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Topic: Vardarska Banovina


In the News (Fri 24 May 13)

  
  Vardarska Banovina   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Vardarska banovina (Banovina of Biology - Vardarska banovina.
Vardarska banovina (Banovina of Vardar), with its capital in Skopje from the Primorska...
/Vardarska banovina) was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom and Serbian :
vardarskabmpy.adhulpukxe.info   (555 words)

  
 kingdom_of_yugoslavia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
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).
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.
Banovina of Croatia (Banovina Hrvatska), with its capital in Zagreb (1939 - 1941)
www.vitabuzz.com /wiki/?title=Kingdom_of_Yugoslavia   (3511 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Republic of Macedonia Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
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)

  
 Vardar Banovina - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Vardar Banovina or Vardar Banate or in Serbian: Вардарска бановина/Vardarska banovina) was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941.
The Vardar Banovina is bounded on the north by the boundaries...
of the Zeta and Morava Banovinas, and on the east, south and west by the State frontiers with Bulgaria, Greece, and Albania.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Vardar_Banovina   (230 words)

  
 Mailgate: soc.culture.slovenia: Re: Nema vise Jugoslavije   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Well, the large portion of the populace in Vardarska was uneducated.
Through education Tito managed to infuse to the kids (and from them in a small degree their parents) the belief they are Macedonians.
The reasons for Vardarska to be called "Macedonia" are long gone since there is no way they can annex Macedonia (northern Greece), and Greece is not interested in Vardarska since forever.
mailgate.supereva.it /soc/soc.culture.slovenia/msg08764.html   (350 words)

  
 macedonia :: vardar macedonia (1913-1946)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
To revenge the killing of colonists at Kadrifakovo and of soldiers in the village of Garvan, all the adult males from the village were taken and shot, without trial.
In order to maintain "law and order" in Vardar Macedonia, now renamed Vardarska Banovina (the Vardar Regional District), 35,000 soldiers, military policemen, frontier guards and paramilitary bands were deployed.
In a letter sent by the zhupans (heads of administrative districts) and the military police commanders in Vardar Macedonia to the Prime Minister and the Minister for Internal Affairs dated December 1927, a dozen measures were proposed under the pretext of combating infiltrators.
macedonia.cjb.net /history/20vek_vardar.htm   (2345 words)

  
 Slavic stealing of Greek symbols for propaganda purposes.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
The officials of Vardarska use the star of Vergina as their "national"
The state of Vardarska isn't connected, by any means, with the ancient
The state of Vardarska isn't connected, by any means, with the
www.newsbackup.com /about675961.html   (434 words)

  
 [MGSA-L] On the 'controversial' map depicting 'unredeemedterritories' of Macedonia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Comes from the river Vardar, hence Vardarian Banovina, a name given to the Serbian part of Macedonia after the partition in 1913.
As for the "lack of credence" here is the prevailing situation during the same Banovina: http://www.gate.net/~mango/Rossos_British_FO.htm >at the time of the re-appearance of a number of controversial maps in official documents and school textbooks in FYROM.
This is especially relevant given the fact that only 20% of the territory of FYROM >corresponds to what is commonly accepted as 'historic Macedonia' All the maps follow the generally accepted boundaries of geographic Macedonia.
maillists.uci.edu /mailman/public/mgsa-l/2004-December/004586.html   (1367 words)

  
 republic of macedonia - Article and Reference from OnPedia.com
After the First World War Serbia joined the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.
In 1929, the kingdom was officially renamed Yugoslavia and divided into provinces called "banovinas".
The territory of the modern Republic of Macedonia became the Province of Vardar (Vardarska banovina).
www.onpedia.com /encyclopedia/Republic-of-Macedonia   (1487 words)

  
 [MGSA-L] On the 'controversial' map depicting'unredeemedterritories' of Macedonia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
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)

  
 [No title]
To this date no solution has been found and the UN deadline of September 13, 2002 has passed by with the two countries only agreeing to extend discussions on this matter for one more year.
Before 1944 the area that later comprised of the former Yugoslavia's southern republic was not called Macedonia but was called Vardarska Banovina (Province -of the river- Vardar).
It was in 1944 that (Joseph Broz) Marshal Tito, the Communist dictator ruling Yugoslavia at that time, created Yugoslavia's southern republic and called it "Socialist Republic of Macedonia".
www.amigopos.com /mig.htm   (745 words)

  
 The Soros Foundation in Balkan Politics
Bruck prints Macedonia, she is not refering to the classic Macedonia, which is in Greece, but she refers to the Former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia, formerly known as Vardarska Banovina.
The Macedonia that excited Soros was of province of Yugoslavia once know as Vardar Banovina; it was renamed the Republic of Macedonia in 1945 by Marshal Tito.
Its populace varied, the largest portion being Slavs, whose ancestors had arrived in the region a thousand years after the most famous Macedonians of all, Philip II and his son, Alexander the Great.
users.hol.gr /~ankar/Macedonia/soros.html   (2063 words)

  
 Macedonia - A wikipage containing historical fact...
After the demise of the Ottoman Turkey the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest of 1913 Greece was awarded the south geographical part of Macedonia, Serbia the north geographical part, and Bulgaria was awarded a small northeastern geographical part of Macedonia.
The Serbs called their part South Serbia and later Vardarska Banovina, which included the whole territory of the FYROM, Kosovo and part of present-day south-eastern Serbia.
It was in 1944 that Marshal Joseph Broz Tito, the communist dictator ruling Yugoslavia at that time, created Yugoslavia's southern republic and called it "People’s Republic of Macedonia" and in 1963 "Socialist Republic of Macedonia" for purely political and expansionist reasons.
macedonia.pbwiki.com   (3467 words)

  
 [No title]
SSM has expressed disgust at SRP, which has called for the creation of a Serbian Republic in Macedonia, known as "Vardarska Banovina." SSM has described SRP's statements as a direct attack on all ethnic groups living in Macedonia, including ethnic Serbs and Montenegrins.
An Albanian army colonel has told the Croatian newspaper, Nedeljna Dalmacija, that the Albanian political leadership and ethnic Albanian leaders from Kosovo had agreed to a joint action in Kosovo should Serbia start a conflict in that province.
srpska republika "Vardarska banovina", od strana na navodnite clenovi na sobranieto na Radikalnata partija vo Makedonija, spored zdruzenieto, pretstavuva najobicna provokacija.
www.b-info.com /places/Macedonia/republic/news/101-200/170.1   (3012 words)

  
 TGA Media Report
The Slavs did not arrive in the region until the sixth century AD.
Until 1944, the area that is now legally referred to as the FYROM was called "Vardarska Banovina".
The Hellenic name of Macedonia was usurped by Yugoslavia's Communist dictator Marshall Broz Tito when he sought to gain access to the Aegean Sea by attempting to annex the province of Macedonia from neighboring Greece.
www.greece.org /projects/themis/macedonia/media2.htm   (297 words)

  
 Snapshot of Europe: Macedonia
The region is divided between Greece, with roughly half of the area and population, split between the three peripheries of Central Macedonia, West Macedonia, and East Macedonia and Thrace; the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia¤, with around 40%; and Bulgaria, with less than a tenth, in Blagoevgrad Province.
The Greek part is sometimes referred to (by non-Greeks mainly) as Greek Macedonia or "Aegean Macedonia", the Republic of Macedonia as "Vardarska Banovina" and the Bulgarian part as Bulgarian Macedonia or "Pirin Macedonia".
The name of Macedonia has not been always used with regard to the region as defined above.
www.sheppardsoftware.com /Europeweb/snapshot/Snapshot-Europe25.htm   (719 words)

  
 Macedonia
Here the Pan-Macedonian Association skims the surface of reality and acknowledges that Slavonic peoples have been in Macedonia since 1,500 years ago.
This claim is disingenuous as the Republic of Macedonia was only referred to as Vardarska Banovina from 1913 to 1944.
The Pan-Macedonian Association is well aware that the region, now referred to as "Geographical Macedonia," was called "Macedonia" from the 4th century BC until 1912-1913, when it was forcibly occupied and partitioned among Greece, Serbia, and Bulgaria.
www.mymacedonia.net /articles/response.htm   (1638 words)

  
 Macedonian Heritage - Macedonia: A Greek Name in Modern Usage
At this point it is worth stressing that in contrast to Greek Macedonia, in the other two parts of Macedonian territory that came under the sovereignty of the neighbouring states, Bulgaria and Yugoslavia, the term ‘Macedonia’ was never used to identify an administrative region in the respective countries.
Indeed, the name chosen for the Yugoslav region between 1929 and 1939 was ‘Vardarska Banovina’.
It was only after the end of World War II, i.e.
www.macedonian-heritage.gr /MacedoniaTerm/ch3.html   (441 words)

  
 PGD 2004 Paper. Republic of Macedonia - Case of Multilateral/Multistakeholder Diploma...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
The treaty of Bucharest that marked the end of the Second Balkan war drew the borders of the Balkan countries in the region of Macedonia.
Vardar Macedonia /the territory of today’s Republic of Macedonia/ was made part of Serbia /after 1929 the Kingdom of Yugoslavia/ as Vardarska banovina.
The historians are used to consider the Macedonian question as a fragment of another problem called the Eastern Question.
textus.diplomacy.edu /thina/GetXDoc.asp?IDconv=3208   (14117 words)

  
 REPLIES TO THE
After the demise of the Ottoman Turkey under the terms of the Treaty of Bucharest of 1913, Greece was awarded the south geographical part of Macedonia, Serbia the north geographical part, and Bulgaria was awarded a small portion of the northeastern geographical part of Macedonia.
The Serbs called their part South Serbia and later Vardarska Banovina, which included the whole territory of the FYROM, Kosovo and part of present-day southeastern Serbia.
It is very true that when Greece was liberated in 1830 it did not include Macedonia.
www.panmacedonian.info /MPO.htm   (2924 words)

  
 Mailgate: soc.culture.slovenia: Re: Nema vise Jugoslavije   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Prove is that Tito renamed Vardarska > > Banovina to Macedonia in the same threat !
Do you know for > how long name Vardarska Banovina existed?
Before that it couldn't be named Vardarska Banovina because it was under Ottoman occupation.
mailgate.supereva.it /soc/soc.culture.slovenia/msg08791.html   (201 words)

  
 Letter to the National Geographic Society, March 26, 1996   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
It is precisely memories of this event that make Greeks understandably apprehensive when dealing with modern-day FYROM's expansionist overtures.
Moreover, it was expansionism into Greece's northern province of Macedonia that was the very raison d'etre of FYROM's creation and of Tito's decision to change the name of this Bulgarophonic region from Vardarska Banovina to "Macedonia".
U.S. Secretary of State Edward Stettinius, a prime architect of the UN Charter, recognized this in 1944 when he issued a warning about "Yugoslav Partisan and other sources [disseminating] increasing propaganda, rumors and semi-official statements in favor of an autonomous Macedonia.
www.hri.org /ahmp/natgeo.html   (311 words)

  
 Montenet - History of Montenegro: Montenegro in Yugoslavia, 1918-1992
Port development in the Gulf of Kotor was largely confined to military facilities; similarly, in the words of one historian, Bar in 1938 was "of very little importance".
By almost all indicators of economic well-being, the Zetska banovina (a governorship in interwar Yugoslavia that roughly corresponded to Montenegro) vied for the lowest place with the banovina of Vardarska (comprising parts of Macedonia).
Montenegro's most important export in this period was probably emigrants.
www.montenet.org /history/cginyu.htm   (737 words)

  
 macedonia :: skopje   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-05)
Skopje got a significant buildings: Assembly, Army House, National Bank, new Railway Station (1938) as well as many other.
The city became a seat of a larger district in southern Yugoslavia, Vardarska Banovina, which included all Vardar Macedonia, parts of Kosovo and Metohija and southeastern Serbia.
Being a seat, during the Second World War (1941-1945), Skopje became one of the first victim-cities, it was bombed by Fascist planes on April 6
macedonia.cjb.net /cities/city_skopje.htm   (4911 words)

  
 Greek News - What’s in name …
According to Nina Gatzoulis, Vice President of the Pan-Macedonian Association, "there are plenty of names the people of FYROM can choose from because when the Slavs settled in the Balkans at the end of the 6th century AD, there were about 11 tribes.
Up to 1945, when the Communist dictator Tito named this southern part of Yugoslavia “Macedonia,” the area in which they are settled now was called Vardarska Banovina (Province of Vardar).
The following historical review will shed further light on the issue.
www.greeknewsonline.com /modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=2229   (610 words)

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