Ankica Žumbar was born in
Zagreb on 24 July 1926. She finished primary school in Zagreb and attended
hospitality school until she abandoned her studies to join the Partisans in May 1944. At age 18, she met her future husband,
Franjo Tuđman, in
Čazma where he was in charge of a department of the 10th Zagreb Corps of the
Yugoslav Partisans. In January 1945, she transferred from Čazma to the Supreme command in
Belgrade, returning to
Zagreb following its
liberation by Partisan forces in May 1945. Thereafter, she moved to
Belgrade with Tuđman, gaining employment at the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of SFR Yugoslavia and marrying Tuđman on 25 May 1945. They had two sons and one daughter, namely
Miroslav (1946–2021), Stjepan (born in 1948), and Nevenka (born in 1951). In 1954, she passed the high school leaving exam and enrolled at the
University of Belgrade to study
English. However, she abandoned her college studies in her
sophomore year, choosing to take a course in English at the Yugoslav foreign ministry. In 1960, her husband was promoted to the rank of
major general, but decided to leave the military in 1961, with the whole family moving back to Zagreb. Once there Franjo Tuđman established the
Institute for the History of the Labour Movement in Croatia and its first director. However, he was removed from that position in 1967 and forced to abandon his membership in the
League of Communists of Yugoslavia. In 1972 and 1981, Franjo Tuđman was sentenced to prison. ==First Lady of Croatia==