Panta Radosavljević-Dunavski or Vojvoda Dunavski (28 August 1876 - 1941) was a Serbian army officer and Chetnik commander in Old Serbia and Macedonia in the early 20th century. He was also a writer.
Early years
Radosavljević was born in Belgrade, Principality of Serbia (now Serbia) on 28 August 1876. After finishing gymnasium (high school) in Belgrade, he attended the prestigious Military Academy in Belgrade. In 1905, as an artillery lieutenant he joined the Serbian Chetnik Organization in Belgrade and volunteered to fight in Old Serbia and Macedonia against the oppressive regime of Sultan Abdul Hamid of the Ottoman Empire. He participated in several battles, including the Fight on Čelopek against superior forces of the Ottoman Army, alongside Gligor Sokolović, Jovan Babunski, and Sreten Rajković-Rudnički, another military man from the same academy. He also participated in the Balkans Wars of 1912 and 1913 and World War I.
Literary years
Between the wars, he wrote historical articles for learned publications in Belgrade:
- Dve katastrofalne godine 1389 i 1915 (Two Catastrophic Years: 1389 and 1915), 1925
- Šta je Maćedonija? (What is Macedonia?), 1925
World War II
During World War II Radosavljević in his senior years joined the army. In April 1941 he was captured by the Germans and sent to a POW camp in Nuremberg, where he died of tuberculosis in December of the same year.
See also
Sources
- Krakov, Stanislav (1990) . Plamen četništva (in Serbian). Belgrade: Hipnos.
- 19th-century Serbian people
- Serbian Chetnik Organization
- Royal Serbian Army soldiers
- Serbian soldiers
- Serbian military personnel of the Macedonian Struggle
- Yugoslav military personnel of World War II
- 20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
- Serbian prisoners and detainees
- Prisoners who died in German detention
- 1876 births
- 1941 deaths
- World War II prisoners of war held by Germany
- Yugoslav prisoners of war
- Military personnel from Belgrade
- Tuberculosis deaths in Germany