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a mountainous republic in southeastern Europe bordering on the Adriatic Sea formed from two of the six republics that made up Yugoslavia until 1992 Serbia and Montenegro were known as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia until 2003 when they adopted the name of the Union of Serbia and Montenegro a former country of southeastern Europe bordering the Adriatic Sea formed in 1918 and named Yugoslavia in 1929 controlled by Marshal Tito as a communist state until his death in 1980 "Tito's Yugoslavia included Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Serbia, and Montenegro"
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Wikipedia
Yugoslavia (''Jugoslavija'' in all south Slavic languages, in Cyrillic ''Југославија'') is a term used for three separate but successive political entities that existed during most of the 20th century on the Balkan Peninsula in Europe. Translated, the name means ''Land of the South Slavs'' (''jug'' in the word ''Jugoslavija'' means south). The first was a Monarchykingdom formed in 1918 as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which was re-named the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929 and existed under that name until it was invaded in 1941 by the Axis powers. The second was a Socialist state established immediately after World War II in 1945 as ''Democratic Federation of Yugoslavia (DFY)'', which in 1946 became the ''Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (FPRY)'' and in April 7 1963 the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). This remained in place until 1992, by which time four of its six constituent republics - Slovenia, Croatia, Republic of MacedoniaMacedonia and Bosnia and Herzegovina - had seceded. The third was called Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) and was formed in 1992 on the territory of the remaining republics of Serbia (including the autonomous provinces of Vojvodina and of Kosovo, officially known as Kosovo and Metohija) and Montenegro. In 2001, the name Yugoslavia was to be officially abolished when the state would transform into a loose commonwealth called Serbia and Montenegro which finally happened on February 4, 2003.
Origins - Probably the first "official" mention of the term Yugoslav (as opposed to simply Slavic peoplessouth Slav) was the forming of the group of advocates of a joint country of South Slavs, by politicians from Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, which were then both in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy.On November 22, 1914, Ante Trumbić, Frano Supilo, Ivan Meštrović, Hinko Hinković and Franko Potočnjak from Croatia and Nikola Stojanović and Dušan Vasiljević from Bosnia and Herzegovina first met with Pavle Popović, a representative of Nikola Pašić's Serbian government, on neutral ground in Florence, Italy, in an effort to coordinate their efforts towards building an independent state of western South Slavs. Lujo Vojnović was also present as an observer from the Kingdom of Montenegro.The new "Yugoslav" cause (from ''Jugosloven'', meaning "Southern Slav") was receiving an increasing amount of support: in the western states, the people were generally tired of Austria-Hungary and a union with the eastern states was probably seen as the best way to come out of the anomie caused by the World War IGreat War. Even the large diasporas, known for their nostalgia and patriotism, started supporting the new idea.The Yugoslav Committee (''Jugoslavenski odbor'') was officially formed on April 30th, 1915 in London, and the aforementioned politicians were its members. The Committee and the Kingdom of Serbia subsequently signed the Corfu Declaration on July 20, 1917 that declared their desire to form a new joint kingdom.
The First Yugoslavia - ''Main article: Kingdom of Yugoslavia''The goals of the Yugoslav Committee were partly reached by the end of the World War IFirst World War in 1918, when Austria-Hungary disintegrated, and the South Slavs organized into the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs.This short-lived state soon, on December 1, 1918, joined Serbia and Montenegro to form "The Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes".On June 28 1921, — a day of historical importance to Serbs (see Vidovdan) — parliament (''Skupština'') passed a new constitution despite a boycott from Croatian MPs. The constitution centralized political authority and strengthened the power of the royal government in Belgrade.In 1928, Puniša Račić, an ethnic Serbian nationalist leader from Montenegro, shot and killed Croatian Peasant Party leader Stjepan Radić in the parliament chambers. King Alexander I of YugoslaviaAlexander (Aleksandar) used the shooting as a pretext to strengthen his power and on January 6, 1929 he suspended the constitution, dissolved the ''Skupština'' and proclaimed a royal dictatorship. He went on to reorganize the regional divisions within the country and renamed it the ''Kingdom of Yugoslavia''. All national identities except "Yugoslav" were abolished.Yugoslavia became a highly militarismmilitarized state, which spawned several insurgent nationalist groups opposed to the royal dictatorship. The king was highly unpopular, particularly among non-Serbs, and while on a visit to Marseille, France in 1934, he was assassinated by VMROMacedonian nationalists. His son and successor, Peter II of YugoslaviaPeter II (Petar II), was a child, so power fell into the hands of the ineffectual Prince Paul of YugoslaviaPrince Paul (Pavle), who continued on an authoritarian path with the prime minister Milan Stojadinović.In the beginning of World War II, Yugoslavia was pressured by Germany and Italy to join the Axis powers. Italy was mired in an inconclusive war with History of GreeceGreece, and before Germany committed its forces to the Greek campaign, it wanted to secure Yugoslavia's support.Prince Paul submitted to the fascist pressure and signed the Tripartite Treaty in Vienna on March 25, 1941, hoping to still keep Yugoslavia out of the war. But this was at the expense of popular support for Paul's regency. Senior military officers were also opposed to the treaty and launched a coup d'état when the king returned on March 27. Army General Dušan Simović seized power, arrested the Vienna delegation, exiled Paul, and ended the regency, giving 17 year old King Peter full powers.Adolf HitlerHitler then decided to attack Yugoslavia on April 6, followed immediately by an invasion of Greece where Mussolini had previously been repelled. (As a result, the launch of Operation Barbarossa was delayed by four weeks, which proved to be a costly decision.)
Yugoslavia during the Second World War - At 05:15 on April 6 1941, Nazi GermanyGerman, ItalyItalian, HungaryHungarian, and Bulgarian forces attacked Yugoslavia. The Luftwaffe bombed Belgrade and other major Yugoslav cities. On April 17, representatives of Yugoslavia's various regions signed an armistice with Germany at Belgrade, ending eleven days of resistance against the invading German Wehrmacht. More than three hundred thousand Yugoslav officers and soldiers were taken prisoner. , Serbs, Jews and Gypsies were marched to the Jasenovac concentration camp]]The Axis Powers occupied Yugoslavia and split it up. The Independent State of Croatia was established as a Nazi puppet-state, ruled by the Catholic fascist militia known as the Ustaše which actually came into existence in 1929, but was relatively limited in its activities until 1941. German troops occupied Bosnia-Herzegovina as well as part of Serbia and Slovenia, while other parts of the country were occupied by Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Italy. Yugoslavs opposing the Nazis organized resistance movements. Those inclined towards supporting the old Kingdom of Yugoslavia joined the Chetniks, a mostly Serb-composed nationalistic royalist guerilla led by Colonel Draža Mihajlović. Those inclined towards supporting the Communist Party of YugoslaviaCommunist Party (and against the King) joined the Partisans (Yugoslavia)Yugoslav National Liberation Army, led by Josip Broz Tito, a CroatsCroatian member of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia.The NLA initiated a guerrilla campaign which was developed into the largest resistance army in occupied Western and Central Europe. The Chetniks initially made notable incursions and were supported by the exiled royal government as well as the Allies, but soon started to collaborate with axis powers against NLA. After allies realised that Chetniks were helping Germans they ceased to support them. The German response to resistance movement was to punish the civil population by carrying out reprisal killings and by giving a free hand to the quisling forces of the Independent State of Croatia. This led to great civilian loss of life, principally but not exclusively among the Serbs of Bosnia and Croatia, whose populations provided a large portion of rebel formations. The estimated demographydemographic loss was 1,700,000 individuals or 10% of the population of Yugoslavia.During the war, the communismcommunist-led partisans (Yugoslavia)partisans were ''de facto'' rulers on the liberated territories, and the NLA organized people's committees to act as civilian government. On November 25, 1942, the AVNOJAnti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of Yugoslavia was convened in Bihać. The council reconvened on November 29, 1943 in Jajce and established the basis for post-war organisation of the country, establishing a federation (this date was celebrated as Republic Day after the war).The NLA was able to expel the Axis from Serbia in 1944 and the rest of Yugoslavia in 1945. The Red Army aided in liberating Belgrade as well as some other territories, but withdrew after the war was over.Westerner attempts to reunite the partisans, who denied supremacy of the old government of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, and the emigration loyal to the king, led to the Tito-Šubašić Agreement in June 1944, however Tito was seen as a national hero by the citizens and so he gained the power in post-war independent communismcommunist state, starting as a prime minister.
The Second Yugoslavia - ''Main article: Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia'' led Yugoslavia from the end of World War II until his death in 1980.]]On January 31, 1946 the new Constitution of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslaviaconstitution of Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia, modeling the Soviet Union, established six constituent republics and two autonomous province.The republics were: Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Republic of MacedoniaMacedonia Montenegro Serbia Sloveniaand within Serbia's new reduced borders, the people of the following two regions were granted limited autonomous rights: Vojvodina Kosovo In 1974, the two provinces of Vojvodina and Kosovo as well as the republics of Bosnia & Herzegovina and Montenegro were granted greater autonomy to the point that Albanian and Hungarian became nationally recognised minority languages and the Serbo-Croat of Bosnia and Montenegro altered to a form based on the speech of the local people and not on the standards of Zagreb and Belgrade.Vojvodina and Kosovo form a part of the Republic of Serbia. The country distanced itself from the Soviets in 1948 (cf. Cominform and Informbiro) and started to build its own way to socialism under strong political leadership of Josip Broz Tito. The country criticized both Eastern blocEastern bloc and NATO nations and, together with other countries, started the Non-Aligned Movement in 1961, which remained the official affiliation of the country until it dissolved.On April 7, 1963 the nation changed its official name to Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and Josip Broz TitoTito was named President for life.In SFRY, each republic and province had its own internal constitution, supreme court, parliament, president and prime minister. At the top of the Yugoslav government was a collective Presidency, the federal Prime Minister, and the federal Parliament.An important role was one of the president of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia for each republic and province, and the president of presidency of Central Committee of the Communist Party.Josip Broz Tito was the most powerful person in the country, and after him there were republic and province premiers and presidents, plus Communist Party presidents. People whom he did not favor varied greatly. Slobodan Penezić Krčun served under Tito and then after he started to complain about Tito's politics, he was found dead under unknown circumstances. Aleksandar Ranković lost all of his titles and rights after a major disagreement with Tito regarding state politics. Sometimes ministers in government were more important than the premier, such as in the case of Edvard Kardelj or Stane Dolanc.The suppression of national identities escalated with the so-called Croatian Spring of 1970-71, when students in Zagreb organized demonstrations for greater civil liberties and greater Croatian autonomy. The regime stifled the public protest and incarcerated the leaders, but many key Croatian representatives in the Party silently supported this cause, so a new Constitution of the Socialist Federal Republic of YugoslaviaConstitution was ratified in 1974 that gave more rights to the individual republics and provinces. According to this constitution, individual republics had a right for self-determination, up to secession, which made later break-up easier.
Breakup - After Tito's death in 1980, ethnic tensions grew in Yugoslavia. Some members of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts drafted a memorandum in the 1980s that opposed the policy of the federation and promoted Serbian nationalism in response to the growing influence of the clerics chielfy in Croatia and Slovenia who were now working towards luring the people of their republics to reject Belgrade law. The Albaniansethnic Albanian miners in Kosovo organized strikes which dovetailed into ethnic conflict between the Albanians and the non-Albanians in the province. By this time, the Albanians had become the largest ethnic group with over 50% of the population. The principle Slavs, mainly Serbs, were fast reducing in size and would by 1999 be as little as 10% of the two million population.Serbian communist leader Slobodan Milošević, the new strong man of Yugoslavia, tried to play on the revived Serb nationalism, but ended up alienating all the other ethnic groups in the federation. Autonomy of Vojvodina and of Kosovo Kosovo and Metohija was reduced, though both entities retained a vote in the Yugoslav Presidency Council. In January 1990, the extraordinary 14th Congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia was convened. The Serbian delegation, led by Milošević, insisted on the reversal of 1974 Constitution policy that empowered the republics and rather wanted to introduce a policy of "one person, one vote", which would empower the majority population, the Serbs. This caused the Slovenian and Croatian delegations (led by Milan Kučan and Ivica Račan, respectively), who instead favored more economic liberalization (such as perestroika), to leave the Congress in protest.Following the fall of the Soviet Union in the rest of Eastern Europe, each of the republics elected a new government democratically, but the unresolved issues remained. In particular, Slovenia and Croatia elected governments oriented towards independence (under Milan Kučan and Franjo Tuđman, respectively), while Serbia and Montenegro elected candidates who favoured Yugoslav unity.In March 1990, the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija, JNA) met with the Presidency of Yugoslavia (an eight member council composed of representatives from six republics and two autonomous provinces) in an attempt to get them to declare a state of emergency which would allow for the army to take control of the country. The representatives of Serbia, Montenegro, Kosovo-Metohija, and Vojvodina voted for the decision, while Croatia (Stjepan MesićStipe Mesić), Slovenia (Janez Drnovšek), Macedonia (Vasil Tupurkovski) and Bosnia (Bogić Bogićević) voted against. The tie delayed an escalation of conflicts, but not for long.Following the first multi-party election results, the republics of Slovenia and Croatia proposed transforming Yugoslavia into a loose confederation of six republics in the Autumn of 1990, however Slobodan MiloševićMilošević rejected all such proposals, arguing that all Serbs should live in the same country.On March 9, 1991 demonstrations were held against Slobodan Milošević in Belgrade, but the police and the military were deployed in the streets in order to restore order, killing two people. In late March, 1991, the so-called Plitvice Bloody Easter incident was one of the first sparks of open war in Croatia. The Yugoslav People's Army maintained an impression of being neutral, but as time went on, it was becoming more and more involved in state politics.On June 25, 1991, Slovenia and Croatia became the first republics to declare independence from Yugoslavia, but the international community pressured them to place a three-month moratorium on the decision in the Brioni Agreement, agreed upon by representatives of all republics.Secession of the newly-formed states marked the beginning of the bloody Yugoslav wars. These began with a short war in Slovenia and continued with a war in Croatia in 1991. In September 1991, the Republic of Macedonia also declared independence becoming the only former republic to gain sovereignty without resistence from the Belgrade based Yugoslav authorities. 500 U.S soldiers were then deployed under the U.N banner to monitor Macedonia's northern borders with the Republic of Serbia, Yugoslavia. Macedonia's first president, Kire Gligurov, maintained good relations with Belgrade and the other breakaway republics and there have to date been no problems between Macedonian and Serbo-Montenegrin border police even though small pockets of Kosovo and the Preševo valley complete the northern reaches of the historical region known as Macedonia, which would otherwise create a border dispute if ever Macedonian nationalism should resurface (see IMORO).As a result of the conflict, the United Nations Security Council unanimously adopted UN Security Council Resolution 721 on November 27, 1991, which paved the way to the establishment of peacekeeping operations in Yugoslavia. nato.intBosnia and Herzegovina held a referendum on independence in early 1992; this vote was boycotted by the sizeable Serb population there (35% of Bosnian population), which advocated continued union with Yugoslavia. Heavy pro-independence sentiment among Bosnians Muslims and Croats resulted in a Yes vote in the referendum. While everyone advocated that any decision had to be made with the consent of all the three nations, the referendum was declared valid, the opinion of the Serbs was ignored, and the republic's government declared its independence. The Serbs immediately declared the independence of Republika Srpska, and the war in Bosnia followed shortly thereafter.The so-called Badinter Commission formed by the European Community declared in early 1992 that the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia had "dissolved".Various dates are considered as the end of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia: June 25, 1991, when Croatia and Slovenia declared independence October 9, 1991, when the July 9th moratorium on Slovenian and Croatian secession was ended January 15, 1992, when Slovenia and Croatia were internationally recognized April 28, 1992, the formation of FRY (see below)
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia - The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY) was formed on April 28, 1992, and it consisted of the former Socialist Republics of Serbia and Montenegro.The war in the western parts of former Yugoslavia ended in 1995 with United StatesU.S.-sponsored peace talks in Dayton, Ohio, with the so-called Dayton Agreement.Starting in 1996, the Albanian organization Kosovo Liberation Army started terrorist actions in the southern Serbian province. The situation worsened, with the Yugoslav reaction causing many ethnic-Albanians to flee their homes, to the point that there was widespread violence and emigration. Following the Racak incident and unsuccessful Rambouillet Agreement in the early months of 1999, NATO proceeded to bombard Serbia and Montenegro for more than two months, until the Milošević government submitted to their demands and withdrew its forces from Kosovo. See Kosovo War for more information. Since June 1999, the province has been governed by peace-keeping forces from NATO and Russia, although all parties continue to recognize it as a part of Serbia.Milošević's rejection of claims of a first-round opposition victory in new elections for the Federal presidency in September 2000 led to mass demonstrations in Belgrade on October 5 and the collapse of the regime's authority. The opposition's candidate, reformed nationalist Vojislav Koštunica took office as Yugoslav president on October 6.On Saturday, March 31, 2001, Milošević surrendered to Yugoslav security forces from his home in Belgrade, following a recent warrant for his arrest on charges of abuse of power and corruption. On June 28 he was driven to the Yugoslav-Bosnian border where shortly after he was placed in the custody of Sfor officials, soon to be extradited to the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia. His trial on charges of genocide in Bosnia and war crimes in Croatia and in Kosovo and Metohija began at The Hague on February 12, 2002. On April 11, the Yugoslav parliament passed a law allowing extradition of all persons charged with war crimes by the International Criminal Tribunal.In March 2002, the Governments of Serbia and Montenegro agreed to reform FRY in favour of a new, much weaker form of cooperation called Serbia and Montenegro. By order of Yugoslav Federal Parliament on February 4, 2003, Yugoslavia, at least nominally, ceased to exist. A federal government remains in place in Belgrade but now assumes only ceremonial powers. The local governments of Serbia and of Montenegro now conduct their respective affairs almost as though the two republics were independent. Furthermore, customs have been established along the traditional border crossings between the two republics.
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Websites
United Nations
Global association of governments facilitating cooperation in international law, security, economic development, and social equity.
http://www.un.org/
William P. Gottlieb Photographs from the Golden Age of Jazz
The William P. Gottlieb Collection comprises of over 1600 photographs of celebrated American jazz artists.
http://memory.loc.gov//ammem/wghtml/wghome.html
Yugoslavia Infomap
Web portal, includes search engine, e-cards, web cams, directory of internet resources in Yugoslavia and about the country.
http://www.yu
Cyber Yugoslavia
Virtual nation created after the violent breakdown of physical unity in 1991, seeking a way for normal, peaceful and friendly relations between the Balkan nations.
http://www.juga.com
Federativna Republika Jugoslavija
Zvanicni sajt na kome mozete naci osnovne informacije o drzavi.
http://www.gov.yu/
Football Association of Serbia and Montenegro
Official site including team, player and national team profiles with latests result tables
http://www.fsj.co.yu/
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