The landlocked countries in the Balkans are Kosovo and North Macedonia. Additionally, Serbia is also considered landlocked, as it does not have direct access to the sea. These nations are surrounded by other Balkan countries that have coastlines on the Adriatic, Aegean, or Black Seas.
The Balkan countries are Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Greece, Macedonia, Montenegro, and Serbia. A coastline is another word for a coast or border with the sea, so this question asks which of the Balkan countries are landlocked. Most of these countries border either the Aegean Sea, the Ionian Sea, the Adriatic Sea or the Black Sea. However, both Macedonia and Serbia are fully landlocked with no coastline.
The Black Sea
The Adriatic Sea separates the Italian and Balkan Peninsulas. The countries of Italy and Spain both touch the Adriatic Sea.
Eight countries have Coastlines on the North Sea. They are Scotland, England, Germany, Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, France, and Belgium.
Lithuania and Latvia
Answer: The Adriatic Sea, The Aegean Sea and the Black Sea. Hope this helps
Black Sea, Adriatic, Aegean. It would be a good plan to look them up on a map to get an idea of the whole area. It's an important area, lost of wars have started there, including the First World War.
The Black Sea is not a country but it is a sea, that can only be entered by ocean going ships from the Mediterranean Sea through the Bosporus. The Black Sea is surrounded by the coastlines of 6 nations. They are Turkey, Bulgaria, Romania, the Ukraine, Russia and Georgia.
The Baltic Sea has a coastline with all these countries and Denmark and Germany (the sea is called "Ostsee" in German)
Bolivia and Paraguay have no outlet on the sea.
The Balkans are located in southeastern Europe. This region is characterized by its diverse cultures, languages, and histories, and it includes countries such as Greece, Bulgaria, and Serbia. The Balkan Peninsula is bordered by the Adriatic Sea to the west, the Aegean Sea to the south, and the Black Sea to the east.