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Yugoslavia in the Balkans and Central Europe

International Affairs, 1945
THIS paper deals with the region south of the Carpathians, embracing Yugoslavia, Bulgaria, Albania, Roumania, Hungary, Czechoslovakia and Austria; it excludes Greece and Poland. Five essential points are common to the whole area. (1) The internal regimes are characterized by a strong trend to the Left, but they represent neither the Soviet system nor ...
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Political discourse in Central, Eastern and Balkan Europe

Critical Discourse Studies, 2020
Political discourse studies presuppose a necessary integration of the conventionally dichotomized analytical paradigms through inter- or intro-disciplinary endeavors.
Zhengrui Han, Xue Fu
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Northern Greece and the Central Balkans

2018
Abstract This chapter deals with the cultural and social history of an area encompassing ancient Epirus, Illyria, Macedonia, and Thrace. In the past, these historical landscapes were usually perceived as cultural or ethnic entities, and were used as arguments for past and modern ethnogenesis in the Balkans. The material culture of single
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Croatia: Between Central Europe and the Balkans

2003
Since the formation of the Croatian state, heated arguments have tried to demonstrate that Croatia has nothing to do with the Balkans and has no desire to be in any sort of regional community with the Balkan states, all because of Milosevic’s Serbia as the aggressor, as well as cultural and civilization points of reference for the Balkans. Because this
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The Eneolithic period in the Central Balkan Area

1982
The Eneolithic period, which came between the Neolithic Age and the age when metal was fully in use, covered a great length of time. In the initial phase of the Eneolithic period only small objects, such as jewellery and tools like needles or awls, were produced for personal use.
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‘Princely graves’ of the central Balkans – A critical history of research

European Journal of Archaeology, 2002
This article critically explores the century-long history of research into a particular set of archaeological finds. The ‘princely graves’ – funerary assemblages dated to the early Iron Age (seventh to fifth centuries BC) containing, among other things, luxurious objects produced in Archaic Greek workshops – are known from various parts of temperate ...
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The Princely Burials of the Central Balkans in Context

European Journal of Archaeology
Despite a consensus that the Late Hallstatt ‘princely’ burials heralded the emergence of the earliest complex societies in the central Balkans, there is room for nuance. In this article, the ‘princely’ burial horizon is examined in light of the opposition between group-oriented and individualizing societies, while accepting that burials are as much an ...
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Witchcraft in the Central Balkans I: Characteristics of Witches

Folklore, 1989
THE conservatism of the peoples of the Central Balkans ensured that many traditional beliefs and ritual practices survived till the end of the nineteenth century, and even that some traces of them remained in the first decades of the twentieth. Noteworthy elements in this inheritance are the various supernaturally evil beings (vampires, witches, demons,
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