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Republika Srpska (1992-1995): Difference between revisions

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During the [[Bosnian War]], Republika Srpska was the Serb-controlled areas of [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]].
''For the present-day entity which is one of the two constitutent ones of [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], see [[Republic of Srpska|Republika Srpska]].''
 
{{Infobox country|name=Republic of Srpska|native_name=Република Српска|image_flag=Flag of Republika Srpska.svg|image_coat=Former COA Republika Srpska.svg.png|capital=Banja Luka|largest_city=Banja Luka|year_start=1992|year_end=1995|image_map=RS 1993.png|map_width=260|map_caption=Map of Republika Srpska-controlled territories (red) in 1993.|official_languages=Serbo-Croatian|date_start=9 January|date_end=14 December}}
 
During the [[Bosnian War]], the '''Republika Srpska''' was the Serb-controlled areas of Bosnia and Herzegovina.


== History ==
== History ==
{{Infobox country|name=Republic of Srpska|native_name=Република Српска|image_flag=Flag of Republika Srpska.svg|image_coat=Former COA Republika Srpska.svg.png|capital=Banja Luka|largest_city=Banja Luka|year_start=1992|year_end=1995|image_map=RS 1993.png|map_width=260|map_caption=Map of Republika Srpska-controlled territories (red) in 1993.|official_languages=Serbo-Croatian|date_start=9 January|date_end=14 December}}
=== Bosnian War (1992–1995) ===
=== Bosnian War (1992–1995) ===
[[Radovan Karadžić]], the first president of Srpska, proposed allowing majority Serb areas of Bosnia to stay in [[Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1992–2006)|Yugoslavia]]. He appointed many [[Communism|communist]] officers even though he was not a communist himself.<ref name=":032">{{Citation|author=[[Michael Parenti]]|year=2000|title=To Kill a Nation|chapter=Republika Srpska: Democracy, NATO Style|page=58–66|pdf=https://leftychan.net/edu/src/1614706295182-3.pdf|publisher=Verso}}</ref>
[[Radovan Karadžić]], the first president of Srpska, proposed allowing majority Serb areas of Bosnia to stay in [[Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1992–2006)|Yugoslavia]]. He appointed many [[Communism|communist]] officers even though he was not a communist himself.<ref name=":032">{{Citation|author=[[Michael Parenti]]|year=2000|title=To Kill a Nation|chapter=Republika Srpska: Democracy, NATO Style|page=58–66|pdf=https://leftychan.net/edu/src/1614706295182-3.pdf|publisher=Verso}}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
[[Category:History of Bosnia & Herzegovina]]

Latest revision as of 15:49, 4 November 2024

For the present-day entity which is one of the two constitutent ones of Bosnia and Herzegovina, see Republika Srpska.

Republic of Srpska
Република Српска
1992–1995
Flag of Republic of Srpska
Flag
Coat of arms of Republic of Srpska
Coat of arms
Map of Republika Srpska-controlled territories (red) in 1993.
Map of Republika Srpska-controlled territories (red) in 1993.
Capital
and largest city
Banja Luka
Official languagesSerbo-Croatian
History
• Established
9 January 1992
• Dissolution
14 December 1995


During the Bosnian War, the Republika Srpska was the Serb-controlled areas of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

History[edit | edit source]

Bosnian War (1992–1995)[edit | edit source]

Radovan Karadžić, the first president of Srpska, proposed allowing majority Serb areas of Bosnia to stay in Yugoslavia. He appointed many communist officers even though he was not a communist himself.[1]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Michael Parenti (2000). To Kill a Nation: 'Republika Srpska: Democracy, NATO Style' (pp. 58–66). [PDF] Verso.