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 Josip Broz Tito 

Josip Broz Tito (May 7, 1892 - May 4, 1980), better known as Marshall Tito, was the leader of Yugoslavia from the end of World War II until his death.

Tito was born in Kumrovec[?], Austria-Hungary (now in western Croatia), the seventh child in the family of Franjo and Marija Broz. His father Franjo was Croat, while his mother Marija was Slovenian. After spending some of his childhood years with his mother's father in Podsreda, he entered the primary school in Kumrovec and finished it in 1905.

In 1907, moving out of the rural environment, he started working as a locksmith apprentice in Sisak. There he became aware of the labour movement and celebrated May 1 for the first time. In 1910 he joined the Union of metallurgy workers and at the same time the Social-democratic party of Croatia and Slavonia. Between 1911 and 1913, Tito worked for shorter periods in various places of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

From Autumn 1913, Tito served his military service; in May 1914 he won a silver medal for the second place at a fencing competition of Austro-Hungarian Army in Budapest. At the outbreak of the First World War, he was sent to Ruma[?]. Due to the anti-war propaganda, he was arrested and imprisoned in the Petrovaradin fortress. In 1915, he was sent to Galicia to fight against Russia. In Bukovina, Tito was seriously injured from a grenade from a Russian howitzer. In April, the whole battalion fell into Russian captivity.

After spending several months in the hospital, Tito was sent to a work camp in the Urals in Autumn 1916. In April 1917 he was arrested for organizing demonstrations of prisoners of war; later he escaped the camp and joined the demonstrations in Saint Petersburg on July 16-17, 1917. He fled to Finland to avoid the police, but was arrested and locked in the Petropavlovsk fortress for three weeks. He was then sent to a prison camp in Kungur, but escaped from the train and in November enlisted in the Red Army in Omsk. In the Spring 1918, he applied for membership in the Russian Communist Party.

His first wife was Hertha Haas, who in May 1941 gave him his first born son Mišo.

Timeline

He died in Clinic centre in Ljubljana, May 4, 1980. His funeral enticed many world's celebrities, mainly from politics. At that time, speculation arose about whether Yugoslavia could continue to be held together by his successors: Tito's greatest strength had been in suppressing nationalist insurrections and maintaining unity throughout the country. Without Tito's call for unity, the people of Yugoslavia could not hold together. Ethnic divisions and conflict grew, and eventually erupted into gruesome civil wars (Croatian war, Bosnian war, Kosovo War).

Tito is buried in his mausoleum in Belgrade, called Kuća cveća (The House of Flowers) and many people every year visit the place, although it doesn't hold any sentries any more.

I could it has had all the charm which the French-woman attributed to your being in some great disgrace, Fred, for stealing apples. We told you that stolen fruit tasted sweetest, which you took au changed your feelings much since then.' 'Yes--you must go,' repeated Mr. Hale, answering Margaret's fixed on one subject, and it was an effort to him to follow the sympathy would be theirs no longer if he went away. So much was coursed the same thought till it was lost in sadness. Frederick myself a good fright this afternoon. I was in my bedroom; I had have done his business and gone away long ago; so I was on the my room door, I saw Dixon coming downstairs; and she frowned and message given to some man.html">man.html">man that was in my father's study, and that quiet man who came up for orders about two o'clock.' 'But this was not a little man--a great powerful fellow; and it drawn him into the conversation. 'Mr. Thornton!' said Margaret, a little surprised. 'I did not finish her sentence. 'Oh, only,' said she, reddening and looking straight at him, 'I somebody come on an errand.' 'He looked like some one of that kind,' said Frederick, manufacturer.' Margaret was silent. She remembered how at first, before she knew Frederick was doing. It was but a natural impression that was unwilling to speak; she wanted to make Frederick understand what I believe. But I could not see him. I told Dixon to ask him if.

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