Serbs of Croatia

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Script error: No such module "Sidebar". The Serbs of Croatia (Template:Lang-sh-Cyrl-Latn) or Croatian Serbs (Template:Lang-sh-Cyrl-Latn) constitute the largest national minority in Croatia. The community is predominantly Eastern Orthodox Christian by religion, as opposed to the Croats who are Catholic.

In some regions of modern-day Croatia, mainly in southern Dalmatia, ethnic Serbs possibly have been present from the Early Middle Ages. Serbs from modern-day Serbia and Bosnia-Herzegovina started actively migrating to Croatia at a time when the Habsburg monarchy was engaged in a series of wars against the Ottoman Empire. Several migration waves happened after 1538, when the Emperor Ferdinand I granted them the right to settle on the territory of the Military Frontier. In exchange for land and exemption from taxation, they had to conduct military service and participate in the protection of the border. They populated the Dalmatian Hinterland, Lika, Kordun, Banovina, Slavonia, and western Syrmia. From the beginning of the 20th century, the Croat-Serb Coalition led by Croat Frano Supilo and Serb Svetozar Pribićević governed the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia until the dissolution of Austria-Hungary. After the creation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in 1918 (later renamed to Yugoslavia), a few thousand Serbs moved to Croatian territory. During World War II, Serbs were targeted for extermination as part of genocide by the Ustashas in the Nazi German puppet state Independent State of Croatia (NDH).

After the beginning of the breakup of Yugoslavia and Croatia's proclamation of independence, the Serbs living in Croatia rebelled against the Croatian government and proclaimed the Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) on parts of Croatian territory, which led to the Croatian War of Independence (1991–1995). Several RSK leaders have been later convicted of war crimes by the ICTY. After the Croatian Army's Operation Storm, the RSK ceased to exist, its territory was reincorporated into Croatia, and approximately 200,000 Serbs fled from the country. In the post-war period, Serbs were exposed to discriminatory measures and rhetoric, including barriers to employment and property rights, and use of the minority languages. Denial of genocide in the NDH has also been a prominent issue at times. Following the 2020 elections, Boris Milošević, member of the Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS) and President of the Serb National Council, was elected one of the four Deputy Prime Ministers. Shortly afterwards, the Croatian authorities and representatives of the Serbs marked the events of the 1991–95 war together. The expelled Croatian Serbs were the largest refugee population in Europe before the 2022 Ukraine war.[2]

Many prominent Croatian Serbs have become internationally recognized in their fields, such as Nikola Tesla, Milutin Milanković, Sava Šumanović, Rade Šerbedžija, Siniša Mihajlović and Peja Stojaković. According to the 2021 census, 123,892 Serbs were living in Croatia (3.2% of the population) which are recognized as a national minority by the Croatian Constitution and therefore have three permanent seats in the Croatian Parliament.

Overview

Traditional elements of their identity are the Serbian Orthodox faith, Cyrillic script and military history, while modern elements are language and literature, civic, social and political values, concern for ethnic status and national organisation, and celebration of the Liberation of Yugoslavia.[3]

According to the 2021 census, there were 123,892 ethnic Serbs living in Croatia, 3.2% of the total population. Their number was reduced by more than two-thirds in the aftermath of the 1991–95 War in Croatia as the 1991 pre-war census had reported 581,663 Serbs living in Croatia, 12.2% of the total population.

History

Medieval history

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Fresco of Mihailo Vojislavljević in the Church of St. Michael in Ston.

In the 10th-century De Administrando Imperio (DAI), the lands of Konavle, Zahumlje and Pagania (which included parts of southern Dalmatia now in Croatia) is described as inhabited by Serbs who immigrated there from an area near Thessaloniki previously arrived there from White Serbia.Template:Sfn[4] However, some scholars like Francis Dvornik, Tibor Živković, and Neven Budak doubt such a claim and consider that a closer reading of the DAI suggests that the Constantine VII's consideration about the regional population ethnic identity is based on Serbian political rule during the expansion of Časlav in the 10th century and does not indicate ethnic origin.[5]Template:Sfn[6]Template:Sfn John Van Antwerp Fine Jr. and Noel Malcolm believe that what is today western and proper Bosnia and Herzegovina was part of Croatia, while the rest was divided between Croatia and Serbia.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Some members of the Serbian royal family took refuge in Croatia amid dynastic rivalry and war with the First Bulgarian Empire in the 9th and 10th centuries.Template:Sfn

Stefan Vojislav (r. 1018–1043) ruled a territory that included the coastal region from Ston in the north down to Skadar by 1040 after his rebellion against Byzantine rule.Template:Sfn Mihailo Vojislavljević (1050–1081) built the St. Michael's Church in Ston, which has a fresco depicting him.[7] Croatia entered union with Hungary in the beginning of the 12th century.[8] Serbia also entered close relations with Hungary (Béla II married a Serbian princess, Helena). Beloš, a member of the Serbian royal family, became the "Ban of Croatia and Dalmatia" in 1142.Template:Sfn By the early 13th century, the territory of Hum was under the jurisdiction of the Western i.e. Roman Church,[9] while the Serbian Orthodox Church established the diocese of Hum in 1219, seated at Ston, that linked the Pelješac peninsula with Hum which lasted until 1321 when Serbian Orthodox bishop had to withdraw from Ston.[10] Serbia continued to hold parts of southernmost Dalmatia into the 14th century. In 1333 King of Serbia Stefan Dušan sold the Pelješac peninsula and the coastland between Ston and Dubrovnik to the Republic of Ragusa, while Ragusa had to pay an annual tribute and also had to guarantee freedom of worship for Eastern Orthodox believers in this territory.[11]

According to Yugoslav ethnologist Jovan Erdeljanović, members of the Orlović clan settled in Lika and Senj in 1432, later joining the Uskoks.Template:Sfn In 1436 on the Cetina, Croats, Vlachs, and Serbs appeared at the same time living on the estate of Ivan Frankopan.[12] Serbs are reported in Hungarian documents as living in Croatia in 1437 (three documents call the Serbs in Syrmia and Slavonia as RascianosRascians)Template:Sfn and on 22 November 1447, the Hungarian King Ladislaus V wrote a letter which mentioned: "Rascians, who live in our cities of Medvedgrad, Rakovac, both Kalinik and in Koprivnica".[13] Matthias Corvinus complained in a letter from 1462 that 200,000 peoples during the previous three years had been taken from his country by Turks, but this information was mistakenly used in Serbian and other historiographies as a reference for Serb migration to Hungary.[14][15] After the Ottoman conquests of Serbia and capture of Smederevo fortress in 1459 and fall of Bosnia 1463 different populations of Eastern Orthodox Christians moved into Syrmia and by 1483 perhaps 200,000 Eastern Orthodox Christians moved into central Slavonia and Syrmia. The Turkish conquest of Bosnia also pushed refugees and migrants into eastern Croatia.[16][17]

Early modern period

File:Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia and Montenegro religious demographics map, 1901.png
Map of demographic distribution of main religious confessions in Croatia, Dalmatia, Bosnia, Serbia and Montenegro in 1901: #REDIRECT Template:Legend inline
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As many former inhabitants of the Austrian-Ottoman borderland fled northwards or were captured by the Ottoman invaders, they left unpopulated areas. At the beginning of the 16th century settlements of Eastern Orthodox Christians were also established in modern-day western Croatia.[18] In the first half of the 16th century Serbs settled Ottoman part of Slavonia while in the second part of the 16th century, they moved to the Austrian part of Slavonia.[19][20] In 1550 they established the Lepavina Monastery.[21] As Vlach settlements by name and signature we find marked Mali i Veliki Poganac (Poganetz) which was mentioned as Vlach settlement in 1610 and Lepavina (Lipavina) and Marča Monastery (Eparchy of Marča).[22] The Habsburg Empire encouraged people from the Ottoman Empire to settle as free peasant soldiers, establishing the Military Frontiers (Script error: No such module "Lang".) in 1522 (hence they were known as Grenzers, Script error: No such module "Lang".).Template:Sfn[23] When it comes to the Austrian colonization of the Turkish Vlachs to Slavonian Military Frontier and the Vlachs in the Croatian Military Frontier there are some minor differences. Vlachs to western Slavonia or the Varaždin Generalate of Slavonian Krajina are coming en masse and in a very short time: from yeare 1597 to 1600. To Croatian Krajina and Karlovac Generalate Vlachs arrive in smaller groups but throughout the whole XVII. century. Therefore, the Slavonian region was the first to open the door to the Balkans Vlachs. The biggest number of Vlachs comes from Slavonian Turkish Sandžaks[24] In the first half of the 16th century Serbs settled Ottoman part of Slavonia while in the second part of the 16th century, they moved to the Austrian part of Slavonia.[19][20]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".Serbs were mentioned in the Slavonian area at the end of the 14th century where they along with the Turks plundered and burned villages (Turcos et Rascianos).[25] The Habsburg Empire encouraged people from the Ottoman Empire to settle as free peasant soldiers, establishing the Military Frontiers (Militärgrenze) in 1522 (hence they were known as Grenzers, Krajišnici).Template:Sfn[23] They were mostly of Eastern Orthodox faith, Serbs and Vlachs (Romance-speaking).Template:SfnScript error: No such module "Unsubst". Catholic Vlachs were assimilated into Croats, while the Eastern Orthodox, under the jurisdiction of the Serbian Orthodox Church, assimilated into Serbs.[26][27]

File:Serbian frontiersman in Syrmia, 1742.jpg
Serbian frontiersman in Syrmia, Military Frontier, 1742

The militarized frontier would serve as a buffer against Ottoman incursions.[23] The Military frontiers had territory of modern Croatia, Serbia, Romania and Hungary. The colonists were granted small tracts of land, exempted from some obligations, and were to retain a share of all war booty.[23] The Grenzers elected their captains (vojvode) and magistrates (knezovi). All Eastern Orthodox settlers were promised freedom of worship.Template:Sfn[28] By 1538, the Croatian and Slavonian Military Frontier were established.[23] Austrians offered land to Serbs and Vlachs which acted as the cordon sanitaire together with Croats against Turkish incursions from the Ottoman Empire.[29]Template:Sfn The Military frontiers are virtually identical to the present Serbian settlements (war-time Republic of Serbian Krajina).Template:Sfn Colonization into Habsburg lands continued from 1526 to well into the seventeenth century. Serbian communities were dotted about until the twentieth century, preserving memories of their origin.[14]

In 1593, Provveditore Generale Cristoforo Valier mentions three nations constituting the Uskoks: "natives of Senj, Croatians, and Morlachs from the Turkish parts".Template:Sfn Many of the Uskoks, who fought a guerrilla war with the Ottoman Empire were Eastern Orthodox Christian Serbs, who fled from Ottoman Turkish rule and settled in White Carniola and Žumberak.[30][31][32][33] The Vlachs from Glamoč, Srb and Una area moved in among Eastern Orthodox Christians and settled in 1530 under the protection of King Ferdinand I. on the border of the Julian Alps (now Uskoks mountain) in Žumberak area.[34] Tihomir Đorđević points to the already known fact that the name 'Vlach' didn't only refer to genuine Vlachs or Serbs but also to cattle breeders in general.[35] In the Venetian documents from the late 16th and 17th centuries, the name "Morlachs" (another term of Vlachs, first mentioned in the 14th century) was used for immigrants from conquered territory previously of Croatian and Bosnian kingdoms by the Ottoman Empire. They were of both Eastern Orthodox and Catholic faith, settled inland of the coastal cities of Dalmatia, and entered the military service of both Venice and Ottoman Empire.[36]

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Serb national costume from Knin, 1899

There was a population movement from the Ottoman territories into Venetian Dalmatia in this period. The Venetian government welcomed immigrants, as they protected possessions against the Ottomans. The Morlachs, former Ottoman subjects, helped Venice triple its size in Dalmatia. The bishop of Makarska described how many people migrated from the Ottoman Empire to Venetian territories. Major population movements into Venetian Dalmatia occurred during the 1670s and 1680s. In the summer of 1685, Stjepan I. Cosmi, the Archbishop of Split, wrote that Morlach leader Stojan Janković had brought 300 families with him to Dalmatia, and also that around Trogir and Split, there were 5,000 refugees from Ottoman lands, without food; this was seen as a serious threat to the defence of Dalmatia. Grain sent by the Pope proved insufficient, and these were forced to launch expeditions into Ottoman territory.[37] Under Janković's leadership Serbs settled in Dalmatia in several waves. In July 1684. around 9000 Serbs settled around the borders of Dalmatia. By the end of the same year, 1500 Serb families moved from Zagora into Venice territory and the same migration happened in March 1685. when 600 families moved from Cetina under their chieftain Peraičić [38] The military border was returned in 1881 to the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia. In 1918, it became part of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs, which immediately joined the Kingdom of Serbia to form the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.

Throughout the history of the Serbs in Dalmatia, the Catholic clergy, particularly through the efforts of the Archbishop of Split, sought to assert their supreme authority over the "schismatics."[39] The formation of the Serbian identity of Vlachs in Croatia began in the 18th century under the influence of the Serbian Orthodox Church (SPC), and most of the local Eastern Orthodox priests of the Metropolitanate of Karlovci who were educated in monasteries outside Croatia under the guidance of SPC clergy who came to the southwestern region of the Habsburg monarchy during the Great Migrations of the Serbs (1690–1739). In 1695, Serbian Patriarch Arsenije III Čarnojević organized the SPC's hierarchy in Croatia – the territory of the Military Frontier was 'subjugated' to the Eparchy of Gornji Karlovac, and Varaždin Generalate and the rest of Croatia to the Eparchy of Pakrac (since 1705). The Serbianisation of the Vlachs in southern Croatia was the result of the hierarchical linkage of Eastern Orthodox Vlachs from southern Croatian territories, at the time ruled by the Venetians, with the SPC in northern Croatia, which strengthened the ritual and ecclesiastical connection of the Vlachs with the Serb immigrants.[40]

File:Manastir Krka DSC07498.JPG
Krka monastery (mid-16th century), one of the oldest Serbian Orthodox monasteries in Croatia

Among the oldest Eastern Orthodox churches in Croatia are the monasteries of Krupa, Krka and Dragović, and other smaller churches (in settlements Kula Atlagića, Pađene, Golubić, Miranje, Biljane, Ostrovica, Karin, Biovičino Selo, Đevrske, Kistanje, Žagrović, Radučić, Mokro Polje, Benkovac, Dragišić-Grabovci, Bratiškovci, Kosovo-Markovac, Morpolača, Žegar, Plavno, Drniš, Ervenik, Kolarina, Brgud, Vrbnik, Kričke, Islam Grčki, Dobropoljci among others). These churches were converted to Eastern Orthodoxy in the mid-16th century and later, during the Ottoman period were forbidden to build new Christian churches.[41] The claim by Nikodim Milaš that they date back to the 14-15th century is controversial and unlikely, as they display Romanesque and Gothic architectural features that are unusual for Byzantine-Orthodox churches. Additionally, Eastern Orthodoxy did not exist in Croatia before the Ottoman conquest, which further challenges such dating of these churches.[42][43][44]

Modern period

In the 1860s, Serbian thought began spreading among the Eastern Orthodox Christians in the Kingdom of Dalmatia. At first through the religious denomination, and over time as a sign of national affiliation. There was also a brief occurrence when certain Catholic intellectuals, predominantly in Dubrovnik, were won over by the Serbian thought. They were known as "Serb Catholics".[45] The reason for this was that Dalmatia and the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, at the time ruled by Károly Khuen-Héderváry, were extremely disadvantaged so intellectuals did not want to link themselves to them, while at the same time, they found newly created Kingdoms of Serbia and Montenegro with their idea of unification of the South Slavs, appealing. With the creation of Yugoslavia, their political goals were achieved, and after that, these "one-time Serbs" disappeared from the political stage.[46] Such developments in the spread of Serbian thought in the Croatian lands were the result of Serbian politicians' plans dating back to the first half of the 19th century when Serbia wasn't an independent country, but a province of the Ottoman Empire. According to the 1844 Ilija Garašanin's Načertanije, they intended to establish a Serbian Empire on the territory of the collapsed Ottoman Empire. At first, its borders were supposed to be the borders of the Ottoman Empire and the Slavs in them, but they gradually expanded to the territory of present-day Croatia (including the Military Frointaire and Dalmatia).[47] To accomplish this, the ground had to be prepared, so that diplomacy and the military would have a stronger base for taking action. The basis for this was the Serbian state law, and where it wasn't possible to appropriate the land with it, the argument of nationality, and when that argument couldn't be applied, then it was necessary to "create" the Serbs among the target population, if not among all, then among the majority. The main target was Eastern Orthodox Christians in the neighbouring, non-Serb countries. In 1848/50, the Serbian government organized a secret network of agents who propagated the Serbian ideas. Those agents were concealed as cultural workers. The famous agents were Georgije Nikolajević and Stjepan Mitrov Ljubiša.[47] The 'creation' of new Serbs was carried out by identification of Eastern Orthodox Christianity in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina only with Serbs.[48] Another argument used in the areas with no Eastern Orthodox Christians was identifying people who spoke Shtokavian with the Serbs. The idea "all Shtokavians are Serbs" was created by German Slavists in the 1850s, and was promoted by the Austrian government who wanted to equalize Croats and Serbs so that it could more easily rule the Croatian lands and in the next stage conquer Serbia and penetrate across Macedonia to Thessaloniki.[49] The idea was that it was easier to "govern Belgrade and Zagreb if the same language was spoken in them". Geostrategic position of Belgrade to Zagreb further contributed to favouring the Serbs whom Austrians did not perceive as a danger, unlike Croats who had their language, politicians, national consciousness, laws, military tradition and prepared army, as well as international treaties which have affirmed their rights, so Austrians needed someone (Serbs) to discipline the Croats. The same was done by Hungary which became a strong political factor after 1848 and wished to expand into the Southeast Europe, which was particularly strong during the reign of Károly Khuen-Héderváry over Croatia.[49] Script error: No such module "Multiple image". The revolutionary 1848 and the process of building a modern Croatian nation resulted in closer cooperation between Croats and Serbs and recognition of their equality in the sense of Illyrian Movement (also known as the Croatian National Revival) and Yugoslavian ideas. In the 1830s, ideas of the Illyrian Movement spread to Dalmatia. In 1835, Božidar Petranović began publishing the Serbo-Dalmatian Magazine. In the following thirty years, Croats and Serbs worked together in the 'national movement' (by using this neutral name they avoided conflicts) against the Austro-Hungarian unitarian and Italian nationalists. However, since Vuk Karadžić, Ilija Garašanin and Jovan Subotić started writing of Dalmatia as a "Serbian land", and the recognition of Serbia as an independent state in 1878 Congress of Berlin, the differences between Croats and Serbs in Dalmatia increased. Following Croat enthusiasm with the successful 1878 Austro-Hungarian conquest of Bosnia and Herzegovina, during which many Croatian soldiers died, and them seeking unification of Dalmatia and the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, the conflict between Croats and Serbs was inevitable.[50] In 1879, Serbs from Bukovica voted for the Italian candidate instead of Croat Miho Klaić.[50] This event was called by People's Party's supporters Bukovica betrail. Shortly thereafter, separate Croatian and Serbian parties emerged, but Croatian parties managed to keep the majority in the Diet of Dalmatia while Serbs started cooperating with the Italian nationalists.[48] Before this, Serbs in Dalmatia started emphasizing Serbianism more often, and for the Croats emphasize "Slovene, Yugoslavian, Slavic, Illyrian", which Mihovil Pavlinović considered destructive to Croatia so he used only attributes "Croatian" in his political program.[51]

Ban Ivan Mažuranić abolished Serbian education autonomy, which was carried out by the Serbian Orthodox Church, as part of his educational reforms and liberal endeavours. Despite the interpretation of this move as anti-Serbian, some of the most senior governmental positions during Mažuranić's reign were held by the Serbs; Jovan Živković was Deputy Ban, Livije Radivojević president of the Table of Seven (Supreme Court), and Nikola Krestić President of the Croatian Parliament.[52]

During his 20-year-long reign, marked by violence and aggressive magyarization, Ban Károly Khuen-Héderváry encouraged ethnic conflicts between Croats and Serbs. He introduced Cyrillic in grammar school and equalized it with Latin, and allowed the use of Serbian flags. He has changed the official language in the Kingdom from Croatian to "Croato-Serbian" and appointed Serb Vaso Đurđević to the position of the Speaker of the Croatian Parliament. In 1884, Parliament enacted the so-called "Serbian laws" by which SPC gained the right to independently conduct education on the Croatian territory. In addition, Khuen-Héderváry financially assisted the Serbs. During his reign, four out of eight Croatian county prefects, Deputy Ban and Speaker of the Croatian Parliament were Serbs, and Serbs occupied the highest ranks in the judiciary. The main goal of favouring the Serbs was to encourage inter-ethnic (Croat/Serb) conflicts which would lead to the prevention of Croatian resistance against the Austrian Empires' state policies.[53][54] By the end of the 19th century, on the Vladimir Matijević's initiative, Serbs established several institutions such as the Serbian Bank in Zagreb, the Association of Serbian Agricultural Cooperatives and the Serbian Business Association 'Privrednik'.[55]

File:Rodna kuća Milutina Milankovića.jpg
House in Dalj where Milutin Milanković was born, today hosts the Cultural and Scientific Center

In 1894, Srbobran, a journal of Serbs in Croatia, which was funded by the Serbian government,[56] published an article titled Our First Decennial in which the author described the awakening of Croatian national consciousness and aspirations to Western values among the Eastern Orthodox Christians and the lack of indoctrination with Serbianism among the clergy; "In the Serbian church, we found many priests who didn't know who the Saint Sava was, let alone they wanted to be Sava's apostles, neither safeguard his behests, Eastern Orthodox faith and Serbian nationality nor nourish their flock within them. Among them, we found "Orthodox Croats" who preached from the Serbian enlightener Sava's ambon Croatian thought, and Latin was more dear to them then Cyrlic."[57][58] The Croatian-Serbian conflict culminated on 10 August 1902, when, after years of controversial writing,[59] Srbobran published a text titled To Investigation Yours or Ours in which author Nikola Stojanović, President of the Serbian Academic Society Zora, denied the very existence of the Croatian nation and predicted the result of the conflict between Croats and Serbs, calling for destruction: "That struggle must lead to the investigation ours or yours. One party must fall. Their geographical position, circumstances in which they live everywhere mixed with the Serbs, and the process of general evolution where the idea of Serbianism means progress, guarantees us that those [falling] will be Croats." Enraged crowds reacted by burning Serbian flags and attacking Serb-owned shops, and buildings used by the Serbian institutions.[60][61]

File:Svetozar Pribićević (1).jpg
Svetozar Pribićević, one of the founders of the Croat-Serb Coalition and Vice President of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs

Formation of the so-called New Course Policies in the first decade of the 20th century was a turning point for the resumption of cooperation between Croats and Serbs to fight for common interests, as confirmed by the 1905 Zadar Resolution when the Croats agreed on broad concessions regarding flags, education, language and equality of Serbs. This led to the creation of the Croat-Serb Coalition (HSK) whose policy was based on cooperation with Hungary, the Italian parties in Dalmatia and the Serbs in Croatia and Slavonia, guaranteeing broad concessions regarding the Serb minority in Croatia.[62][63] Serbs played a disproportionately large role in the political life of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia. Electoral units were not created according to the population but were gerrymandered according to the Governments' interests so, for example, in the 1913 parliamentary election, the Croatian Peasant Party received 12,917 votes and only 3 seats, while the Serb Independent Party received 11,704 votes and 17 seats. Serbs Mišćević, Pribićević, Krajnović, and Budisavljević received 1,062 votes, which was enough for all four of them to get elected, while Croat M. Uroić from the Party of Rights won 1,138 votes but hadn't been elected.[64] According to the 1910 census, 644,955 Serbs lived on the territory of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, accounting for 24.5% of the population. In 1900, 95,000 Serbs, accounting for 16% of the population, lived in the Kingdom of Dalmatia.

World War I and Kingdom of Yugoslavia

File:Etnografski muzej Beograd Dungodung 50.jpg
Serbian costumes from Dalmatia, the end of the 19th and early 20th century

Immediately upon the outbreak of the World War I, all organizations that the government considered favoured the unification of South Slavs or Serbia, which was on the side of the Allied Powers, were banned. Josip Frank's associates took advantage of some provocations and the anger of the people after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand by Serb Gavrilo Princip and organized anti-Serbian demonstrations. After a stone was thrown on a parade in which the image of Franz Ferdinand was carried through Zagreb, many cafés and gathering places of pro-Yugoslav politicians as well as Serb-owned shops were demolished.[65][66] Croat-Serb Coalition MP's were also attacked.[67] On the other hand, members of the Social Democratic Party of Croatia and Slavonia held a rally in which they spoke against the violence.[68] Simultaneously with the large anti-Serbian protests held in Vienna, Budapest and Bosnia and Herzegovina, in which there were wounded and dead, protests against pro-Yugoslav oriented citizens were held in many Croatian cities, including Dubrovnik, in which protesters attacked Serbian Society "Dušan Magnificant"[69] Riots have been reported in Zadar, Metković, Bjelovar, Virovitica and Konavle where protesters burned the Serbian flag. In Đakovo and Slavonski Brod riots become so violent that the army intervention was requested.[68] In addition, a curfew was imposed in the town of Petrinja. In Vukovar and Zemun police managed to prevent more clashes. Most Serbs in Croatia approved assassination. Cases of provocation, such as showing images of King Peter I of Serbia, joy, insults and celebrations, have been reported.[70][71] 14 Serbs were arrested in Zadar for celebrating the assassination.[72]

Following the end of World War I, previously independent State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and Kingdom of Serbia merged in 1918 into the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The creation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia led to the formation of stronger ties between Serbs in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina with Serbia. Immediately after 1918, the influx of Serbs from Serbia into the territory of Croatia, in particular in the areas of Syrmia and Lika-Krbava County, increased.[73] Relative growth in the number of Serb citizens was recorded in Virovitica (35% increase), and Syrmia and Modruš-Rijeka counties, mainly due to the migration of Serbian war veterans who fought on Macedonian front to Slavonia during agrarian reform which was organized by the authorities. Thus, 25 settlements for volunteers were erected, and 8,000 families settled on the land in the areas of agrarian offices in Osijek and Vukovar.[74] Although most of the Serbian parties in Croatia have been co-operating with Croatian Peasant Party in the struggle against Serbian unitarianism for years, following the creation of Banovina of Croatia in 1939, part of Serbs showed a lack of willingness to live in a country with Croat majority. There were also requests for joining the Lika and Kordun districts with the Vrbas Banovina which had a Serb majority.[75]

World War II

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File:Jasenovac HDR D.jpg
Stone Flower, a monument to the victims of Jasenovac death camp, which was part of the Genocide of Serbs committed by Ustashe

Following the Invasion of Yugoslavia in April 1941, the Axis powers occupied the entire territory of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia and established a puppet state, the so-called Independent State of Croatia (NDH) on the territory of present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia. The Ustaše government saw Serbs, Jews, Romanis and antifascist Croats as a disruptive element and enemies of the Croatian people, and immediately started with their prosecution. One-third of Serbs were to be killed, one-third expelled and one-third forcibly converted to Catholicism, according to a formula devised by Ustaše ministers.[76] Upon the establishment of the NDH, Ustaše officials immediately began making harsh statements against the Serbs.[77] Although some of the prominent Serbs first offered cooperation to the new Ustaše government, Serbs were outlawed. During the first months of NDH's existence, numerous legal decisions were made against the Serbs: they had to leave the public service, had to move to the northern parts of Zagreb,[78] could walk through Zagreb only during the day,[79] had to wear a badge with the letter "P" (stood for "Pravoslavni", meaning Eastern Orthodox Christians),[80] The name of their faith was changed from Serbian Orthodox to Greek-Eastern, and usage of the Cyrillic script was prohibited.[81] Ustaše were making lists of Serbs which they used for deportations to Serbia. About 175,000 Serbs were deported from NDH to Serbia during the first two years of NDH's existence.[82] The regime systematically and brutally massacred Serbs in villages in the countryside, using a variety of tools.[83] In addition, Nazi-style concentration camps were set up for enemies of the state, the most notorious being Jasenovac where some 50,000 Serbs were killed.[84] Sisak and Jastrebarsko concentration camp were specially formed for children.[85][86][87] During the war, around 300,000 Serbs are estimated to have been murdered under the Ustashe regime as a result of their genocide campaign.[88] Diana Budisavljević, a humanitarian of Austrian descent, carried out rescue operations and saved more than 15,000 children from Ustashe camps.[89][90]

File:Deca u logoru Sisak.jpg
Prisoners in the Sisak concentration camp which was especially created for children

Budisavljević and her team was assisted by the Croatian Red Cross and the Zagreb Archdiocese branch of Caritas. Thousands of rescued Serb children were placed with ethnic Croat families from Zagreb and rural communities.Template:Sfn

The Ustasha policy towards Serbs further drove a number of them to join either Chetniks or the Yugoslav Partisans who were particularly strong in the regions of Lika, Kordun and Banovina. In 1941–42, the majority of Partisans in Croatia were Serbs, but by October 1943 the majority were Croats. This change was partly due to the decision of a key Croatian Peasant Party member, Božidar Magovac, to join the Partisans in June 1943, and partly due to the surrender of Italy in September 1943.Template:Sfn[91][92][93] Furthermore, Ustashe authorities ceding Northern Dalmatia to fascist Italy, Italian terror of the population and misrule of the Ustashe and Axis invaders would further push Croats towards the partisans. At the moment of the capitulation of Italy to the Allies, the Serbs and Croats were participating equally according to their respective population sizes as it was in Yugoslavia as a whole.[94] Eventually, Serbian percentage dropped in favour of Croats by the end of the war amounting to 28.6% in 1944 in Croatia. The Serb contribution to Croatian Partisans represented more than their proportion of the local population.[95][96]

After the invasion of Yugoslavia by Axis forces, Serbian uprisings broke out under the Chetnik leadership in Gračac, Srb, Donji Lapac, Drvar and Bosansko Grahovo. The uprisings in the NDH were a reaction to the genocide policies of the Ustaše towards the Serbs.Template:Sfn[97] The policy of the Chetniks under the leadership of Draža Mihailović varied from the struggle with the Nazis to tactical or selective collaboration with them in different periods throughout the war. The Chetnik movement operated as "legalised" auxiliary forces under Axis control.[98] They had collaboration agreements with the Italians in occupied Dalmatia and, after the Italian capitulation in September 1943, with the Germans directly.Template:Sfn They also collaborated with some of the Ustashe forces in northern Bosnia and they fought together against the Yugoslav Partisans during the Case White.Template:Sfn Contracting parties obliged to a joint struggle against the Partisans, in return, Serb villages would be protected by the NDH authorities together with the Chetniks from "attacks by communists, so-called Partisans".[99] The goal of the Chetniks, based on a 1941 directive, was the creation of an ethnically homogeneous Greater Serbia. The largest Chetnik massacres took place in eastern Bosnia within the NDH where they preceded any significant Ustashe operations.Template:Sfn In the territories they controlled, Chetniks committed genocide[100][101] against the Croat and Muslim civilian populations.Template:Sfn[102]Template:Sfn Estimates of the number of deaths caused by the Chetniks in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina range from 50,000 to 68,000.[103] In April 1943, Đujić's Chetniks set up a prison and execution site in the village of Kosovo (today Biskupija), near Knin.[104] Thousands of local civilians, (both Croats and even Serb Anti-Fascists) including women and children, as well as captured Partisans, were held and mistreated at this prison, while hundreds of prisoners (as many as over 1,000[105]) were tortured and killed at an execution site near a ravine close to the camp.[106] Chetnik propaganda claimed that the Partisan resistance consisted of Jews.Template:Sfn Some Jews who hid in the countryside were killed and robbed by Chetniks.[107] As the Chetniks increased their cooperation with the Germans, their attitude toward the Jews in the areas under their control deteriorated, and they identified the Jews with the hated Communists. There were many instances of Chetniks murdering Jews or handing them over to the Germans.Template:Sfn

A certain change in relations towards Serbs in NDH took place in the spring of 1942 on German demand, as the Germans realized that the Ustaše policy towards Serbs strengthened their rebellion, which was putting pressure on the German army that had to send more of its troops to the NDH territory.[108] Afterwards, Ustaše founded the Croatian Orthodox Church and Serbs were recruited to the Croatian Home Guard units.[109] Ustaše stopped with deportations of Serbs and their forced conversions to Catholicism. However, these measures did not significantly affect the Serb rebellion. The establishment of the Church was done to try and pacify the state as well as to Croatisize the remaining Serb population once the Ustaše realized that the complete eradication of Serbs in the NDH was unattainable. Persecution of Serbs continued, however, but was less intense.Template:Sfn At the beginning of 1942, NDH authorities started making agreements with the Chetniks to avoid conflicts and coordinate actions against the Yugoslav Partisans.[110][111] In 1944 the Chetniks recognized the sovereignty of the Independent State of Croatia and became a legalized movement in it.[112] The necessary ammunition and provisions were supplied to the Chetniks by the Ustaše military. Chetniks who were wounded in such operations would be cared for in NDH hospitals, while the orphans and widows of Chetniks killed in action would be supported by the Ustaše state. The agreements did not stop crimes against Serbs by the Ustaše or against Muslims and Croats by the Chetniks. In early May 1945 Chetnik forces withdrew through Ustaše-held Zagreb; many of these were later killed, along with captured Ustaše, by the Partisans as part of the Bleiburg repatriations. On 8 May 1945, Yugoslav Partisans entered Zagreb, which marked the collapse of the Ustaše regime and the liberation of Croatia from the Nazi occupation. Following the end of the war, Croatia entered union with Bosnia and Herzegovina, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia, and Slovenia and formed the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

Socialist Yugoslavia

During the Second World War, at the Second and Third sessions of the National Anti-Fascist Council of the Peoples Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH) held in October 1943 and May 1944 respectively, the equality of the Serbian and Croatian nations, as constituent nations of the federal unit of Croatia, was recognized in every aspect.[113] Later, in 1963, the Croatian Constitution did not mention the Serbs in Croatia as a constituent nation of SR Croatia. Constitution of 1974 defined Croatia as a "national state of Croatian people, state of Serbian people in Croatia and state of other nationalities that live in it".Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Croatian War of Independence

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File:Map of Republika Srpska Krajina.png
Territorial extent of Republic of Serbian Krajina, proclaimed unilaterally in 1991 and disestablished in 1995

Amid rising Serbian nationalism and tensions between Yugoslav republics during the breakup of Yugoslavia, on 8 July 1989 Serbs held a rally in Knin during which numerous Chetnik symbols were exhibited and a JNA military intervention against Croatia was invoked. With the introduction of the multiparty system, the first ethnic Serb parties were founded in Croatia, the largest being Serb Democratic Party (SDS). Soon afterwards, extremist leaders of the Serb movements in Lika, Northern Dalmatia, Kordun, and Podunavlje called for armed rebellion against the Croatian government, and violence against Croats and refused to recognize legally elected Croatian authorities.[114] By this point, several opposition parties in Serbia, such as Vojislav Šešelj's Serbian Radical Party, were openly calling for a Greater Serbia that would incorporate Serbs living in different regions of Yugoslavia into one state, rejecting the then existing boundaries of the republics as the artificial creation of Tito's Partisans. The crisis in Yugoslavia was further fueled by Serbian President Slobodan Milošević, who supported these groups. Milošević "endorsed a Serbian nationalist agenda" and "exploited a growing wave of Serbian nationalism to strengthen centralised rule in the SFRY".[115] The republics of Croatia and Slovenia eventually sought to secede from Yugoslavia following disagreements between the republics regarding the structure of the federal government.[116]

Tension grew following the Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 's victory in the 1990 general election, led by Franjo Tudjman, since one of its political goals was Croatia's independence from Yugoslavia. Jovan Rašković, leader of SDS, refused to participate in the work of the Croatian Parliament in May 1990. Some prominent Serbian politicians and scientists, such as Simo Rajić and Jovan Bamburać, called for coexistence, de-escalation and peace, while others organized Serb parties in the Croatian government-controlled areas, like Milan Đukić, while others, like Veljko Džakula, unsuccessfully tried to organize the parties in the rebelled areas, but their work was prevented by Serb nationalists.[117] On 17 August 1990, part of the Croatian Serbs, supported by Serbia, rebelled against Croatian government in the so-called Log Revolution.

On 22 December 1990, the Croatian Parliament ratified a new constitution in which Serbs were classified as a national minority.[118][119][120][121][122] Previously Serbs were considered autochthonous constituent of Croatia. In the first paragraph of Article 12, Croatian was specified as the official language and alphabet, and dual-language road signs were torn down even in Serb-majority areas.[123] Furthermore, a number of Serbs were removed from the bureaucracies and the police and replaced by ethnic Croats.[123] Many Serbs in government lost their jobs, and HDZ made themselves target of Serbian propaganda by having party members attempting to rehabilitate the WWII Croatian fascist movement Ustaše, or by saying that the numbers of people killed in Jasenovac, one of the largest extermination camp in Europe, were inflated.[124] The proclamation of the new constitution was considered by Serbian leaders as evidence of Croat hostility towards Serbs. Thus, SDS, which rejected the new constitution,[123] began building its national governmental entity to preserve rights that Serbs saw as being stripped away and to enhance the sovereignty of the Croatian Serbs.[125] A Norwegian historian Øyvind Hvenekilde Seim stated that status of Serbs in Croatia, who made important contributions to Croatian cultural, scientific, and political history, was annulled by actions of president Franjo Tuđman during the 1990s.[126] Sabrina P. Ramet wrote that Tuđman's regime "promoted a traditionalist and exclusive vision of Croatia" as a Croat state in which Serbs were "unwelcome", while journalist Chris Hedges claimed to have transcript documents of a meeting that supposedly showed Tuđman had "planned ethnic cleansing and other war crimes", including "Croatia’s final solution" of its Serbian problem.[127] Under the influence of propaganda and with the support from Serbia as well as in response to actions by President Tudjman's administration,[128] rebelled Serbs established an unrecognized state called Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK) in hopes of achieving independence and complete self-governance from Croatia. As the popularity of the unification of RSK with Serbia into a Greater Serbia increased, the rebellion against Croatia became more intense. The RSK had de facto control over one-third of Croatian territory during its existence between 1991 and 1995 but failed to gain any international recognition. According to the ICTY, the RSK implemented policies "which advanced the objective to forcibly and permanently remove the majority of Croat and other non-Serb populations from approximately the one-third of Croatia".[129]

In the spring of 1991, an open war broke out. Serb forces, in cooperation with the local Serb authorities, commenced persecutions to drive the Croat and other non-Serb populations from areas such as Krajina, controlled by rebelled Serbs.[129] Nearly all non-Serbs were expelled; between 170,000 (according to the ICTY), 250,000 (according to Human Rights Watch) and 500,000 (according to the UNHCR),[130][131][132] and hundreds of Croat and other non-Serb civilians were killed.[129][130] There were numerous instances of war crimes against Croat civilians and prisoners of war perpetrated by Serb and Yugoslav forces in Croatia.[133] Among them, the Dalj massacre,[134] the Lovas killings,[135][136] the Baćin massacre,[134] the Voćin massacre,[134][137] the Vukovar massacre, the Škabrnja massacre, the Tovarnik massacre, the Široka Kula massacre, Petrinja killings and the Zagreb rocket attacks. According to the Croatian Association of Prisoners in Serbian Concentration Camps, a total of 8,000 Croatian civilians and prisoners of war (a large number after the fall of Vukovar) went through Serb prison camps such as Velepromet camp, Sremska Mitrovica camp, Stajićevo camp, Begejci camp and others where they were subjected to abuse and torture. A total of 300 people died in them.[138]

Meanwhile, Serbs living in Croatian towns, especially those near the front lines, were subjected to various forms of discrimination and harassment.[139] Croatian Serbs in Eastern and Western Slavonia and parts of the Krajina, were also forced to flee or were expelled by Croatian forces, though on a restricted scale and in lesser numbers.[140] The Croatian Government sought to stop such occurrences and were not a part of the Government's policy.Template:Sfn War crimes were also committed by Croatian forces against Serb civilians. Serb prisoners were detained and tortured in camps such as Lora, Pakračka Poljana, and Marino Selo.[141] The war ended with a Croatian military success in Operation Storm in 1995 and subsequent peaceful reintegration of the remaining renegade territory in eastern Slavonia in 1998 as a result of the signed Erdut Agreement from 1995. Local Serbs, on the ground that the Agreement established the Serb National Council and gained the right to establish the Joint Council of Municipalities. During and in the aftermath of Operation Storm about 200,000 Serbs fled from the RSK[142] and hundreds of mainly elderly Serb civilians were killed in the aftermath.[143] Throughout the war, nearly 7,950 Serbs were killed including 2,344 civilians while almost 16,000 Croats were killed, of which 6,605 were civilians. The conflict led to the displacement of 250,000 Croats and between 250,000 and 300,000 Serbs.[144]

In February 2015, during the Croatia–Serbia genocide case, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) unanimously dismissed the Serbian lawsuit claim that Operation Storm constituted genocide,[145][146] ruling that Croatia did not have the specific intent to exterminate the country's Serb minority, though it reaffirmed that serious crimes against Serb civilians had taken place.[145][147] The judgment stated that it is not disputed that a substantial part of the Serb population fled that region as a direct consequence of the military actions.[148] Although it has also been noted that there was an evacuation order given by the RSK's "Supreme Defence Council", based on the testimony by commander Mile Mrkšić at the ICTY.[149] The Croatian authorities were aware that the operation would provoke a mass exodus; they even to some extent predicated their military planning on such an exodus, which they considered not only probable but desirable.[148] Fleeing civilians and people remaining in United Nations protected areas were subject to various forms of harassment, including military assaults and acts by Croatian civilians. On 8 August, a refugee column was shelled.[150] Although it was very difficult to determine the number of properties destroyed during and after Operation Storm since a large number of houses sustained some degree of damage since the beginning of the war, Human Rights Watch (HRW) estimated that more than 5,000 houses were destroyed in the area during and after the battle.[151] Out of the 122 Serbian Orthodox churches in the area, one was destroyed and 17 were damaged. HRW also reported that the vast majority of the abuses were committed by Croatian forces. These abuses, which continued on a large scale even months after Operation Storm, included summary executions of elderly and infirm Serbs who remained behind and the wholesale burning and destruction of Serbian villages and property. In the months following the August offensive, at least 150 Serb civilians were summarily executed and another 110 persons forcibly disappeared.[152] Three Croatian generals, involved in the Operation Storm, were later acquitted by the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) of charges of committing war crimes and partaking in a joint criminal enterprise to force the Serb population out of Croatia.[153] The ICTY stated that the Croatian Army and Special Police committed a large number of crimes against the Serb population after the artillery assault, but that the state and military leadership was not responsible for their creation and organizing.[154] Examples of crimes are massacres, most often elderly Serb villagers killed by the Croatian Army, such as the Varivode massacre, the Kijani massacre and the Golubić massacre.[155]

At the ICTY, Milan Babić was indicted, pleaded guilty and was convicted for "persecutions on political, racial and religious grounds, a crime against humanity".[129][156] Babić stated during his trial that "during the events, and in particular at the beginning of his political career, he was strongly influenced and misled by Serbian propaganda".[157] RSK President, Milan Martić, was also trialled by the ICTY for various Crimes against humanity and war crimes, including murder, persecution, inhumane treatment, forced displacement, plunder of public or private property, and wanton destruction of cities, towns or villages, as well as ordering an indiscriminate rocket attack on Zagreb, in 1995.[158] On 12 June 2007, Martić was sentenced to 35 years in prison.[158][159] His sentence of 35 years in prison was confirmed by ICTY appellate council on 8 October 2008. He was found to have been part of a "joint criminal enterprise" which included Blagoje Adžić, Milan Babić, Radmilo Bogdanović, Veljko Kadijević, Radovan Karadžić, Slobodan Milošević, Ratko Mladić, Vojislav Šešelj, Franko Simatović, Jovica Stanišić, and Dragan Vasiljković.[159]

A small minority of the pre-war Serb population has returned to Croatia. Today, the majority of the pre-war Serb population from Croatia settled in Serbia and Republika Srpska.[160] After Croatian and other Yugoslav Wars, Serbia became home to highest number of refugees (Serbs who fled from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia) in Europe.[161][162][163]

The percentage of those declaring themselves as Serbs, according to the 1991 census, was 12.2% (78.1% of the population declared itself to be Croat). Although today Serbs are formally able to return to Croatia, a majority choose to remain citizens of other countries in which they gained citizenship. However, Croatia also adopted discriminatory measures to prevent the return of Serbs after the war, while the Croatian forces continued with abuses on a large scale for months afterwards, which included the destruction of Serb property.[164][152] Also, Serbs still face significant barriers to employment and to regain their property.[165] Consequently, today Serbs constitute 4% of Croatian population, down from the prewar population of 12%. The majority of the remaining population is elderly, which indicates that the negative demographic trend will persist.[126]

Currently, the official status of "autochthonous national minority" for the Serbs of Croatia is recognized by the Croatian Constitutional Act on the Rights of National Minorities from 2002 which supplemented the Constitutional Act on the Human Rights and Freedoms and on the Rights of Ethnic and National Communities or Minorities in the Republic of Croatia from 1992.

Recent history

Tension and violence between Serbs and Croats has reduced since 2000 and has remained low to this day, however, significant problems remain.[166] The main issue is thought to be due to high-level official and social discrimination against the Serbs.[167] In 2005, the Republic of Croatia ratified a bilateral agreement with Serbia and Montenegro on the protection of the Serbian and Montenegrin minority in Croatia and the Croatian national minority in Serbia and Montenegro.[168] Some Croats, including politicians, continue to deny and minimise the magnitude of the genocide perpetrated against Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia.[169] At the highest levels of the Croatian government, new laws are continuously introduced to combat this discrimination, demonstrating an effort on the part of the government.[166] For example, lengthy and in some cases unfair proceedings,[166] particularly in lower-level courts, remain a major problem for Serbian returnees pursuing their rights in court.[166] In addition, Serbs continue to be discriminated against in access to employment and in realizing other economic and social rights.[170] Also some cases of violence and harassment against Croatian Serbs continue to be reported.[166]

The property laws allegedly favour Bosnian Croats refugees who took residence in houses that were left unoccupied and unguarded by Serbs after Operation Storm.[166] Amnesty International's 2005 report considers one of the greatest obstacles to the return of thousands of Croatian Serbs has been the failure of the Croatian authorities to provide adequate housing solutions to Croatian Serbs who were stripped of their occupancy rights, including where possible by reinstating occupancy rights to those who had been affected by their discriminatory termination.[166]

The European Court of Human Rights decided against Croatian Serb Kristina Blečić and stripped her of occupancy rights after leaving her house in 1991 in Zadar.[171] In 2009, the UN Human Rights Committee found a wartime termination of occupancy rights of a Serbian family to violate ICCPR.[172] In 2010, the European Committee on Social Rights found the treatment of Serbs in Croatia in respect of housing to be discriminatory and too slow, thus in violation of Croatia's obligations under the European Social Charter.[173] In 2013, the Anti-Cyrillic protests in Croatia were a series of protests in late 2013 against the application of bilingualism in Vukovar, whereby Serbian and the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet were assigned co-official status due to the local minority population.

In 2015 Amnesty International reported that Croatian Serbs continued to face discrimination in public sector employment and the restitution of tenancy rights to social housing vacated during the war.[174] In 2017 they again pointed out that Serbs faced significant barriers to employment and obstacles to regain their property. Amnesty International also said that the right to use minority languages and scripts continued to be politicized and unimplemented in some towns and that heightened nationalist rhetoric and hate speech contributed to growing ethnic intolerance and insecurity.[165]

Since 2016, anti-fascist groups, leaders of Croatia's Serb, Roma and Jewish communities and former top Croat officials have boycotted the official state commemoration for the victims of the Jasenovac concentration camp because, as they said, Croatian authorities refused to denounce the Ustasha legacy explicitly and they downplayed and revitalized crimes committed by Ustashe.[175][176][177][178]

Following the 2020 Croatian parliamentary election, Boris Milošević, member of the Independent Democratic Serb Party and President of the Serb National Council, was elected one of the four Deputy Prime Ministers of Croatia in charge of social affairs and human and minority rights in the new cabinet of Andrej Plenković.[179] On the 25th anniversary of the Operation Storm, the celebrations were attended for the first time ever by an ethnic Serb political representative, Boris Milošević.[180] On 25 August 2020, Zoran Milanović (President of Croatia), Tomo Medved (Minister of Croatian Veterans), along with members of the Independent Democratic Serb Party, Milorad Pupovac and Deputy Prime Minister Milošević, attended a commemoration of the Grubori massacre, the mass murder of elderly Serbs civilians.[181]

Demographics

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". According to the 2021 census, 123,892 ethnic Serbs were living in Croatia, 3.20% of the total population. Their number was reduced by more than three-quarters in the aftermath of the 1991–95 War in Croatia as the 1991 pre-war census had reported 581,663 Serbs living in Croatia, 12.2% of the total population.

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Year Serbs %
1900[182] 548,302 17.35%
1910[182] 564,214 16.60%
1921[182] 584,058 16.94%
1931[182] 636,518 16.81%
1948[183] 543,795 14.47%
1953[184] 588,411 15.01%
1961[185] 624,956 15.02%
1971[182] 626,789 14.16%
1981[182] 531,502 11.55%
1991[182] 581,663 12.16%
2001 201,631 4.54%
2011 186,633 4.36%
2021 123,892 3.20%

Counties

Counties with significant Serb minority (7.50% or more):Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

County Serbs %
Vukovar-Srijem County 19,309 13.49%
Lika-Senj County 4,062 9.50%
Sisak-Moslavina County 12,153 8.71%
Šibenik-Knin County 8,064 8.37%
Karlovac County 8,683 7.74%

Cities

Cities with significant Serb minority (10% or more):

<templatestyles src="Refbegin/styles.css" />

Municipalities

Municipalities with a significant Serb population (10% or more):

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Culture

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Serbs in Croatia have cultural traditions ranging from kolo dances and singing, which are kept alive today by performances by various folklore groups. Notable traditions include gusle, diple,[186] Ojkanje singing, and Čuvari Hristovog groba.

Many Serbs contributed to the Croatian culture, such as trader Hristofor Stanković who founded the first permanent theatre building in Gornji Grad, Zagreb.[187]

Religion

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File:Serbian Orthodox Cathedral, Zagreb.JPG
Serbian Orthodox Cathedral and monument to Petar Preradović in Zagreb

The Serbs of Croatia are predominantly of the Serbian Orthodox faith. There are many Eastern Orthodox churches and monasteries across Croatia. Most notable and historically significant are the Krka monastery, Krupa monastery, Dragović monastery, Lepavina Monastery and Gomirje monastery. Many Eastern Orthodox churches were demolished during World War II and the Croatian War of Independence, while some were rebuilt with EU funding, the Croatian government, and Serbian diaspora donations.[188]

In the 1560s a Serbian Orthodox bishop was installed in the Metropolitanate of Požega, seated in the monastery of Remeta.Template:Sfn In the 17th century, the Eparchy of Marča was founded at Marča, in the Croatian frontier.Template:Sfn These were part of the Serbian Orthodox Patriarchate of Peć, which was re-established in 1557 and lasted under Ottoman governance until 1766.Template:Sfn Other bishoprics were founded, although their approval by the Habsburgs hinged on the belief that they would facilitate the union of these Eastern Orthodox Christians with the Catholic Church, and, many, including some Eastern Orthodox bishops, did unify with Rome.Template:Sfn

File:Rezidencija.dalj.jpg
Eparchy of Osječko polje and Baranja in Dalj

Serbs in the Croatian Military Frontier were out of the jurisdiction of the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć and in 1611, after demands from the community, the Pope established the Eparchy of Marča (Vratanija) with a seat at the Serbian-built Marča Monastery, with a Byzantine vicar instated as bishop subordinate to the Catholic bishop of Zagreb – working to bring Serbian Orthodox Christians into communion with Rome, which caused struggle of power between the Catholics and the Serbs over the region.[32][33]

In 1695 Eastern Orthodox Eparchy of Lika-Krbava and Zrinopolje was established by metropolitan Atanasije Ljubojević and certified by Emperor Josef I in 1707. In 1735 the Serbian Orthodox protested in the Marča Monastery and became part of the Serbian Orthodox Church until 1753 when the Pope restored the Catholic clergy. On 17 June 1777 the Eparchy of Križevci was permanently established by Pope Pius VI with its Episcopal see at Križevci, near Zagreb, thus forming the Croatian Greek Catholic Church which would after World War I include other people; the Rusyns and ethnic Ukrainians of Yugoslavia.[32][33]

According to the 2021 Croatian census, 101,250 (81.72%) Serbs declared themselves as Eastern Orthodox, 11,406 (9.02%) declared themselves as atheists or non-religious, and 2,342 (1.89%) declared themselves as agnostics. The smaller portion of Serbs declared themselves to be of different confessions, with 2,042 (1.64%) identifying as Catholics and 2,076 (1.67%) as members of other Christian churches. There are 4,004 (3.23%) Serbs whose confession remained undisclosed or unknown.[189]

Language

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". The Serbian language is officially used in 23 cities and municipalities in Croatia.[190] Script error: No such module "Multiple image".

In April 2015 the United Nations Human Rights Committee urged Croatia to ensure the right of minorities to use their language and alphabet.[191] The committee report stated that particularly concerns surrounded the use of Serbian Cyrillic in the town of Vukovar and municipalities concerned.[191] Serbian Foreign Minister Ivica Dačić stated that Serbia welcomed the UN Human Rights Committee's report.[192]

Although the 2021 census in Croatia listed Serbs as the largest national minority in Croatia, with 3.2% of the total population, the number of people who had declared Serbian language as their native was only 1.16% of the total population (45,004).[193]

Politics

Serbs are officially recognized as an autochthonous national minority, and as such, they elect three representatives to the Croatian Parliament.[194]

All elected special representatives since 1995 Parliamentary elections.

Election Representative Party Term Representative Party Term Representative Party Term
1995 Milan Đukić SNS 1995–2003 Veselin Pejnović SNS 1995–2000 Milorad Pupovac ASH 1995–2000
2000 not elected under the law
2003 Vojislav Stanimirović SDSS 2003–2015 Ratko Gajica SDSS 2003–2011 Milorad Pupovac SDSS 2003–
2007
2011 Jovo Vuković 2011–2015
2015 Mile Horvat 2015–2020 Mirko Rašković 2015–2016
2016 Boris Milošević 2016–2024
2020 Dragana Jeckov 2020–
2024[195] Anja Šimpraga 2024–

The major Serb party in Croatia is the Independent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS). In the elections from 2003, the SDSS has won all Serbian seats in the parliament. In the Cabinet of Ivo Sanader II, the party was part of the ruling coalition led by the conservative Croatian Democratic Union, and SDSS member Slobodan Uzelac held the post of Deputy Prime Minister.[196] After that Serbs again entered government during Cabinet of Andrej Plenković II, in which Boris Milošević become Deputy Prime Minister and responsible for Social Affairs and Human and Minority Right.[197]

Some ethnic Serb politicians are members of mainstream political parties, such as the centre-left Social Democratic Party's MPs and Milanović cabinet members Željko Jovanović, Branko Grčić and Milanka Opačić.

Croatisation

During the Second World War, the Ustashe regime systematically engaged in the extermination, expulsion and forced conversion of Serbs in Croatia.[198][199] Facing discrimination after the Croatian War of Independence (1991–95), several anonymous Serbs from Zagreb testify that some young Serbs have converted to Catholicism and changed their surnames in order to 'become Croats'.[200]

Community in Serbia

File:Nikola Tesla, with his equipment Wellcome M0014782 - restoration1.jpg
A picture of Nikola Tesla in his laboratory
File:Vojin Bakić radi na skulpturi Bika, 1956.JPG
Notable Yugoslav and Croatian sculptor Vojin Bakić during work

Approximately 250,000 Serbs from Croatia were resettled in Serbia during and after the Croatian War of Independence, of which the larger part took Serbian citizenship.[201] In 2011, there were 284,334 Serbs from Croatia living in Serbia (excluding Kosovo), with the majority living in Vojvodina (127,884), followed by Central and South Serbia (114,434). In 2013, approximately 45,000 Serbs from Croatia were still listed as refugees in Serbia.[201][202] The largest part of the Croatian Serb community in Serbia stated that they wished to integrate (60.6%), only 4.3% wanted to return to their homes in Croatia, while 27.4% who were undecided.[203]

Notable people

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See also

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References

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  1. Template:Croatian Census 2021
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  4. Sima M. Ćirković (2008). Srbi među Europsim narodima Template:Webarchive (The Serbs), p. 26-27
  5. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: He probably saw that in his time all these tribes were in the Serb sphere of influence, and therefore called them Serbs, thus ante-dating by three centuries the state of affairs in his day... It is obvious that the small retinue of the Serbian prince could not have populated Serbia, Zachlumia, Terbounia and Narenta.
  6. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  9. Milenko Krešić; (2016) Religious situation in the Hum land (Ston and Rat) during the Middle Ages p. 66; [1]
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  12. Sima Ćirković; (2004) The Serbs p. 117; Wiley-Blackwell, Template:ISBN
  13. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".; Script error: No such module "Footnotes". "Rascianis in castris nostris Medwe, Rakonok, utriusque Kemlek et Caproncza constitutis"
  14. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  15. Sima Ćirković, Сеоба Срба у Краљевину Угарску у XIV и XV веку, (Migration of the Serbian people to the Kingdom of Hungary in the fourteenth and fifteenth century){"У једном писму Венецијанцима из 1462. краљ се жалио да су у протекле три године, дакле од 1459, Турци из његове земље одвукли више од 200.000 становника. (Овде морам приметити да је услед неспоразума у једној старој мађарској збирци регеста овај број тако употребљен као да се односи на становнике Србије који су прешли у Угарску. Радонић га је у том смислу употребио у својој на француском објављеној краткој историји Срба у Угарској, одатле су је преузели Јиречек, затим Ивић, а касније је безорој пута поновљено, и тешко и споро ће се та грешка отклањати.")..In a letter to the Venetians of 1462, the king complained that the Turks had taken more than 200,000 inhabitants from his country in the past three years, or since 1459. (I have to mention here that due to misunderstandings in the old Hungarian original collection, this number was used as a reference to the Serbs who immigrated to Hungary. Information was taken by Konstantin Jireček, then Aleksa Ivić, and later repeated many times, and this error will be difficult and slowly corrected} https://www.rastko.rs/rastko-hu/istorija/istorija/Cirkovic_Seobe.html
  16. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "Population movements began in earnest after the Battle of Smederevo in 1459, and by 1483, up to two hundred thousand had moved into central Slavonia and Srijem (eastern Croatia)."
  17. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  18. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".: "In the early sixteenth century Orthodox populations had also been established in western Croatia."
  19. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  20. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  21. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  22. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  23. a b c d e Ramet, p. 82
  24. Mirko Valentić, O etničkom korijenu hrvatskih bosanskih Srba, Vol. 24 No. 3, 1992. "Kada je riječ o austrijskoj kolonizaciji turskih vlaških prebjega u Slavonskoj i vlaških prebjega u Hrvatskoj krajini, postoje neke manje razlike. Vlasi u zapadnu Slavoniju, odnosno u Varaždinski generalat Slavonske krajine, prelaze masovno i u veoma kratko vrijeme: od 1597. do 1600. godine. U Hrvatsku krajinu, tj. u Karlovački generalat, Vlasi pristižu u manjim skupinama, ali u tijeku cijeloga XVII. stoljeća. Prema tome, Slavonska je krajina prva otvorila vrata balkanskim Vlasima. Najveći broj stiže iz slavonskih turskih sandžaka https://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=307682#page=14 Template:Webarchive
  25. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  26. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  27. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  28. Sabrina P. Ramet, "Whose democracy?: nationalism, religion, and the doctrine of collective rights in post-1989 Eastern Europe", Rowman & Littlefield, 1997, Template:ISBN, p. 83
  29. William Safran, The secular and the sacred: nation, religion, and politics, p. 169
  30. Europe:A History by Norman Davies (1996), p. 561.
  31. Goffman (2002), p. 190.
  32. a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  33. a b c Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
  34. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  35. Gavrilović, Danijela, "Elements of Ethnic Identification of the Serbs" from FACTA UNIVERSITATIS – Series Philosophy, Sociology, Psychology and History (10/2003), pp. 717–730 Template:Webarchive
  36. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  37. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  38. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  39. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  40. Introduction by Mirko Valentić in: Mile Bogović: Katolička Crkva i Pravoslavlje u Dalmaciji za vrijeme mletačke vladavine, Kršćanska sadašnjost/Školska knjiga, Zagreb, 1993., p. 5-6
  41. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  42. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  43. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  44. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  45. Benedikta Zelić-Bućan, predgovor u: Mihovio Pavlinović: Misao hrvatska i misao srbska u Dalmaciji, Laus, Split, 1994., p. 10
  46. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  47. a b Benedikta Zelić-Bućan, Prologue in: Mihovil Pavlinović: Misao hrvatska i misao srbska u Dalmaciji, Laus, Split, 1994., p. 11
  48. a b Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  49. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  50. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  51. Zelić-Bućan, Benedikta, Mihovio Pavlinović: Misao hrvatska i misao srbska u Dalmaciji (Predgovor), Laus, Split, 1994., p. 12
  52. Dalibor Čepulo: Liberalne reforme Hrvatskog sabora i srpska elita u Hrvatskoj, p. 269-285
  53. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  54. N. Rumenjak, 2005, Politička i društvena elita Srba u Hrvatskoj potkraj 19. stoljeća. Uspon i pad Srpskog kluba, Zagreb, 2005.
  55. Dušan Bilandžić, Hrvatska moderna povijest, Zagreb, 1999., p. 30
  56. Artuković, Mato (1991). Ideologija srpsko-hrvatskih sporova (Srbobran 1884.-1902.), Naprijed, Zagreb, p. 32-33 Template:ISBN
  57. Artuković, Mato (1991). Ideologija srpsko-hrvatskih sporova (Srbobran 1884.-1902.), Naprijed, Zagreb, p. 34 Template:ISBN
  58. Srbobran, 4(16) October 1894, no. 113
  59. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  60. Dušan Bilandžić, Hrvatska moderna povijest, Zagreb, 1999., p. 31
  61. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  62. Dušan Bilandžić, Hrvatska moderna povijest, Zagreb, 1999., p. 25
  63. Kolar, p. 136-38
  64. Ivan Bulić, Politika Hrvatsko-srpske koalicije uoči Prvoga svjetskog rata 1907.–1913. ČSP, no. 2., p. 415-453
  65. Agičić, Damir: "Civil Croatia on the Eve of the First World War (The Echo of the Assassination and Ultimatum)", Povijesni prilozi 14, p. 305
  66. Karaula, p. 274
  67. Karaula, p. 268-79
  68. a b Agičić, p. 306
  69. Demonstracije u Dubrovniku, Ilustrovani list, no. 29, Year I, 18 July 1914, Zagreb
  70. Agičić, Damir: "Civil Croatia on the Eve of the First World War (The Echo of the Assassination and Ultimatum)", Povijesni prilozi 14, p. 309.-310
  71. Karaula, Željko: "Sarajevski atentat – reakcije Hrvata i Srba u Kraljevini Hrvatskoj, Slavoniji i Dalmaciji", Radovi Zavoda za hrvatsku povijest 43 (1): p. 255-291
  72. Karaula, p. 277
  73. Lorković, Mladen (2005.). Narod i zemlja Hrvata, Split,: Marjan tisak (reprint from 1939), p. 105
  74. Lorković, Mladen (2005.). Narod i zemlja Hrvata, Split,: Marjan tisak (reprint from 1939), p. 114
  75. Krešimir Regan, Srpski kulturni klub i Banovina Hrvatska, LZMK, Časopis za suvremenu povijest, Vol. 40, No. 2, October 2008
  76. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  77. Matković, 2002., p. 180
  78. Hrvatski narod, no. 85, 8 May 1941, p. 3
  79. Hrvatki narod, no. 85, 8 May 1941, p. 3
  80. Đurić Veljko, Srbi u Nezavisnoj Državi Hrvatskoj i Hrvati u Srbiji 1941–1944. Viđenje kroz sudbine sveštenoslužitelja, p. 156
  81. Pupovac Milorad, NDH na životu, Večernje novosti, no. 530
  82. Jonjić Tomislav, Hrvatska između sila osovine, p. 5
  83. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  84. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  85. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  86. Marija Vuselica: Regionen Kroatien in Der Ort des Terrors: Arbeitserziehungslager, Ghettos, Jugendschutzlager, Polizeihaftlager, Sonderlager, Zigeunerlager, Zwangsarbeiterlager, Volume 9 of Der Ort des Terrors, Publisher C.H.Beck, 2009, Template:ISBN pages 321–323
  87. Anna Maria Grünfelder: Arbeitseinsatz für die Neuordnung Europas: Zivil- und ZwangsarbeiterInnen aus Jugoslawien in der "Ostmark" 1938/41-1945, Publisher Böhlau Verlag Wien, 2010 Template:ISBN pages 101–106
  88. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  89. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  90. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  91. Strugar, Vlado, Jugoslavija 1941–1945, Vojnoizdavački zavod
  92. Anić, Nikola, Narodnooslobodilačka vojska Jugoslavije: pregled razvoja oružanih snaga narodnooslobodilačkog pokreta 1941–1945, Vojnoistorijski institut, 1982
  93. Jelić Ivo, Putevima Glavnog štaba Hrvatske, Republički štab teritorijalne obrane SRH i Zavod za općenarodnu obranu i društvenu samozaštitu, 1976
  94. Marko Attila Hoare, 2002, Whose is the Partisan movement? Serbs, Croats and the legacy of a shared resistance, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/38174088_Whose_is_the_Partisan_movement_Serbs_Croats_and_the_legacy_of_a_shared_resistance Template:Webarchive #page=30
  95. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  96. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  97. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  98. Script error: No such module "Footnotes"., Script error: No such module "Footnotes"., Script error: No such module "Footnotes"., Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  99. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  100. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  101. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  102. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  103. Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  104. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  105. Popovic; "Nasa Rec, monthly political and literary review (Middlesex, England), No. 402/XLII (Feb 1989), pp 248-249
  106. NOB u Dalmaciji, 6, 116
  107. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  108. Jonjić Tomislav, Hrvatska između sila osovine
  109. Božić, Tvrtko, Ivan Košutić: Rađanje, život i umiranje jedne države- 49 mjeseci NDH, Časopis za suvremenu povijest
  110. Fikreta Jelić-Butić: Četnici u Hrvatskoj 1941–1945, Globus, Zagreb 1986
  111. Kotur Goran, NDH četnicima davala oružje i mirovine, Slobodna Dalmacija from 15 August 2009
  112. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  113. Yugoslavia Through Documents: From Its Creation to Its Dissolution edited by Snežana Trifunovska, page 477, it says: "at the Second and Third sessions of the National Anti-Fascist Council of the Peoples Liberation of Croatia (ZAVNOH),..., the equality of the Serbs and the Croats, as constituent peoples of the federal unit of Croatia, were recognized in every respect."
  114. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".Template:Cbignore
  115. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  116. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  117. Template:In lang Croatian Iuridic Portal Template:Webarchive Đakula prvi svjedočio protiv Martića
  118. Template:In lang Dunja Bonacci Skenderović i Mario Jareb: Hrvatski nacionalni simboli između stereotipa i istine, Časopis za suvremenu povijest, y. 36, br. 2, p. 731.-760., 2004
  119. Yugoslavia Through Documents: From Its Creation to Its Dissolution edited by Snežana Trifunovska, page 477
  120. Integration and Stabilization: A Monetary View by George Macesich, page 24
  121. The Quality of Government by Bo Rothstein, page 89
  122. Soft Borders by Julie Mostov, page 67
  123. a b c Living Together After Ethnic Killing: Exploring the Chaim Kaufman Argument by Roy Licklider and Mia Bloom, page 158, says: Previously, a constituent nation in the Republic of Croatia, ..."
  124. Croatia by Piers Letcher, page 20, it says: "The HDZ also put Croatias 600,000 Serbs on the defensive by changing their status from "constituent nation" in Croatia, to "national minority" and many Serbs in government lost their jobs."
  125. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  126. a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  127. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  128. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  129. a b c d Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  131. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  145. a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  146. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  147. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  148. a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  149. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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  152. a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  153. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  154. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
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  164. Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  165. a b Script error: No such module "Footnotes".
  166. a b c d e f g Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  167. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  168. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  169. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  170. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  171. Negativna presuda evropskog suda u slučaju Kristine Blečić iz Zadra Template:Webarchive
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  182. a b c d e f g Karoly Kocsis, Eszter Kocsis-Hodosi: Ethnic Geography of the Hungarian Minorities in the Carpathian Basin Template:Webarchive, Simon Publications LLC, 2001, p. 171
  183. Stanovništvo po narodnosti po popisu od 15. marta 1948. godine, Beograd 1954. Template:Webarchive, p. 3 Template:In lang
  184. Popis stanovništva 1953. godine Template:Webarchive, p. 35 Template:In lang
  185. Population, households and dwellings census in 1961, National structure of population in FNR Yugoslavia, data on localities and ocmmunes, Vol. III Template:Webarchive, p. 12 Template:In lang
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  187. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  188. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  189. Template:Croatian Census 2021
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  191. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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Sources

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Books

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  • Karl Freiherr von Czoernig: "Ethnographie der österreichischen Monarchie", Vol. II, III, Wien, 1857.
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Journals

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Documents

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News

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External links

Template:Sister project

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