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1877 beehive panel painting of King Matjaž Matthias Corvinus, about fifty years old (contemporary sculpture from Buda Castle). King Matjaž/Mátyás/Matijaš (Slovene: Kralj Matjaž, Hungarian: Mátyás király, Croatian: Kralj Matijaš) is a legendary king in Slovenia, Hungary, Croatia and in some other countries, based on pre-Christian traditions of Carantania [1] and in course of centuries ...
The novel is first person narrative of a twelve year old Egon who tries to become a normal teenager with normal teenage problems of growing up in a milieu of little industrial town in then Tito's Yugoslavia with open borders to the West that allowed free visits to the other side of the iron curtain that was not so iron at the borders between modern day Slovenia and Italy, in times of record ...
This is a complete list of dukes and kings of Croatia (Croatian: knez, kralj) under domestic ethnic and elected dynasties during the Croatian Kingdom (925–1918). This article follows the monarch's title number according to Hungarian succession for convenience.
Zalagasper (stylised in all lowercase, formerly Zala Kralj & Gašper Šantl) is a Slovenian musical duo from Maribor consisting of vocalist Zala Kralj and multi-instrumentalist Gašper Šantl. The duo represented Slovenia [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] in the Eurovision Song Contest 2019 with the song " Sebi ", finishing 15th [ A ] (out of 26 entrants) in ...
A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Slovene Wikipedia article at [[:sl:Saga o Karantaniji, Kralj Samo]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|sl|Saga o Karantaniji, Kralj Samo}} to the talk page. For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
The House of Karađorđević or Karađorđević dynasty (Serbian: Династија Карађорђевић, romanized: Dinastija Karađorđević, pronounced [karadʑǒːrdʑevitɕ]; pl. Карађорђевићи, Karađorđevići) was the former ruling Serbian and deposed Yugoslav royal family.
Stephen Držislav was a son of king Michael Krešimir II and Queen Helen of Zadar. [4] His church name Stephen (Stefani regis) is mentioned on the epitaph of the Helen's sarcophagus with date 976.
King of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes; Reign: 1 December 1918 – 16 August 1921 Successor: Alexander I Karađorđević: Regent: Alexander (1918–1921) King of Serbia