year 1922inCroatia. Monarch – Alexander I February 19 – First issue of Borba, the newsletter of the banned Yugoslav Communist Party, published in Zagreb...
1922 January February March April May June July August September October November December Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1922. 1922 (MCMXXII)...
demographic characteristics of the population of Croatia are known through censuses, normally conducted in ten-year intervals and analysed by various statistical...
Croatia (Croatian: hrvatske županije) are the first-level administrative subdivisions of the Republic of Croatia. Since they were re-established in 1992...
The Croats (/ˈkroʊæts/; Croatian: Hrvati [xr̩ʋǎːti]) are a South Slavic ethnic group native to Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and other neighboring countries...
Slavoljub Eduard Penkala (Croatian pronunciation: [slâʋɔʎuːb ɛ̂duard pɛŋkǎːla]; 20 April 1871 – 5 February 1922) was a Croatian engineer and inventor of...
The Banovina of Croatia or Banate of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Banovina Hrvatska, Бановина Хрватска) was an administrative subdivision (banovina) of the...
describe the Kingdom of Italy governed by the National Fascist Party from 1922 to 1943 with Benito Mussolini as prime minister and dictator. The Italian...
list of dukes and kings of Croatia (Croatian: knez, kralj) under domestic ethnic and elected dynasties during the Croatian Kingdom (925–1918). This article...
The Serbs of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Срби у Хрватској / Srbi u Hrvatskoj) or Croatian Serbs (Serbo-Croatian: Хрватски Срби / Hrvatski Srbi) constitute...
known as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes) existed successively in three different forms. From 1918 to 1922, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia maintained...
by Croat politicians for autonomy of Croatia, an autonomous region of Croatia was created within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the Banovina of Croatia. It...
Constitution of 1921, in1922 the region of Syrmia (the territory between rivers Sava and Danube), that was part of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia before 1918...
the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes from the merger of the Kingdom of Serbia with the provisional State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (which was...
(1922–1999), Croatian historian, writer and politician Franjo Vlašić (1766–1840), Croatian general and ban Franjo Vladić (born 1950), Bosnian Croat footballer...
-tiə/; Croatian: Dalmacija [dǎlmaːtsija]; Italian: Dalmazia [dalˈmattsja]; see names in other languages) is one of the four historical regions of Croatia, alongside...
League. The club was established in1922 by Croatian Americans, and is one of the oldest continuously run soccer club in North America. According to legend...
shipyard inCroatia, located in the Supaval bay, on the north side of the Split peninsula. The company was founded in1922 by a merger of shipyards in the...
of Croatia. According to the census of 2011 there were 9,641 Czechs inCroatia, comprising 0.22% of total population. Most Croatian Czechs live in Western...
League of Communists of Croatia (Serbo-Croatian: Savez komunista Hrvatske, SKH) was the Croatian branch of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia (SKJ)...
autochthonous minorities of Croatia. According to 2011 census, there were 4,753 Slovaks in the country. Slovaks mainly migrated to Croatiain the 19th century,...
Metropolitan) of the Croatian Orthodox Church (1942–1945). Georgy Ivanovich Maximov was born in 1861 in Stanitsa Nogavskaya in the Don Host Oblast of...