From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Miloš Minić (Милош Минић) (b. August 28, 1914 Preljina near Čačak, Kingdom of Serbia — d. September 5, 2003, Belgrade, Serbia-Montenegro) was a Serbian communist politician.
Minić graduated from secondary school in Čačak, then from the Faculty of Law at the University of Belgrade.
From 1935 he was a member of the then-illegal Young Communist League of Yugoslavia (SKOJ), as well as the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (KPJ), holding senior positions in both organizations. During the Partisans war against Germany and Italy, Minić held both party and military posts from 1941.
After the liberation of Serbia from Nazi occupation, he was the head of Department for the Protection of the People's Belgrade branch, then public prosecutor of Serbia and representative of the military prosecutor of the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA). He then held several posts in the Yugoslavian and Serbian government. He was the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Yugoslavia from December 16, 1972 to May 17, 1978.
Prime Ministers of Serbia |
|
First Serbian Uprising (1805-1814) |
|
|
Principality of Serbia (1815-1878) |
Moler · Obrenović · Todorović · Davidović · K. Marković · Petronijević · P. Janković · Đ. Protić · Petronijević · A. Simić · Petronijević · Garašanin · A. Simić · A. Janković · S. Marković · A. Simić · S. Marković · Magazinović · Rajović · F. Hristić · Garašanin · Ristić · N. Hristić · Cenić · Milojković · Blaznavac · Ristić · Marinović · Čumić · Stefanović · Mihailović · Kaljević · Mihailović
|
|
Kingdom of Serbia (1878-1918) |
Ristić · Piroćanac · N. Hristić · Garašanin · Ristić · Grujić · N. Hristić · Protić · Grujić · Pašić · Avakumović · Dokić · Grujić · Đ. Simić · Nikolajević · N. Hristić · Novaković · Đ. Simić · Đorđević · Jovanović · Vujić · Velimirović · Cincar-Marković · Avakumović · Grujić · Pašić · Stojanović · Grujić · Pašić · Velimirović · Novaković · Pašić · Milovanović · Trifković · Pašić
|
|
Socialist Republic of Serbia (1945-1991) |
Nešković · P. Stambolić · Veselinov · Minić · Penezić · Doronjski* · Stamenković · Jojkić · Bojanić · Čkrebić · I. Stambolić · Ikonić · Jevtić · Radmilović
|
|
Republic of Serbia (since 1991;
independent since 2006) |
|
|
* acting
|
|
Mayors of Belgrade |
|
Čarapić · Bogićević · Žujović · Delimirković · Stojković · Smiljanić · G.Jovanović · Terzibašić · Nikolić-Čokojić · Ivanović · Čumić · Lukić · Đurić · Popović · Stevanović · Karabiberović · Đorđević · Bogićević · Nikolajević · Pašić · Marinković · Tatić · Pantović · Stamenković · Glavinić · Vulović · Davidović · Nestorović · Marjanović · K.Jovanović · Filipović · Kara-Jovanović · Mitrović · Kumanudi · Savčić · Nešić · M.Petrović · Ilić · Đurčić · Tomić · Milićević · Stojadinović · Jovanović · Ratković · N.Petrović · Jojkić · Minić · Neoričić · Pešić · Kovačević · B.Bogdanović · Bakočević · Unković · Gruden · Čović · Đinđić · Mihailović · Protić · Hrustanović · N.Bogdanović · Zoran Alimpić
|
|
|
[edit] References