answersLogoWhite

0

What are croations?

Updated: 4/28/2022
User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago

Best Answer

they are humans

User Avatar

Wiki User

14y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What are croations?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Is there a nickname for Croations?

Croats, Hrvati(croation)


A noun that starts with the letter C to go after this Couragous Croations cleverly calculate despite concerned Or if you can make up one describing Croatia that hasallofthosetypesof words?

A noun that starts with C that goes with Couragous Croations or descre Croatia or any adjectives there of is Croatian.


What type of people lived in the Southern Colonies of the US?

Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Connecticut, Massachusetts, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, the New York colony, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Georgia and New Jersey, .The people who lived in the 13 colonies were generally cattle and dairy farmers, shipbuilders and fisher men.


How did the civil war in Yugoslavia start?

when Slovenia and Macedonia left Croatia tried too but because of the WW2 history between Croatia and Serbia Milosevic didnt want his serbian people living in a country where the people in the 40s killed Serbs there were a lot of protests and when it was sure tha Croatia would leave Yugoslavia, Bosnia tried to leave too Both Serbia and Croatia wanted Bosnia and both attacked it from both sides in bosnia some fought for indepence, some for uniting with Croatia and the others for uniting with Serbia all three did the same atrocities but some more than others


Who are Zlata filipovics parents?

Zlata Filipovic was a girl who lived in Sarajevo, Bosnia since she was born. War started to happen when she was only eleven. Where she lived was put on a siege during the Yugo Slavia Civil War from 1991-1995.Someone from the press asked the local school teatcher if they could have everyone`s diary they had writen. They read through everyone`s diary and liked Zlata Filipovic`s the best. So her diary was print in the newspaper and it soon became famous all over the world so it was published and sold everywhere. Since Yugo Slavia had an alliance with North America, North America helped by making Yugo Slavia into different countries. The war started when the srebes wanted a bigger Serbia so they said if you aren`t going to become a Serb, you are going to have to leave Yugo Slavia. But the other people that lived there (Croations, Bosnians, and Muslims) were saying that they didn`t want to leave. So that is how the Yugo Slavia Civil War started.


What are the important details about the beginning of World War 1?

Events Leading Up to WWIThe Archduke Francis Ferdinand was assassinated in Serbia in 1914. Austria (the Archduke's home) demanded an answer from Serbia, and attacked before Serbia could expalin the situation. One thing led to another, and eventually allies from all over the world were pulled into the fight, and so began WWI.The assination of the Archduke Ferdinand was caused by a terrorist cell operating in Serbia, called the Black Hand. I am not quite sure of the Cell's name, but its out there on the E someware!


What were reasons for the US not to enter World War 1?

President Wilson's reason for not going to war was b/c the war was chiefly b/w England, France, and Germany and the Americans all immigrated from Europe and he didnt wan2 fight with his kinsmen.


What are the 3 main causes of world war 2?

The main causes of World War II are two in number and may be described briefly as follows. First, unresolved conflicts from World War I led to the renewal of rivalries between leading European nations, principally Germany in opposition to Britain and France, with war nearly inevitable as a result. Second, the powerful ambitions of Hitler and his fellow Nazis sought domination of the continent, and these ambitions were not checked (or snuffed out) by western nations when Nazi Germany was its weakness -- thus leading indirectly to large-scale war years later.


Why do Serbs and Croats hate each other?

This topic is a complex one and for the most part is based on the abuse of power. Such abuse translated into promoting national interests, namely more land, ethnic and cultural supremacy, etc. In this instance Serbia hated Croatia because Croatia and other Yugoslav states (namely Slovenia, Macedonia, Bosnia) foiled its plans of creating 'Greater Serbia'. The Serbian abuse of power prompted the other states to secede. From the time of Serbian independence in 1878 Serbia held the upper hand over the other western Balkan states and for the greater part of the following century. Serbia made sure that the power was used for the benefit of the Serbian people and to the detriment of others. In the 19th century Serbs, unlike other western Balkan nations, had their own independent kingdom and powerful allies such as the Russian Empire that made sure Serbia was and stayed powerful. Serbia's long term goal was to make every Balkan ethnic group in its sphere of influence (south Slavic nations of Slovenes, Croats, Bosnians and Macedonians) become Serbian. The notion of greater Serbia stems from a 19th century Serbian politician Ilija Garasanin who wrote a memorandum in 1844 that covered taking over and incorporating surrounding countries and people into a Greater Serbian state. This memorandum was to serve as a backbone of Serbian expansionism for future generations. It was a general Serbian consensus that all the people in these lands were Serbian: Slovenes being the alpine Serbs, the Croats being Catholic Serbs, the Bosniaks Muslim Serbs and the Macedonians - southern Serbs. In the Kingdom of Yugoslavia of the early 20th century, the Macedonians were not allowed to have a nation but were referred to as the southern Serbs. The Macedonians were not happy in the least and subsequently assassinated the Serbian King Alexander I by a Macedonian revolutionary (Velicko Kerin also known as Vlado Chernozemski). Furthermore, none of the lands that were to be incorporated into Greater Serbia had any historical links with Serbia apart from brief periods of occupation in the late middle ages by the Serbian Kingdom of parts of Macedonia, Greece and Albania, and the Vlach and Serbian orthodox refugees that were fleeing the Turkish oppression during the 17 century. These Vlach refugees settled in parts of Hungary, Croatia and Bosnia. The Vlachs were an indigenous Balkan population of romanized Illyrians and Thracians that converted to Orthodox Christianity and from 18th to 20th centuries in particular, came to see themselves as Serbs due to their cultural similarities and relative isolation from their true kinsmen - the Romanians. At the time of these migrations ethnic Vlachs were closer related to the Romanians than the Serbs both ethnically and linguistically. Serbs were Slavs and Vlachs were not. The lands (outside of Serbia), although currently populated by Serb minorities were NOT initially populated by Vlachs or Serbs. As an example, Croatia was initially settled by the Croats in the 7th/8th century and the Vlach populations started arriving 1000 years later - from the 17th century onwards. These lands still had Croatian settlers though now had Vlachs as well, invited by the Habsburgs to populate the decimated lands of the Ottoman invasions. After World War 1, Croatia joined the kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The kingdom was ruled by a Serbian dynasty eager to exert control over all the nations in the country with the final aim of making a kingdom of all Serbs - The Greater Serbia. This of course was welcome by neither the Slovenes nor the Croats, nor the Bosniaks, Macedonians and Albanians for that matter. The Serbian dictatorship in the kingdom was ever present in the country. The military, police and the government were all Serbian. The school curriculum was taught in Serbian - Serbian history, Serbian language. Slowly other nations were to be wiped out culturally and if not, forcibly if need be as was evident in the 1990s Serbian aggression in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and finally Kosovo. These wars were led by Slobodan Milosevic, the president of Serbia who died in the Hague whilst being tried for war crimes in former Yugoslavia. To conclude, Serbia and Serbian politics was its own worst enemy bringing hatred to its neighbours. Prior to the 19th century, there were no historical records of any western Balkan nations hating the Serbs or vice versa. Serbs brought hatred through their thirst for power and their own selfish interests to the detriment of others.