Structure of the Serbian Army during World War I
In World War I, the Royal Serbian Army was organized into armies (field armies), divisions, regiments, battalions, squadrons, batteries, detachments and chetas.
Command
| High Commander (Врховни командант) regent Aleksandar Karađorđević |
|---|
| Chief-of-Staff (Начелник штаба Врховне команде) vojvoda Radomir Putnik, assistant (помоћник) general Živojin Mišić |
Organization
Oblasts
The Serbian Army recruited according to oblast (province) and okrug (district), so that families, friends and neighbours could fight together.
| Oblast | Regiments | Okrug |
|---|---|---|
| Morava (Моравска) headquarters in Niš | ||
| 1st Infantry Regiment (1. пешадијски пук–Милош Велики) | Vranje | |
| 2nd Infantry Regiment (2. пешадијски пук–Књаз Михаило) | Prokuplje | |
| 3rd Infantry Regiment (3. пешадијски пук) | Pirot | |
| 16th Infantry Regiment (16. пешадијски пук–Цар Николај II Романов) | Niš | |
| Drina (Дринска) headquarters in Valjevo | ||
| 4th Infantry Regiment (4. пешадијски пук–Стеван Немања) | Užice | |
| 5th Infantry Regiment (5. пешадијски пук–Краљ Милан) | Valjevo | |
| 6th Infantry Regiment (6. пешадијски пук–Престолонаследник Александар) | Šabac | |
| 17th Infantry Regiment (17. пешадијски пук) | Valjevo | |
| Danube (Дунавска) headquarters in Belgrade | ||
| 7th Infantry Regiment (7. пешадијски пук–Краљ Петар) | Belgrade | |
| 8th Infantry Regiment (8. пешадијски пук–Књаз Александар) | Požarevac | |
| 9th Infantry Regiment (9. пешадијски пук–Краљ Никола I) | Požarevac | |
| 18th Infantry Regiment (18. пешадијски пук–Краљевић Ђорђе) | Belgrade | |
| Šumadija (Шумадијска) headquarters in Kragujevac | ||
| 10th Infantry Regiment (10. пешадијски пук–Таковски) | Čačak | |
| 11th Infantry Regiment (11. пешадијски пук–Карађорђе) | Kragujevac | |
| 12th Infantry Regiment (12. пешадијски пук–Цар Лазар) | Kruševac | |
| 19th Infantry Regiment (19. пешадијски пук) | Kragujevac | |
| Timok (Тимочка) headquarters in Zaječar | ||
| 13th Infantry Regiment (13. пешадијски пук–Хајдук Вељко) | Negotin | |
| 14th Infantry Regiment (14. пешадијски пук) | Knjaževac | |
| 15th Infantry Regiment (15. пешадијски пук–Стеван Синђелић) | Zaječar | |
| 20th Infantry Regiment (20. пешадијски пук) | Zaječar | |
| Ibar (Ибарска) | Unorganized | Unorganized |
| Kosovo (Косовска) | Unorganized | Unorganized |
| Vardar (Вардарска) | Organized during war | Unorganized |
| Bregalnica (Брегалничка) | Organized during war | Unorganized |
| Bitola (Битољска) | Some units organized during war | Unorganized |
Divisions and Regiments
The Serbian Army was organized into divisions and larger detachments at the beginning of the war in the following:
- Morava Division I (Моравска дивизија I позива), with 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 16th Infantry Regiments (1st Call)
- Drina Division I (Дринска дивизија I позива), with 5th, 6th, 17th Infantry Regiments and 3rd Supernumerary Infantry Regiment (1st Call)
- Danube Division I (Дунавска дивизија I позива), with 7th, 8th, 18th Infantry Regiments and 4th Supernumerary Infantry Regiment (1st Call)
- Šumadija Division I (Шумадијска дивизија I позива), with 10th, 11th, 12th, 19th Infantry Regiments (1st Call)
- Timok Division I (Тимочка дивизија I позива), with 13th, 14th, 15th, 20th Infantry Regiments (1st Call)
- Combined Division (Комбинована дивизија), with 1st, 2nd, 5th and 6th Supernumerary Infantry Regiments (1st Call)
- Morava Division II (Моравска дивизија II позива), with 1st, 2nd, 3rd Infantry Regiments (2nd Call)
- Drina Division II (Дринска дивизија II позива), with 5th, 6th Infantry Regiments (2nd Call), 6th Infantry Regiment (3rd Call) with supernumerary battalion, and one battalion of the 5th Infantry Regiment (3rd Call)
- Danube Division II/Braničevo Detachment (Дунавска дивизија II позива, Браничевски одред), with 7th, 8th, 9th Infantry Regiment (2nd Call), 9th Infantry Regiment (1st Call), 8th, 9th Infantry Regiments (3rd Call)
- Šumadija Division II (Шумадијска дивизија II позива), 10th, 11th, 12th Infantry Regiment (2nd Call)
- Timok Division II (Тимочка дивизија II позива), 13th, 14th, 15th Infantry Regiments (2nd Call)
- Obrenovac Detachment (Обреновачки одред), 7th Infantry Regiment (2nd Call), two battalions of 5th Infantry Regiment (3rd Call)
- Užice Brigade (Ужичка бригада), 4th Infantry Regiment (2nd Call), 4th Infantry Regiment (3rd Call)
- Mokra Gora Detachment (Одред код Мокре Горе), 4th Infantry Regiment (1st Call)
- Lim Detachment (Лимски одред), 4th and 5th Cadre Regiment, one and a half battalion of 4th Infantry Regiment (3rd Call)
The mobilized were categorized into four age groups or classes, poziv (literally "call", also translated as "line"[1]). The 1st Call (Први позив) being 21-31 years (deemed "active army", активна војска), 2nd Call (Други позив) 32-37 years, 3rd Call (Трећи позив) 38-45 years. The "Last Defence" (poslednja odbrana, Последња одбрана) was 18-20 and 46-55 years. The 1st and 2nd Calls were organized into the National Army, being the operative component in the Serbian Army, while the 3rd and Last Defence were used for garrison- and guard duty.
Cavalry, Artillery, Air Force
- Cavalry Division (Коњичка дивизија), made up of two brigades, each with two regiments.
- 1st Cavalry Brigade, with Cavalry Regiments 1st, 3rd.
- 2nd Cavalry Brigade, with Cavalry Regiments 2nd, 4th.
- Cavalry Artillery Division.
- Artillery, organized into the Infantry Regiments and Cavalry Division, and the independent Highland Artillery Regiment with nine batteries.
- Air Force, two planes and one baloon, during war aided by a French squadron
Chetnik Detachments
The Serbian High Command ordered for the establishment of Chetnik detachments to also house volunteers, each detachment numbering 500–600 men.
- Zlatibor Chetnik Detachment (Златиборски четнички одред), under major Kosta Todorović
- Jadar Chetnik Detachment (Јадарски четнички одред), under major Vojin Popović
- Rudnik Chetnik Detachment (Руднички четнички одред), under major Vojislav Tankosić
- Gornjak Chetnik Detachment (Горњачки четнички одред), under major Velimir Vemić
1914
First Army
General Petar Bojović, Commanding First Army
Colonel Božidar Terzić, Chief of Staff
| Divisions | Regiments |
|---|---|
| Cavalry division:
|
|
| Timok division I ban:
|
|
| Timok division II ban:
|
|
| Morava division II ban
|
|
| Braničevo detachment (Dunav division II ban) | troops of Dunav division II ban:
other troops:
|
| Army artillery
|
Second Army
General Stepa Stepanović, Commanding Second Army
Colonel Vojislav Živanović, Chief of Staff
| Divisions | Regiments |
|---|---|
| Morava division I ban
|
|
| Combined division I ban |
|
| Šumadija division I ban |
|
| Dunav division I ban |
|
| Yugoslav Division | |
| Army artillery
|
Third army
General Pavle Jurišić Šturm, Commanding Third Army
Colonel Dušan Pešić, Chief of Staff
| Divisions and brigades | Regiments |
|---|---|
| Drina division I ban
|
|
| Drina division II ban
|
|
| Obrenovac detachment
|
|
| other units:
|
|
| Army artillery:
|
Army group Užice
General Miloš Božanović
| Divisions and brigades | Regiments |
|---|---|
| Šumadija division II ban
|
|
| Užice brigade
|
|
| detachments:
|
|
| Army artillery:
|
1915
1916–18
References
- ^ Keegan 2011, p. 166.
Sources
- Historical Museum of Serbia (2020). Србија 1914 [Serbia 1914] (PDF). Belgrade: Историјски музеј Србије, Војни музеј.
- Keegan, John (2011-08-31). The First World War. Random House. p. 166. ISBN 978-1-4070-6412-3.
- Price, W. H. Crawfurd (1918). Serbia's Part in the War ... Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent & Company. (Public Domain)