Purchase includes a free trial membership in the publisher's book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Arso Jovanovi, Krsto Zrnov Popovi, Stanisa Stano Radonjic, Sava Kova evi, Vasos Mavrovouniotis, Matija Zmajevi, Vladimir Kova evi, Novica Cerovi, Mirko Petrovi -Njego, Pavle Strugar, Milutin Vu ini, Vicko Bujovi, Bla o ukanovi, Ratko Vujovi, Janko Vukoti . Source: Wikipedia. Free updates online. Not illustrated. Excerpt: Arso R. Jovanovi (Cyrillic: . ) (1907 - 1948) was a Montenegrin partisan and one of the foremost military commanders to participate in the People's Liberation Struggle (Narodno oslobodilacka borba) in Yugoslavia (as their World War II operations were referred to by the Yugoslav Communist Partisans). Educated through the Yugoslav Royal Army academies, General Jovanovi was one of the best-educated generals among the partisan forces in Yugoslavia, speaking French, Russian and English. His military reports distinguished him, sometimes running to as many as ten pages, and he stayed close to the partisan High Command, lecturing in the first partisan officer school in Drvar, 1944. Arso Jovanovi was born in Zavala village near Podgorica, Principality of Montenegro on March 24, 1907 into a family with a strong military tradition. His father was, until 1910, an officer of the Kingdom of Serbia army, stationed with the artillery regiment in Topider, a suburb of Belgrade. Jovanovi went to school in Niki, and then progressed to the Yugoslav Royal Army's military academy in Belgrade in 1924. There he was a contemporary of Velimir Terzi and Petar etkovi, who would later also become significant commanders in the partisan forces during World War II. He graduated the top of his class, and was recommended to go to France for 'professional perfection'. He finished with top grades at the academy and went on to its higher school, graduating in 1934. By this time he had re...More: http: //booksllc.net/?id=1682042