I don't understand 'stile' - waht are you asking? Sarajevo is a large city in former Yugoslavia, now in Bosnia-Herzogovina.
He would consider himself to be a Yugoslavian. He was born in Bosnia Herzogovina of the Austria-Hungarian Empire to a family whose ethnicity was Serbian.
The countries are Spain, France, Monaco, Italy, Malta, Slovenia, Croatia. Bosnia and Herzogovina, Montnegro, Albania, Greece, Turkey and Cyprus
The trigger for world war 1 was the assassination of Arch-Duke Franz Ferdinand of Austria. This took place in Sarajevo, a city located in Bosnia-Herzogovina.
965 kilometres taking this route:Follow E73 ZENICA from Sarajevo thru Bosnia & Herzogovina, CROATIA, and HUNGARY to E65 to GYÖR (M1 via M0 to bypass BUDAPEST).Follow E65 thru Hungary and SLOVENIA (you will be going thru BRATISLAVA) to PRAHA (Prague). E65 approaching Prague is the D1 motorway.Countries that you will be driving through (in this order):Bosnia and HerzegovinaCroatiaHungarySloveniaCzech Republic
The term is "Ethnic Cleansing"Source: College Text Book, Soci1301 TCC, Ninth Edition, author: Richard T. SchaeferDePaulUniversity, Chapter: 9, section: Understanding the Issue, page: 236
Bosnia-Herzegovina is its own independent country. It used to be part of Yugoslavia.
Euro
The Basketball for Bosnia is a fundraiser organized by the Freedom Writers to help raise money and awareness for the war in Bosnia. The students held a basketball game to raise funds for medical supplies and humanitarian aid for victims of the conflict in Bosnia. The event symbolized the students' commitment to making a positive impact in the world beyond their own community.
No!
Bosnia is a region of SE Europe on the Balkan peninsula, which in 2010 is part of the republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Bosnia and Herzegovina were formerly a part of the federation of Yugoslavia, which was broken up by the Yugoslav conflicts (Bosnian War) beginning in May of 1992.HistoryIn the middle ages, Bosnia and Herzegovina was just called "Bosnia", or "Kingdom of Bosnia". Herzegovina is a region of Bosnia, in the middle ages it was called "Hum", but it was renamed to Herzegovina. Ottomans occupied Bosnia, and in the Ottoman empire it was called "Bosnian vilayet". After Ottomans, Austro-Hungary annexed Bosnia, and it was the first time the term "Bosnia and Herzegovina" was used. In Yugoslavia, Bosnia was one of six constituent republics. It's full name was "Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina", and when Yugoslavia broke up, it was called the "Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina.".
Bosnia-Herzogivina