Na strani monarhije sa simpatijama prema "srpskom neprijatelju". O čemu još govore ratni dnevnici

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ŠTĚPÁNEK Václav

Rok publikování 2018
Druh Další prezentace na konferencích
Fakulta / Pracoviště MU

Filozofická fakulta

Citace
Popis The memoirs of participants in the First World War were very common after the First World War. However, many of the original war diaries which were written by their authors directly in the trenches or during a campaign, and who, therefore, had no time to 'embellish history', often did not survive. This related in particular to those who remained 'loyal to the emperor' throughout the war, even though they had their own ideas about the war. One good example of this is the diary of Hynek Doležal, a lieutenant in the 20th mountain brigade of the 3rd Austro-Hungarian army. As it is made up mainly of photographic material, his diary is naturally quite unique. Throughout the Balkan campaign the author, working in the brigade headquarters, had the opportunity to both take and develop photographs. This diary, therefore, comprehensively documents the field campaigns which the brigade began in the winter months of 1914 in Bosnia, continuing into Serbia in 1915 and then the next year into Montenegro, Albania and Macedonia, from where in 1918, following the breakthrough at the Salonica Front, the brigade retreated back to the disintegrating monarchy. Despite the fact that Doležal was in the Austrian army, his Czechness is evident from the descriptions accompanying his photographs as well as his sympathy for the 'Serb and Montenegrin enemy'. In his diary the author collected not only his own photographs, but also commercial photographs from the areas where he was operating. He also stuck photographs of the Serb and Montenegrin royal families into his diary, took note of what happened to them as well as the lives of the ordinary Serbian and Montenegrin (and Albanian and Macedonian) villagers. From the photographs of Serbian and Montenegrin prisoners and the accompanying descriptions it is possible to see his sympathy for the 'defeated enemy'. The diary is not only a record of military operations, but also an important ethnographic source.
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