Sarajevo: A BiographyHurst & Company, 2006 - 435 sivua Indelibly marked as the site of the assassination of Habsburg Archduke Franz Ferdinand in 1914, Sarajevo hosted the Winter Olympics in 1984, but by 1992 was a city at war, its residents subjected to what became the longest urban siege of the modern era. Sarajevans showed extraordinary courage under fire as they struggled to preserve a treasured way of life. Robert J. Donia examines the city's history from its founding in the fifteenth century to the present. In its Ottoman heyday Sarajevo was synonymous with learning, its skyline punctuated by the minarets and domes of mosques and madrasas. Under Tito it was a haven of multiculturalism where Yugoslavs lived and worked together, irrespective of their ethnic or religious affiliations. The Siege of Sarajevo (1992-5) and its aftermath receives particular attention in Donia's compelling account, the most detailed to appear in English to date. |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 79
Sivu 22
... central authorities — to the empire's key urban institutions . By 1604 the city had more than one hundred vakufs , and a considerable portion of the city's economic life revolved around the maintenance and upkeep of its religious and ...
... central authorities — to the empire's key urban institutions . By 1604 the city had more than one hundred vakufs , and a considerable portion of the city's economic life revolved around the maintenance and upkeep of its religious and ...
Sivu 24
... Central officials labored in vain to increase tax revenues , causing soldiers to go unpaid and be inadequately equipped . Segments of the feudal military elite rebelled against the central government , which was unable to pay them and ...
... Central officials labored in vain to increase tax revenues , causing soldiers to go unpaid and be inadequately equipped . Segments of the feudal military elite rebelled against the central government , which was unable to pay them and ...
Sivu 25
... central government , but its members also resisted the authority of governors dispatched from Istanbul to rule Bosnia . Leading Sarajevo Muslims exercised the autonomous rights given to the city in its early days , refusing to recognize ...
... central government , but its members also resisted the authority of governors dispatched from Istanbul to rule Bosnia . Leading Sarajevo Muslims exercised the autonomous rights given to the city in its early days , refusing to recognize ...
Sisältö
Sarajevos Founders and Foundations | 8 |
The Sarajevo Uprising and the Advent of Habsburg Rule | 37 |
The Making of Fin de Siècle Sarajevo | 68 |
Tekijänoikeudet | |
16 muita osia ei näytetty
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
April ARBiH areas army assassination attacks August Austro-Hungarian authorities autonomy Baščaršija BCS ERN became Belgrade Bosne i Hercegovine Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia-Herzegovina Bosnian Muslims Bosnian Serb Bosnian Serb Assembly Bosnian Serb nationalists building campaign Catholic central Chetnik city council city of Sarajevo city's civilians command Communists Croatia cultural December delegates economic elections February federal forces German Habsburg Habsburg Monarchy Ibid ICTY Ilidža institutions Islamic Izetbegović Jews July June Karadžić Kruševac Kukanjac major March military Miljacka Milošević Mostar movement municipalities nationalist parties November officials organizations Oslobodjenje Ottoman Partisan People's percent police political postwar president Regional Government religious reported Republic Republika Srpska resistance royal Sarajevans Sarajevo city Sarajevo Muslims SDS leaders Second World Serb and Croat Serbian Orthodox church siege Social Democrats socialist Srškić structures SUSJ territory Tito troops units UNPROFOR urban Ustasha Vancaš votes Wassitsch Yugoslav Yugoslavia Zagreb