Yugoslavia was created from parts of the Austro-Hungarian empire after WW1. From 1912 until his assassination in 1934, Yugoslavia was ruled by King Alexander I. He was succeeded by his eleven year old son Peter II and a regency council headed by his cousin Prince Paul.
The monarchy was deposed by the Communists in late 1945. Marshal Josip Broz Tito ran the country (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) until his death in 1980. Yugoslavia was formally dissolved in 1992.
Marshal Tito and he ruled Yugoslavia
Josip Tito
Josip Broz Tito, president of the (Socialist Federal Republic of) Yugoslavia from 1945 until his death in 1980.
tito
Bosnia was ruled by erstwhile Yugoslavia.Now Bosnia is a sovereign country after the disintegration of Yugoslavia in nineties. BRAJESH MISHRA MANDLA
The dictator of Slovenia was Josip Broz Tito. Tito was the leader of Yugoslavia, which Slovenia was a part of until its independence in 1991. Tito ruled Yugoslavia with a strong hand, implementing a socialist regime and maintaining control through a combination of political repression and economic policies.
In the 1950s, Slovenia was part of Yugoslavia, a socialist federation that comprised six republics. Slovenia was one of these republics, along with Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Yugoslavia was led by Josip Broz Tito, who ruled from the end of World War II until his death in 1980. Slovenia gained independence from Yugoslavia in 1991.
No, Yugoslavia is not Armenian, Yugoslavia is Slavic.
Yugoslavia was a badly organized country on the grounds that "Jugo" means Southern and "Slav" means a Slavic person. Thus Yugoslavia literally meant the "Country of the Southern Slavs". These people did not want to live together and they had previously tried to be separate (Serbia used to be independent. Bosnia and Croatia were not ruled jointly by the same Empire from the late 1700s until the early 1900s and so on. When Tito ruled Yugoslavia, he was able to keep the diverse nation together restricting people's rights and generally violent tactics. When Tito fell, the different nations of Yugoslavia, such as Slovenia and Croatia (Bosnia followed later) asserted their right to be independent. The Serbian rulers of Yugoslavia resisted this secession and attempted to occupy Slovenia and Croatia by force. After four years, Slovenia and Croatia had successfully seceded and evicted the Serbian troops. These nations remain independent.
Yugoslavia no longer exists. You cannot go on holiday to Yugoslavia.
Slovenia as a country never existed before 1991 and it was always a republic. Before that Slovenia was a part of: 1945 - 1991 Socialist Federative Republic of Yugoslavia (known at some time as Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia) - Republic In SFRY Slovenia was one of 6 parts of the federation - Socialist Republic of Slovenia 1918 - 1945 Kingdom of Yugoslavia (Known at some time as the kingdom of Serbs, Crats and Slovenes) - monarchy, ruled by serbian Karadjordje dinasty in Belgrade In the kingdom Slovenia was a region ruled by a "Ban". till 1918 - Austro - Hungarian empire (Austrian part) - monarchy, ruled by Austrian Habsburg dinasty in Vienna. In the empire Slovenia was divided between different duchies, Carniola, Stayermark, Istria, Gorizia, Coritnhia.
No he was definitely not from Yugoslavia.