Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ultranationalism or extreme nationalism is an extreme form of nationalism in which a country asserts or maintains hegemony, supremacy, or other forms of control over other nations (usually through violent coercion) to pursue its specific interests.
The Serbian Radical Party (Serbian: Српска радикална странка, romanized: Srpska radikalna stranka, abbr. SRS) is a far-right, [1] ultranationalist [2] political party in Serbia. Founded in 1991, its co-founder, first and only leader is Vojislav Šešelj .
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 ...
Serbian Right (SD) is a far-right political party led by Miša Vacić. Vacić previously headed SNP 1389. [ 188 ] [ 240 ] The party was formed out of fifteen movements that had similar ideological beliefs, [ 129 ] while it also received support from Jim Dowson, a British far-right activist, and local political leaders.
National Bolshevism, [a] whose supporters are known as National Bolsheviks [b] and colloquially as Nazbols, [c] [1] is a syncretic political movement committed to combining ultranationalism and Bolshevik communism.
Serbian Action was founded by a young lawyer who graduated from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Law [11] in early 2010. [3] [5]Serbian Action became more known to the public in late 2014, when authorities arrested some of their members for hate speech, for distributing flyers against illegal settlements of Romani people [13] and inviting to lynch them. [3]
The roots of Putin's ultranationalism. March 28, 2022 at 3:00 AM ... is "a state that has no geopolitical meaning, no particular cultural import or universal significance, no geographic uniqueness ...
The most notable Serbian linguist of the 19th century, Vuk Karadžić, was a follower of the view that all south Slavs that speak the Shtokavian dialect (of Serbo-Croatian) were Serbs, speaking the Serbian language. [21] As this definition implied that large areas of continental Croatia, Dalmatia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina, including areas ...