Suchergebnisse
Filter
Format
Medientyp
Sprache
Weitere Sprachen
Jahre
1333 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
Croat-Slovene talks
In: Keesing's record of world events: record of national and internat. current affairs with continually updated indexes ; Keesing's factual reports are based on information obtained from press, broadcasting, official and other sources, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 39870
ISSN: 0950-6128
World Affairs Online
le renouveau croate
In: Politique internationale: pi, Heft 71, S. 9-24
ISSN: 0221-2781
Le renouveau croate
In: Politique internationale: pi, Heft 71, S. 9-22
ISSN: 0221-2781
World Affairs Online
Asymetries serbo-croates
In: Politique internationale: pi, Heft 55, S. 67-80
ISSN: 0221-2781
World Affairs Online
The Croats in Albania
In: Journal of Croatian studies: annual review of the Croatian Academy of America, Band 1, S. 25-31
ISSN: 2475-269X
Nationalism among the Croats
In: Zbornik Matice Srpske za društvene nauke: Proceedings for social sciences, Heft 116-117, S. 103-146
ISSN: 2406-0836
These are the three lectures about Croatian nationalism presented in the Serbian Culture Club in 1940. They review the history of the Croato-Serbian relations in a specific way, from the time when the Serbs settled in the regions of the former Croatian medieval state, after the Turkish conquest of the Balkans, after the fall of Bosnia in 1463 and after the Moh?cs Battle in 1526, till the period preceding World War II. Comparing Serbian and Croatian nationalism, the author points out that nationalism among the Croats appeared relatively late, that it did not have deeper folk roots and that at first it was the nationalism of the upper class. It was a feudal-estate nationalism but later there also appeared Austro-Catholic nationalism of the lower class in the regions under the Habsburgs. Enmity, hatred towards the Serbs and Serbophobia were the common features of these two nationalisms. The author points out that the feudal-estate nationalism of the upper class was caused by the state-legal and agrarian-legal regulation in the regions of the former Croatian kingdom settled by the Serbs. These regions, under the name of Military Border, were granted a special legal system. As for their state-legal status, the Serbs were completely excluded from the rule of the Croatian Ban the Croatian Assembly, and were under the jurisdiction of the Austrian military commanders ? therefore, directly under Vienna. As for the agrarian-legal status, Vienna completely freed the inhabitants of the Border from all taxes for the Croatian gentry, who had owned these regions before the Turkish offensive; the reason was to motivate the Serbs for permanent military service at the Border and to use these regulations to lure new Serbs-solders from the neighbouring Turkish Empire. And the dynastic-catholic nationalism of the lower class clashed with the Serbs, inhabitants of the Border, primarily because of the religious intolerance, of the irresistable desire to convert the Serbs into Catholicism. In addition, envy towards the Serbs in the Border area ? warriors and free men ? began to develop more and more among the Croatian peasants in the Ban?s Croatia, in the so-called provincial, who still remained the serfs of their gentry. The author underlines that the Croatian Serbophobias have deep historical and social roots, and points to the typical historical facts which confirm that. Croatian nationalism withdrew only sporadically before the Illyrian Yugoslavism, which saw several rises and falls in Croatia. Yugoslavism was strengthened only when the pressure from Vienna, Pest or the Italians was stronger and, secondly, it worked only when there were chances to realize it from Zagreb, not from Belgrade. As soon as one of these two conditions was not met, Croatian spirit exclusively prevailed. The author disagrees with those who believed that the Croatian nationalism could have been neutralized by decentralization, federalization and democratization of the common state. He thinks that the Croatian nationalist movement did not want a just arrangement of the relations with the Serbs, but Croatia with the border on the Drina, in which the Serbian nation would be stifled with the use of "modern" methods. Therefore, he believes that only a resolute resistance of the Serbs in the defence of their interests could stop Croatian chauvinism.
Serbs, Croats, and Russians
In: Radio London and Resistance in Occupied Europe, S. 328-341
Modern Serbo-Croat Lyrics
In: Slavonic Year-Book. American Series, Band 1, S. 223
Réfugiés Serbo-Croates en Islande
In: Hommes & migrations: première revue française des questions d'immigration, Band 1205, Heft 1, S. 74-81
ISSN: 2262-3353
En août dernier, une petite ville d'Islande , au nord-ouest du pays , a pris l'initiative d'accueillir trente-cinq réfugiés serbo-croates, grâce a une action concertée entre la Croix-Rouge , le gouvernement islandais et les habitants de cette localité, qui ont participé bénévolement à la préparation de cette opération. Pris en charge financièrement par l'Etat pendant une année, les réfugiés sont parrainés par des familles hôtes pour gérer les difficultés du quotidien. Plus qu'un refuge, c'est une véritable intégration que les Islandais leur proposent. Cette expérience novatrice ouvre la voie à une conception originale du droit d'asile, qui privilégie une politique d'accueil limitative mais qualitative.
Bosnian Croat grievances: Hardline desperation
In: Strategic comments: in depth analysis of strategic issues from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, Band 7, Heft 4, S. 1-2
ISSN: 1356-7888
Bosnia: Muslim-Croat federation accord
In: Keesing's record of world events: record of national and internat. current affairs with continually updated indexes ; Keesing's factual reports are based on information obtained from press, broadcasting, official and other sources, Band 40, Heft 3, S. 39918
ISSN: 0950-6128
Royaume des Serbes, Croates et Slovènes
In: Revue internationale de la Croix-Rouge et Bulletin international des sociétés de la Croix-Rouge, Band 11, Heft 122, S. 139
ISSN: 1607-5889