The first route, Belgrade - Zagreb, became operational on 15 February 1928. The following year, 1929, Aeroput joined the
International Air Traffic Association (IATA). The first international flight was on the 7 October 1929, when Aeroput flew from Belgrade via Zagreb to Vienna with a Potez 29/2 with five-passengers. By 1930, Aeroput had regular flights from Belgrade to
Graz and
Vienna (via
Zagreb), and to
Thessaloniki (via
Skopje). Thus the shortest air link between Central Europe and the Aegean Sea was formed across the Yugoslav territory. By then, Aeroput connected Belgrade and Zagreb with routed to all other major domestic centers in the interior and the coast of the
Adriatic. Initially, the fleet consisted of three
Potez 29/2 biplanes with five passenger seats. In 1932 Aeroput expanded its fleet with
Farman F.306 aircraft, and in 1934 the company purchased three
Spartan Cruiser II planes. Aeroput also bought two
Caudron C.449 Goéland monoplanes, one
de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide and six mid-range
Lockheed Model 10A Electra aircraft. Relying on its renewed fleet, the company greatly expanded its list of destinations in 1937 and 1938. Regular flights to
Sofia,
Tirana, and
Budapest were introduced, as well as a seasonal-tourist flight
Dubrovnik - Zagreb - Vienna -
Brno -
Prague. In cooperation with Italian and Romanian companies, the
Bucharest - Belgrade - Zagreb -
Venice -
Milan -
Turin route was introduced. In 1940, Aeroput broke all records by carrying over 16,000 passengers and 232 tons of freight by flying 726,000 aircraft-kilometers. The development of the company was interrupted by the start of the Second World War. Aeroput suspended all services after the
April War at beginning of the
World War II in Yugoslavia in April 1941. After occupation of Yugoslavia in April 1941, the airline effectively ceased to exist, and its aircraft were seized by the
Axis powers. JAT was established with the assistant of the Yugoslav transport regiment and former Aeroput pilots and aircraft mechanics.
Establishment of Aeroput Technical service In the first three years, while the fleet consisted only of
Potez 29/2 biplanes, major aircraft maintenance for Aeroput was performed by aircraft factory
Ikarus in Zemun, which had licence for producing a similar plane
Potez 25 for the
Royal Yugoslav Air Force (JKRV). Engine maintenance was performed at the factory Jasenica AD from
Smederevska Palanka, which also produced under licence aircraft engines of the
Lorraine brand. Early in 1931, Aeroput acquired a workshop for the repair of the aircraft from the French - Romanian company
CIDNA, which was located at Zemun airport and assembly organized with the mechanics of Ikarus and the Air Force, and in that way organized its own technical aircraft maintenance service. Maintenance department was located in one of the large hangar at the civilian part of the airport, it was a modern and possessed a test stand for aero-engines. Since then, all the revisions, and airplane engines overhauling that had Aeroput were performed in they own technical service. How it was the good service, show fact that they are made in the service aircraft of domestic design, the
Aeroput MMS-3.
World War II and postwar nationalization Bombing in 1941 destroyed almost the entire property of the company. Due to the outbreak of war, 500 tons of fuel which were ordered and paid, never arrived. Aeroput sued for punitive damages on 31 October 1941. In 1942 the commissar administration banned Aeroput operations. German occupation authorities nationalized the property of Aeroput in
Knez Mihailova Street 32, where they moved their national airline
Deutsche Luft Hansa (DHN). After the war Aeroput renewed work on 2 July 1945, and a general meeting of shareholders elected the first post-war management of the company. The meeting was attended by delegates of the new government of
Democratic Federative Yugoslavia (DFY), and with the participation of then the Head of State
Ivan Ribar, who was a pre-war shareholder and board member. However, the later communist government of the
Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia adopted a decree prohibiting private joint-stock companies, and on 24 December 1948 Aeroput was liquidated. Its assets were nationalized and the airline continued as
Jat Airways. ==Fleet==