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Topic: Banovina


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In the News (Fri 4 Dec 09)

  
  The Constitution of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1931)
The Coast Banovina is bounded on the north by the southern boundaries already drawn of the Sava and Vrbas Banovinas as far as the intersection of the limits of the three districts of Jajce, Bugojno and Travnik (Rakovce, hill 1217).
The Zeta Banovina is bounded on the north by the southern boundaries of the Coast and Drina Banovinas, already indicated, as far as the intersection of the boundaries of the three districts of Dragacevo, Zica and Studenica.
The Morava Banovina is bounded on the north and the east by the State frontiers with Romania and Bulgaria as for as the southern boundary of the district of Luznica (at Descani Kladenac).
www.geocities.com /dagtho/yugconst19310903.html   (8310 words)

  
 Ban (title) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Ban was also the title of province administrators in the medieval Croatian state and in the kingdom of Hungary, since the 9th century.
When Croatia became a part of the Hungarian kingdom in the 12th century, the title of ban acquired the meaning of viceroy because the bans were appointed by the king, though the banate of Croatia was rarely referred to as a banat.
When the medieval Bosnian state achieved some independence in the 12th century, its rulers were also called bans, and their territory banovina, likely because of the similar suzerain status that it had towards the king of Hungary.
www.encyclopedia-online.info /Banovina   (394 words)

  
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Savska Banovina (Banovina of Sava), with its capital in Zagreb
Vrbaska banovina (Banovina of Vrbas), with its capital in Banja Luka
In 1939 the Banovina Hrvatska (Banovina of Croatia) was formed from the Primorska and Savska banovinas, with some border alterations.
publicliterature.org /en/wikipedia/k/ki/kingdom_of_yugoslavia.html   (750 words)

  
 Ban (title)'s article at Wowla Encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
The meaning of the title changed with time — the position of a ban can be compared to that of a viceroy or a duke, but neither is accurate for all historical bans.
Ban was the title of province administrators in the medieval Croatian state and in the kingdom of Hungary, since the 9th century or since ca.
A region in central Croatia, south of Sisak, is called Banovina or Banija.
encyclopedia.wowla.com /?title=Ban_(title)   (621 words)

  
 Dunavska banovina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dunavska banovina (Дунавска бановина, Banovina of Danube, Banat of Danube, Danubian Banat) was a province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941.
Capital city of Dunavska banovina was Novi Sad.
Smaller Dunavska banovina (including Banat and Šumadija) existed as part of Serbia between 1941 and 1944 and its capital city was Smederevo.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Dunavska_banovina   (233 words)

  
 Drinska banovina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Drinska banovina was one of the chief provinces of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
The Yugoslavian banovinas were intentionally not related to ethnic boundaries.
The Drinska banovina was created in 1929, and ceased to exist along with the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1941.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Drinska_banovina   (90 words)

  
 banovina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
It is thought that this word originates from Sarmatian "Bajan"; it also bears similarity with Khan.
Teritory over which a ban rules is Banovina (in Bosnia) and Banat (in Wallachia).
Ban was also title for province administrator in Kingdom of Yugoslavia; each of the provinces was also called Banovina.
www.yourencyclopedia.net /Banovina.html   (159 words)

  
 History of the Assembly of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Banovina Palace, nowadays the building of the AP Vojvodina Assembly, used to be the residence of the Danube Banovina Governor.
After the Second World War and throughout the mid-fifties, in the representative rooms of Banovina Palace, beside the seat of the National Assembly of Vojvodina promulgated by the Constitution of FNRJ of 31st January 1946, there also was the Military Club, in which various cultural events took place.
At present, Banovina Palace is the seat of the Assembly of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina.
www.skupstinavojvodine.sr.gov.yu /english/istorija.asp   (318 words)

  
 Croatian Bannate in Yugoslavia (1939-1941)
Banovina Hrvatska was created in 1939 by the agreement Cvetkovic-Macek (Cvetkovic being prime-minister of Yugoslavia, and Macek leader of HSS, Croatian peasants' party supported by more than 90% of the votes from Croatians at the time).
Banovina (Banate) was the name of administrative divisions of Yugoslavia between the two world wars.
The flag used in Banovina Hrvatska was the Croatian tricolour.
www.fotw.net /FLAGS/hr-1939.html   (781 words)

  
 Feral Tribune, Walls Of Banovina, by Predrag LUCIC, May 9, 2003   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
In Split, May 6 is traditionally marked as one of the most important dates in the history of the city.
Thus, we got another page in the ignominious history of the attitude of Split and its residents with respect to the slain young man. This one apparently aims to become and be accepted as the historical truth.
I was in front of the Banovina building on May 6, 1991, at the time when shots were fired from the mass of "unarmed people" at the building.
www.ex-yupress.com /feral/feral222.html   (486 words)

  
 Previous Section Next Section Table of Contents
Croatia was divided into the 15,649 square mile Banovina of Savska, primarily Croatia proper and Slavonia, and the 7,587 square mile Banovina of Primorska, primarily Dalmatia.
While some traditionally Bosnian territory was added to Primorska Banovina, the oil and mineral rich region of Srijem, Croatian since 1718, went to the Serbian Banovina of Dunavska.
The new Croatian Banovina was connected to Yugoslavia only in matters of defense, foreign relations and a common postal system.
voiceofcroatia.net /Croatia-Myth-and-Reality-Myth8.htm   (1934 words)

  
 Croatia: Myth and Reality   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
He was a former mayor of Nis and a person open to negotiation concerning the "Croatian Question." The result was the Sporazum or "Agreement" of August 26, 1939 which formed the semi-autonomous Banovina of Croatia covering 38,600 square miles with a population of almost four and one-half million, 80 per cent of whom were Croatian.
Its borders included all of the two previous Banovinas, portions of western Bosnia and a portion of western Hercegovina.
The formation of the Banovina of Croatia was a gesture that could have saved Yugoslavia in 1918, but coming only a week before the outbreak of World War II, it was simply too little, much too late.
www.studiacroatica.com /libros/mythe/mfro03.htm   (704 words)

  
 AEH: EUR.INST: Zagreb Fair and the Participation of Banovina Croatia at International Fairs (1939-1941)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Banovina Croatia participated in some European fairs at Budapest, Leipzig and Vienna with its own pavilion, as part of the bigger Yugoslav pavilion.
It was a great opportunity for Banska Vlast (the government in Zagreb) to present the economical, cultural and touristic potentials of Banovina Croatia, as well as to inform international visitors about the new borders of the autonomous Croatian territory within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
"Zagreb Fair and the participation of Banovina Croatia at the international fairs (1939-1941)." Zbornik Mire Kolar-Dimitrijevic, FFpress, Zagreb 2003, 379-394.
www.eh.net /pipermail/abstracts/2005-April/000664.html   (194 words)

  
 Croatia-Myth and Reality - Myth:"Borders were drawn to benifit Croatia"
The result was the "Sporazum" or Agreement of August 26, 1939 which formed the semi-autonomous Banovina of Croatia covering 38,600 square miles with a population of almost four and one-half million, 80 percent of whom were Croatian.
The new Croatian Banovina was connected to Yugoslavia only in matters of defence, foreign relations and a common postal system.
The foundation of the Banovina of Croatia was a gesture that could have saved Yugoslavia in 1918, but coming only a week before the outbreak of World War II, it was simply too little, much too late.
www.hic.hr /books/myth-reality/p09.htm   (2105 words)

  
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia - InfoSearchPoint.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Internally, the Kingdom was divided into provinces, each of them called banovina.
Their borders were intentionally drawn in such a way that they did not adhere to national borders and they were named after geographical features.
In 1939 Banovina Hrvatska (Banovina of Croatia) was formed from Primorska and Savska banovina with some border alterations.
www.infosearchpoint.com /display/Kingdom_of_Yugoslavia   (280 words)

  
 [MGSA-L] On the 'controversial' map depicting'unredeemedterritories' of Macedonia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
In fact, the name "Vardarska Banovina" was imposed not after 1913 but after the royal Coup d' Etat in 1929, when the "Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes" was renamed as "Yugoslavia" and all its nine provinces were also renamed after their rivers (i.e.
Drinska Banovina, Dunavska Banovina, Moravska Banovina, etc) -so that the respective "ethnic" names were supressed in favor of a unique (and serb-controlled) "yugoslav" identity (article 83 of the 1931 Constitution).
As for the "lack of credence" here is the prevailing situation > during the same Banovina: > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
maillists.uci.edu /mailman/public/mgsa-l/2004-December/004532.html   (230 words)

  
 An International Symposium "Southeastern Europe 1918-1995"
Consequently, an agreement on August 26, 1939 allowed the establishment of a separate Croatian Banovina within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia with its own government, parliament, legislative, administrative and judicial autonomy, which could not be taken away or decreased without the permission of the Banovina itself.
The Banovina had an area of 65,456 km, with a population of 4,025,601 (according to the 1931 census): 70.1% were Croatians, 19.1% were Serbians and 10.8% were listed as "others".
All the parts of the Croatian Banovina in which Serbians were the majority, as well as those which Serbians considered of geostrategic and political importance, for resistance preparations (Knin, for example), were to be annexed to the "Serbian lands", all of which intensified international relations.
www.hic.hr /books/seeurope/013e-dizdar.htm   (7399 words)

  
 Vrbaska banovina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
Vrbaska banovina (Banovina of Vrbas) was a province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941.
Capital city of Vrbaska banovina was Banja Luka.
In 1941, the Axis Powers occupied Vrbaska banovina; province was abolished and attached to the Independent State of Croatia.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/V/Vrbaska-banovina.htm   (230 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Republic of Macedonia Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
The Republic contains roughly 38% of the area and nearly 44% of the population of the geographical region known as Macedonia, the remainder of which is divided between neighbouring Greece (with about half of the total) and Bulgaria (with under a tenth).
The lands governed by the Republic of Macedonia were known as the Vardarska banovina before 1945.
The lands governed by the Republic of Macedonia were known as the Vardarska banovina between 1929 and 1945, and as Socialist Republic of Macedonia between 1963 and 1991.
www.ipedia.com /republic_of_macedonia.html   (914 words)

  
 City of Nis   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
he Banovina Palace is a two-storey building which faces two streets.
In the first year of World War I, when Niš was the war capital of Serbia, all the political and diplomatic activities of the Serbian government took place there.
The building is today the seat of the Rectorate of Niš University and a number of other important institutions are today situated in this building.
www.nis.org.yu /grad/city/zgr_bane.html   (109 words)

  
 CROATIAN LONG-TERM STRATEGY OF THE BOSNIA PARTITION - HERCEG BOSNA :: Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina ::
Had Tudjman wished to resurrect the Banovina Hrvatska/Croatia in the 1939 boundaries, he couldn't possibly have done so without incorporating the overwhelming majority of Bosnian Posavina, which had been so vital a part of Cvetkovic-Macek Banovina 1939 agreement.
Since "Banovina fixation" and "territorial swap" are mutually exclusive- another myth goes down the toilet.
The two geopolitical aims, Banovina (less than 1/3 of BandH, with almost exclusively Croatian population) and the "napkin Croatia" (more than 2/3 of Bosnia and Herzegovina, with Bosnian Muslims outnumbering Bosnian Croats in ratio surpassing 2.5/1, completely annexed into a hypothetical greater Croatia) are irreconcilable.
www.hercegbosna.org /engleski/myths.html   (4420 words)

  
 History of Eastern Croatia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
However in 1939 the Serbs were forced to loosen their grip on the other republics with the creation of the Croatian Banovina which comprised partly historical Croatian territory but also regions from Bosnia and Herzegovina which were inhabited by Croats.
All of Eastern Slavonia and Western Srijem formed an integral part of this Banovina as well as all of the territory that today forms part of Croatia.
During the 2nd world war, Croatia acquired the status of independent state and comprised all of Slavonia, Srijem, Bosnia and Herzegovina except Istria and part of Dalmatia which was occupied by Italy.
jagor.srce.hr /svjedoci/east/2str.html   (260 words)

  
 WHKMLA : Croatia within Yugoslavia, 1929-1941
The assassination of Stipe Radic caused a series of demonstrations in Zagreb, on the occasion of which there were several casualties.
Dubrovnik (historic Ragusa) was in the Zeta Banovina which further contained Montenegro and Kosovo; parts of eastern Slavonia were included in the Danube Banovina.
The banovina was granted a certain degree of autonomy (in the fields of internal affairs, education, industry, trade); moderate Croatians thus had finally achieved a long-term goal.
www.zum.de /whkmla/region/balkans/croat19291941.html   (440 words)

  
 VLADKO MAČEK AND LEGAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE AUTONOMOUS BANOVINA OF CROATIA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-29)
The second denotes the most outstanding Croatian legal experts who were involved together with Dr. Maček in the development of legal pattern of the Autonomous Banovina of Croatia.
The third segment of the analysis implies the organization of government of the Autonomous Banovina of Croatia as the first stage in further federative reorganization of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
The fourth chapter observes the most significant regulations referring the organization structure while the fifth, conclusive chapter presents the Author's conclusive remarks appraising Vladko Maček (period from 1939 up to 1941) not only as the political leader but moreover as the most persistent normative constructor of the Autonomous Banovina of Croatia.
www.pravri.hr /en/collectedpapers/v22_s1/14Sirotkovic1.html   (167 words)

  
 Amazon.com All Products Search Results
Map showing banovinas in 1929 (Vrbaska banovina is coloured green,...
banovina (Banovina of Vrbas) was a province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia...
banovina was one of the chief provinces of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
www.independentcommerce.com /icdirectory/keyword.asp?keyword=banovina   (135 words)

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