-
renamed City of Lisbon, and
subsequently resold to Yugoslavia,
becoming Partizanka operating with the
shipping company Jugoslavenska Linijska Plovidba until...
-
imagery of
traditional folklore heroines to
attract and
legitimize the
partizanka (pl. partizanke;
Partisan Woman).
Members included figures such as Judita...
-
Maltese emigrants left to
Australia on
board of the
Yugoslav steamers SS
Partizanka and SS Radnik.
Relations between newly independent Malta and socialist...
- Kobe. In 1978 the ship was
bought by
Jadrolinija and renamed,
firstly to
Partizanka, then, in the same year, to
Lastovo I. In the year 1998 the ship was renamed...
-
imagery of
traditional folklore heroines to
attract and
legitimize the
partizanka.
After the war,
women were
relegated to
traditional gender roles, but...
-
After the war she
served in the
fledgling Yugoslav Navy as Nada then
Partizanka,
before being returned to the
Royal Navy in 1949.
Later that year she...
-
Transferred on 11
January 1944 to the
Yugoslav Navy as Nada.
Renamed in 1948 as
Partizanka.
Returned to RN in 1948.
Transferred in 1948 to the
Egyptian Navy as El...
-
Maltese immigrants land in
Sydney from the SS
Partizanka, 1940s...
- The
triglavka or
Triglav cap (in Slovenia) or the
partizanka or
Partizan cap (in Croatia) is a side cap that was a part of the
Yugoslav Partisan uniform...
-
Walter de Gruyter, ISBN 978-3-42298-648-0 Kovačević,
Dinka (2007). "Mlada
partizanka iz čitanke" [The
Young Female Partisan from the
Reading Book]. Nezavisne...