You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Serbian. (April 2015) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
View a machine-translated version of the Serbian article.
Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Serbian Wikipedia article at [[:sr:Јован Станојковић-Довезенски]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|sr|Јован Станојковић-Довезенски}} to the talk page.
Jovan Stanojković (Serbian Cyrillic: Јован Станојковић, 8 April 1873 – 2 May 1935), known by his nom de guerre, the demonym Dovezenski (Довезенски), was a Serbian Chetnik commander (vojvoda), and participant in the Balkan Wars, in the Battle of Kumanovo, and World War I.[1] He was originally a teacher who turned into a guerilla fighter following Bulgarian oppression on Serb people in Macedonia. He rose in ranks and became one of the supreme commanders in Macedonia.
Pavle Mladenović established the first local Serb-oriented cheta (band) in Kumanovo[7] in springtime 1903 when the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) started assassinating and murdering people who identified themselves as Serbs in the Kumanovo region.[8][9] After Mladenović, Jovan Stanojković, who had been a teacher up until then in Rudar,[10] formed a band in the Kumanovo region.[11] He adopted the nom de guerre "Jovan Dovezenski".[12] Dovezenski spontaneously decided to command his own band after Bulgarian commander Atanas Babata massacred Serbs in his village on 11 August 1904.[10] After the establishment of bands in Kumanovo, self-organized bands were established in Skopska Crna Gora and in the Palanka kaza.[13] All of these bands had the objective of self-defense, and they worked independently from one another.[13] In the summer of 1904, resistance to the Bulgarian oppression emerged with the first Serbian-organized secret band in Drimkol, led by Đorđe Cvetković-Drimkolski from Labuništa.[13] Henceforth, the movement was coordinated.[13]
The left side of the Vardar was formed out of locals in the bands of Pavle Mladenović, Dovezenski, and Petko Ilić.[14]Ilija Jovanović, Ljuba Jezdić and Đorđe Skopljanče were among those sent by the Committee across the border.[14] On the night of 22–23 October 1904, Dovezenski's band attacked the village of Beljakovce, where he, according to the Bulgarian sources, killed Bulgarian Exarchist teacher Teodosi Sholyakov, one other man and two women.[15] In November 1904, Dovezenski came to Vranje where he formed a band, in which, among others, were two youngsters, both from Peć: a border gendarmerie corporal, Kosta Pećanac and a lance sergeant from the NCO school, Đorđe Skopljanče.[16] Dovezenski proved to be a capable organizer and propagandist, and thanks to him, the Chetniks were joined by the bands of Ilinden veteran commanders Krsta Kovačević, Vanđel Skopljanče and Milan Štipljanče.[17]
He organized the Board of Western Povardarje in 1904.
Micko and Dovezenski in the centre, 1904–05
Micko and Dovezenski, 1904–05
Group photo of Chetnik commanders, during the Young Turk Revolution (1908).
Dovezenski, sitting in the centre, with fellow Chetnik commanders, during the Young Turk Revolution (1908).
Portrait of Dovezenski, wearing a fez, coat jacket, and white ribbon (1908).
Balkan Wars
After unsuccessful fights with Bulgarian bands, Komenović was replaced with Dovezenski.[when?][where?][18] He participated in the Battle of Kumanovo.
World War I
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (April 2015)
There is a story about Jovan Dovezenski and Deda-Laza Aleksić, both widowers, who were interested in the same widow at a party. Dovezenski first took her to dance, then Aleksić danced with her, better and longer, however, the widow chose Dovezenski.[20]
He died on 2 May 1935 in Kumanovo.[21] His descendants, as those of Jovan Babunski, are surnamed with their Chetnik surnames.[12]
One of his descendants is Nebojša Dovezenski, a researcher and molecular immunologist.
^Jovan F. Trifunoski (1974). Kumanovska oblast. Trifunoski. p. 184. Пред крај поменуте владавине у овом селу истакао се познати четнички војвода Ј о в а н Станојковић — Довезенски. Потицао је од рода Велчевци.
^ abcdefPrvo jugoslovensko narodno pretstavništvo izabrano 8.nov.1931.godine. 1931. p. Јован С. Довезенски рођен је 8. априла 1873. у селу Довезеиима, срез жеглиговски. Основну школу учио је у селу Мургашу и у Градишком Манасти- ру, где се је учило старословенски. У време српско - бугарског рата г. Довезенски је свршио и остале школе до ко- јих се, у то време, у његовом родном крају могло доЬи. 1888. год. прешао је у Србију, да продужи школу. Уписао се у Светосав- ску богословско-учитељску школу за младиЬе из јужних крајева. 1897. постао је учитељ у свом родном месту. На тој дужности остао је до 3. марта 1904., ка-да је ступио у Комитет српске четничке организације, а на томе послу остао је све до ослобођења Јужне Србије, 1912. године. Г. Довезенски је организатор првих наших четничких.
^Jovan Jovanović; Stanoje Stanojević (1935). Srpski narod u XIX veku [Serbian People in the 19th Century] (in Bosnian). Izdavačko i knjižarsko preduzeće G. Kon a.d.
^U. Šešum, Vojvode srpske četničke organizacije 1903-1908, Naša Prošlost br. 11, Kraljevo 2011, 136.
^Narodna enciklopedija srpsko hrvatsko slovenačka, Beograd 1929, 836-837
^Jovan Jovanović; Stanoje Stanojević (1935). Srpski narod u XIX veku [Serbian People in the 19th Century] (in Bosnian). Vol. 16. Izdavačko i knjižarsko preduzeće G. Kon a.d. p. 158. Прву чету је органи- зовао Павле Младеновић из кумановског села Јачинца. За њим је образовао чету мирни учитељ Јован Станој- ковић из кумановског села Довезенаца, доцније познати војвода Довезенски. Из кумановског ...