The Macedonia naming dispute is a political dispute regarding the use of the name Macedonia by the (Former Yugoslav) Republic of Macedonia, formerly a federal unit of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. In antiquity, the territory of the present-day (Former Yugoslav) Republic of Macedonia equated approximately to the kingdom of Paeonia, which lay immediately north of ancient Macedonia. The modern Greek province of Macedonia approximately corresponds to that of ancient Macedonia. Pertinent to its background is an early 20th-century armed conflict that formed part of the background to the Balkan Wars and the battle for control over the area of historical Macedonia. The specific naming dispute was ignited in 1963 when Josip Broz Tito aiming to wrest the historical Macedonia from Greece and force an outlet to the Aegean sea for his country, renamed the southern Vardar Banovina of Yugoslavia by the name, "Socialist Republic of Macedonia" at the same time the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia was renamed the "Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia". With the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1991, the former Socialist Republic of Macedonia was expected to end the communist expansionist agenda on Greece's northern province by choosing a name for itself that did not imply territorial claims on northern Greece. Instead, the newly founded country dropped the "Socialist" from its name and kept "Macedonia". Greece objected with an eventual UN interim accord being signed giving the newly created Slavic state the appellation "Former Yugoslav" as a provisional term to be used only until the dispute was resolved. Since then, it has been an ongoing issue in bilateral and international relations.
It was the Conflict of the Orders between the patricians (the aristocrats) and the plebeians (the commoners)
China became involved in the Korean War, which proved very costly to the young nation's economy.
Austria, Prussia, Spain, Portugal, Britain, & the Dutch Republic
Texas split up from Mexico and became an independent republic. This conflict is known as the Texas Revolution or the Texas war of independence.
Armenia is in conflict with Azerbaijan.
A conflict diamond is a blood diamond and they come from Angola, Liberia, Ivory Coast, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Congo
The Macedonia naming dispute is a political dispute regarding the use of the name Macedonia by the (Former Yugoslav) Republic of Macedonia, formerly a federal unit of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. In antiquity, the territory of the present-day (Former Yugoslav) Republic of Macedonia equated approximately to the kingdom of Paeonia, which lay immediately north of ancient Macedonia. The modern Greek province of Macedonia approximately corresponds to that of ancient Macedonia. Pertinent to its background is an early 20th-century armed conflict that formed part of the background to the Balkan Wars and the battle for control over the area of historical Macedonia. The specific naming dispute was ignited in 1963 when Josip Broz Tito aiming to wrest the historical Macedonia from Greece and force an outlet to the Aegean sea for his country, renamed the southern Vardar Banovina of Yugoslavia by the name, "Socialist Republic of Macedonia" at the same time the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia was renamed the "Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia". With the breakup of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1991, the former Socialist Republic of Macedonia was expected to end the communist expansionist agenda on Greece's northern province by choosing a name for itself that did not imply territorial claims on northern Greece. Instead, the newly founded country dropped the "Socialist" from its name and kept "Macedonia". Greece objected with an eventual UN interim accord being signed giving the newly created Slavic state the appellation "Former Yugoslav" as a provisional term to be used only until the dispute was resolved. Since then, it has been an ongoing issue in bilateral and international relations.
The conflict of the orders between patricians and plebeians
Uganda--secondary to overflow of Sudanese ref's into that Country.
The Union Of Soviet Socialist Republics Otherwise Known As The Soviet Union Or The USSR.
Bohemia is not part of Russia. It is part of the Czech Republic.
RUSSIA has a continuing internal low-level insurgency in Chechnya and some neighboring oblasts (like Daghestan).
Counties that have poor economies because of recent conflict include the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ivory Coast, CAR and Mali
Conflict diamonds or 'blood diamonds -- have a history in Angola, Liberia and Sierra Leone, Côte d'Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Republic of Congo and Zimbabwe. Each has a history of funding civil war or other mayhem using diamonds as far back as the 1980s. You can read more about each country's history with conflict diamonds, below.
Neighboring countries are countries that share a common border or are geographically close to each other. They often have close political, economic, and social ties due to their proximity. Relations between neighboring countries can vary from cooperation and friendly relations to tension and conflict.
" EFFECT" is a noun. "AFFECT" is a verb.