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rdfs:label
  • Jozef Gabčík
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  • Jozef Gabčík (8 April 1912 – 18 June 1942) was a Slovak soldier involved in the British backed assassination of Nazi Reinhard Heydrich in Prague, Czechoslovakia in 1942. He and his friend and partner Jan Kubiš were able to fatally wound Heydrich, and flee. However, they and other anti-German partisans were traced to a church. After a six hour gun battle, Gabčík ended his life with a grenade rather than face capture.
  • Gabčík was born 1912 in Palosnya, Slovak territory in Austria-Hungary (today Poluvsie, part of Rajecké Teplice, Žilina district, Slovakia). He learned to be a farrier, as well as a blacksmith. He was also taught clock making at the village of Kostelec Nad Vltavou (Bohemia). He was taught by local master blacksmith J. Kunike. He lived with the Kunike family in their house of which still stands together with the outbuilding and yard which was used as a smithy. The house is located some 50 meters down a small hill which leads from the village centre where the church stands. In 1927 so the school records show that he attended School in Business Studies at Kovarov near to Kostelec Nad Vltavou. The building which housed the school is today the Municipal Office. A marble plaque was erected in 201
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Unit
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dbkwik:military/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:turtledove/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
serviceyears
  • 1939
Birth Date
  • 1912-04-08
Branch
death place
  • Cyril and Methodius Cathedral, Prague
Name
  • Jozef Gabčík
Birth Place
Cause of Death
  • Suicide by grenade during a battle
death date
  • 1942-06-18
Rank
Battles
Affiliations
Occupation
  • Soldier
Death
  • 1942
Birth
  • 1912
Nationality
abstract
  • Jozef Gabčík (8 April 1912 – 18 June 1942) was a Slovak soldier involved in the British backed assassination of Nazi Reinhard Heydrich in Prague, Czechoslovakia in 1942. He and his friend and partner Jan Kubiš were able to fatally wound Heydrich, and flee. However, they and other anti-German partisans were traced to a church. After a six hour gun battle, Gabčík ended his life with a grenade rather than face capture.
  • Gabčík was born 1912 in Palosnya, Slovak territory in Austria-Hungary (today Poluvsie, part of Rajecké Teplice, Žilina district, Slovakia). He learned to be a farrier, as well as a blacksmith. He was also taught clock making at the village of Kostelec Nad Vltavou (Bohemia). He was taught by local master blacksmith J. Kunike. He lived with the Kunike family in their house of which still stands together with the outbuilding and yard which was used as a smithy. The house is located some 50 meters down a small hill which leads from the village centre where the church stands. In 1927 so the school records show that he attended School in Business Studies at Kovarov near to Kostelec Nad Vltavou. The building which housed the school is today the Municipal Office. A marble plaque was erected in 2010, together with historical documents on the wall there. These documents were all placed there by the citizens of Kovarov. Jozef at one time was working at a chemicial plant in Žilina until 1939. He fled Czechoslovakia during World War II for Great Britain, where he was trained as a paratrooper. He became a rotmistr (approx. UK Staff Sergeant) in rank. The Free Czechoslovaks, as he and other self-exiled Czechoslovaks were called, were stationed at Cholmondeley Castle near Malpas in Cheshire.
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