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Velimir Škorpik

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Velimir Škorpik
Born2 April 1919
Brodarica near Zadar, Kingdom of Italy
Died7 November 1943(1943-11-07) (aged 24)
Zagorje village near Posušje, Independent State of Croatia
Allegiance Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1940–1941)
 Independent State of Croatia (1941)
 Yugoslav Partisans (1941–1943)
Service / branchNavy (1940–43)
Ground forces (1943)
Years of service1940–1943
Rankporučnik korvete (Corvette Lieutenant) in 1941[a]
Battles / warsWorld War II in Yugoslavia  
AwardsOrder of the People's Hero (posthumous)

Velimir Škorpik (2 April 1919 – 7 November 1943) was a Croatian and Yugoslav Partisan naval officer and commander of several early Partisan naval units. After graduating from the Naval Academy in 1940, Škorpik began his naval carreer as an officer in the Royal Yugoslav Navy (Serbo-Croatian: Kraljevska mornarica – KM). Following the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941 which saw the rapid collapse of the KM, Škorpik joind the Armed Forces of the Independent State of Croatia, serving as a harbour officer in Makarska. After comming into contact with local communist operatives, he eventually defected to the Partisans in late 1942.

Škorpik soon met with Josip Broz Tito and would be given the command of the Sekcija za ratnu mornaricu (Template:Lang-en), an early Partisans naval formation tasked with organizing attacks on Axis forces in the coastal areas. He would go on to command Partisan detachments operating in the Dalmatian Hinterland followed by a brief stint as the commander of a Partisan flotilla in September/October of 1943. His last posting was that of the Chief of Staff of the 3rd Dalmatian Brigade. He was killed by the Ustaše in November 1943 near Posušje.

He was posthumously awarded the title of People's Hero of Yugoslavia. The Naval Repair Yard in Šibenik also bore his name from 1953 until 1992 as well as a Yugoslav Navy Osa-class missile boat acquired from the USSR during the 1960s.

Biography

Early military service

Škorpik was born on 2 April 1919 in Brodarica near Zadar. After completing his high school education, he enrolled in the Naval Academy from which he graduated in 1940, serving in the Royal Navy (Serbo-Croatian: Kraljevska mornarica – KM) with the rank of poručnik korvete (Corvette Lieutenant).[1][2] When the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia commenced on 6 April 1941, Škorpik was the second-in-command of the motor torpedo boat Četnik based in Šibenik. With Yugoslavia soon surrendering to the Axis, Škorpik took Četnik to Divulje near Split in order to avoide capture by the Italians and possibly to join the nascent Navy of the Independent State of Croatia (Croatian: Ratna Mornarica Nezavisne Države Hrvatske – RMNDH). Arriving in Divulje, he attempted to damage the boat before departing for Split and eventually to Zagreb where joined the armed forces of the newly-established Axis puppet state Independent State of Croatia (Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska – NDH).[3][1] His first and only posting with the NDH forces was that of a harbour officer in Makarska, where he soon came in touch with local members of the communist party, eventually becoming its member in late 1941. After months of secretly spreading propaganda material and passing information on Italian and NDH plans to the communists, Škorpik was ordered by the Party to abandon his post and make way to the Biokovo mountain. On 1 December 1942, Škorpik, his father, NCOs Stjepan Muhtić and Ratko Franković with the help of several partisans of the Biokovo Battalion "Vid Mihaljević", escaped Makarska taking with them dozens of rifles and ammunition.[4][1][1] Škorpik left a proclamation calling on other naval personell to follow their example, asserting the "truncated Croatian Navy existed only on paper" and how "... our fleet has been treacherously handed over to the enemy... using their guns to attack our villages and cities".[5]

Yugoslav Partisans

Ten days later, Škorpik made his way from Biokovo to the Fourth Operational Zone Headquarters (Serbo-Croatian: Štab četvrte operativne zone) in Glamoč, from where he continued to Bosanski Petrovac arriving on 18 December. There, he was invited to the Supreme Headquarters to brief the Party leadership on the actions carried out by Partisan forces on the sea and discuss future possibilities. Writing on the ocassion of the tenth anniversary of the Yugoslav Navy in 1952, Josip Broz Tito recounted meeting Škorpik:[6]

A group of comrades from Dalmatia arrived in Glamoč as well. With that group came, then a colonel and now a general, Škorpik with his son, a young naval officer who later died. Very young and full of all sorts of plans on how to successfully harass the occupiers on the sea, the young Škorpik didn't seem very convincing to me, but when I discussed several specific, technical and other possibilities, especially regarding the men, the fighters, I realized the time has come and that this will be another area where the partisan struggle will be successful...

— Tito, in "Jugoslavenski Jadran", 1952.[6]

On same day of 18 December, The Supreme Headquarters issued the order for the creation of the Naval Section (Serbo-Croatian: Sekcija za ratnu mornaricu) adjunct to the Fourth Operational Zone Headquartersd with Škorpik in command. Škorpik assumed command in Livno on 23 December with the task of gathering personell and forming the First Naval Detachment (Serbo-Croatian: Prvi mornarički odred, while Muhtić and Franković were instructed to return to the coast and establish naval stations.[6] The Naval Detachment was formed in Podgora on 23 January 1943 composed of around 150 partisans and a flotilla consisting of two armed boats.[7]) The Naval Section was disbanded in February when the Fourth Operational Zone Headquarters became the 9th Division Headquarters, while Škorpik assumed the command of the Naval Detachment.[8][1] After several successful defensive actions along the Makarska Riviera, the Detachment was reorganized in March 1943 as the Biokovo Partisan Detachment with Škorpik continuing his command. In mid-May, he assumed the role of the Chief of Staff of the Cetina Detachment, followed by the role of commander of the Group of Cetina Batallions in August.[1]

Following the Italian surrender in September 1943, the Partisans took control of the Dalmatian coast and islands previously occupied by Italian forces, prompting German forces to recapture Split, Šibenik and Zadar fearing a potential Allied amphibious landing. On 19 September 1943 the Coastal Headquarters (Serbo-Croatian: Obalska komanda – OK) was formed in Split with Škorpik as its commanding officer.[9] The OK consisted of an armed ships flotilla, cargo vessels, the 1st Island Brigade, coastal artillery and a single floatplane.[10] Following a metting in Nerežišća which assesed the German advances towards Split, on 29 September the OK was dissolved and reformed as the Armed Ships Fleet Headquarters (Serbo-Croatian: Štab flote naoružanih brodova) under Škorpik, while the 1st Island Brigade and coastal artillery batteries were subordinated to other units.[11]

The Headquarters functioned until 18 October when Navy of the People's Liberation Army (Serbo-Croatian: Mornarica narodnooslobodilačke vojske Jugoslavije – MNOVJ) was formed, with Škorpik in the role of the Chief of Staff. However, he never assumed this position as in the meantime he was ordered to take the position of the Chief of Staff of the 3rd Dalmatian Brigade. In early November, Škorpik travelled to meet with the 4th Brigade Headquarters to plan upcoming operations. He was killed on 7 October while passing near the Zagorje village where he encountered members of the Ustaše and unsuccessfully tried to escape them.[1]

Legacy

On 8 September 1952 he posthumously received the title of People's Hero of Yugoslavia.[1] From 1953, the Naval Repair Yard in Šibenik was named in his honour until 1992 and the breakup of Yugoslavia.[12] The Yugoslav Navy Osa I-class missile boat Velimir Škorpik (RČ-310), acquired from the Soviet Union during the 1960s, was named in Škorpik's honour. The boat was captured by Croatian forces and commissioned in the Croatian Navy as Dubrovnik.[2][13] A street in Zagreb was named after him in 1993.[14]

Notes

  1. ^ Multiple sources such as Simović (1990), Trgo (1959, pp. 16) and Dedijer (1981, p. 35) associate Škorpik with the rank of poručnik korvete; the exception being Freivogel (2020, p. 131) who refers to him as being a poručnik fregate (Frigate Liuetenant) during April 1941.

Footnotes

References

  • Brkulj, Vedran (9 August 2017). "Hoće li nakon Tita u Zagrebu padati i narodni heroji?" [Will People's Heroes Fall after Tito in Zagreb as Well?]. tportal.hr (in Croatian). Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  • Dedijer, Vladimir (1981). Rizman, Rudolf (ed.). Dnevnik: 1941 – 1944 [Journal: 1941 – 1944]. Sabrana djela. Vol. II. Rijeka: GRO "Liburnija". ISBN 978-953-8218-72-9.
  • Mušterić, I. (15 February 2016). Jecić, Zdenko (ed.). "raketni čamac" [missile boat]. tehnika.lzmk.hr. Hrvatska tehnička enciklopedija (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  • Jecić, Zdenko, ed. (2016). "NCP − Remontno brodogradilište Šibenik d. o. o." tehnika.lzmk.hr. Hrvatska tehnička enciklopedija (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  • Simović, Anton I., ed. (1990). "Obalska komanda" [Coastal Command]. pomorski.lzmk.hr. Pomorski leksikon (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  • Anić, Nikola (1984). "Formiranje brigade od Nerežišća do Visa" [Formation of the Brigade from Nerežišća to Vis]. Dvanaesta dalmatinska udarna brigada (prva otočka) [12th Dalmatian Strike Brigade (1st Island)] (in Serbo-Croatian). Supetar: Domicil 12. dalmatinske NOU brigade. OCLC 451276194.
  • Simović, Anton I., ed. (1990). "Sekcija za ratnu mornaricu". pomorski.lzmk.hr. Pomorski leksikon (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  • Simović, Anton I., ed. (1990). "Prvi mornarički odred". pomorski.lzmk.hr. Pomorski leksikon (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 14 March 2024.
  • Trgo, Fabijan, ed. (1959). Knjiga 1. Dejstva na Jadranu: Juli 1942 – Januar 1944 god [Book 1. Actions on the Adriatic: July 1942 – January 1944.]. Zbornik dokumenata i podataka o narodnooslobodilačkom ratu jugoslovenskih naroda (in Serbo-Croatian). Vol. VIII. Belgrade: Istoriski Institut Jugoslovenske Narodne Armije. OCLC 461220004.
  • Kačavenda, Petar; Živković, Dušan, eds. (1982). Narodni heroji Jugoslavije: N–Ž [People's Heroes of Yugoslavia: N–Ž] (in Serbo-Croatian). Vol. II. Ljubljana, Belgrade, Titograd: Partizanska knjiga, OOUR izdavačko-publicistička delatnost, Narodna knjiga, Pobjeda, Institut za savremenu istoriju. OCLC 440747932.
  • Simović, Anton I., ed. (1990). "Škorpik, Velimir". pomorski.lzmk.hr. Pomorski leksikon (in Croatian). Miroslav Krleža Institute of Lexicography. Retrieved 10 March 2024.
  • Freivogel, Zvonimir (2020). Warships of the Royal Yugoslav Navy 1918–1945 (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Despot Infinitus. ISBN 978-953-8218-72-9.
  • Vesić, Dušan (1973). "Formiranje prvog mornaričkog odreda" [Formation of the First Naval Detachment]. NAŠE MORE : znanstveni časopis za more i pomorstvo (in Serbo-Croatian). 20 (6): 246–247. Retrieved 13 March 2024.