vojvoda Nikola Kalabić |
|
---|---|
Born |
Podnovlje, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria-Hungary |
20 December 1906
Died | 20 January 1946 Degurićka cave, FPR Yugoslavia |
(aged 39)
Allegiance |
Kingdom of Yugoslavia Chetniks |
Years of service | 1941–1945 |
Rank | major |
Unit | Gorska garda (Mountain Guard) |
Battles/wars | World War II |
Nikola Kalabić (Serbian: Никола Калабић; 20 December 1906 – 20 January 1946) was a Serbian Chetnik commander during World War II.
He was born to father Milan and mother Joka in Podnovlje municipality Doboj in present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina. He had a sister named Angelina, born 1912.
Nikola's father separated from Joka after World War I and proceeded to get married three times. Nikola lived with his father at first so he attended school in places where his father served with the Serbian army. He eventually finished six grades of gymnasium before becoming a student of geodesy in Belgrade. During his studies, he met Borka (a year younger than him) who was born in Rajkovići near Valjevo in present-day Serbia into a family of old supporters of the People's Radical Party and Nikola Pašić. Borka and Nikola married in 1929 and on 3 August 1930 they had twins Mirjana and Milan. Their first service was in Belgrade. They then moved to Aranđelovac and finally back to Valjevo (where there are Kalabićs today). Nikola Kalabić (until the start of World War II) worked in Land-registry management in Valjevo.
During World War II, Nikola Kalabić was commander of Mihailovic's elite formation named Mountain Guard Corps (Serbian Cyrillic: Корпус горске гарде). On 26 November 1943, he together with Colonel Simic, General Inspector of Chetnik Troops, concluded a formal collaboration agreement (German: Waffenruhe-Verträge) with the representative of the German Military Commander in Southeast Europe, General der Infanterie (Lieutenant General) Hans Felber.