TITO, JOSIP BROZ

yôˈsĭp brôz tēˈtō, 1892–1980, Yugoslav Communist leader, marshal of Yugoslavia. He was originally Josip Broz.

Rise to Power

The son of a blacksmith in a Croatian village, Tito fought in Russia with the Austro-Hungarian army in World War I and was captured by the Russians. He served with distinction in the Red Army during the Russian civil war of 1918 to 1920. Several years later Broz returned to Croatia and, while a metalworker, became a prominent union organizer. He was (1929–34) imprisoned as a political agitator. In 1937 the Comintern assigned to him the reorganization of the Yugoslav Communist party, and in 1941 he emerged as a leader of Yugoslav partisan resistance forces after the defeat and occupation of Yugoslavia by the Axis Powers. It was then that he adopted the name Tito.

Although the core of his partisan army was Communist, Tito's rapidly growing forces included many non-Communists. Despite the opposition of the Yugoslav government in exile, which supported the Serbian resistance leader Draža Mihajlović, Tito's army and its successes soon eclipsed those of Mihajlović and his chetniks. Among the causes of his success were his swift guerrilla tactics, his own magnetic personality, and the appeal of his political program—a federated Yugoslavia—to the non-Serbian elements of the population. Although they cooperated at first, Tito and Mihajlović soon clashed.

By 1943, Tito headed a large army and controlled a sizable part of Yugoslavia, centered in Bosnia. Tito was supported from the first by the USSR, but in 1944 he also received the full support of Britain and the United States. In Nov., 1944, after the liberation of Belgrade, he negotiated a merger of the royal Yugoslav government and his own council of national liberation, and in Mar., 1945, he became head of the new federal Yugoslav government.

Already the virtual dictator of Yugoslavia, he won a major electoral victory in Nov., 1945, at the head of the Communist-dominated National Liberation Front, whose candidates were the only ones permitted to run in the election. With the opposition abstaining, Tito won almost 80% of the vote. King Peter II was deposed, and a republic was proclaimed (see Yugoslavia).

Tito's Dictatorship

As premier and minister of defense from 1945, Marshal Tito ruled Yugoslavia dictatorially. He suppressed internal opposition by such measures as the execution of Mihajlović and the jailing (1946) of Archbishop Stepinac of Zagreb, and he nationalized Yugoslav industry and undertook a planned economy. He did not attempt to collectivize the land of the Yugoslav small farmers, but he forced them, under threat of severe penalties, to furnish large portions of their produce to the state.

Although Yugoslavia was closely associated with the USSR and was a leading member of the Cominform, Tito often pursued independent policies and did not hesitate to curtail the activities of Soviet agents. In 1948 the Cominform accused Tito of having deviated from the correct Communist line. Tito denied the charges and refused to submit to the Cominform, from which Yugoslavia was then expelled.

Having already transformed Yugoslavia into an armed camp, built up a highly efficient secret police, and purged dissident elements in the Communist party, Tito succeeded in maintaining his position despite the hostility of the USSR and his neighbors. Although he accepted loans from the Western powers, he initially did not alter his internal program. In later years, however, he relaxed many of the regime's strict controls, particularly those affecting the small farmers. As a result, Yugoslavia became the most liberal Communist country of Europe.

On close terms with President Nasser of Egypt and Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of India, Tito unsuccessfully tried to develop common policies among nonaligned nations. Relations with the USSR were alternately friendly and hostile. In 1968, together with the Romanian party chief, Nicolae Ceauşescu, Tito led the opposition to the Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia.

Tito was repeatedly reelected president from his first term in 1953, and in 1963 his term was made unlimited. In an effort to provide for succession to the leadership after his death, Tito established (1971) a 22-member collective presidency composed of the presidents of the 6 republican and 2 autonomous provincial assemblies and 14 members chosen from the republican and provincial assemblies for 5-year terms. In July, 1971, Tito was elected chairman of the new presidency.

During the 1970s the economy began to weaken under the weight of foreign debt, high inflation, and inefficient industry. Also, he was under increasing pressure from nationalist forces within Yugoslavia, especially Croatian secessionists who threatened to break up the federation. Following their repression, Tito tightened control of intellectual life. After his death in 1980, the ethnic tensions resurfaced, helping to bring about the eventual violent breakup of the federation in the early 1990s.

Bibliography

See the official biography by V. Dedijer (1953, repr. 1972); the biography by I. Ormcanin (1984); studies by W. R. Roberts (1973, repr. 1987) and N. Beloff (1986).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Tito Josip Broz  - 606 results

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...subsequent chapters: VLADIMIR DEDIJER: Josip Broz Tito-- Prilozi za Biografiju . K...the Roots . CHAPTER II Zilliacus, Tito of Jugoslavia , p. 64. Dedijer, Josip Broz Tito-- Prilozi sa Biografiju , p...
...336 Brno, 98 Brod, 23 Browder, Earl, 102 Broz, Dragutin-Karlo, 26 , 87 Broz, Franjo, 12 Broz, Ivan, 17 Broz, Jasip, See Tito Broz, Josip grandson , 55 Broz, Jurica, 18 , 19 Broz, Marija, 12 Broz, Martin, 12 , 30 Broz, Stefan...
...is erroneous. It is denied that Tito is a Croatian or even a Yugoslav...self-confessed Communist, called Josip Broz-Tito, has been leading a revolutionary...able, expert associates, so has Tito. He is surrounded by strong, hard...
...Dorothy, 258 Thonon, Francois, 307 Tito: For the Second Time Among the Serbs film , 206 Tito, Josip Broz, 2 , 7 , 10 , 23 , 27 , 32 , 38...146 , 147 , 158 and Stalin, 198 Tito, Jovanka, 97 Titograd, 187 Tolj...
...123 expulsion of Yugoslavia, 43 Tito-Stalin rift , 53 Stalinism, 172...223 , 233 Thorp, Willard L., 85 Tito, Josip Broz as "Bukharin" communist, 168 confidence...policy after death of Stalin, 131 Tito-Stalin rift, 53 U.S. aid...
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journal articles on: Tito Josip Broz  - 47 results

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...unique, zigzagging behavior of Josip Broz Tito(3) and his subordinates in...researchers in TsKhSD. (5.) Josip Broz Tito, "Features Peculiar to the Liberation...and Work: Selected Writings of Josip Broz Tito (1936-1979), ed. Boro Pejcinovic...
...in a de facto excommunication of Marshal Tito, hero of the anti-Nazi struggle. This...year campaign of vilification of both Tito and Yugoslavia by communist parties around...their journey with communism because of the Tito Affair, Novelist Claire Malraux and philosopher...
...Yugoslavia was forged under the leadership of Marshal Tito, alias Josip Broz. (He was a Croat who had fought in the Austro-Hungarian...still nostalgia for the good old days of unity under Tito, and his portrait is admired across the country...
...THE POLITICAL SITUATION IN POST-TITO YUGOSLAVIA Yugoslavia practiced under President Josip Broz Tito what was known as self-managed...1970s, which established the post-Tito guideline for succession in the federal...
...financing. By this decision, Tito secured the independence of the Communist...of Yugoslavia." Edvard Kardelj, Tito and Socialist Revolution of Yugoslavia...Barricade: The Life and Times of Josip Broz-Tito,Marshal of Yugoslavia (London...
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...CONFLICT BEGIN? As long as communist-era strongman Josip Broz Tito ruled Yugoslavia, the six federated peoples republics...drawn into the fray. HOW "AUTONOMOUS" WAS KOSOVO? Tito had forged together six republics. He also made two...
...Serbian Academy of Arts and Sciences had been published, which set the ensuing tone of complaint: Serbs had fared badly under Tito, they said, and faced oppression in Kosovo, then an autonomous republic with a largely ethnic Albanian leadership. Among...
...Hanke Yugoslav strongman Josip Broz Tim died on May 4, 1980...history. Even though Marshall Tito might be dead, his ideas are alive and well. In 1948, Tito made his mark by breaking...worker-managed system, Tito came up with a simple...
...Darling. by Adam LeBor Tito Neil Barnett Haus Publishing...darling. Its founder, Josip Broz, provides rich material...womaniser and head of state, Tito, as he was known, performed...Barnett is especially good on Tito the man--his womanising...
...the great communist heretic Marshal Josip Broz Tito. Americans admired the Tito image...championed by Roman Catholic bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer, who was imbued...and reinvigorated by the dictator Tito. A communist since 1917, Tito secured...
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...most of them led by communist Josef Broz Tito. Tito emerged as the communist ruler...granted autonomy to Kosovo. After Tito died in 1980, the ethnic Albanians...Italian occupation troops. Josef Broz Tito emerges as leader. 1945 - Yugoslavia...
...Marie Holmes on either side of President Tito of Yugoslavia Reuniting with your long...during World War II, invited by President Tito. John responded to a letter from Anthony...girls and a boy left behind. In May 1953, Tito wrote to Churchill inviting 20 children...
Yugoslav armys resilience rooted in Tito doctrine by Rowan Scarborough Marshal Josip Broz Tito structured the Yugoslav army to stockpile tons...thing is sort of a warlord structure, and Tito designed it that way intentionally so that...
Myth of Croatian Fascism; Tito Demonized Republics Heritage on Path...Recently, Croatian authorities arrested Josip Boljkovac in the mass killings of...secret police of Yugoslav strongman Josip Broz Tito. Mr. Boljkovac has also played...
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encyclopedia articles on: Tito Josip Broz  - 7 results

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TITO, JOSIP BROZ yo sip broz te to, 1892 1980, Yugoslav Communist...marshal of Yugoslavia. He was originally Josip Broz. Rise to Power The son of a blacksmith in a Croatian village, Tito fought in Russia with the Austro-Hungarian...
...of Poland. A Polish nationalist, he was purged in 1949 for alleged sympathy with the Yugoslav Communist leader, Josip Broz Tito , and was arrested in 1951. Freed in 1954, he was readmitted (1956) to the United Workers (Communist) party...
...party member from 1932, he helped Josip Broz Tito organize volunteers to fight in the...government. As a top political adviser to Tito and an outspoken critic of Russian...regarded as a possible successor to Tito. He was about to assume the presidency...
...control, he tried unsuccessfully to dissuade the Chinese Communists from taking power after World War II and broke with Josip Broz Tito in 1948 over the question of Yugoslavias independent Communist policies. Stalins paranoia during the last years of...
...in the revolutionary student movement and joined the Communist party in 1941. He was a member of the partisans of Josip Broz Tito in World War II. After the war he served as a member of the executive council of Slovenia, as a deputy of the Slovenian...
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