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Topic: Dunavska banovina


In the News (Fri 17 May 13)

  
  Danube Banovina Information
The Danube Banovina or Danube Banate (Serbian and Croatian: Дунавска бановина/Dunavska banovina; Hungarian: Dunai Bánság; German: Donau-Banschaft) was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941.
The Danube Banovina is bounded on the south-west by the boundaries...
In 1939, when the new Banovina of Croatia was formed, Šid and Ilok districts were transferred from the Danube Banovina to Banovina of Croatia.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Danube_Banovina   (394 words)

  
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Savska Banovina (Banovina of Sava), with its capital in Zagreb
Vrbaska banovina (Banovina of Vrbas), with its capital in Banja Luka
Dunavska banovina (Banovina of Danube), with its capital in Novi Sad
publicliterature.org /en/wikipedia/k/ki/kingdom_of_yugoslavia.html   (803 words)

  
 Vojvodina Information Center - sta je to vojvodina
Between 1929 and 1941, Dunavska banovina (the province of Danube) was a province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Dunavska banovina consisted of Srem, Bačka, Banat, Baranja and Šumadija.
A smaller Dunavska banovina (including Banat and Šumadija) existed as part of Serbia between 1941 and 1944.
www.scipeeps.com /Sci-Official_Languages_T_-_Z/Vojvodina.html   (1125 words)

  
  Drinska Banovina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
banovina was one of the chief provinces of the The Drinska was Sa...
The Drinska banovina was one of the chief provinces of Yugoslavia.
The Drina Banovina or Drina Banate of Yugoslavia banovina) / Drinska : was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom (Serbian and Bosnian...
drinskafjkm.aszius.info   (539 words)

  
 Danube Banovina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Danube Banovina or Danube Banate (Serbian and Croatian: Дунавска бановина/Dunavska banovina; Hungarian: Dunai Bánság; German: Donau-Banschaft) was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941.
The Danube Banovina is bounded on the south-west by the boundaries...
In 1939, when the new Banovina of Croatia was formed, Šid and Ilok districts were transferred from the Danube Banovina to Banovina of Croatia.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Danube_Banovina   (430 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Accordingly, on 26 August 1939, Vladko Maček became vice premier of Yugoslavia and an autonomous Banovina of Croatia was established with its own parliament (sabor).
Banovina of Croatia (Banovina Hrvatska), with its capital in Zagreb (1939 - 1941)
As an accommodation to Yugoslav Croats, the; Banovina of Croatia (Banovina Hrvatska) was formed in 1939 from a merger of the Maritime and Sava Banovinas, with some additional territory from the Vrbas and Zeta Banovinas.
en.encyclopediahome.com /wiki/Kingdom_of_Serbs,_Croats_and_Slovenes   (3576 words)

  
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia - WikiKamusi   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
a na -badili leo isimu -a leo dola fika miliki -a yugoslavia aidha -badili leo arki kataa katika leo 33 oblasts fika kenda -geni banovinas fi 3 mwezi wa kumi.
katika 1929, leo miliki was subdivided miango kenda -geni eneos danganyo banovinas.
kama dhana malazi fika Yugoslav wakorasia, leo Banovina -a korasia (Banovina Hrvatska) was dutu bi 1939 katika a merger -a leo bahari aidha Sava Banovinas, bi baadhi ya endeleo bara katika leo Vrbas aidha Zeta Banovinas.
sw.wikigadugi.org /wiki/Kingdom_of_Serbs,_Croats_and_Slovenes   (3546 words)

  
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia - Gnorx.com, the free encyclopedia
Drinska banovina (Banovina of Drina), with its capital in Sarajevo
Dunavska banovina (Banovina of Danube), with its capital in Novi Sad
In 1939 the Banovina Hrvatska (Banovina of Croatia) was formed from the Primorska and Savska banovinas, with some border alterations.
www.gnorx.com /Kingdom_of_Yugoslavia   (2656 words)

  
 Dunavska banovina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
'''Dunavska banovina''' (Banovina of Danube, Banat of Danube, Danubian Banat) was province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941.
Capital city of Dunavska banovina was Novi Sad.
Smaller Dunavska banovina (including Banat and Sumadija) existed as part of Serbia between 1941 and 1944 and its capital city was Smederevo (But Banat itself was separate autonomous region ruled by German minority).
dunavska-banovina.kiwiki.homeip.net   (297 words)

  
 Vojvodina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Between 1929 and 1941, Dunavska banovina (Danubian Banat) was Province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Dunavska banovina consisted of Srem, Backa, Banat, Baranja and Sumadija.
Smaller Dunavska banovina (including Banat and Sumadija) existed as part of Serbia Between 1941 and 1944 and its administrative centre was Smederevo.
vojvodina.iqnaut.net   (2861 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Accordingly, on 26 August 1939, Vladko Maček became vice premier of Yugoslavia and an autonomous Banovina of Croatia was established with its own parliament (sabor).
Banovina of Croatia (Banovina Hrvatska), with its capital in Zagreb (1939 - 1941)
As an accommodation to Yugoslav Croats, the Banovina of Croatia (Banovina Hrvatska) was formed in 1939 from a merger of the Maritime and Sava Banovinas, with some additional territory from the Vrbas and Zeta Banovinas.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Kingdom_of_Yugoslavia   (3543 words)

  
 Balkan history facts politics forum debate chat
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.webspawner.com /users/shmajser   (1767 words)

  
 History of Vojvodina
Between 1929 and 1941, Dunavska banovina (Danubian Banat) was province of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Dunavska banovina consisted of Srem, Backa, Banat, Baranja and Sumadija.
Smaller Dunavska banovina (including Banat and Sumadija) existed as part of Serbia between 1941 and 1944 and its administrative centre was Smederevo.
p083.ezboard.com /fbalkansfrm33.showMessage?topicID=72.topic   (5112 words)

  
 Croatia Myth&Reality: Borders were drawn to benefit Croatia
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 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.
mirror.veus.hr /myth/borders.html   (1942 words)

  
 Croatia Myth&Reality: Borders were drawn to benefit Croatia
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 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.
wap.macedonia.org /myth/borders.html   (1942 words)

  
 The Dispatch - Serving the Lexington, NC - News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
The expansion of Nazi Germany in 1938 gave new momentum to efforts to solve these problems and in 1939 Prince Paul appointed Dragiša Cvetković as prime minister, with the goal of reaching an agreement with the Croatian opposition.
Their borders were intentionally drawn so that they would not correspond either to boundaries between ethnic groups, or to pre-World War I imperial borders.
As an accommodation to Yugoslav Croats, the Banovina of Croatia (Banovina Hrvatska) was formed in 1939 from a merger of the Maritime and Sava Banovinas, with some additional territory from the Vrbas and Zeta Banovinas.
www.the-dispatch.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=NEWS&template=wiki&text=Kingdom_of_Serbs,_Croats_and_Slovenians   (3448 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)

  
 [MGSA-L] On the 'controversial' map depicting'unredeemedterritories' of Macedonia
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/004601.html   (230 words)

  
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia
Their borders were intentionally drawn in such a way that they did not adhere to national borders and they were named after geographical features.
Moravska banovina (Banovina of Morava), with its capital in Niš
In 1939 Banovina Hrvatska (Banovina of Croatia) was formed from Primorska and Savska banovina with some border alterations.
www.fact-index.com /k/ki/kingdom_of_yugoslavia.html   (489 words)

  
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia - Japan
These changes satisfied neither Serbs who were concerned with the status of the Serb minority in the new Banovina of Croatia and who wanted more of Bosnia and Herzegovina as Serbian territory.
Their borders were intentionally drawn so that they would not correspond either to boundaries between ethnic groups, or to pre-World War I imperial borders.
As an accommodation to Yugoslav Croats, the; Banovina of Croatia (Banovina Hrvatska) was formed in 1939 from a merger of the Maritime and Sava Banovinas, with some additional territory from the Vrbas and Zeta Banovinas.
kingdom-of-yugoslavia.zdnet.co.za /zdnet/Kingdom_of_Yugoslavia   (4218 words)

  
 Novi Sad - Official Website
In the Kingdom of Yugoslavia Novi Sad became the centre of "Dunavska banovina" (Danube County).
It got its first boulevard at that time, the building of the Banovina Palace and a new bridge.
The World War II brought a horrible raid of Horty's fascist army in which, within only three days, more than 1.500 inhabitants of Novi Sad were killed, most of who were the Serbs and Jews.
www.gradnovisad.org.yu /cnt/index.php?id_node=338   (915 words)

  
 THE VIDOVDAN HYDRA - The collection of texts about Serbian expansionism
One can see how such crucial decisions were determined in advance and it is immediately clear that neither the first nor the second circumstance occurred, rather the third, which ensured the separation of Boka Kotorska from her mother country.
Bosnia and Herzegovina was also divided into four banovinas through administrative means but in such a manner that the Serbs were guaranteed predominance in three of the banovinas.
Thirteen districts from Bosnia and Herzegovina and the district of Sid in Vojvodina in which the Croatian population was the majority, were annexed to the Banovina but without the Croatian historical territories of eastern Srijem, Boka Kotorska, Budva and Spic.
www.freewebs.com /index44/serbianexpansionism.htm   (17160 words)

  
 - Banovina
Banovina, Banska palata, sedište bana Dunavske banovine, (1939-1941) i Banske uprave, danas Izvršno veće i Skupština AP Vojvodine.
godine, postao prestoni grad jedne od devet jugoslovenskih Banovina.
Banovska uprava bila je sastavljena od uglednih i uspešnih građana, kao i političara i ljudi, koji su bez obzira na nacionalnu pripadnost, pripadali, po opredeljenju, integralnom jugoslovenstvu, koje je, poput banovinska podele, trebalo da oformi nove centre moći i ukloni nacionalne podele.
www.vojvodina.sr.gov.yu /index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=97&Itemid=58   (468 words)

  
 [No title]
From the central square five streets lead into the pedestrians' area and the oldest ones among them are Zmaj Jovina and Dunavska Street.
In Kingdom of Yugoslavia (the first Yugoslavia) Novi Sad became the center of the Danube Banovina.
The World War II brought a horrible Raid made by fascist Horthy forces, during which in three days Novi Sad lost 1500 of it's citizens, mainly Serbs and Jews.
www.fizika-ns.org.yu /icps/enviroment/history.html   (1035 words)

  
 Königreich Jugoslawien | THG Lexikon   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-04)
Das Königreich kehrte zur parlamentarischen Regierungsform zurück, König Alexanders Verfassung von 1929 blieb indessen in Kraft, Prinz Paul behielt den entscheidenden Einfluss.
Die Kroaten bekamen eine eigene Verwaltungseinheit, die Kroatische Banschaft (Hrvatska banovina; mit Kroatien etwa ein Drittel Bosnien-Herzegowinas), mit weitgehenden Selbstbestimmungsrechten in innerpolitischen und wirtschaftlichen Kompetenzen.
Banovina Hrvatska (Banschaft Kroatien): Zagreb (1939 Zusammenlegung zweier Banschaften durch den Cvetković-Maček Vertrag)
www.tomshardware.de /lexikon/SHS-Staat   (1091 words)

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