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The article is displaying the wrong flag. The STATE flag of Serbia has a coat-of-arms on it, while the national flag doesn't. All the other countries have national flags displayed, shouldn't it be like that here too? Source: http://www.srbija.gov.rs/pages/article.php?id=5412
Yes, this is article about state, and state flag is displayed. --Pockey 20:38, 27 May 2006 (UTC)
This is obsolete subject, the "Serbia and Montenegro" signs were abandoned when Serbia pronounced it's independence. Jovke 00:40, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
I realize Serbia is a republic and still in a state union with CG. However, isn't it also a country (just one that is in a state union with another country)?Osli73 23:10, 31 May 2006 (UTC)
Err, you are aware that: Country > Republic? Every single republican country on this planet is a COUNTRY. The term "country" is just used to identify an area of land with established leaders, a capital, a government and a population and whatnot. Mehicdino 23:31, 28 February 2007 (UTC)
It has been put in for the following reasons:
That's it. --estavisti 17:28, 1 June 2006 (UTC)
Serbia is no longer a part of the now non-existent State Union, as stated on the Main Page and in most news outlets. The history section, in particular, should show this.
Why the date of independence is July 13, 1878? It is the worst solution we can use here. Serbia was independent in the Medieval Ages long before 1878. Either we should use the first date of the independence of (medieval) Serbia, either last one (June 3, 2006). PANONIAN (talk) 02:49, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
No, no, you got it all wrong! That day was said to be independence day because Serbia was acknowledged to be independent by the two most powerful european empires of that time: Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian. Before the Ottoman rule, Serbia was indeed completely independent, but that was roughly from VII to XIV century when there was no such thing as "official acknowledgement". Jovke 00:37, 22 November 2006 (UTC)
--Greasysteve13 09:39, 4 June 2006 (UTC)
I removed the "unofficial" moto of "Samo sloga srbina spasava". I think we were there before; the country does not have an official moto, period — this one is too controversial to be universaly accepted, even among Serbs themselves, let alone numerous minorities. At best, it could be mentioned as motto of Serbs, but can anyone recall a government official which uttered those words publicly? That goes in the same basket to Three-finger salute (Serbian). Duja 12:06, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
For whom is it controversial? People might not like it, but it doesn't change the fact that it's the popular motto of Serbia. It doesn't matter that a government official hasn't ever used it. Have you ever heard of "Honi soit qui mal y pense" or "Dieu et mon droit"? No UK official ever "uses" them (however you "use" a motto), nor do many Brits (the few that have even heard of these two mottos). By comparison, Samo Sloga Srbina Spasava has huge popular support, and is even represented (as popularly but errouneously believed) on the national flag. Even the people who don't like it recognise its status as an unofficial national motto. I see no problem with putting it in the infobox and noting that it's unofficial. --estavisti 20:29, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
This is popular motto of Serbs, not Serbia, and you san put it on article about Serbs because only Serbs use it anywhere. It is most important that government used it or not. This motto has never used officialy and we can't say that this is motto of Republic of Serbia. This motto also can be motto of Republika Srpska if we think like you. --Pockey 22:22, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
And Serbia is the nation state of the Serbs, with various minorities who are also citizens. Surely, then, the motto of the Serbs is relevant, especially as it's so widespread. It may not be official, but the motto of Serbia is, de facto, Samo Sloga Srbina Spasava. Also, I reject your last point. Of course Republika Srpska can be said to have the same motto. It's a Serb entity with 90% of its population Serb. So what? That has no bearing on what we're discussing - whether to include the popular motto of Serbia in the article. --estavisti 11:40, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
Also, motto of Serbia can be Živela Srbija!, Volim Srbiju!, or Srbija do Tokija!. You must put specific source that Serbia have its motto. Whitout that this article can not contain so called Motto of Serbia. --Pockey 21:02, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
And Serbia is state of all citizens of Serbia, not only Serbs. There is about 65% of Serbs in Serbia. This motto is used mostly by Serbian nationalists. You don't have proof that this sentence is the Motto of Serbia. Wrong informations can't be on Wikipedia. --Pockey 21:14, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
Hmm seing the Flag and Coat of Arms of Serbia (see the CCCC simbols) i think we can see the motto "Samo Sloga Srbina Spasava" as an real motto. It's used by many Serbs....in the years against the wars between the Ottomans too. This is an very old motto. Mostly used by Serbs of course.
Reading this arguments of Pokrajac where stands: "And Serbia is state of all citizens of Serbia, not only Serbs. There is about 65% of Serbs in Serbia. This motto is used mostly by Serbian nationalists. You don't have proof that this sentence is the Motto of Serbia".
In all countries of the world are minoritys of some people. That is maybe their land too but watch France. They have around (some unknown) percent of muslims and still the motto of this land is Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite. This motto comes from the Francais revolution. You can compare it with the resurrection of the Serbs against the Ottomans.
SerbiaAndMontenegro 09:42, 16 June 2006 (UTC)
Maybe I can understand your wish for putting motto in article but as Dcabrilo said it's not on national amblems, nor is it mentioned in any documents. You must give some source (document) where we can see this sentence is motto of Serbia. --Pockey 10:35, 16 June 2006 (UTC)
Please have a good sight at the following link and emblem: []. This is an national emblem of Serbia and its also used at the Coat Of Arms and at the Serbian flag. What do you see in the shield of that two Eagles? CCCC= Samo Sloga Srbina Spasava :).
They won't place CCCC at their Coat Of Arms and their flag if it wasn't the motto of Serbia.
I will search some documents to prove if i can but im not sure i will find some documents. But these reasons (above) may be enough to place the motto CCCC at the Serbia wikipedia page. SerbiaAndMontenegro 09:09, 21 June 2006 (UTC)
SSSS of "Samo sloga srbina spasava" is many times used (not seriously) as "Srbin srbina sekirom sece", or "Samo slanina sarmu spasava", so it lost it's true meaning. ---Adamantum---
I changed of the first sentence from landlocked republic to country in recognition that Serbia was declared independent today but that was reverted by another editor. I reverted back to country for two reasons.
1. the word country and not a description of the government form is used in most country article introductions. The name Republic of Serbia is also listed at the very start anyway.
2. Although some country articles - a minority - do used forms like republic in the case of Serbia it is better to use country now to clearly distinguish between the current status as an independent country and the former status a republic in Yugoslavia and later Serbia-Montenegro. I imagine this is the reason why non of the other articles on former Yugoslav countries use the word republic instead of country.
Country is just the clearer term and is the most widely used in such articles. Republic has had too many other meanings (besides fully sovreign republic) in Serbia's recent history to be a good alternative for simply country.
If anyone objects and prefers republic please state explain why.--Westee 20:03, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
Although republic is technically correct it isn't as clear as country. The latter is especially importnat now that Serbia is an independent country.Osli73 20:14, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
I think this would be good / useful to add a section on the legalities around the dissolution of SCG and to what extent Serbia will be the successor state of SCG. Would anyone be ready to do it? Do you have any good links/sources for this?
My understanding was that Serbia will be the successor state to SCG: Serbia will inherit SCGs seat at the UN, Serbia will inherit progress made in talks with the EU, Serbia will inherit all intl. agreements and treaties, Serbia will, until an agreement has been arrived at, inherit SCGs national debt and foreign assets (such as embassies and the like). However, I don't have any good sources/links for this. Osli73 20:20, 5 June 2006 (UTC)
Currently there are two dates - Ottoman and SiM dissolution. OK. But should it be "Dissolution of Serbia and Montenegro" or "Succession of Serbia and Montenegro" or something like "Dissolution of Serbia and Montenegro (successor state)"? 212.36.8.100 05:22, 6 June 2006 (UTC)
What is the significance of including "landlocked" in the introduction? This is already very clear from the map and only makes the text sound odd? I move to take it out. Anyone against? Osli73 13:27, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
It is normal to indicate if a country is landlocked. Politis 15:44, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
If I understood you correctly, are you saying that you object to 'landlocked' because it is a "bad thing"? How can a geographical location have an ethical dimention? Politis 16:09, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
What I think he means is that the people who are putting it think it's some sort of bad thing. It's hardly a defining characteristic of the state that it doesn't have a coastline. Do the articles on Hungary, Slovakia, the Czech Republic etc have that fact in the very first sentence? NO. --estavisti 18:50, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
I just thought it seemed like an odd thing to say when describing Serbia. Surely there must be other, more interesting and descriptive, things to say in an introduction? Osli73 19:00, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
This isn't an argument that is exclusive to Serbia. Just about every landlocked country has this term in its intro. See Czech Republic, Austria, Bolivia, Zambia to name a few random landlocked countries I could think of to verify consistency. Landlocked seems like a reasonable thing to mention in an intro - since many people reading the intro will be focused on a very general introduction to the country, and landlocked is a very general term with some widespread implications: geographically, economically, politically, for instance. Is it a defining characteristic? Well, no, but it does help to define the country. Is there ever any one term that defines a country?
Regarding the suggested attributes "mountainous", "industrialized", "small", "poor", "democratic". I suppose these are all fine terms to use in introductions, but they're far less concrete than a term like landlocked. Many countries have "mountainous" regions - but that hardly makes the entire country mountainous. And just about every country would like to consider themselves industrialized, but there are a so many different degrees to industrialization, it's hard to use it as a descriptive term. "Landlocked" isn't a term that leaves a lot to the imagination - it is comparitively much more descriptive than the others.
In my mind, "landlocked" is something that should be left in, for consistency with virtually every other landlocked country intro, and because it is a very short, concise and descriptive adjective to use for a country.
Warthog32 23:51, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
It is interesting, perhaps, that this is being disputed over this particular subject. I believe it is yet an issue of contention in some regions that Serbia has still not obtained access to open water, i.e. the Adriatic or Black seas... Maximilli 18:43, 11 August 2006 (UTC)
Should we remove current event tag? The referendum and independence proclamations are over, nothing new will not happen here, so why the tag is still here? PANONIAN (talk) 19:09, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
No, beacose is hapen somthing now, im Kosovo. For one-two week Serbia and Kosovo are going to be regotnesed seperet or together. Serbias status is now in question if Wojvodina wount to sepred or not. The UN-Securty countries hase disedet bun they need time to procamed thate. The futer buged and every thing alls is sepreted , Kosovo is independent in this case (this judical agreemend was disedet and from each said acceptet). Putin is saying thate Kosovo is the presidencian case. China is agree with thate.--Hipi Zhdripi 19:39, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
Till the discussion in Wien is not over Kosovo is not part of Serbia (See:Rez. 1244 there is no paragraf in wicht s standing "Serbia", please dont speculete). We dont need no ropagander here. The serbs are saing that Kosovo is part of Serbia, the Kosovars are saying thate Kosovo is indepedent. Beacose of hate this article is not NEUTRAL The only documents wich is prufing thate are the Serbian documents. --Hipi Zhdripi 19:27, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
The End in Wiena. Now is in Prishtina.--Hipi Zhdripi 19:42, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
The last meeteng in Wein it was the last at all. Now they are going to meet in Prishtina. This type, how is his name the cordinator is backe from China and is saying that the las meeten is ging to be in Prishtina. --Hipi Zhdripi 19:50, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
See his interwiev--Hipi Zhdripi 19:51, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
How I say, I dont know for Wojvodina, but in Sandjak durin last thre moths was more than four bomb exsplostion.--Hipi Zhdripi 21:00, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
The Police (500 policeman: 19 sebians and the others albanias, bosnjaks and UN-police) and KFOR (new base) is rouling over Nord part of Kosovo to prepare for eache "criminal act" after the soulution is going t obe proclamered. Some ethic serbs in nord Kosovo are praperted to demostration. They saye they have called "amergensy state" situation. I think this is cleare for wicht solution is going to bee proclamnted. Petersen is ill in Skopje and now is bac in Prishina (22:00h).--Hipi Zhdripi 20:01, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
The Police and KFOR need some one or two week to "clean" the north part from Millosheviq supporters. But the clesan info for the day in wich is going to hapend is secret.--Hipi Zhdripi 20:48, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
Oj, not another crazay, neverending Kosovo is/not a part of Serbia debate. It's been going on at the Kosovo article for quite some time now (where most people, except, predictably, the local Kosovar Albanian, agree that the province most certainly technically/legally is a province of Serbia, but under UN administration. Check out the talk page for evidence of this by the truckload. Osli73 20:56, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
My friend the Kosovo Mission is over. (23:10 /Radio RTK News/ NATO is anding more trups in Kosovo). Now I dont know wich is the next Mission Sandjak or Vojvodina. For thate this is the article for wich we are going to discusse. Millosheviq prophety "Is not question only Kosovo, but Kosovo is a key" it beacame thru.--Hipi Zhdripi 21:04, 7 June 2006 (UTC)
Hello! How can you understand that Hipi guy? His english is so bad that i can't get it. Hipi, please, translation needed! Do you speak any other language in a bit higher level? ELADIKI
Saying Kosovo is not part of Serbia is the same as saying Quebec is not part of Canada, and both are equally dumb. I can't believe people actually try to pass this off as fact... *sigh...Stop The Lies 10:00, 11 December 2006 (UTC)Stop_The_Lies
Kosovo is the birthplace of Serbia!We cannot and we will not give away a cruical part of Serbian teritory!
I know that this is too early to talk about, but the article reads the Serbia "remain[s] the successor state to the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro". So does that mean that by transitivity, Serbia is also the successor state to Yugoslavia (since before, Serbia and Montenegro is regarded as the successor state of Yugoslavia)? Because if such is the case, then the statistics related to the international participation of Yugoslavia (i.e. medals won in Olympics, beauty pageants won, number of terms and positions held in international bodies like UN) will now be attributed to Serbia, as may be referred to in footnotes (like Russia to USSR).Joey80 05:13, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
In the Wikipedia article on Montenegro, that country is claimed to be the newest country in the world. Montenegro declared independence on June 3 - but Serbia declared independence two days later, on June 5. Does that imply that the Republic of Serbia (and not the Republic of Montenegro) is the newest country in the world? Or do these two countries share the title? Or is Montenegro the newest country in the world - since Serbia is the sole sucessor state to Yugoslavia/SCG?
Serbia is the union successor so the statement that Montenegro is the newest is correct (though false on the other side as Montenegro was independent before)
This newly added map of the cities hidding the text behind it (at least on Opera browser). Can somebody correct that? PANONIAN (talk) 22:49, 8 June 2006 (UTC)
I added fact tags to "occupying forces committed atrocities against Serbs and Jews" because it's not well-known, and should therefore be cited. The was the same reason I tagged "supported the army" later on. MSJapan 02:21, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
Why are many of the economy figures (GDP, etc.) taken from the factbook page on Serbia and Montenegro? This is certainly inaccurate. -- ran (talk) 15:59, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
I'm not the one who added the data but:
--Aleksandar Šušnjar 16:13, 9 June 2006 (UTC)
I don't know where the data is coming from. If it is coming from Serbia & Montenegro government site it might be correct because data is also published per republic. In any case, I found the following for those who have the nerve to comb through the numbers: Republic of Serbia: Quarterly Gross Domestic Product, at constant prices 2002 - 4th Quarter 2005. --Aleksandar Šušnjar 03:08, 10 June 2006 (UTC)
If we exclude economic data for Kosovo province which was in 2004. - 1.68% larger than economic data for Montenegro, the final economic data result will differ even more.
Until the futur update of economic data from IMF, WB and CIA factbook for Serbia (Serbia&Montenegro succesor) which all include cumulativ economic data for the part of Serbia administered by Serbian Government (Central Serbia&Vojvodina province) and Kosovo province administered by UN Administration, the current data from CIA will stay.
Thus, we will include assumption that the economic data for Serbia may be reduced for approximatly 6% (avarage rate of Montengro GDP part in Serbia&Montenegro GDP totall in 2003-2006 period) and the economic data from IMF source will be added. -- Gaston28
I wonder why don't you use data from Serbia's economic institute and National Bank of Serbia, example someone put that Serbia has PPP of 7500 USD, I saw no such estimates anywhere in any major publication or website, IMF< WB or EU economic institute. Considering GDP of Serbia in 2006 was only 21 billion U$ and this is by Serb National Bank data, how someone got Serbia's GDP (PPP) at 60 billion is beyond me. Someone should correct the data. Serbia PPP in 2006 was according to IMF only 46,674 million USD, giving an average income of 4860USD per head, should not this data be used and not some fake information? -- Mic of orion
Ukrainian is not official language in the Serbian province of Vojvodina. No matter what some (uninformed) journalist wrote in that external link, here you can see official web site of the government of the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina: http://www.vojvodina.sr.gov.yu/Engleski/vojvodina.htm Quote: "The Statute of AP Vojvodina stipilates that the official languages, besides Serbian, are Hungarian, Slovak, Rumanian, Ruthenian and Croatian." Ukrainian is not mentioned, thus, not official. PANONIAN (talk) 21:08, 15 June 2006 (UTC) Ruthenian IS Ukrainian, or dialect of it.
Hi people,
A better place for this would be WP:SER, but as I'm not sure about its activity.
Currently there's no consistent infobox for Serbian towns and cities and have uploaded maps of all/most Serbian municipalities into commons:Category:Maps of Serbian municipalities and merged the look of {{Serbian cities 3}} (used in some articles) into {{Infobox Serbia}}. However, before attaching the template to the articles, I'd like to have an agreement in advance about its contents—once you change the contents of the infobox, a whole lot of articles would have to be updated. After an agreement has been reached, we should put up our sleeves and attach it to appropriate articles.
So, for all interested: please visit Template talk:Infobox Serbia and suggest improvements. Duja 08:13, 22 June 2006 (UTC)
I removed several images of Đerdap and others on which we can see mountains and waters in Serbia. Those pics must be on articles about nature or flora and fauna of Serbia. Here was a lot of saints. I left only one because this article is not about Serbian Orthodox Church, but Serbia. We should see other articles about European countries. They are whitout many pictures and galleries. --Pockey 14:33, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
I just started regional Serbian Wikipedians' notice board, which is a place where questions and problems about articles related to Serbia and Serbs should be discussed. So, if anybody have problems with some articles or need help about something, it is right place to discuss it. Here is the link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Serbian_Wikipedians'_notice_board PANONIAN (talk) 14:51, 21 July 2006 (UTC)
In the part of article about demographics in Serbia, most of text is about demographics of Serbian subdivisions. Isn't that wrong, because subdivisions have its own articles. Ie, there is ethnic composition of province of Vojvodina, but not one of Serbia itself. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 195.252.123.18 (talk • contribs) 16:16, 26 July 2006 (UTC)
I have noticed paradox on list of external links. There are two links who are "most visited sites in Serbia". According to Alexa.com, b92.net is the most visited web site in Serbia. But User:Manp (talk · contribs) does not think like that, and he is putting krstarica.com like most visited site. So, can anybody tell can we have two most visited sites on the list? --Pockey 22:59, 2 August 2006 (UTC)
User Pokrajac a.k.a. Pockey obviously doesn't accept Wikipedia's objective approach, and that no personal or religious beliefs are supposed to be expressed through this site.
His qualifications on website B92 could be his personal belief and view which is not corresponding to real true fact. He used one source for his claim and then he asked me to put source for my claim, which I did and then he intentionally [removed it], so he can keep promoting his favorite site (B92).
The only logical approach is to remove all superlatives and claims (as advised in Neutral point of view (NPOV), an official policy on Wikipedia). I have removed all "most visited" like qualifications from the article, but user Pokrajac keeps undoing this change over and over again.
Manp 08:26, 3 August 2006 (UTC)
War crimes are a very important element when describing Serbia. War crimes have been an integral part of Serbian nationalism, which has been the main main ideology of Serbian political leadership in the past 200 years. Any entry about Serbia without war crims will be defficient.
I find it odd that the issue of ICTY cooperation is not mentioned, particularly in the context of Serbia's EU aspirations. This is a major issue in Serbia's international profile, which has effectively blocked Serbia's path to EU and NATO membership. It also presents a serious challenge to Serbia's current democratic leadership, who do not bear responsibility for the crimes committed in the 1990s. Would anyone object to a few sentences about it? Something in the history section like:
"Serbia's post-Milosevic democratic leaders have said that membership in the EU and NATO is a priority for Serbia. In October 2005, the EU open negotiations with Serbia for a Stabilization and Association Agreement (SAA), a preliminary step towards joining the EU. The EU formally suspended these talks in May 2006 after EU officials determined that Serbia was not cooperating fully with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY). In particular, the EU has demanded the handover of indicted war criminal Ratko Mladic who is widely believed to be in Serbia. NATO has also said that Mladic's handover is a pre-condition for Serbia's membership in the NATO Partnership for Peace program. Serbia's leaders have insisted that they are already doing all they can to arrest Mladic." Envoy202 00:56, 18 August 2006 (UTC)
I put a "sources needed" tag on the area of the countrybox that says .sp is Serbia's Internet domain. I somehow doubt that this has been declared yet, I get the impression that SP has only been proclaimed as Serbia's ISO-3166-2 code just a few days ago, and that no corresponding decision on its TLD has been made. I also gather that .yu is still heavily in use (after all, its previous ISO 3166-2 code was CS and the .cs domain remained unused for the 3 years of its existence). I suggest changing it to what was before, like what is on Montenegro's page, it too has just had its ISO 3166-2 code announced (ME) but the .me TLD hasn't been created yet (see the talk on the .me page, and the "Wikipedia is not a crystal ball" note that appears there.) I suspect taht someone was engaging in their own crystal ball for Serbia. (It does seem all but certain it *will* be .sp, but it hasn't been declared yet. And after it does, I suspect .yu will still be hard to get rid of.) --Canuckguy 20:03, 2 September 2006 (UTC)
Serbia... founded in 814...? Uhh.... could anyone try to elaborate this??? --HolyRomanEmperor 20:45, 12 September 2006 (UTC)
I've added a new article, Constitutional status of Kosovo, which discusses the various constitutions of Serbia and Yugoslavia as well as the current situation. It would be very helpful if knowledgable editors could have a look at it and add any comments to Talk:Constitutional status of Kosovo. Thanks in advance. -- ChrisO 19:58, 21 September 2006 (UTC)
A couple of days ago (started 22 September 2006) the addition of "and originally known as "Servia" " was added to this page by a user, which kickstarted a little tit-for-tat reverting of pages to and from this edit.
I had heard of the name servia used once before (sometime this year in a UK newspaper, I think the Times) dealing with a world war gift from the queen to war veterns from the UK, one other country (I can't remember) and "Servia", which was not known to be which country) for their sacrifice in the great war (WW1), so I did a bit of research into the name. So far I got the following:
"Extract from Nuttal Encyclopedia, regarding servia 1907"
This link does not explicitly link Serbia with Servia of the time, but there are similarities in the description, which bear resemblence to serbian history (especially the dates of 1815 (serbian uprising) and 1389 (battle of kosovo))
Servia article, 1911Encyclopedia This one states Servia as the name in english, with the translation as "Srbiya", or serbia. It also talks about a city within these lands called "Belgrade"
1901 Treaty between Great Britain and Serbia This one is of interest as its title reads: "Treaty between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Serbia [Yugoslavia] for the Mutual Extradition of Fugitive Criminals" On the first line, and the latter text makes reference to serbia as "Servia" and to its king as being Alexander. This link is from Australia, because as part of the commonwealth, all UK laws were applicable to its empire.
It would seem that at the very least, the UK and its empire used the name "Servia" for the then Kingdom of Serbia. Would this not warrent its inclusion? As shown
in the UK newspaper this year, this name is still used, and many people do not know which country it refers to (neither did I up until a short while ago). As such I feel it should be included, either in this article or the "Kingdom of serbia" one.
Also many of the maps in the article (and indeed the one about 814 above, are labeled "servia", I don't think this is a typo).
So far the only argument against is from PANONIAN with "Do you see "v" here: Sorbs". This I feel bears little relevence in this discussion at the moment, as its to do with a completely different time period (we are currently discussing the 1900's). I think this was to do with the original submitters summary which states that "servia" is the name given to the area by the settling serbs.
About this point in particular, I set about doing some more research and I came across this link which states "In the seventh century the forefathers of the present Serbs, a tribe of the southern Slavs, migrated into the country, which received from them the name of Servia. During the Middle Ages and well into modern times the term included not only the present Servia, but also Bosnia, Herzegovina, Montenegro, and the northern parts of Macedonia and Albania." which would back up the original submitter, but so far I have not found any other references, so I belive more research and verification is needed before we can decide upon the time period where "servia" is used as the name.
I may be missing something, which results in this not being included in the article at all, in which case, feel free to post it here, for the moment I will add the deleted line, until some discussion on the subject has occured and some consenceus is reached, thanks.
--ZivaVatra 20:47, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
To clarify the matter somewhat: here is a page, apparently created by a student — not fitting the WP:RS, but he apparently conducted a nice research:
The book contains an important article The Story of the Black Hand and the Great War by a Montenegrin intellectual Voislav M. Petrovich, p. 243-267. He committed suicide in London in 1934 after a violent campaign instituted against him and threats of the Black Hand. It is interesting that Petrovich had published a Serbian grammar in London in which he succeeded in getting the English Press to use the word "Serbia" instead of "Servia".
Duja 21:16, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
For ZivaVatra: please stop your trolling. "Servia" is a false name for Serbia. Name Serbia derived from the name Serbs which never had letter "v" in their name. Check some historical maps:
PANONIAN (talk) 21:42, 23 September 2006 (UTC)
It should be mentioned, but has no place in the intro. It's simply one of those thing: Rumania/Romania, Jugoslavia/Yugoslavia etc --estavisti 16:33, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Please refer to the article, Servian, it seems a user has unilaterally moved pages and is giving undue weight to this incorrect term. I'm not sure how to proceed, so hopefully someone help, I just recalled this discussion here, so if the user responds to comments I have left on the Talk:Servian_(disambiguation) I will direct him to refer to this discussion. // Laughing Man 00:12, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
OK, I tried to clarify the history of usage "Servia" in the article, with several sources; I hope it settles the issue for good. I'm not sure the intro is the right place for that—feel free to find it a better place to live. Duja► 16:52, 30 January 2007 (UTC)
I dident know thate Dardania (Kosoo) was so big. Now I know way Serbs hase make mytologie of Kosovo.
—Preceding unsigned comment added by Hipi Zhdripi (talk • contribs) -using the IP 172.174.34.35 (talk · contribs)- 01:20, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Hi PANONIA is nice to see thate you are traing to work here in en:Wiki but I think thate you must work more in sr:Wiki to explen the peopel, to understande to seperet mytology, history, politic and Wiki. Sorry but reale some serbs have taket the strategy from some Islamic fundamentalists and they wount too tell the rest of the Word thate the only one is Serbia (Allah). They have loste the realty, I cann understande thate this cand of comunication can help i innternal crises but this dot work in external crises. This is maken the serbs to clown (=palatcho/joker/) of Europ. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hipi Zhdripi (talk • contribs) -using the IP 172.174.34.35 (talk · contribs)- 01:30, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Atention: The mape is not showing the teritory of Serbia but the last part of Yugoslavia in year 2006. Serbia and Vojvodina was merged to Serbian state and Kosovo is UN Protectoriate. See the last CG statemant http://www.auswaertiges-amt.de/diplo/de/Aussenpolitik/RegionaleSchwerpunkte/Suedosteuropa/KosovoStatement060921.pdf the statut of Kosovo is not definetet. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hipi Zhdripi (talk • contribs) -using the IP 172.174.34.35 (talk · contribs)- 01:13, 24 September 2006 (UTC)
Evidence is provided here: ISO website
After they have destroid Balkan they are moven there hrad in north part of the earth in "Hart of Serbia", in Moskwa. They have sale all captured part of Balkan after 100 years. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hipi Zhdripi (talk • contribs) -using the IP 172.158.148.47 (talk · contribs)- 15:55, 3 October 2006 (UTC)
I think this article is important to look at. It connected the dismantling off Yugoslavia, the bombing of Serbia by NATO, Iraq, Lebanon, the former USSR, and events in the Middle East, plus oil. All editors should take a look at it for their own personal reasons to understand one of the reason Yugoslavia fell apart and was aggresively opposed by the US and NATO.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=NAZ20061001&articleId=3361 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 69.196.164.190 (talk • contribs) 04:42, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
I found interesting site here: http://www.cesid.org/lokalni2004/rezultati.jsp?opstina=70505 It list all municipality presidents in Serbia, so if somebody is interested to write their names into infoboxes in the articles about Serbian municipalities, he can do it now. There are too many municipalities and I do not have time to do it, but if somebody have time, it would be good that this job is done. :) PANONIAN (talk) 02:18, 10 October 2006 (UTC)
A guideline on whether or not to italicize Cyrillics (and all scripts other than Latin) is being debated at Wikipedia talk:Manual of Style (text formatting)#Italics in Cyrillic and Greek characters. - - Evv 16:03, 13 October 2006 (UTC)
The Ottoman period was a defining one in the history of the country; Slavic, Byzantine, Arabic and Turkish cultures suffused.
So -- the Serbs lost their identity as Slavs, Byzantines, Arabic, and Turkish. (Suffused is a rarely seen word meaning combined in this context.)
However the majority of the Serbs managed to keep their culture and religion through the long period of Ottoman rule.
No -- they kept their identity. I don't have stake in this, but could someone take this out, and add something that doesn't contradict itself. patsw 16:07, 14 October 2006 (UTC)
I saw the request for expansion and came across a news article today referring to an European Bank for Reconstruction and Development report that stated Serbia has shown highest growth in Southeast Europe this year so added it to article. Someone please move it the appropriate place (the table or Economy of Serbia article?) if necessary.// Laughing Man 01:02, 16 November 2006 (UTC)
I really don't understand why some people are reverting the article to some previous form in which is written that: 1. Serbian language will confirmed as official on November 8th by proclaiming the new constitution. IT IS ALREADY DONE!!!! 2. Turkish is ALSO official language in Kosovo from September 2006. For those who don't know about that: http://unpo.org/article.php?id=5498 and http://www.zaman.com/?bl=hotnews&alt=&trh=20060923&hn=36713 3. +382 code is not yet introduced in practice and Montenegrin Telecommunications Agency announced that when IT GETS introduced in practice, FROM THAT MOMENT six months period for using both 381 and 382 will start to expire. So, 381 will be used by Montenegro for sure till May 2007, and maybe even later. 4. U can find in many articles that .rs code WILL NOT be active till 2007 and that .yu will also be used till about 2010!!!!
213.198.226.241 21:18, 19 November 2006 (UTC)milan
I find it odd, to say the least, that the name "Zoran Djindjic" does not appear anywhere in this article or on the discussion page. I would think that the recent assasination of a prime minister is relevant to both the history and the current politics of Serbia, no? Jasontoon 18:28, 21 November 2006 (UTC)
It's like that from September 2006 and stop writing in Infobox that those are only Albanian & Serbian !!
If you don't believe: http://vladimirkurdistan.blogspot.com/2006/09/turkish-becomes-official-language-in.html http://www.zaman.com/?bl=hotnews&alt=&trh=20060923&hn=36713 http://www.turkuaz.us/news_det.php?newsId=332&catId=32 http://www.byegm.gov.tr/YAYINLARIMIZ/CHR/ING2006/09/06x09x22.HTM http://www.hri.org/news/turkey/anadolu/2000/00-08-05.anadolu.html ...
Need more???
213.198.222.48 13:09, 22 November 2006 (UTC)milan
How come every country (like Montenegro) has its official website, an online presentation, and Serbia has none. --PaxEquilibrium 00:32, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
It does. http://www.srbija.gov.rs It's existed since Milošević's day....--Еstavisti 19:36, 9 December 2006 (UTC)
New GDP for Dec. of 2006 per capita is 4.028$ (not PPP!) http://www.b92.net/info/vesti/index.php?yyyy=2006&mm=12&dd=22&nav_category=9&nav_id=224634 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 131.130.126.242 (talk • contribs) 11:30, 23 December 2006 (UTC)
tukish is not an offical language of kosovo,,,,,,,,,, turks have been albanian enemies for 6 centuries
Would anyone know what the law is in Serbia about whether foreigners can become Serbian citizens? What different ways are there? Thanks! ==== —Preceding unsigned comment added by 218.167.169.210 (talk • contribs) 01:31, 6 January 2007 (UTC)
I added a line under the history section noting the EU's suspension of Stabilization and Association Agreement talks. It previously just mentioned the start of the talks, but not their suspension -- this looked odd to me. The sentence added is: "These talks, however, were suspended in 2006 after the EU concluded that Serbia had not done enough to meet its obligations to cooperate with the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia." Any objections? Envoy202 02:27, 6 January 2007 (UTC)
The history section is awful on the 90s history. I'd propose this short summation. What do you think?
"As Yugoslavia collapsed in the early 1990s, Serbia offered support to ethnic Serbs involved in the bloody ethnic conflicts in Croatia and Bosnia. Serbia was a party to the 1995 Dayton Agreement that put an end to the war in Bosnia.
In 1989 Serbia revoked the autonomy of its southern province Kosovo, which was overwhelmingly ethnic Albanian. In response, Kosovo Albanians launched a non-violent campaign of civil disobedience with the goal of achieving independence from Serbia. By the late 1990s a guerrilla band, the Kosovo Liberation Army, began targeting Serb security personnel. As the conflict worsened -- and Serb reprisals grew more severe -- NATO forces conduced a 78-day bombing campaign to compel Milosevic to withdraw from Kosovo and agree to an international peacekeeping mission (See: Kosovo War). In June 1999, Milosevic capitulated and Kosovo was placed under UN administration (UNMIK) pending a determination of its future status. A UN-led process to determine Kosovo's future status was begun in late 2005." Envoy202 02:45, 6 January 2007 (UTC)
The current version has an unsourced screed about the KLA: "Many sources suggests that the K.L.A. was funded by the US government because they needed a reason for an intervention. K.L.A. did terrible, sometimes even barbaric acts, like cutting peoples head and many kinds of physical torment. Indicted war criminal Agim Ceku was a prime person behind many of these acts." By no means am I saying the KLA was a bunch of nice guys, but you have to admit that this section is pretty wacky and doesn't fit in with the article. Also, I sought to trim and better define the chain of events. Envoy202 14:27, 6 January 2007 (UTC)
Do you believe it is really necessary (or should I say relevant at all) to have the JNA (Yugoslav Peoples' Army) internal structure from early 1990s on the front page of a country's article? I mean, why is it important for readers to know that HQ of 5th Army was in Zagreb?! Meelosh 01:48, 24 January 2007 (UTC)
According to the official article, Serbs never rebelled against Ottoman rule before 1804. Is this true or is there a factological mistake? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 220.233.208.218 (talk) 13:41, 7 February 2007 (UTC).
I removed Orthodox New Year, St. Sava and St. Vitus from the holiday list. While those days have certain historical importance, none of those was ever an official holiday (except before 1941?), so the entire section comes out as an excercise. The only hard criteria that can be used are official documents; otherwise, we might add e.g. Catholic Christmas, 29. November or 7. July as important dates for someone else. May I remind you that we don't permit original research? Duja► 08:28, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
I changed Sretenje to Dan državnosti Srbije, because that's the holiday's name (you get not to go to work because of the "Serbian statehood", not because of the religious holiday that coincides). Also, aren't May 1st and May 9th (Victory day) still official holidays (says so here? --dcabrilo 21:41, 12 February 2007 (UTC)
The claim that this form was used as a result of a folk etymology linking Serbians to servants seems ridiculous. The term "Servia" was used because "b's" and "v's" can sound similar. It is no different from sometimes seeing "Duke of Alba" and sometimes "Duke of Alva". Presumably, the folk etymology explains why Serbs took offense at this spelling variant, not why the spelling variant was used. I'm going to change it unless someone provides some explanation here. john k 08:24, 22 February 2007 (UTC)
Since the "Serbia vs Servia" section also deals with the more central issue of the etymology of "Serbia" shouldn't the section heading be changed. An English spelling of the name some 80 years ago doesn't seem like the central issue here. Comments? Cheers Osli73 10:49, 23 February 2007 (UTC)
Is it really that important that we include this in the article? Compare with other events in the nation's history, this really is a trivial matter. Compare this to the Berlin Conference; both are international agreements, but one of them has a lasting impact (recognition of independence), while the other one is about involvement in a mid-sized war. So again, is it really that relevant? If you must include this on Wiki, then it would probably be better to put it in the politics or foreign relations articles. Хајдук Еру (Talk || Cont) 02:29, 27 February 2007 (UTC)
"The occupying powers committed numerous crimes against the civilian population, especially against Serbs and Jews." http://www.porges.net/JewishHistoryOfYugoslavia.html might be a useful reference In 1941 in Serbia and Banat, German troops assisted by "Volksdeutsche" ransacked Jewish shops and forced 9145 Jews out of a total prewar population of 12000 to register. 2500 adult men were sent to a camp in Belgrade, all of a total of 8000 prisoners there were executed.
Some mention of what happened to the Ethnic German (Volksdeutsche) at the end of WWII needs at least a mention. I would propose at least an added paragraph something like
"After the end of WWII, much of the ethnic German civilian population was confined and later expelled" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expulsion_of_Germans_after_World_War_II
Supporting info:
http://www.hic.hr/books/seeurope/016e-geiger.htm 'An International Symposium "SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE 1918-1995"' as a reference, itself listing supporting references. 48000 Germans died in internment and forced labor camps throughout Yugoslavia. Banat in a 1931 census listed 20.6% ethnic German i.e. 120,450 people (including 1,874 German Jews), 4% in Yugoslavia overall. 1941 ethnic German population estimates are 600,000-750,000. At the end of the war, 100,000 ethnic germans were detained in roughly 70 camps. By 1948, 55000 remained, so 90% of the German population had either been expelled or died in camps.
www.read-all-about-it.org/tito-partisanen/banat3.html
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/refugees_03.shtml "Violence against the Volksdeutsche here was probably more relentless than in any other country." —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 64.129.166.50 (talk) 00:33, 8 March 2007 (UTC).
Of course Serbia was not founded in 814. As a matter of fact, there is no such thing as the foundation of Serbia as such. When the Serbs came to the Balkans during Emperor Iraklie's reign, they were led by an anahront, whose great grandchildren will go on to become the first named rulers of these part of the Byzantinian Empire (during the eight century), namely - the Vlastimirovic Dynasty. However, Serb regions were never quite independent and thus there was never a foundation date. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 213.244.209.221 (talk) 19:35, 16 April 2007 (UTC).
Someone keeps deleting Milosevic's picture. No matter how much people hate him for making Serbia look bad or whatever, he was a very important and controversial leader in Serbia in modern times. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 65.95.138.59 (talk) 07:06, 29 April 2007 (UTC).
We should all try to forget about Milosevic.It's for the best.
This map was drawn by somone who doesnt know History. First of all there was no Italy it was the Roman empire, There no such thing as eatern roman empire because that was the nickname given for the Bytiziane empire much later in history, there was no england at the time regarding that they were the Norman who apperared around 11 centuray. It is clear that an idiot drew this map. --Marbus2 5 07:33, 8 May 2007 (UTC)
As indicated by my revisions to the Government and Politcs section of the article, the political situation has chance on both 8 and 11 May 2007; perhaps the article should have a current events flag in the masthead? Xenon 17:00, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
No, otherwise all countries would have it all the time :-) --Hadžija 23:17, 11 May 2007 (UTC)
True enough. :) Xenon 06:16, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
"The age of mass-media: The 5th October revolution even made news on MTV." I'm not entirely sure what this means. Are all other news programs filters that lead to MTV? Does MTV only play the most important news? Since when is MTV a judge of what is important and what is not? If this is not about the importance of the event, then what does a quip about mass media have to do with this article? JHMM13 16:22, 14 May 2007 (UTC)
I think it's meant to mean that it was so significant that it even made the airhead news, or something to that effect. But yeah, it's irrelevant and should be removed.--Hadžija 17:16, 14 May 2007 (UTC)
I would even suggest that if the news in question got MTV coverage, it had to have been important enough at the time (particularly since MTV, as I understand it, couldn't give a rat's arse about what goes on in the world beyond the world the of Britney Spears, but that's another discussion for another time, and another place). In any event, I believe that the meaning of that sentence is likely broadly interpreted by readers in the way Hadžija mentions. :) Xenon 19:10, 16 May 2007 (UTC)
At the moment, two of the COAs (Novi Sad and Kragujevac) are fair use images, so can not be in the table without breaking policy. The rest claim to be either PD or GDFL/equivalent. So, either the table can have no images, so it's standard, or there can be a couple gaps. Personally, I think the images add color and make it look nicer, however having open spots will look funny. Unless someone can recreate those two, I'd support having no images, and as such, am reverting to the no-image version. If it is decided to have the COAs (with or without those two), it would probably look nicer having them in the first column, rather than in the middle -- they just feel misplaced and distracting, breaking up the number columns like that. -Bbik 22:42, 29 May 2007 (UTC)
User:Rjecina recently replaced the existing text describing Serbia's involvement in the Croatian and Bosnian wars:
By 1992, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, and Bosnia & Herzegovina had all declared independence from Yugoslavia, resulting in the collapse of the Socialist Federal Republic and the outbreak of war. Serbia, together with Montenegro, formed the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992. Serbia was not directly involved in the Yugoslav wars from 1991 to 1995 in Bosnia and Croatia. However, the Serbian government did support the interests of Serbian people in Croatia and supported giving military equipment to the Bosnian Serbs.
...with this text:
By 1992, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, and Bosnia & Herzegovina had all declared independence from Yugoslavia, resulting in the collapse of the Socialist Federal Republic and the outbreak of war. Serbia, together with Montenegro, formed the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992. During the Yugoslav wars from 1991 to 1995 military forces of Serbia has attacked Croatia and Bosnia. Officially Serbia has not declared war but in reality her forces has been in battle of Vukovar, and then many other battles. Similar to that in first phase of Bosnia war serbian paramilitary units (Serb Volunteer Guard, White Eagles (paramilitary))from territory of Serbia has attacked Bosnian cities in river Drina region. After end of first phase of Bosnia war Serbia has send "only" volonters, army supplies and wages for army of Bosnian Serbs. This together with sanctions has created record inflation.
I believe it is fairly undisputed that Serbia was involved in these wars through military aid (financial, material and operational, much reduced once UN sanctions were fully imposed). However, at the same time Serbia was not offically at war in any of these circumstances. So, to say that "military forces of Serbia has attacked Croatia and Bosnia" gives the wrong impression. Either way, the paragraph could certainly do with a more detailed reference. CheersOsli73 07:53, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
Panonian, yes, basically the ICJ found Serbia to be "not guilty" but with a slap on the wrist for not having taken more care in stopping what was going on. However, the fact that the ICJ transferred the initial charge brought by Bosnia against the SFRY back in 1992 to Serbia would seem to imply that the ICJ felt that Serbia was the successor to the SFRY and could (if it had been found "guilty") have been held responsible for actions made by the SFRY. Apart from such legal details, it would seem to me that the vast majority of sources describe the actions of SFRY during the war when it describes the history of Serbia. Not doing so would be as if a history of England did not include its involvement in the Napoleonic wars, simply because the principal in that war was Great Britain. This being said, I don't support the new text proposed, since it is obviously inflammatory and unsourced. I propose looking at the sources for guidance on this.Osli73 22:36, 3 June 2007 (UTC)
The following text has been moved here from user:osli73s talk page.
No problem and sorry for cynic commentary. Simple I have become angry after reading article. Few minutes ago I have accepted sugestion of AgentCDE to put this question for mediation from WP:RFM . I know that my text is not very good because I know my knowledge of english. You can change article without problem. My only wish(demand ?) is that there is no text which speak that Serbia has nothing to do with war in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina because of which UN has put sanctions ! Rjecina 0:35, 4 June 2007 (CET)
Serbia was not directly involved in the Yugoslav wars from 1991 to 1995 in Bosnia and Croatia. However, the Serbian government did support the interests of Serbian people in Croatia and supported giving military equipment to the Bosnian Serbs.
To not look very long for sources I will give you 3 of them from english wikipedia. Articles are Battle of Vukovar, Ratko Mladić and War in Bosnia and Herzegovina
On May 2, 1992, one month after the Bosnian Republic's declaration of independence, Mladić and his generals, acting under orders from Belgrade, blockaded the city of Sarajevo, shutting off all traffic in and out of the city, as well as water and electricity.
Bosnian Serb Army was able to take over 70% of the country during these months. . This is another Serbian POV which I will now change. Why ?
Bosnian Serb Army is created only in middle of may 1992. Before that name has been JNA which is under total control of Belgrade and Serbian president Slobodan Milošević. My point is that Serbian army under name of JNA (they are making ethnic cleansing of non serbian population)has taken 70 % of Bosnia and now somebody tell that they have not been in war ??? Only after that conquest they have started to give only "supplies". Conclusion: Serbia has been in war with Croatia and Bosnia between september 1991 and may of 1992 !!Rjecina 2:20, 4 June 2007 (CET)
While the current text states that while Serbia was not officially involved in the wars it "did support the interests of Serbian people in Croatia and supported giving military equipment to the Bosnian Serbs." Rjecina thinks this is insufficient and does not correctly describe Serbia's full involvement in these wars.
I'm not sure about this and would like some additional opinions.
Cheers Osli73 08:18, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
OK, I see the logic in this. However, I still think it might be worthwhile to expand the information on what exactly was Serbia's involvement in the wars in Croatia and Bosnia, since this will undoubtedly be something a lot of readers will want to know about (or should know about). If we source it (the expanded text) properly, it can also function as a model/reference for othe articles which deal with this subject (such as the War in Bosnia and Herzegovina article). Cheers Osli73 15:16, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
My understanding is, that, at some point the JNAs involvement in these wars went from being about maintaining the unit of SFRY to protecting/promoting the Serb insurgents in the breakaway republics. I'm sure it was a gradual development so it's probably difficult to set a specific date when this happened. Osli73 10:03, 5 June 2007 (UTC)
In my thinking text about period 1991 - 1995 need to be something like this: By 1992, Slovenia, Croatia, Macedonia, and Bosnia & Herzegovina had all declared independence from Yugoslavia, resulting in the collapse of the Socialist Federal Republic. Serbia, together with Montenegro has then created/formed the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1992. Peace of that new state has been broken between 1998 - 1999...Rjecina 7:04, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
I have been thinking that we have started little by little discussion looking for solution which will make as both happy but if you have thinked that I am somebody which do like what happen then you must never forget that I am not alone. On my side is all United Nations with resolutions ! On your question what is not OK this is my answer (from article):
"Serbia was not directly involved (this part is not OK) in the Yugoslav wars from 1991 to 1995"
If you want that something say about wars in Bosnia and Croatia (but I do not see point) then this need to look like:
"During the Yugoslav wars from 1991 - 1995 Serbia goverment has supported Croatian and Bosnia Serbs. Because of that, the country was under economical and political santions, which resulted in economical disaster that forced thousands of young Serbian citizens to emigrate from the country".
This is neutral part of article which say nothing and all about wars in Croatia and Bosnia. Reason for this are words "Serbia goverment has supported Croatia and Bosnia Serbs". With this you say that Serbia has supported but you don't say how (military, economical or....) This will be neutral and this can stay (I am not happy but..)Rjecina 10:00, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
I have deleted support for Serb institutions in Bosnia and Croatia because of timeline. Timeline is this (from wikipedia):
Point of this timeline if that in time when war has started Republika Srpska institutions has not existed. Because is not possible to support institutions which do not exist it is not possible to write this in article. In this first 45 days before creation of Republika Srpska army Bosnia has been overrun by Serbia (Yugoslav) army. I accept that after that Serbia has given only support for Serbs in Bosnia but not before (in legal way it has not be possible). Rjecina 12:20, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
What about period when Kragujevac was capital of Serbia (1818-1845). There is nothing about Obrenovic's Serbia in History section!?
In the section "The Yugoslav Era", the language used in the article is very biased and is severely mispelled, attempts to change this have been reverted. One example of bias is in this section
"Tito and comunists weakened Serbia as they could.They divided Serbia in three parts.Central Serbia,Vojvodina and Kosovo. Upon Tito's death, the controversial status of the autonomous province of Kosovo created a Albanian nationalism and chuavism"
First of all this does not explain why Tito divided Serbia, but simply accuses him and the communists of wanting to weaken Serbia. It accuses Albanians specifically of chauvinism, while not mentioning that there were Serbian nationalist elements in Kosovo which could equally be considered chauvinist.
First of all, Tito divided Serbia into three because of the serious threat of Croatian nationalism which was delegitimizing his leadership of Yugoslavia and challenging that the system favoured Serbia. In response, Tito both arrested the Croatian nationalists and divided Serbia in 1974, creating two autonomous provinces to prevent further eruptions of nationalism.
Secondly, the accusation of Albanian chauvinism, is trying to villainize Albanians. Many nationalist movements have varying degrees of chauvinism attached to them. There probably were a number of Albanian nationalists who were chauvinist, but so are a number of nationalists from other areas. Chauvinism and war crimes were perpetrated by all sides in the Yugoslav Wars. Depending on the ethnicity of those in the former Yugoslavia, interpretations of what happened vary from person to person from the former Yugoslavia.
Thirdly, the article has removed the fact that Yugoslavia itself did engage in a one-year war with Croatia, which did involve Serbian recruits fighting in Croatia and result in a signficiant number of deaths on both sides and claims that Yugoslavia never participated in any of the Yugoslav civil wars.
Usually the whole issue of who is chauvinist or not in the conflict falls into a viscious cycle of people arguing about the numbers, showing pictures, etc. of war crimes, and arguing that some pictures or facts are falsifications or exaggerations. Every side had chauvinists, every side did war crimes, the only question is the numbers which are still argued to this day. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.95.161.143 (talk • contribs)
This I write only because of last days comment why other republics has been in fear from Milosevic: I do not know how much is your knowledge about Yugoslavia so I will write little her about Yugoslavia death. For all us "historians" from ex Yugoslavia which are not living in Serbia first date of Yugoslavia death has been 6 october. 1988. I am sure that you now ask why ? After Tito death Yugoslavia has been ruled by presidency in which every republic is giving 1 member. Last 2 members has come from Vojvodina and Kosovo which has ulmost in all been independent from Serbia. Together there have been 8 members in presidency. On 6 october 1988 Serbia (Milosevis) has with coup in Vojvodina take control of this "province" and of her member in presidency. On 10 january 1989 Serbia has made coup in Montenegro and in march of 1989 he has made coup in Kosovo. Now in april of 1989 Serbia has 4 votes of presidency and all others "free" republics (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Macedonia) have another 4 votes and Yugoslavia has been dead. I really do not understand why Serbia has not tried coup in Macedonia to win 5 vote, but has choosen Slovenia. When this coup has failed in 1989 Yugoslavia presidency has become locked in 4 (Serbia): 4 (all others) voting. Funny is that Serbia has abolished Kosovo and Vojvodina provinces but she has not abolished members of presidency which has from then on put on positions from Serbia president :)) Breakup of Yugoslavia and political Story of Great Serbia has started only after failed coup in Slovenia when it has become clear that Milosevic will not have 5 votes of presidency and he will not become Tito after Tito. Rjecina 07:37, 6 June 2007 (UTC)
Yes I am sure that coup in Montenegro has been created by people which live there:)) Do you know why coup in Slovenia have failed ? Because Croatia has closed borders for Serbian "tourist" which has wanted to go see how beautifull is Slovenia capital. About voted in Yugoslav presidency my answer is that after coups Serbia has 3 votes (out of 8) and Montenegro with coup rulers has given 1 more vote. Rjecina 10:13, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
With elections in Serbia and Montenegro people has not "choosen" rulers but only confirmed Milošević (in Serbia) and coup leaders in Montenegro. How fre has been this election I will give you comment of Human Right Watch: "By May 1991, all the republics had held elections, although the elections in Serbia and Montenegro were neither free nor fair" About situation of Kosovo in 1991 you really do not want reports of HRW. Rjecina 12:30, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
In the end you know what is funny ? This version is more pro-serbian of version on Serbian wiki (article History of Serbia) ? Rjecina 13:52, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
OK, since no-one seems to be willing or able to list the precise outstanding supposed POV issue I will delete the tag. CheersOsli73 15:04, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
You can return POV because of this "mistakes":
Now my question is what this map show, where are political borders and what signification are of yelow, green and red lines on the map ? If I accept your argument that short lived "Voivodship of Serbia is part of Serbia because everything which is having Serbia name is part of Serbia then in this logic Croatia is great European country which need to have in territory part of Poland, Czech republic, Slovakia (White Croatia), Panonian Croatia (now it is part of Croatia), great parts of Bosnia (Dalmatian Croatia) and parts of Montenegro and Albania (Red Croatia). I have been never thinking in how great state I live. Maybe you now want to say that all things which has have name of Serbia are Serbian but this is not OK for other states ? I will not even comment your try to use your article on wikipedia to show that you are right. On that I will only say that it will be lower number of your fundamentalist articles about how good and great (in territory )are Serbs on wikipedia. Rjecina 6:32, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
For me must historical must funny thing is that Serbian dynasty which has ruled from X - XV century has been in reality Croatian dynasty Trpimirović which has changed surname 2 times (like Windsor in UK). If you look this today it is really funny :)) Rjecina 15:45, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
Some comments on the above:
CheersOsli73 20:25, 9 June 2007 (UTC)
I do not agree with your comment about Croatia occupation of Serbia. Look this map from article about Habsburg empire: [] You will see that NDH (not important what I think about this "state) has recieved in Serbia only what has been annexed from Croatia in 1918. With my poor english I will write today about territorial changes in time of Yugoslavia between today independent statesRjecina 6:03, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
Rjecina, tell me if I understand your argument correctly. Basically, you are saying that since this part of present day Serbia had previously been part of Austria-Hungary it is incorrect to call the Croatian annexation of that territory as "occupation". Is this a correct understanding of your pointof view? Osli73 09:52, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
I am only sorry that for us is not possible to speak about national/state arguments in court because I will win every time. Look this now you say about Syrmia that "Every land belong to its people". I am sure that you think that only about lands where Serbs are majority because in Kosovo where Albanians say "Every land belong to its people" and we people want freedom you say they are terrorist !! Rjecina 21:07, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
No you are speaking in articles about terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army but when is needed to speak about Serbs in Bosnia and Croatia you speak about Serbia support for military forces (not terrorist, but normal) of Bosnian and Croatian Serbs. Rjecina 21:57, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
It couldn't have been returned to NDH because NDH was an unrecognized puppet state,and yes, territory of Kingdom of Yugoslavia was legaly considered occupied by Nazi Germany and their allies. Rules of Hague conventions should have been applied, but Germans and other nazi-oriented entities (mostly Croats, Bulgarians and Hungarians) disregarded that and commited horrific crimes. So, not only it wasn't a legal territory of NDH, but it was also an illegal occupation.--Velimir85 14:06, 10 June 2007 (UTC)
Dear all, I think this discussion is going nowhere. In my opinion, the simple (or at least relatively simple) solution lies in two key Wikipedia guidelines - WP:OR and WP:V. Basically, it's not up to the editors of this article to determine what is the right or wrong interpretation of history, we should simply convey how professional historians (or, at least, respected sources) portray a specific historic event. I'm not sure how many good historic sources on Serbian history there are available on the internet (I'm sure there are a lot of books though). I suggest that we agree on a couple of sources and then apply their presentation of Serbian history, rather than our own (which would be WP:OR). I suggest we add any good sources below (online or otherwise):
Good link with very few not important mistakes. Rjecina 14:54, 14 June 2007 (UTC)
OK, does anyone have any other, perhaps more detailed, links or sources they feel could be appropriate (ie not obscure books/sources)? CheersOsli73 07:25, 15 June 2007 (UTC)
I am appalled that an argument is went on this long, and I am very mad that no one on Wikipedia called a close to this. I wrote the first section MONTHS AGO, and now it has gone completely off-topic with nationalist rants and accusations of people who were "not there" of not being able to make sound judgements, accusing information of Milosevic's actions of being from "pro-Croatian" media, that Albanians did not "accept" the very existance of a Serbian state by User:PANONIAN. Or from User:Rjecina saying this article is "pro-Serbian" and speaking of Croatian "historical", "justified" claims on Serbia and being sarcastic about very grave and serious issues about the Yugoslav Wars. These are all obvious nationalistic statements by PANONIAN and Rjecina in particular. People can be proud of their nation on wikipedia, but post it on your personal page, DON'T insult other nations, DON'T POST Original Research which is forbidden on wikipedia. JUST QUIT, there have been thousands of these pointless debates. I'm neutral, I see the entire Yugoslav wars as a terrible catastrophe resulting from opportunists like Milosevic and Tudjman who used the old ethnic nationalist card, to win their way to power. I'm certain that many from the former Yugoslavia have been seriously and negatively affected by the brutality of the Yugoslav Wars and truely want to believe and prove that their nation was "the more innocent one", but that is personal judgement, and cannot and will not be sustained as fact on wikipedia discussions and articles. User:R-41
If either the user PANONIAN or Rjecina have any common, justifiable information that has firm proof that they want to add, or obvious, universally accepted errors they wish to fix, then they can continue on this page. But if either of the two or others continues this discussion board as a blog for a months long argument they should stop immediately. This is a warning to both PANONIAN and Rjecina, do not abuse the discussion boards any further with unjustified arguments! User:R-41
When is there going to be an HDI study?DedMed 20:50, 12 June 2007 (UTC)
For all of you arguing about how the name should be written, how about a compromise. The first time the province is mentioned, use the full Kosovo and Metohija, and after that stick with the more English Kosovo. Then in whatever section it keeps getting added to and removed from, leave the explanation of the Serbian name and the nickname Kosmet. (I'm not so sure what the Albanian name has to do with it, even as a majority; that seems like something that should be on the Kosovo page, rather than here, but I don't really care one way or the other.) Would something like that work for any of you, so this can be settled and (hopefully) avoided in the future? -Bbik★ 21:47, 20 June 2007 (UTC)
OK people, it seems to me we're making this a lot more difficult than it has to be. The first time around, we call it whatever the official Serbian name (I guess it's KiM) for it is and thereafter we just say "Kosovo". The reason we should use the official Serbian name the first time around (rather than the official UNMIK or inofficial Albanian name) is that this is an article abot Kosovo as a Serbian administrative region. Cheers Osli73 21:12, 25 June 2007 (UTC)
I also just wanted to add that the Constitution of Serbia refers to the province as Kosovo and Metohija. // laughing man 19:12, 27 June 2007 (UTC)
The proposed compromise (i.e., use the Serbian government/nationalist term "Kosovo and Metohija" first, then use "Kosovo" elsewhere) is reasonable. "Kosovo" is clearly the established English usage, cited a huge number of times by reputable sources. A check of the sources reveals that "Kosovo and Metohija" is used virtually exclusively by only Serb government and nationalist sources. Plus, Noah makes a great point that to use "and Metohija" -- a term whose usage in the last twenty years has been intended to piss off Kosovo's Albanian majority -- tilts the article unacceptably towards Serb POV. LaughingMan's proposal is to decide that the Serbian constitution (obviously representing only one point of view in the current conflict!) should be given particular weight over all other sources, including Kosovo's operative legal documents such as UNSCR 1244 and the Constitutional Framework as well as media/international usage: to make such a decision would be original research. Incidentally, I suspect that after Kosovo becomes independent we will have this conversation again regarding whether to use "Kosova" instead of "Kosovo." I don't have strong feelings about it, but generally think that just to use "Kosovo" is the path of least resistance for now. Envoy202 22:50, 2 July 2007 (UTC)
Sorry! Didn't mean to offend. Let's all chill out and avoid profanity. Envoy202 11:37, 3 July 2007 (UTC)
Ev is correct on this one. The full form should be used where useful and expected and shortened to Kosovo elsewhere. Both 'Kosovo' and 'Kosovo and Metohija' are acceptable in English, the former is just the informal usage. Whilst the UN administers Kosovo it does not determine it's status which remains (for the present) an autonomous province of Serbia, and known as whatever Serbia wants to call it. DSuser 15:25, 4 July 2007 (UTC)
Nikola's version is the most stable one.--Tones benefit 17:47, 5 July 2007 (UTC)
Someone should add the cities from Kosovo in the list of Serbian cities. Kosovo is still apart of Serbia so anyone can you add them to that list on the artical. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Euro.Serb (talk • contribs) 09:56, 29 June 2007 (UTC)
I've added cities from Kosovo, taking the data frome the 'List of cities in Serbia' page which quotes 2002 census figures. The figures for cities in Kosovo only have one set of numbers, which seem to correspond with the 'urban' figures for those in the rest of Serbia. DSuser 15:47, 4 July 2007 (UTC)
Fair enough, Duja. We need some figures in there, though. According to the 'list of cities in Serbia' page both sets come from a 2002 census. We can't pretend those cities don't exist. If you can find better numbers, please just go ahead and amend.
And until someone says otherwise Kosovo is still a part of Serbia - don't prejudge final status negotiations please! DSuser 15:47, 4 July 2007 (UTC)
Some users are reverting the addition of cities in Kosovo without contributing to the discussion here. However reliable the numbers are we need to account for those cities somehow - it is not that they don't exist! We need to put them in the list and annotate that the numbers may be unreliable. DSuser 11:14, 5 July 2007 (UTC)
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.