Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Glas Istre (based in Pula; covers Istria region) glasistre.hr; Glas Slavonije (based in Osijek; covers Slavonia) glas-slavonije.hr; Dubrovački vjesnik (based in Dubrovnik, covers the city and south Dalmatia) dubrovacki.hr; Zadarski list (based in Zadar, covers Zadar County) zadarskilist.hr; Weekly. Narodni list (est. 1862, based in Zadar ...
S. Hrečkovski, Njemačka četa Ernst Thalmann u jedinicama NOV i POJ u Slavoniji, Glas Slavonije od 15. VIII 1968; Redžić, Nail: Telmanovci: zapisi onjemačkoj partizanskojčeti"Ernst Telman“. (Telmanovci: Notizen über die deutsche Partisanentruppe „Ernst Thälmann“). Beograd 1984.
Glas Slavonije (lit. ' The Voice of Slavonia ' ) is a Croatian daily newspaper published in Osijek . In 2000, its average daily circulation was c. 9000, making it the 7th largest daily newspaper in Croatia.
Sexon has been writing short stories and columns for the Croatian daily newspaper Glas Slavonije [32] for more than 15 years. Sejo Sexon earned his bachelor's degree in history from the University of Zagreb in 2009. The dissertation title is "The conflict between youth subcultures and Yugoslav official policy in 1980s". [33]
Glas Koncila is a Croatian, Roman Catholic, weekly newspaper published in Zagreb and distributed throughout the country, as well as among Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatian diaspora. Publishing history
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Zadarski list is a Croatian daily newspaper. It is the first daily newspaper published in Zadar.. Zadarski list started on 3 November 1994 as a weekly. At that time, it was focused on the news from Zadar and the Zadar County, reaching a circulation of 12,000.
Vučedol Dove. The name Slavonia originated in the Early Middle Ages.The area was named after the Slavs who settled there and called themselves *Slověne. The root *Slověn- appeared in various dialects of languages spoken by people inhabiting the area west of the Sutla river, as well as between the Sava and Drava rivers—South Slavs living in the area of the former Illyricum.