Yes, both Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia underwent significant changes in the late 20th century. Yugoslavia disintegrated in the 1990s into several independent nations due to ethnic conflicts and nationalism. Czechoslovakia peacefully split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia in 1993, a process known as the Velvet Divorce. These changes reflected the broader trends of nationalism and the reconfiguration of borders in post-Cold War Europe.
Ethnic conflict.
The biggest difference is that Czechoslovakia broke up peacefully while Yugoslavia broke up violently with wars in Bosnia,Croatia and Slovenia
Slovakia was never in Yugoslavia. Slovakia was a part of Czechoslovakia and Austria-Hungary prior to that.
estonia, finland, latvia, lithuana, czechoslovakia, and yugoslavia were made independent countries. poland was returned to the status of a nation.
East Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, and Albania. Three of these countries (East Germany, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia) no longer exist.
No. Yugoslavia is not a city. Yugoslavia is a country that no longers exists. Czechoslovakia is a country that no longer exists. It split into two countries. They are the Czech Republic, whose capital is Prague, and Slovakia, whose capital is Bratislava.
Austria-Hungary
Both revolutions were motivated by the desire for freedom.
Yugoslavia and the USSR (Soviet Union)
Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia and Poland
Poland, Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia.
Czechoslovakia, Yugoslavia, & USSR.