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In the show, contestants called "zadrugari" (eng. cooperators) live together in a specially constructed community that is isolated from the outside world.The show's former title refers to the term zadruga, a type of rural community in which the institution of zadruga held people's property, herds and money in common, with usually the oldest (patriarch) member ruling and making decisions for ...
HRT 3's original history began in 1989, when this channel was originally known as Z3 and later HTV Z3. It officially came on air on 1 March 1991, [1] but was taken off air on 16 September 1991, when its main transmitter, the Sljeme TV tower, was damaged in an air raid. On 7 November 1994, the channel came back on air, this time as HRT 3.
Within the zadruga, all of the family members worked to ensure that the needs of every other member were met. The zadruga system eventually went into decline beginning in the late 19th century, as the largest zadrugas started to become unmanageable and broke into smaller zadrugas or formed traditional villages with related extended families ...
24 sata (meaning "24 hours" in Croatian) is the name of two daily newspapers (both of which spell their names 24sata): 24sata (Croatia) , Croatian daily tabloid owned by the Austrian Styria group 24 sata (Serbia) , Serbian free weekly owned by the Swiss Ringier group
24sata is a daily newspaper in Croatia. [2] It was launched by Styria Medien AG, an Austrian media group, in March 2005. [3] [4] Its first editor-in-chief, Matija Babić, [5] announced that the new newspaper would target "young, urban and modern" audiences.
24 sata (24 hours) was a weekly free newspaper in Belgrade, founded by Ringier in October 2006. It used to have circulation figures of around 150,000. [ 1 ] On April 1, 2011, the 1,167th issue of the newspaper was published. [ 2 ]
It was founded in 1937 by Jan Stachniuk.It published a monthly political and cultural bulletin Zadruga.The group that coalesced around this bulletin was the most active neopagan group during the 1918–1939 period in Poland, with around 300 followers in 1939.
Dnevnik HRT was started on 29 November 1956 within an experimental schedule on Zagreb TV as a weekly news broadcast. In 1959, the program was cancelled and replaced by then-Belgrade TV's Dnevnik, as the institution of the Yugoslav Radio Television (JRT) resulted in forming a unitary broadcasting schedule between Belgrade, Zagreb and Ljubljana TV.