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serbia    音标拼音: [s'ɚbiə]
n. 塞尔维亚[南斯拉夫一地方]



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  • Serbia - Encyclopedia. com
    Serbia requires an onward return ticket, sufficient funds for the stay, and a certificate showing funds for health care Visas are required for all nationals except those of 41 countries including the United States, Australia, and Canada In 2003, about 1 4 million tourists arrived in Serbia and Montenegro, of whom 93% came from Europe
  • Serbia and Montenegro - Encyclopedia. com
    On April 27, 1992 in Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro joined in passing the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia In March 2002, the Belgrade Agreement was signed by the heads of the federal and republican governments, setting forth the parameters for a redefinition of Montenegro's relationship with Serbia within a joint state
  • Yugoslavia - Encyclopedia. com
    YUGOSLAVIA THE LAND AND PEOPLEECONOMYCULTURE AND THE ARTSHISTORY AND POLITICSBIBLIOGRAPHY Source for information on Yugoslavia: Encyclopedia of Modern Europe: Europe Since 1914: Encyclopedia of the Age of War and Reconstruction dictionary
  • Milosevic, Slobodan - Encyclopedia. com
    Milosevic, Slobodan 1941-2006 BIBLIOGRAPHY Slobodan Milosevic was the president of Serbia from 1989 to 1997, and president of the Federated Republic of Yugoslavia from 1997 to 2000 Milosevic was born in Pozarevac, Serbia, the second son of a former Orthodox priest and a Serbian schoolteacher; both parents later committed suicide In high school Milosevic met Mirjana Markovic, the daughter of
  • Black Hand - Encyclopedia. com
    BLACK HAND The Black Hand, an underground nationalist organization whose official name was Union or Death, was founded in 1911 in Belgrade by a group of Serbian officers and civilians The officers, who formed the nucleus of the organization, had become increasingly impatient with the Serbian government's cautious approach to the Serbian national question They were especially dissatisfied
  • Multi-Ethnic Conflict: Yugoslavia - Encyclopedia. com
    Only Serbia and Montenegro remained together as one nation called Serbia The new nations of Slovenia and Macedonia proved somewhat stable, but conflict raged among the Serbs, Bosnians, and Croats in the other three nations of Serbia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, and Croatia The ethnic war would eventually be the bloodiest war in Europe since World War II
  • Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) - Encyclopedia. com
    Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) At a Glance Official Name: Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Continent: Europe Area: 39,517 square miles (102,350 sq km) Population: 11,206,039 Capital City: Belgrade Largest City: Belgrade (1,500,000) Unit of Money: Yugoslav new dinar Major Languages: Serbian, Albanian Natural Resources: Oil, gas, coal, antimony, copper The Place Yugoslavia, located
  • Setting the World on Fire: The Start of World War I
    Serbia bitterly resented the power of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and urged Serbs within Bosnia and Herzegovina, an Austrian province, to resist Austro-Hungarian rule Serbs hoped that one day Bosnia and Herzegovina would become part of a greater Serbia
  • Miloševic, Slobodan (1941–2006) - Encyclopedia. com
    MILOŠEVI?, SLOBODAN (1941–2006) BIBLIOGRAPHY Serbian leader and accused war criminal Slobodan Miloševi?, the most prominent of the defendants at the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, was born in Požarevac, in Serbia, on 20 August 1941 He graduated from Belgrade's Faculty of Law (1964), and joined the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (LCY) Miloševi? made his
  • Karadjordje - Encyclopedia. com
    KARADJORDJE KARADJORDJE (Djordje Petrovi?; 1768–1817), Serbian revolutionary leader Djordje Petrovi?, known as "Karadjordje" (kara is a Turkish prefix meaning black), led the Serbian revolution of 1804–1813 In the process, he created one of two rival Serbian royal dynasties (the Obrenovi?es being the other) and contributed to the birth of one of Serbia's lasting political tensions





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