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29 June 1951 [19] Popovac bus accident Crash: Popovac: 14 30 September 1967 [12] Pojatno bus accident Crash: Pojatno: 14 22 September 1989 [12] A1 bus crash Crash: A1 highway near Gospić: 14 7 September 2008 [20] August Cesarec fire Fire: Adriatic Sea: 12 18 September 1971 [18] 2007 Kornat fire: Fire: Kornat: 12 30 August 2007 [21] A4 bus ...
This is a list of earthquakes in 1941. Only magnitude 6.0 or greater earthquakes appear on the list. Lower magnitude events are included if they have caused death, injury or damage. Events which occurred in remote areas will be excluded from the list as they wouldn't have generated significant media interest. All dates are listed according to ...
The June 1941 uprising in eastern Herzegovina began when Serbs in eastern Herzegovina rebelled against the authorities of the Independent State of Croatia. Born: Robert Hunter, poet, singer and songwriter, in San Luis Obispo, California (d. 2019) Died: Frederick Gottwald, 82, American painter
26 March 1502: Medvednica: VIII: The earliest recorded earthquake in Zagreb; destroyed the tower of the St. Mark's Church. [1] [3] 26 March 1511: Slovenia: X: Intensity of MCS VII in Rijeka and VI in Zagreb. [4] Severely damaged the Zagreb Cathedral. See 1511 Idrija earthquake: 28 July 1516: Dubrovnik: IX [5] 15 September 1590: Austria: VII–IX
The star marks the epicenter of a strong earthquake that rattled Croatia on Sunday morning, local time. (USGS) A strong earthquake rattled Zagreb on Sunday morning, local time, killing at least ...
Ivan Šubašić was appointed Ban of Croatia. 1941: 25 March: World War II: Prince Paul signed the Tripartite Pact, pledging support to the Axis Powers. 27 March: Yugoslav military coup of 27 March 1941: A military coup overthrew the Regency and declared Peter II to be of age. [citation needed] 6 April: World War II in Yugoslavia begins 6 April
Earthquake locations are taken from the Centennial Catalog [1] and the updated Engdahl, van der Hilst and Buland earthquake catalog, [2] which is complete to December 2005. From January 2006, earthquake locations are from the United States Geological Survey 's Preliminary Determination of Epicenters (PDE) [ 3 ] monthly listing.
A deadly, massive earthquake has left much of the Balkan Peninsula rattled on Tuesday. A magnitude 6.3 earthquake shook central Croatia, followed up by aftershocks that registered a magnitude 4.4 ...