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The term Greater Serbia or Great Serbia ... was the single most important document to set into motion the pan-Serbian movement of the late 1980s which led to ...
The Serbian Provinces of Kosovo and Metohija and Vojvodina are de facto separated from Serbia, as they were awarded state-treatment in the Federal Parliament, where they could veto any Serbian decision. Timeline of the breakup of Yugoslavia; 1980: President Josip Broz Tito dies in Ljubljana at the age of 88. Ethnic tensions rise across the ...
Monument to Karađorđe and Church of Saint Sava in Belgrade. Serbian nationalism asserts that Serbs are a nation and promotes the cultural and political unity of Serbs. [1] It is an ethnic nationalism, [1] originally arising in the context of the general rise of nationalism in the Balkans under Ottoman rule, under the influence of Serbian linguist Vuk Stefanović Karadžić and Serbian ...
The Serbian government along with a clique of pro-Milošević members of the Yugoslav army and its general staff, secretly adopted the RAM or "frame" plan that involved the partition of Croatia and Bosnia to give large amounts of territory to the local Serbs that would remain united with Serbia, effectively a Greater Serbia. [126]
Timeline of the Serbian Revolution; Y. Timeline of the breakup of Yugoslavia This page was last edited on 15 April 2017, at 13:48 (UTC). Text ...
A railway station roof had collapsed days earlier in the Serbian city of Novi Sad, killing 15 people. ... the demonstrations have ballooned into the biggest protest movement in Serbia in years ...
The kingdom would be renamed to Yugoslavia in 1929, and ruled by Serbian Karađorđević dynasty till Second World War. After the formation of Yugoslavia, Serbia attempted to create a "Greater Serbia" by using police intimidation and vote rigging to establish a Serbian controlled Yugoslavia. From 1929-1941 Serbian controlled Yugoslavia ...
The anti-bureaucratic revolution (Serbian: Антибирократска револуција, romanized: Antibirokratska revolucija) was a campaign of street protests by supporters of Serbian leader Slobodan Milošević that ran between 1988 and 1989 in Yugoslavia.