Bosnia and Herzegovina was partitioned into a Muslim-Croat federation and a Serbian entity by the Dayton Peace Accords in 1995, ending the Bosnian War.
Croat, Serb, and Bosniak are ethnoreligious terms. A Croat is a Catholic Christian Yugoslav person or their children (if their descendants are not Catholics themselves). A Serb is an Orthodox Christian Yugoslav person or their children (if their descendants are not Orthodox themselves). A Bosniak is a Muslim Yugoslav person or their children (if their descendants are not Muslims themselves).Conversely, Croatian, Serbian, and Bosnian are national terms that apply to citizenship. A Croatian is a citizen of the Republic of Croatia, a Serbian is a citizen of the Republic of Serbia, and a Bosnian is a citizen of Bosnia and Herzegovina.As a result, you can have Croatian Serbs, who are ethnic Serbs who are citizens of Croatia, or Bosnian Croats, who are ethnic Croats who are citizens of Bosnia and Herzegovina, or Serbian Bosniaks, who are ethnic Bosniaks who are citizens of Serbia. Of course, the largest populations (pluralities or majorities) line up between the national and ethnoreligious terms, e.g. Croatian Croats, Serbian Serbs, and Bosnian Bosniaks.
Deny Flight
Deny Flight
Deny Flight
Deny Fly
operation deny flight
Czech is a man from Czech republic and Croat is a man from Croatia!
Croat-Serb Coalition was created in 1905.
Croat People's Union was created in 1910.
Croat National Council was created on 2002-12-15.
"Hristos se rodi" is a greeting in Serbian Orthodox tradition that means "Christ is born." It is often used during the Christmas season as a way of acknowledging and celebrating the birth of Jesus Christ.