Velimir Vemić
Velimir Vemić (1870 – after 1938) was a Serbian officer. He was sentenced to 20 years in prison at the
When journalist Luigi Albertini wrote his investigation into the origins of the First World War in the 1930s, many participants were still alive to be interviewed about their recollections of those tragic moments. He questioned the surviving members of the Black hand, Velimir Vemić, Čedomir A. Popović, Vladimir Tucović, and Božin Simić in November 1937 about the events that took place in the first decades of the 20th century. According to them, what British historian Robert Seton-Watson wrote regarding the Black Hand that it "favored concessions to Bulgarians" was absolutely false. In fact, the Black Hand was strongly opposed to any kind of concessions whatsoever.[7]
The diary of Velimir Vemić is one of the few primary sources of events that took place during the
References
- ISBN 9780880334143.
- ISBN 9781557534767.
- ISBN 9780429772597.
- ISBN 9781472580054.
- ^ Brehm, Bruno (1932). "They Call it Patriotism".
- ISBN 9788642100784.
- ISBN 9781929631261.
- ^ "East European Quarterly". 1982.