• National Republic of Serbia'), was one of the six constituent republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in what is now the modern day states of Serbia and the disputed territory of Kosovo. (wikipedia.org)
  • In 1963, a new Yugoslav Constitution was adopted, renaming the federal state into the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, and its federal units into socialist republics, thus introducing the name: Socialist Republic of Serbia (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Социјалистичка Република Србија). (wikipedia.org)
  • From 1963 to 1992 Serbia was one of the 6 constituent republics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. (localcollegeexplorer.com)
  • [i] However, in post-1945 Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (the SFRY) this myth, in fact, served as the focal political and moral instrument of legitimation of illegitimate and unchallenged rule of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (the CPY, since 1963 the Union of the Communists of Yugoslavia) over Yugoslavia. (global-politics.eu)
  • [v] The Communists, however, became extremely proud to formally announce that they finally succeeded to solve all national questions in Yugoslavia after 1945 by the creation of six republics as the national "states" followed by two autonomous units within Serbia (the Vojvodina province and the Kosovo-Metochia region, later on with a changed name upgraded to a provincial status). (global-politics.eu)
  • On November 29 (1945), Yugoslavia was officially proclaimed as federal republic, and in January 1946, after the first Constitution of federal Yugoslavia was adopted, the Federated State of Serbia was renamed to People's Republic of Serbia (Serbo-Croatian: Народна Република Србија / Narodna Republika Srbija). (wikipedia.org)
  • By that time, internal political life in Serbia was fully dominated by the Communist Party of Serbia, formed in May 1945 as a branch of the ruling Communist Party of Yugoslavia. (wikipedia.org)
  • In order to suppress remaining monarchist opposition, communists initiated the creation of a wider political coalition, thus establishing the People's Front of Yugoslavia (PFY), in August 1945. (wikipedia.org)
  • At the first congress in July 1945, the Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation expressed its support for the Communist Party of Yugoslavia and soon joined the People's Front of Yugoslavia, the creation of which was inspired by the Slovenian Communist Edvard Kardelj, who was the most influential theoretician of Communist ideology after the war. (communistcrimes.org)
  • Trieste was taken by the Yugoslav army between 31 April and 1 May 1945. (communistcrimes.org)
  • As a result of pressures from the Soviets, a temporary agreement was signed on 9 June 1945 in Belgrade between Arso Jovanović - Chief of Staff of the Yugoslav People's Army - and General Morgan regarding the division of Trieste and its surrounding area. (communistcrimes.org)
  • He was formally deposed by the Yugoslav parliament in 1945. (infogalactic.com)
  • The Socialist Republic of Serbia (Serbo-Croatian: Социјалистичка Република Србија / Socijalistička Republika Srbija), previously known as the People's Republic of Serbia (Serbo-Croatian: Народна Република Србија / Narodna Republika Srbija, lit. (wikipedia.org)
  • In that form, it lasted until the constitutional reforms from 1990 to 1992, when it was reconstituted, as the Republic of Serbia within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. (wikipedia.org)
  • Partisans advocated transformation of Yugoslavia into a federation, with Serbia becoming one of its federal units. (wikipedia.org)
  • In November 1944, the Anti-fascist Assembly for the People's Liberation of Serbia was convened, affirming the policy of reconstituting Yugoslavia as a federation, with Serbia as one of its federal units. (wikipedia.org)
  • Thus was laid the foundation for the creation of the Federated State of Serbia (Serbo-Croatian Cyrillic: Федерална Држава Србија), as a federated state within new Democratic Federal Yugoslavia. (wikipedia.org)
  • Two newly created regions, Autonomous Province of Vojvodina and Autonomous Region of Kosovo and Metohija, decided to merge into Serbia. (wikipedia.org)
  • Since 1992, only Serbia and Montenegro together formed the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, the other states had become independent. (localcollegeexplorer.com)
  • Kosovo, originally part of Serbia, has been under the administration of the United Nations since the war in Yugoslavia and has strived for independence, which it achieved in spring 2008 after a referendum - despite strong protests from Serbia. (localcollegeexplorer.com)
  • Therefore, the Jajce meeting in 1943 was allegedly a legitimate one as the formal representatives of all five constituent nations attended it regardless to the very fact that the representatives of Serbia were missing (they were replaced by the Serbs from other parts of Yugoslavia). (global-politics.eu)
  • The Kingdom of Montenegro had united with Serbia five days previously, while the regions of Kosovo , Vojvodina and Vardar Macedonia were parts of Serbia prior to the unification. (infogalactic.com)
  • The official brainwashed dogma became the so-called National Liberation of Yugoslavia while the personal cult of Josip Broz Tito became framed on the propaganda that self-proclaimed "Marshall" of Yugoslavia (on November 29th, 1943 in Bosnian town of Jajce) was one of the most intelligent and ingenious national leaders of the anti-fascist coalition in Europe during the wartime. (global-politics.eu)
  • This was established on 2 November following the signing of the Treaty of Vis by Ivan Šubašić (on behalf of the Kingdom) and Josip Broz Tito (on behalf of the Yugoslav Partisans ). (infogalactic.com)
  • According to this myth, the legal representatives of the five nations, irrespective of the Federal republic in which they lived in Yugoslavia, exercised once and for all their right to national self-determination by uniting in the federation of six republics finally established in January 1946. (global-politics.eu)
  • After WWII, the official state-sponsored myth, based on notorious lies and forged historical facts, of the anti-fascist combat and the liberation of Yugoslavia by Tito's Partisans acquired a political life of its own until the 1990s. (global-politics.eu)
  • Its formation was initiated in 1941, and achieved in 1944-1946, when it was established as a federated republic within Yugoslavia. (wikipedia.org)
  • The Communist dictatorship was formally legalized by the first post-war Constitution (January 31st, 1946) which abolished the monarchy and proclaimed the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia. (global-politics.eu)
  • After liberating Slovenia from Nazis and establishing the new state of Yugoslavia, Communists went after the anti-Communist Slovene Home Guard militia who had retreated to Austria and surrendered to British troops. (communistcrimes.org)
  • The Communist Party of Slovenia was a branch of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia from 1937. (communistcrimes.org)
  • These five nations (originally without later on recognized Bosnian-Herzegovinian Muslims [iv] ) allegedly performed at the Second Meeting of the Communist-dominated National Liberation Council of Yugoslavia (the NLCY), on November 29th‒30th, 1943 in Jajce (in mid-Bosnia-Herzegovina) when a new Yugoslavia was declaratively proclaimed. (global-politics.eu)
  • After the collapse of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in the April War (1941), the entire country was occupied and partitioned between Axis powers. (wikipedia.org)
  • Based on its revolutionary ideology, the victorious CPY intended to create a new state and a new society which would have no relations to the former capitalist and parliamentary the Kingdom of Yugoslavia except in the name. (global-politics.eu)
  • Location and extent of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in Europe during the 1930s. (infogalactic.com)
  • [5] The official name of the state was changed to "Kingdom of Yugoslavia" by King Alexander I on 3 October 1929. (infogalactic.com)
  • The interwar Yugoslavia developed a myth of the „three ethnic tribes of the same ethnic nation" as it was assumed that the Slovenes, the Croats, and the Serbs have been of the same ethnolinguistic origin sharing the same or very similar (Yugoslav) cultural, custom, linguistic and tradition features and having the same historical destiny to struggle for the national (Yugoslav) unification what was finally realized on December 1st, 1918. (global-politics.eu)
  • Федерална Држава Србија ), as a federated state within new Democratic Federal Yugoslavia . (cloudfront.net)
  • In 1944, he accepted the formation of Democratic Federal Yugoslavia , along with a temporary vacancy in the position of head of state . (infogalactic.com)
  • In 1944, after pressure from the British Prime Minister Winston Churchill , the King recognized the government of Democratic Federal Yugoslavia as the legitimate government. (infogalactic.com)
  • The border with Croatia had, for the most part, remained unchanged since 1941 (running along the frontier of the Drava Banovina and the Sava Banovina), while the border in the territory of Istria, ceded to Yugoslavia, was established in 1944. (communistcrimes.org)
  • Slovene: Slovenija [slɔˈʋèːnija]), officially the Republic of Slovenia (Slovene: Republika Slovenija ⓘ, abbr. (biagiociardo.it)
  • For its first eleven years of existence, the Kingdom was officially called the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes , but the term "Yugoslavia" was its colloquial name from its origins. (infogalactic.com)
  • The former Yugoslavia was a Socialist state created after German occupation in World War II and a bitter civil war. (biagiociardo.it)
  • He was also president of the Grand National Assembly (1949-50), minister of state security (1952-53), head of the State Department of Security (1953-57), and a deputy premier (1961-65, 1967-68). (rulers.org)
  • Prompted by European powers' blockade of Venezuelan ports in 1902, he formulated the Drago Doctrine, which opposed the forcible collection of debts through military intervention in any South American republic. (rulers.org)
  • The most prominent activists during the war were Boris Kidrič and Edvard Kardelj, who also had an enormous impact on post-war life in Yugoslavia. (communistcrimes.org)
  • In 1953, a constitutional law was adopted, introducing further social reforms. (wikipedia.org)
  • April 5, 1942, Alma-Ata, Kazakh S.S.R. [now Almaty, Kazakhstan]), plenipotentiary of the president in Sibirsky federal district (2000-04). (rulers.org)