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Banat (1941–1944)

Banat
Administrative unit of the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia

1941–1944
Flag Coat of arms
Flag Insignia
Location of Banat
Banat (lighter green) within the Territory of the Military
Commander in Serbia
(darker green).
Capital Veliki Bečkerek (Petrovgrad)a
Government Minority authoritarianism
Vice Governor
 •  1941–1944 Joseph-Sepp Lapp
Historical era World War II
 •  Balkans Campaign 1941
 •  Belgrade Offensive 1944
Area
 •  1931 9,300 km2(3,591 sq mi)
Population
 •  1931 585,579 
Density 63 /km2  (163.1 /sq mi)

The Banat was a political entity established in 1941 after the occupation and partition of Yugoslavia by the Axis Powers in the historical Banat region. It was formally under the control of the German puppet Government of National Salvation in Belgrade, which theoretically had limited jurisdiction over all of the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia, but all power within the Banat was in the hands of the local minority of ethnic Germans (Volksdeutsche). The regional civilian commissioner and head of the ethnic German minority was Josef Lapp. Following the ousting of Axis forces in 1944, this German-ruled region was dissolved and most of its territory was included into Vojvodina, one of the two autonomous provinces of Serbia within the new SFR Yugoslavia.

The local German population agitated for the German government to establish a large German state in the Danube and Tisza valleys, expressing annoyance that the Bačka and Syrmia regions in the west were awarded to Hungary and Croatia respectively after the collapse of Yugoslavia. In spite of repeated personal appeals to Hitler, they were rebuffed in this objective. In the interest of maintaining close political ties with the Hungarian and Romanian regimes Berlin preferred to retain the Banat as a potential bargaining chip with these countries, both of which desired to annex the area (see also Greater Hungary and Greater Romania). In order to avoid offending either ally it was placed within the Territory of the Military Commander in Serbia. Because this theoretically placed the Banat under the control of the puppet Nedić government, the Germans ordered the puppet government to proclaim it a separate administrative area under an ethnic-German vice-governor (Vice-Banus), who was to have sole administrative authority of the region.


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