- Nikola Mandić
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Nikola Mandić Prime Minister of the Independent State of Croatia In office
1943 – 8 May 1945President Ante Pavelić (Poglavnik) Preceded by Ante Pavelić Succeeded by Office dissolved Personal details Born January 20, 1869
Travnik, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Austria-HungaryDied June 7, 1945 (aged 76)
Zagreb, FS Croatia, DF YugoslaviaNationality Croat Political party Croatian National Union,
Croatian Popular Party,
Ustaše PartyAlma mater University of Vienna Occupation Politician Profession Lawyer Religion Roman Catholic Nikola Mandić (Travnik, January 20, 1869 – Zagreb, June 7, 1945), was a Croatian politician.
Mandić was born in what was then Ottoman Bosnia and Herzegovina in Travnik in 1869 (the county soon came into the hands of the Austrian Empire). Mandić finished gymnasium in Sarajevo. He later doctored in law at Vienna in 1894. In 1907 he helped found, and became president of, the Croatian National Union (Hrvatska narodna zajednica), a political party representing Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina's Regional Parliament. He was elected to the parliament in 1910 and became its president in 1912. From 1914 Mandić took on the role of assistant to the nation's regional governor, originally Oskar Potiorek, later a fellow Croat, Stefan Sarkotić.
After 1918 Bosnia and Herzegovina became a part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes. Mandić was elected into its Constitutional Assembly in 1920 under the Croatian People's Party (Hrvatska pučka stranka).
His final political acts came in the late stages of his life. The Independent State of Croatia was proclaimed in 1941 and included all of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He had little involvement with the regime until September 2, 1943 when he was named president of the government of the Independent State of Croatia. He held this position until the state's collapse in 1945. In the late stages of World War II as Croatian forces retreated towards Austria, Mandić, along with other members of the government, were taken captive by the British. The British handed Mandić over to the Yugoslav authorities which tried and executed the then 76-year-old Mandić.
Government of the Independent State of Croatia Heads of Government Ante Pavelić · Nikola MandićForeign Ministers Ministers of Interior Ministers of Armed Forces Ministers of Education and worship Vladimir Košak · Anton Filipančić · Dragutin TothMinisters of Traffic Ministers of Trade Ministers of Rural economy and food Stjepan HeferMinisters of Association Jozo Dumandžić · Lovro Sučić · Janko Tortić (also minister of Health)Ministers of Foresty and mining Ivica Frković · Josip BalenMinisters of Health Ivo PetrićMinisters of Welfare for perished lands Mehmed Alajbegović · Meho MehičićMinisters for Liberated lands Edo BulatMinisters without portfolio Andrija Artuković · Savo Besarović · Edo Bulat · Živan Kuveždić · Mladen Lorković · Mirko Puk · Lovro Sučić · Ljudevit Šolc · Janko Tortić · Vjekoslav Vrančić · Milovan ŽanićCategories:- 1869 births
- 1945 deaths
- People from Travnik
- Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Croatian People's Party (1919) politicians
- Collaboration during World War II
- Collaborators with Nazi Germany
- Collaborators with Fascist Italy
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