 4, 1836
Čačak, Principality of Serbia
DiedOctober 12, 1894(1894-10-12) (aged 58)
Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbia
Allegiance
Years of service1851–1878
RankColonel
UnitArtillery
Commands heldIbar Army
Ušica Division
Čačak Brigade
Battles/warsSerbian–Turkish Wars
Awards
Spouse(s)Jelena Matić
ChildrenBoško Čolak-Antić
Vojin Čolak-Antić
RelationsČolak-Anta Simeonović
Other workMilitary attaché

Čolak-Antić was the elder son of a renowned Serbian family, he attended the Military Academy then studied artillery in Belgium as an officer cadet. Under the supervision of the minister of war, he was involved in the reform of artillery in anticipation of a conflict with the Ottoman Empire. Shortly before the outbreak of the Herzegovina uprising, he commanded a battalion group before serving as intelligence officer in the Sanjak of Novi Pazar. During the war that followed, he succeeded wounded General Zach as commander of the Ibar army. Following the treaty of Berlin, he held a series of diplomatic missions in France and Italy before being appointed military attaché to the Austro-Hungarian empire.

Family background

Ilija K. Čolak-Antić was born on 4 July 1836, in Čačak, Principality of Serbia, into a prominent Serbian noble military family that originated from Old Herzegovina and Old Serbia. Čolak-Antić was the third son of Konstantin Čolak-Antić, son of Vojvoda Čolak-Anta Simeonović, a famed military commander and duke of Revolutionary Serbia.[1]

Čolak-Antić's mother Jovanka, was a daughter of Jovan "Demir" Mitrović, Obor-kapetan in the Habsburg-Austrian army, and related to Prince Maksim Rasković, leader of the Old Vlach during the First Serbian uprising. After following Karađorđe into exile in Bessarabia, the family lived in Saint Petersburg where his father was admitted to the First Cadet Corps at Saint Petersburg, by special decree of Emperor Alexander I. The family returned to Serbia in 1830 and his father was appointed district judge in Čačak, they lived in Kruševac, then the Serbian capital. Čolak-Antić had three brothers Lazar, Ljubomir, and Vlajko as well as a sister Christina.[2] When he was twelve both his parents died, Čolak-Antić and his siblings were then raised by a relative. He finished elementary school in Užice before attending secondary school in Kragujevac.[1]

Early career

After graduating from secondary school in 1851, Čolak-Antić entered the Military Academy at the age of fifteen. Upon completion of his studies in 1857 he was sent to Liege, Belgium to follow postgraduate training as an Officer cadet, while his brother Lazar was sent to study at the Prussian Artillery School alongside Sava Grujić and Dimitrije Đurić. Together with Stanojlo Stokić, Čolak-Antić translated the Prussian officers' booklet Die Wissenschaft des Kampfes (The Science of Combat) which became one of the combat manuals of the Serbian Military Academy. Čolak-Antić extended his stay in Belgium upon government request to 1858 in order to study weapon manufacturing, at the time the Principality did not produce weapons, and relied on buying the surplus of the Austrian and Russian armies.[3] On his return, he taught at the Artillery School in Belgrade before joining the Ministry of Defense.[4]

In the period from 1859 to 1872, in anticipation of a conflict with the Ottoman Empire, Čolak-Antić was in charge of reforming the artillery and modernising the Serbian army's weapons under the supervision of the Minister of War Milivoje Blaznavac. Serbia was feverishly searching for a country that would supply it with modern weapons equipped with the new percussion system.[3] After the minister hastily purchased defective M1867 rifles, Čolak-Antić organised their conversion at the arsenal of Kragujevac.[5] In 1865, Čolak-Antić was sent to Vienna by Prince Mihailo Obrenović with the secret mission of acquiring weapons for the Principality of Montenegro. Having successfully completed this task, Prince Nikola Petrović-Njegoš decorated him with the Order of Prince Danilo I.[6] After a year spent at the War Office, the headquarters of the Armed forces of the Principality of Serbia, he was made commander of a battalion group (Čačak, Rudnik and Užice). In 1875 during the Herzegovina uprising he was sent to the Sanjak of Novi Pazar as intelligence officer to collect information and advise the insurgents.[7]

Serbian–Ottoman Wars

The Serbian Commanders of the First Serbian–Ottoman War. Čolak-Antić second from top, right side.

At the outbreak of the Serbian-Ottoman War in June 1876, Čolak-Antić was appointed commander of the Čačak brigade, his brother Lazar's unit was attached to the main army of Mikhail Chernyayev in command of the Kruševac brigade, while their other brother Ljubomir Čolak-Antić ran the arsenal in Kragujevac.[8] On 8 July Čolak-Antić leading the Ušica Division managed to repulse the Ottomans, crossing the border at Raška pushing them back towards Novi Pazar.[9] On the proposal of the Minister of Defense, on 7 July 1876, the government decided to issue a law on "awards for meritorious service in war" with Čolak-Antić one of the first recipient. Prince Milan Obrenović (future Serbian king) awarded him the Order of the Cross of Takovo for bravery.[10]

Replacing the wounded general František Zach, Čolak-Antić was promoted to commander of the Ibar army as he was considered to be Zach's best lieutenant and was very popular with the troops.[11][9] Leading a corps of twelve thousand soldiers and six thousand volunteers, he launched a new offensive on 24 July towards Sjenica, repulsing a Turkish column under Dervish Pasha back towards the town.[9] For about two weeks his forces besieged the town using heavy artillery against its fortifications.[12][13]

On 28 September, leading the left wing of General Đura Horvatović, Čolak-Antić launched an attack on the Turkish right rear defended by Adyl Pasha.[14] Distinguishing himself in the subsequent battles he was promoted to the rank of colonel. His brother Major Lazar Čolak-Antić was promoted to lieutenant colonel also receiving the medal for bravery for his defense of the Jankova gorge, northwest of Čučale, after he lead a corps of Serb volunteers against a much larger Turkish force.[15]

Postwar career

After the end of the war and the subsequent autonomy of the country, Čolak-Antić was sent on several missions abroad for the Serbian government, first in Paris where he negotiated contracts for the purchase of military equipment for the newly formed Serbian Kingdom, then to Vienna on 25 November 1879, as head of the artillery administration. In Austria, he was sent to visit arsenals together with the foundry controller Zivadin Dimitrijević before heading to Italy where he studied the fabrication of gunpowder in Naples, Capua, Scafati, Turin and Genoa. The foundry controller Zivadin Dimitrijevic set off together with him to Vienna again in order to study the Vienna Arsenal. They returned to Belgrade on 29 February 1880, and reported to the Minister of War.[16]

In 1884–1885 he became military attaché in Vienna. On several occasions, he was chairman of the military commission on weapons-related matters. On behalf of King Aleksandar Obrenović, on 1 January 1891, the royal deputies decorated retired Colonel Čolak-Antić with the Order of the Takovo Cross of the Second Order.[17] He died on 12 October 1894, in Belgrade at the age of 58.[2]

Personal life

Čolak-Antić married Jelena (née Matić), daughter of prominent Liberal politician and philosopher Dimitrije Matić who was President of the National Assembly in 1878 when Serbia gained independence from the Ottoman Empire. They had three children, Boško Čolak-Antić (1871–1949) Marshal of the Court and diplomat, Vojin Čolak-Antić (1877–1945), General in the Royal Serbian Army and Jovanka who died as a volunteer nurse at the beginning of the First World War.[2] After the death of his brother Lazar in October 1877 in Kruševac, he looked after his daughter Milica, she later married Vladislav Ribnikar, the founder of Politika.[18]

See also

Notes

  1. Milićević, M.Đ. (1888). Famous figures of the Serbian nation. Endowment of Nikola Čupić (in Serbian) (1979 ed.). Royal Press. p. 829-830.
  2. Milosavljević, Boris (2020). Belgrade Genealogies (in Serbian). Balkan Studies Institute of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. ISBN 978-86-7179-110-6.
  3. "The first Serbian weapons". Oružje Online (in Serbian). 2 April 2021.
  4. Perović, K.; Brčić, L.; Jovović, B. (2002). Vojin: the oldest Serbian military magazine: 1864–1870: bibliography of contributions. Editorial office of the Military book (in Serbian). War Publications Institute. ISBN 978-86-335-0128-6.
  5. "The modernization of the Serbian army weapons". Oružje Online (in Serbian). 8 January 2021.
  6. Georgievic, M. (1876). "Serbian military leaders". Zora: an illustrated news magazine (in Serbian). Seidl. p. 215. Retrieved 5 October 2022.
  7. "Echo of the 1875 uprising in Bosnia and Herzegovina". Heritage of Užice (in Serbian).
  8. Demeter, D. (1870). Hrvatski Sokol Zabavan i poucan tjednik. Ured. Dimltrija Demeter (Der kroatische Falke. Belletristisches Wochenblatt) (in German). Hartman. p. 256.
  9. Guerre d'Orient en 1876–1877. Guerre d'Orient en 1876–1877 esquisse des B ev B enements militaires et politiques: 1 (in French). B. Benda. 1877. p. 212.
  10. Jovanović, V. (1988). Memories. Historical-memoir works. Belgrade Publishing and Graphic Institute. p. 317.
  11. Lamarque, J.M.; Fririon, F.N. (1879). Le Spectateur Militaire: Recueil de science, d'art et d'histoire militaires (in French). Bureau de Spectateur militaire. p. 203.
  12. Schweinfurter Tagblatt0. Schweinfurter Tagblatt0 (in German). Mediengruppe Main-Post. 1876.
  13. Allen, W.E.D. (1925). Béled-es-siba: Sketches and Essays of Travel and History. Macmillan and Company, Limited. p. 170.
  14. Tyrrell, H.; Haukeil, H.A. (1879). The history of Russia from the foundation of the empire to the war with Turkey in 1877-'78, by H. Tyrrell and H.A. Haukeil. The history of Russia from the foundation of the empire to the war with Turkey in 1877-'78, by H. Tyrrell and H.A. Haukeil. Retrieved 6 May 2021.
  15. "Colak-Antic Lazar". Official website of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
  16. Stojančević, V.; Stojančević, В. (2007). The First Balkan War in 1912 and the end of the Ottoman Empire in the Balkans (in Serbian). Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. ISBN 978-86-7025-436-7.
  17. "Organ and Edition of the Ministry of Defense". Official Gazette (in Serbian).
  18. Universität, Graz. "The Balkans. 1860–1950". Austrian Centre for Digital Humanities.

References

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