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The region bounded by the Adriatic Sea to the west, Austria and Hungary to the north, the Danube to the east, and the highlands of Thrace, Macedonia, and Albania to the south. Fragmented in both geography and politics, this mountainous land has been a battleground between east and west for millennia. Contains: Albania, Bosnia, Federation of Bosnia and Hercegovina, Brcko, (Dalmatian) Croatia, (Pannonian) Croatia, Dalmatia, Dioclea, Dunav, Durres, Fiume, Girokaster, Hercegovina, Hum and the Coast, Illyria, Kalemegdan, Korçë, Kosovo, Krajina, Kumanovo, (Slavic) Macedonia, Maczva, Mirditë, Montenegro, Neretva, Ohrid, Ragusa, Serbia, the Serbian Patriarchs, Slavonia, Srpska, Syrmia, Rascia, Yugoslavia, Tribalia, Vojvodina, Zahumlje, and Zeta.
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CROATIA
(Dalmatian) The Croatians
are a Serbo-Croatian people speaking
the Croatian dialect of that language. They are Roman Catholic for the
most part, and use the Latin alphabet. See also the Pannonian
Croats (Hungary) and the White Croats
(Poland) for other branches of this people.
DALMATIA
The
heavily indented and island-strewn eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea.
RAGUSA
(Dubrovnik) An important and picturesque seaport on the Croatian
coast of the Adriatic, this city has been a unique blend of Italian and
Slavic cultures since its founding, more than 1300 years ago. An autonomous
city within the Hungarian-controlled Kingdom of Croatia from 1358, it became
a protectorate of the Ottoman Empire 1526-1806, which did not abuse or
molest the Republic, since it found Ragusa's status as a free port useful.
Governed by France during the first years of the 19th century, it was granted
as an apanage Dukedom to one of Napoleons Marshals.
SERBIA
The
Serbs are a Serbo-Croatian people
who speak the Serbian dialect of that language. They are Serbian Orthodox
in faith, and use the Cyrillic alphabet. In vassalage to the Ottoman Empire
from the disaster of Kossovo in 1389, Serbia was annexed outright in 1459.
In the modern era, the Karageorge rebellion of 1804 represents independence
from the Ottoman Empire. The Obrenovic government of 1817 was locally autonomous,
and recognized by the Ottoman government as an autonomous dependent Principality
in 1833. A fully independent Kingdom was established in 1882. The Kingdom
of Serbia became the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes in 1918 and,
finally, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1921; but Yugoslavia was dismembered
in 1941, and the Kingdom of Serbia was once more brought into existence.
Yugoslavia was reconstituted in 1945 as a Communist Republic but the state
was once more pulled asunder by internal divisions following the collapse
of Communism in the West. Yugoslavia still exists, albeit much smaller,
currently it comprises Serbia and Montenegro.