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World Geography Mrs. Curtiss
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After WW I, Austro-Hungarian Empire broken up Unified into a multi-ethnic state based on linguistic groups Ethnic diversity in Yugoslavia was enormous: Seven distinct ethnic neighbors Austria, Greece, Italy, Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary and Romania Four official languages Croatian, Serbian, Macedonian, Slovene Three major religions Roman Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy and Islam Two alphabets Roman – Croatian and Slovene Cyrillic – Macedonian and Serbian
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Six semi-autonomous Republics within Yugoslavia Bosnia & Herzegovina Croatia Macedonia Montenegro Serbia Slovenia Five Republics established on basis of ethnicity Bosnia & Herzegovina – mixture of ethnicity Serbia – largest republic and dominated national government
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The people known as Serbs, Bosnian Muslims, and Croats belong to three distinct ethnic groups. All three speak their own dialect of the Serbo-Croatian language. Serbs Originally farmers, after World War II Serbs increasingly migrated to cities where they became wage earners. Serbs are strongly influenced by Eastern European culture. Their religion is Eastern Orthodox. Bosnian Muslims sometimes referred to as Turks were originally ethnically the same as Serbs, but converted to the Muslim religion in the fifteenth century. Bosnian Muslims live mostly in cities and are professionals, business owners, and government workers. Croats predominantly rural farmers, but many live in cities of southern Croatia. Croats are strongly influenced by the Western European culture in literature, art, science, and education. They are geographically located near the Italian cities of Genoa and Venice. Croatian culture reflects Italian culture. Croats are Roman Catholic. http://find.galegroup.com/gic/infomark.do?contentSet=EBKS&docType=EBKS.Article&type= retrieve&tabID=T001&prodId=GIC&docId=CX2831400029&userGroupName=lees22928&versio n=1.0&digest=b4c025643a70ec377a4bfe544a23c502&source=gale
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“a process in which a more powerful ethnic group forcibly removes a less powerful one in order to create an ethnically homogenous region.” “…undertaken to rid an area of an entire ethnicity, so that the surviving ethnicity can be the sole inhabitants.”
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Ethnicities suppressed during 20 th century Communist dictator Josip Broz Tito Tito died in 1980s – Communist government collapsed All Republics (except Serbia and Montenegro) broke away to become independent countries 1991 – Slovenia and Croatia 1992 – Macedonia 1993 – Bosnia 2003 – no more Yugoslavia New countries combined different ethnic groups Biggest difference – religion Mostly dominated by 1 ethnic group i.e. most in Croatia were Croats – but Serbs also lived there
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Serbs and Croats used ethnic cleaning as a way to claim territory Ethnic regions and political boundaries did not match up At time of breakup Bosnia and Herzegovina Herzegovina ethnicities Bosnian Muslim: 48 percent Serb: 37 percent Croat: 14 percent Serbs and Croats Ally to eliminate Bosnian Muslim population Dayton Accords (1996) Bosnia and Herzegovina divided into three regions
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United Nations, the United States and other European countries worked to negotiate peace between warring groups Sent troops to enforce peace treaties Result of Conflict: Disrupted economies in region Unstable conditions made trade difficult People forced from homes Had to start new lives in different countries Today – standard of living is low in region compared to rest of Europe
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