Miša Aleksić-Marinko | |
---|---|
Birth name | Milan Aleksić |
Nickname(s) | Miša, Marinko |
Born | 1876 Raška region, Ottoman Empire (now Serbia) |
Died | May 27, 1923 (aged 47) Veliki Bečkerek, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (now Serbia) |
Allegiance |
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Years of service | 1904–1918 |
Unit | Stefan Nedić-Ćela's band |
Milan Aleksić (Serbian Cyrillic: Милан Алексић), nicknamed Miša (Миша), known by his nom de guerre Marinko (Маринко), was a Serbian Chetnik active from 1905 to 1918. He was born in Raška, at the time part of the Ottoman Empire. He fled Ottoman tyranny to Kuršumlija, in the Kingdom of Serbia, where he graduated from the Military Academy as a non-commissioned officer. He joined the Serbian Chetnik Organization in 1905, fighting under Jovan Babunski and Gligor Sokolović in Poreč and on the Babuna against Bulgarian and Albanian bands. He was an assistant of the Upper Staff of Panta Radosavljević-Dunavski, Nikola Janković-Kosovski and Pavle Blažarić as a non-commissioned officer. In 1908, he worked with Vojislav Tankosić in training volunteers in Bosnia. He is regarded a hero in all wars between 1912 and 1918, during which he had the rank of lieutenant colonel. He wore an Albanian costume during battle in order to confuse the enemy. He died of exhaustion in Veliki Bečkerek (modern Zrenjanin), in Banat, on May 27, 1923.
Gallery
- Chetniks during the Austro-Hungarian annexation of Bosnia (1908), Marinko is noted as (2)
- Stefan Nedić-Ćela and his band, Marinko laying at the right
References
- ^ П. Д. С. Јеринић, Војводе из четничке акције у Старој Србији и Маћедонији 1903-1912, Добровољачки гласник, бр. 32, Београд 2008, 32-33; Simo Živković (December 1998). "Sakupi se jedna četa mala". Srpsko-nasledje.rs. Retrieved 2011-08-12.
- name=PDS
- 1876 births
- 1923 deaths
- 20th-century Serbian people
- Serbian military leaders
- People from Raška District
- Chetniks of the Macedonian Struggle
- Serbian military personnel of the Balkan Wars
- Serbian military personnel of World War I
- Royal Serbian Army soldiers
- Emigrants from the Ottoman Empire to Serbia
- Emigrants from the Ottoman Empire
- Immigrants to the Kingdom of Serbia