Minor corrections: - The first king should be Peter I not Peter II. - Yes, I realize I accidentally mispelled Josef Broz Tito as Josef Bronz Tito, my bad.
My great grandfather (born in Zagreb Croatia 1925) was 8 years old when Hitler took power in Germany. He describes the day the Axis invaded Yugoslavia as “pure bloodshed” and “hell on earth”. He ended up joining the Yugoslav Partisans/Resistance, suffering a bullet wound to his collarbone area and a grazed bullet wound on his cheek from an Italian soldier. His best friend from school ended up being killed by the Germans due to resistance, and his mother died too as she was found under the rubble after a bombing raid. His mother, best friend, two siblings and his grandparents were killed during the entire occupation of Yugoslavia. He passed away in 2020 due to kidney failure at the age of 95.. Bog blagoslovio Hrvatsku i Balkan! Molite za njega i za sve izgubljene živote! 🇭🇷 🇷🇸 🇧🇦 🇸🇮 🇲🇪 🇷🇴 🇬🇷 🇦🇱 🇧🇬 🙏🏼
A Hrvat I can Respect despite my Hatred for communists and Fascists overall. You Grandfather was a great man who fought for his Nation, when many of his countrymen turned into Vicious Savages... and that Give him my Respect. Love from RS, BiH
@SamuelLapinski It just so happened that Bulgaria had practically no choice but to comply? Yes, we did gain land, but the vast majority of it had atleast Bulgarian plurality. Also the government and church tried their best to save the Bulgarian jews, but sadly couldn't save the ones from the newly acquired territories. Overall, other than killing a few hundred civilians in Thrace and Eastern Serbia, Bulgaria didn't really do anything wrong imo.
Minor error: The first state shown should have been listed as "The State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs" (different order). It is a small difference, however it highlights the fact that the majority of Serbia was not a part of this state. You also misspelled Tito's last name - it's in fact Broz.
Two of my great grandfathers fought in WW2 in a partisan movement. Yugoslav theatre of war the 3rd most brutal if you ask me. USSR and China come before that. Ustaše were so cruel that even Nazis were shocked. If you wonder, I am a Croat and I am proud to say that many many Croats despite there being a Fascist Croatia fought against the Nazi puppets in Zagreb. At first people were throwing flowers in front of Wehrmacht soldiers in Ban Jelačić square, but soon after they started to see the true horrors of Ustaše. Smrt fašizmu, sloboda narodu! URA!
So was Josip Broz, a croat-slovene himself. Yugoslavia was one of the few countries to liberate themselves with Greece and Albania. Smrt Fasizmu, sloboda narodu indeed.
I once knew a guy that grew up in the former Yugoslavia. He used to run a bar here in Melbourne and was the only place I knew in town that would serve 80% Stroh rum (only to favourable patrons, of course)... Good god them Yugos knew how to drink 😅😂
My biggest honors to the yugoslav partisans in WW2. They fought bravely and managed to fight the nazi occupation with determination, liberaring themselves from it.
Propaganda, they never liberated a single city alone. They just moved into the nazi occupied cities as the nazis were retreating at the end of the war. The only reason they took power after the war is because allies started supporting them at the end of the war. Don't believe everything you hear, especially if it involves communism.
Nazis dont last forever, so of course they get their country back then. It was still swift take in April of 1940 out of nowhere with how nazis came. Good that Yugoslavians fought back against nazis, because they slowed the German plan to attack USSR and it made more difficult for them, so USSR could one day come back with counter attack on the nazis.
Minor error: Banat, Backa, and Baranja region had a small sliver of modern-day Southern Hungary that traditionally belonged to the aforementioned regions. It was transferred back after the Treaty of Trianon, Hungary losing the vast majority of the land but not all of it, retaining Baja for example that was originally part of the area. Great video otherwise (although some of the other comments point out some other minor inaccuracies)!
Macedonian partizans, (shumkars) were a few, KPM are from November 1943. Before that was sporadic fighting mainly in western part of Vardar Macedonia with balist Combetar Shkiptare.
Hey since I'm extremely confused about Macedonia as a Bulgarian (who the heck isn't) what was the movement about, what was it's main ethnicity, and stuff like that if you know?
The only thing I would add is that Albania after WW2 is considered by many to be a Yugoslav satellite until the Tito-Stalin split in '48, but Yugoslavia also could be counted as a Soviet satellite by some during that timeframe, and because this is monthly, it'd be even harder to be accurate in regards to that (which is largely interpretation on what someone thinks a client is), so I don't consider it a flaw you don't show that.
@@user-rl6fs6rd7m It's complicated, because Soviet troops did enter border areas of Yugoslavia during the war, and they left at the end of '45 if I recall (though it's hard to find), so while there wasn't military influence, Soviet troops also never were in Albania, and they left Bulgaria in 1947, yet Bulgaria and Albania are still considered satellites. Yugoslavia was basically following in line with all of the other Eastern Bloc countries at the time in terms of domestic policy until the Tito-Stalin split. Bulgaria even still considered itself a satellite when Ceaușescu's Romania considered itself entirely independent while remaining in the Warsaw Pact. So as you can see, depending on who you ask, these countries either could've been independent or under Soviet control, and there really isn't one correct answer.
Makedonija, Slovenija, Crna Gora(Montenegro) and Hrvatska(croatiia) are probably the only Former Yugoslav Nations that Earned their Independence. Makedonija, Even to this day has joined the fight again Greater Albania and the Šiptar Menace
@@uros3701Tito’s Yugoslavia lasted more than twice as long as the original. He gained power through self liberating territories from Nazi occupation. He even got recognition from the Allies as the legitimate government it’s hard to call his reign illegal.
@@Spozywanieodchodowtomojehobby My Family always goes to the Crne Gore Beaches, really nice, sometimes we go to Dalmacija but I hold some personal dislike because they always hike the prices for serbs
@@regardstringent220 Druže pričaš na engleskom a koristis srpske nazive. Jel to znaci da kad mi pričamo o recimo engleskim mestima treba da kažemo England ili Scotland umesto Engleske i Škotske?
@@FilipFCB Ne radim ovo zato što volim ove regije i to je ono što sam uvijek tradicionalno nazivao, jer su to njihova imena Također, ljudi su se ljutili zbog engleskog pravopisa Crna Gora (Montenegro) Ako želite reći England ili Scottland, ne morate, ali možete Osobno ne preporučujem, srpski je lijep jezik i ne treba više vanjskog utjecaja Engleski je već sjeban... Primjer ovoga, izgleda dobro. Idem u Englesku idem u England Idem u SAD Ameriku Idem u US-America(Amerika?)
I love the choise of music ranging between the aftermath of the Yugoslav Wars, and the official end of Yugoslavia. Oh yeah, also the song name's not in the description. Dammit
It's confusing that Yugoslavia is mainly associated with Serbia while it was founded by the Slovenian & Croatian provinces of the Austrian empire. the king may have been foreign, and this is just a union state in general.
Because the Serbians dominated Yugoslavia Just like the English dominate the UK Just like the Castillians dominate Spain. These union states have always had a dominant ethnic elite that manifest over all others and appeared on a spolight for foreigners. The German empire had the Prussians.
Oh boy, I can’t wait to have some calm, unbiased, and respectful discussions about the events that occurred during the Yugoslav Wars! Got my hazmat suit and geiger counter ready to go!
0:11 That brief state was actually called "The State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs", then the order got reversed when it united with Serbia, Vojvodina and Montenegro 2:58 Also, you didn't transfer a portion of territory from Bosnia to Montenegro (Sutorina), and instead you kept it until the end of the video
Incorrect - there was no’vojvodina’ . Srem, Banat, Bačka and Baranja all first formally joined the Kingdom of Serbia (yes Vukovar was brought into Jugoslavia by Serbia) as well as Montenegro as a part of Serbia after the Podgoricka skupstina
Someone would called you crazy if they had no knowledge of history whatsoever. The Macedonians are bonded culturally and by blood with the Hellenics-Greeks. All that before Christ. because the Slavs migrated south (to their current locations) at around 600 A.D.. Some centuries after the macedonian kingdom and Alexander's the Great legacy.
My respect and admiration to all the people who fought for their country. Even more admiration for doing all that on their own and not falling under the boot of USSR
Because we Former Jugosloveni always jump at the Change to prove our country is better than everyone else's, If we didn't do this, it would be betraying our birthright to prove our nation's the best.
Technically of you were born prior to 2006 Yugoslavia still existed because in 2003 while the country changed its name from Yugoslavia to Serbia and Montenegro, the borders did not change and the country effectively remained the same with the name Yugoslavia still commonly used during those years on all sorts of maps.
During the ww2 Occupation of yugoslaiva you should have seperated the Chetniks and Partisan forced into 2 diffrent colors just for that added bit of info since the two sides were fighting agasint eachother
@@Domagoj0610 Rod smo bili i uvek cemo biti dobri brate, to je bitnije, jer samo postujuci pretke moze nam biti bolje. Nekad su se nasa plemena zvala Etrurcani, Iliri i jos dalje Asi i daleko veca je bila nasa zemlja od Ilirskog poluostrva. Potekli smo iz Indije, jer nasa plemena dele istu kulturu kao i oni. Tako da postoji kroz kulturu, jezik i tradicije vecita povezanost koja je starija od bilo koje jugoslovenske republike. Pobismo se gore od Kaina i Avelja za ovih 150 godina u bratoubilackim ratovima... Greh nacinismo za koji imamo duznost da operemo pred Bogom u ime nase dece i njihove. Karma se prenosi pokoljenjima i zato umiremo kao balkanska plemena
Yugoslavia didn’t dissolve in 2003, it just changed its name but the territory was exactly the same between 2003 and 2006 when Montenegro gained independence.
Error - Serbian troops did not have access to the Ground Safety Zone (the buffer between AP Kosovo and Central Serbia) until 2001. The territory should've been colored in blank before Serbian troops re-entered the territory. Also it's Josip Broz Tito, not "Bronz".
@@EmperorTigerstar Well it is, but barely. At about the height of the "Banovinas" text and the longitude of the Easternmost end of the island of Imbros for reference the border should start going in the bottom right direction hitting the right end of the map frame at about the height of the border between the "Banovinas" and "Militarily Occupied" boxes.
They called themselves Yugoslavia, so we did live in a time when Yugoslavia still existed, even if the union of states was dissolved functionally 14-15 years before we were alive, and the territory of Serbia(and Montenegro) and Croatia was cut down to what it is today by 1996.
@@EmperorTigerstarI get your point, but the name change from Yugoslavia to Serbia and Montenegro really didn't mean much, since the borders didn't change at all, and it was still viewed by the international community as the Yugoslav rump state.
Great video!!! However, some mistakes It isn’t Josip Bronz Tito, but Josip Broz Tito Also, after october 2000, prime minister isn’t Zoran Zizić, but Zoran Djindjić With Dj or dj being a single letter in serbo-croatian, but totally different than Z or Ž
In fact, after the collapse of Austro-Hungary, they proclaimed the state of the Slovenians, Croats and Serbs, however, that state was never recognized by the Atante powera, the Paris Peace Treaty formed the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, so no, they did not have any legally recognized state
@@regardstringent220 Bošnjaci nisu postojali pre 1993 Godine, zvali su se Samo Muslimani. I na Vikipediji piše da su Bošnjaci i Srbi mnogo bliži jednim drugima (Genetski) nego što je iko od njih Hrvatima, to onda logično znači da Su Bošnjaci Srbi, jer oni U Ranom sredjnjem Veku nisu Postojali kao Bošnjaci, bili su Srbi ali sada su Islamizovani.
It was not State of Serbs,Croats and Slovenes but State of Slovenes,Croats and Serbs, also you should have mapped chetniks as they only became colabarators when partizans started to push back Germans and Italians
0:34 In 1922 notice how the new province borders divide up the Albanian majority region of Kosovo between 3 different oblasts. presumably so they dont have a majority in any of the oblasts which could lead to seperatism.
I like these kind of videos. However, a chance is missed to visualize the WWII period in a more insightful manner. First of all, the whole of Yugoslavia should be light blue after the Axis invasion, since it was militarily occupied. It would be enlightening to show the various subdivisions, some of them with a degree of self-rule (like the "Independent" State of Croatia, the Governorate of Montenegro and the Governorate of Dalmatia), in varying shades of grey. If any, the Chetniks were representing the government-in-exile, and should be shown in blue until August 1944, when the Supreme Command of the Yugoslav Army, still led by Mihailovic, was dissolved by the king. The partisans should ofcourse be shown in red from the start. Similarly, it would be helpful to show the independent former Yugoslav republics after 1991, including Montengro from 2006 and ending with Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence in 2008.
It's not really a state, it's a region of Croatia called Eastern Slavonia (or Podunavlje) which was occupied by Yugoslav/Serbian forces and peacefully reintegrated into Croatia in 1998
Minor corrections:
- The first king should be Peter I not Peter II.
- Yes, I realize I accidentally mispelled Josef Broz Tito as Josef Bronz Tito, my bad.
wb Bronz Tito?
you are a serb, unsubscribe from this moment.....Kosova snd Montenegron are independeted states
The state that broke away from AH was called State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs. The nations were not named in the same order as in Kingdom.
Also, Josip BROZ Tito, not Bronz
@@karloperkovic6710 just wanted to type that LOL
This comment section is sure to be 100% respectful and not end up having any political debates of any kind.
yeah.........
*Insert nationalist comment*
Yugoslavia as a nation was a good idea
@@Homeminboss i disagree
Kosovo is Sorbian@@CAProductions051
I love how the music perfectly syncs with the Fall of Yugoslavia and the Bosnian War.
Would be weird to show a genocide with inappropriate music.
God dam it not this again
Damn bro it's almost as if the creator intended it...
@@8isrubbish- the only genocide was committed during WW1 & WW2 by Croats and bosniaks. Learn the meaning of the word
@@yellowwasprakija2869and Germans
My great grandfather (born in Zagreb Croatia 1925) was 8 years old when Hitler took power in Germany. He describes the day the Axis invaded Yugoslavia as “pure bloodshed” and “hell on earth”. He ended up joining the Yugoslav Partisans/Resistance, suffering a bullet wound to his collarbone area and a grazed bullet wound on his cheek from an Italian soldier.
His best friend from school ended up being killed by the Germans due to resistance, and his mother died too as she was found under the rubble after a bombing raid. His mother, best friend, two siblings and his grandparents were killed during the entire occupation of Yugoslavia.
He passed away in 2020 due to kidney failure at the age of 95..
Bog blagoslovio Hrvatsku i Balkan! Molite za njega i za sve izgubljene živote! 🇭🇷 🇷🇸 🇧🇦 🇸🇮 🇲🇪 🇷🇴 🇬🇷 🇦🇱 🇧🇬 🙏🏼
@SamuelLapinskiagreed, but in addition Albania.
A Hrvat I can Respect despite my Hatred for communists and Fascists overall. You Grandfather was a great man who fought for his Nation, when many of his countrymen turned into Vicious Savages... and that Give him my Respect.
Love from RS, BiH
@SamuelLapinski where are you from? I ask so I can Reword what I will say for your understanding.
@SamuelLapinskiMy great-grandfather fought against the Germans in WW2, and he was Bulgarian. Think twice before writing nonsense.
@SamuelLapinski It just so happened that Bulgaria had practically no choice but to comply?
Yes, we did gain land, but the vast majority of it had atleast Bulgarian plurality.
Also the government and church tried their best to save the Bulgarian jews, but sadly couldn't save the ones from the newly acquired territories.
Overall, other than killing a few hundred civilians in Thrace and Eastern Serbia, Bulgaria didn't really do anything wrong imo.
Minor error: The first state shown should have been listed as "The State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs" (different order). It is a small difference, however it highlights the fact that the majority of Serbia was not a part of this state.
You also misspelled Tito's last name - it's in fact Broz.
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_of_Slovenes,_Croats_and_Serbs#:~:text=The%20State%20of%20Slovenes%2C%20Croats,Pre%C4%8Dani)%20residing%20in%20what%20were
you are wrong, it's Broth
You are wrong, it is Bro
"Slovens" basically means "Slavic language speaking people" so the majority was just Slavic speaking people, that's all that it means.
@@korana6308no its what the name implies, its state of serbs croats and slovenes
I like how the music gets very fast once Yugoslavia collapses into smaller countries. Anyways, since job as always, Tigerstar!
Two of my great grandfathers fought in WW2 in a partisan movement. Yugoslav theatre of war the 3rd most brutal if you ask me. USSR and China come before that. Ustaše were so cruel that even Nazis were shocked. If you wonder, I am a Croat and I am proud to say that many many Croats despite there being a Fascist Croatia fought against the Nazi puppets in Zagreb. At first people were throwing flowers in front of Wehrmacht soldiers in Ban Jelačić square, but soon after they started to see the true horrors of Ustaše. Smrt fašizmu, sloboda narodu! URA!
So was Josip Broz, a croat-slovene himself. Yugoslavia was one of the few countries to liberate themselves with Greece and Albania. Smrt Fasizmu, sloboda narodu indeed.
Ew, titoists
Nisi ti Hrvat cim ovako pricas i lazes
Another serbo-commie extremist and liar
@@drme-1234fascist
I had no idea that Yugoslavia didn't formally control that territory under Trieste until 1954, these videos always teach me something obscure
yes, was a former jugoslav administration in the former territory of trieste
Trst🇸🇮*
@@NicholasG4308 Venezia(union), Gorizia(montain), Grado(wooden bar), Ravena(flatland), all not italian! Si pacem vis, prepara belum!
@@Renuntius_BRICScome and get it. Your country will disappear from history.
@@Zz_Mike-Hawk_zZ Lol Spaghettini, what is my country?
I once knew a guy that grew up in the former Yugoslavia. He used to run a bar here in Melbourne and was the only place I knew in town that would serve 80% Stroh rum (only to favourable patrons, of course)...
Good god them Yugos knew how to drink 😅😂
Yugos means south 😅, Yugoslavos are better term
I love how the music gets intense during the Nazi occupation and Yugoslavia War
My biggest honors to the yugoslav partisans in WW2. They fought bravely and managed to fight the nazi occupation with determination, liberaring themselves from it.
Liberation into communism...so much better
Propaganda, they never liberated a single city alone. They just moved into the nazi occupied cities as the nazis were retreating at the end of the war. The only reason they took power after the war is because allies started supporting them at the end of the war.
Don't believe everything you hear, especially if it involves communism.
@@tvojamama4888False don't spread misinformation you Nasi
Nazis dont last forever, so of course they get their country back then. It was still swift take in April of 1940 out of nowhere with how nazis came. Good that Yugoslavians fought back against nazis, because they slowed the German plan to attack USSR and it made more difficult for them, so USSR could one day come back with counter attack on the nazis.
@anti-shqip_aktionfr same TH-cam can't fix bugs like this but rather spend their time making an counter ad-blocker
You forgot to add that yugoslavia was under regency of prince paul from 1934 to 1941
Minor error: Banat, Backa, and Baranja region had a small sliver of modern-day Southern Hungary that traditionally belonged to the aforementioned regions. It was transferred back after the Treaty of Trianon, Hungary losing the vast majority of the land but not all of it, retaining Baja for example that was originally part of the area. Great video otherwise (although some of the other comments point out some other minor inaccuracies)!
That event lasted less than a month and by the end of the month Hungary required the territory, hence why it wasn’t shown.
@@EmperorTigerstar Had no idea, thanks for the clarification! Could have sworn it lasted more like 6 months.
Possibly the best produced EmperorTigerstar video to date.
My great grandpa was born in 1919, he fought as a Macedonian Partizan
Macedonian partizans, (shumkars) were a few, KPM are from November 1943. Before that was sporadic fighting mainly in western part of Vardar Macedonia with balist Combetar Shkiptare.
slava na makedonija
Hey since I'm extremely confused about Macedonia as a Bulgarian (who the heck isn't) what was the movement about, what was it's main ethnicity, and stuff like that if you know?
@@BulgarianCatHis grandfather was a Macedonian who was a partisan who fought for his country and people. Not that complicated
It's a good day when the emperor uploads. Great video👍❤
The only thing I would add is that Albania after WW2 is considered by many to be a Yugoslav satellite until the Tito-Stalin split in '48, but Yugoslavia also could be counted as a Soviet satellite by some during that timeframe, and because this is monthly, it'd be even harder to be accurate in regards to that (which is largely interpretation on what someone thinks a client is), so I don't consider it a flaw you don't show that.
wasn't it just the same case of the bigger power considering the smaller one as a satellite, but the smaller viewing them as equals?
@@user-rl6fs6rd7m It's complicated, because Soviet troops did enter border areas of Yugoslavia during the war, and they left at the end of '45 if I recall (though it's hard to find), so while there wasn't military influence, Soviet troops also never were in Albania, and they left Bulgaria in 1947, yet Bulgaria and Albania are still considered satellites. Yugoslavia was basically following in line with all of the other Eastern Bloc countries at the time in terms of domestic policy until the Tito-Stalin split. Bulgaria even still considered itself a satellite when Ceaușescu's Romania considered itself entirely independent while remaining in the Warsaw Pact. So as you can see, depending on who you ask, these countries either could've been independent or under Soviet control, and there really isn't one correct answer.
Bulgaria considered itself a satellite? Just in terms of how it listened to Moscow you mean?@@spaghettiking7312
Albania was Pro China in the Sino-soviet Split and Used Jugoslavija as its defender
Appreciation for the sound engineering 👏👏
Macedonia post-independence: simple round nation in the middle of the Balkans
Macedonia pre-independence: Yugoslavia's B A L L S
Makedonija, Slovenija, Crna Gora(Montenegro) and Hrvatska(croatiia) are probably the only Former Yugoslav Nations that Earned their Independence. Makedonija, Even to this day has joined the fight again Greater Albania and the Šiptar Menace
FR
lmao
@@regardstringent220 Taka e.
You named four out of a total of six ex Yugoslav republics, yet you used "only".
How many of them would be...not "only"? All six?
Yugoslavia: The average VERY stable balkan country
It was, until Tito died
@@chimera9818it was until Hitler and later Tito illegally occupied and messed Yugoslavia up.
@@uros3701 What flavor of kool aid did you overdose on?
Fake. Lies.
@@uros3701Tito’s Yugoslavia lasted more than twice as long as the original. He gained power through self liberating territories from Nazi occupation. He even got recognition from the Allies as the legitimate government it’s hard to call his reign illegal.
great work with music!
I have been to 4 former Yugoslav countries it’s very nice place
Which ones?
@@regardstringent220 slovenia, croatia, montenegro and the one bosnian beach, probably. "very nice place"
@@Spozywanieodchodowtomojehobby My Family always goes to the Crne Gore Beaches, really nice, sometimes we go to Dalmacija but I hold some personal dislike because they always hike the prices for serbs
@@regardstringent220 Druže pričaš na engleskom a koristis srpske nazive. Jel to znaci da kad mi pričamo o recimo engleskim mestima treba da kažemo England ili Scotland umesto Engleske i Škotske?
@@FilipFCB Ne radim ovo zato što volim ove regije i to je ono što sam uvijek tradicionalno nazivao, jer su to njihova imena Također, ljudi su se ljutili zbog engleskog pravopisa Crna Gora (Montenegro) Ako želite reći England ili Scottland, ne morate, ali možete Osobno ne preporučujem, srpski je lijep jezik i ne treba više vanjskog utjecaja Engleski je već sjeban...
Primjer ovoga, izgleda dobro.
Idem u Englesku
idem u England
Idem u SAD Ameriku
Idem u US-America(Amerika?)
The music at the end of the Yugoslav history was cool cuz after the Yugoslav wars, it was just the right music! Love it
Quality content as always.
Really great video you're most accurate mapper I know good job
You should make a follow up video showing the war in the comments section: every second
"how low can your stability get ?"
"yes !"
I love the choise of music ranging between the aftermath of the Yugoslav Wars, and the official end of Yugoslavia.
Oh yeah, also the song name's not in the description. Dammit
Josip Bronz Tito 💀
It's confusing that Yugoslavia is mainly associated with Serbia while it was founded by the Slovenian & Croatian provinces of the Austrian empire. the king may have been foreign, and this is just a union state in general.
Serbia was the head honcho
Because during Yugoslavia's last years it was mostly Serbia and Montenegro
@@redacted7060Yet most countries rightfully did not recognize FR 'Yugoslavia' as the sole legal successor.
The ruling dynasty was a Serbian one tho
Because the Serbians dominated Yugoslavia
Just like the English dominate the UK
Just like the Castillians dominate Spain.
These union states have always had a dominant ethnic elite that manifest over all others and appeared on a spolight for foreigners. The German empire had the Prussians.
Oh boy, I can’t wait to have some calm, unbiased, and respectful discussions about the events that occurred during the Yugoslav Wars!
Got my hazmat suit and geiger counter ready to go!
Kosovo is India😉
I love how Broz is misspelled as Bronz
0:11 That brief state was actually called "The State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs", then the order got reversed when it united with Serbia, Vojvodina and Montenegro
2:58 Also, you didn't transfer a portion of territory from Bosnia to Montenegro (Sutorina), and instead you kept it until the end of the video
Incorrect - there was no’vojvodina’ . Srem, Banat, Bačka and Baranja all first formally joined the Kingdom of Serbia (yes Vukovar was brought into Jugoslavia by Serbia) as well as Montenegro as a part of Serbia after the Podgoricka skupstina
@@yellowwasprakija2869 incorrect
@@letecitoster3469 potpuno tacno Ustasho
@@yellowwasprakija2869 I think he meant the general area of modern day Vojvodina
Don't cry because its over, smile because it happened.
good quote
Wish it never happened.
Didn't realise just how long it took to sort out Trieste after WWII
Yugoslavia Was A Best Neutral Country And They Supported My Country Bangladesh 🇧🇩 Independent 🇧🇩💖🇷🇸
Your name is Islam it the truth let alone you found out what serbs did to the muslims
kosovo is rightfully brazilian
Sou brasileiro e concordo. É o vigésimo sétimo estado brasileiro!
@@odilusporce8814same as a french
@@El-Djazir-BlobfishSame as an American, it should be the 51st state!
Lol
@@T_Way it already is
Call me crazy but I think 🇲🇰 should have renamed itself Yugoslavia in 2018
😂😂 That would've been hilarious. As a Macedonian-American thank you for making me laugh.
🇺🇲❤️🇲🇰
Someone would called you crazy if they had no knowledge of history whatsoever. The Macedonians are bonded culturally and by blood with the Hellenics-Greeks. All that before Christ. because the Slavs migrated south (to their current locations) at around 600 A.D.. Some centuries after the macedonian kingdom and Alexander's the Great legacy.
The idea of him speaking a Slavic language is like thinking of Queen Elizabeth speaking like a Viking@@Asakura834
Every former yugo state should rename itself north Albania
Lol@@icrushchildrensdreams4556
Finally, Emperor adressing my country in one of his videos
Yugoslavia my favourite country 🇳🇱⭐️🇳🇱
@@-Faris-That's the Dutch Flag, Jugoslavija had
🔵
🤍
❤
My respect and admiration to all the people who fought for their country. Even more admiration for doing all that on their own and not falling under the boot of USSR
Ahh. Yugoslavia. Wonder how this will go.
The saddest breakup of countries.
Damn, I thought this was an old video and noticed how recent the comments are.
Well, the animation does stop in 2003, before Montenegro independence.
Because we Former Jugosloveni always jump at the Change to prove our country is better than everyone else's, If we didn't do this, it would be betraying our birthright to prove our nation's the best.
Oh wow, Yugoslavia (technically) existed while I was alive, I didn't know that
You outlived a country
Technically of you were born prior to 2006 Yugoslavia still existed because in 2003 while the country changed its name from Yugoslavia to Serbia and Montenegro, the borders did not change and the country effectively remained the same with the name Yugoslavia still commonly used during those years on all sorts of maps.
Ne ponovilo se, ali bratski pozdrav svim ex-jugovićima. Kaj da velim ambivalentan sam oko teme :)
Kao formalni Jugosloven (Rođen za vrijeme Savezne Republike) Zdravo
During the ww2 Occupation of yugoslaiva you should have seperated the Chetniks and Partisan forced into 2 diffrent colors just for that added bit of info since the two sides were fighting agasint eachother
Really love the details
💀
?@@FrenkyZ690
@@lolnoobthemapper oh oops you where serious 🗿
The music when Yugoslavia is nearing its eventual collapse up until the bleak aftermath of the Bosnian Genocide and the Kosovo War, is oh so perfect.
Moja Jugoslavijo i Balkanu 💔😔 Bog da vas pomiluje ❤🙏
Ode sfrj razbise je kao 41g dojcland opet
Balaševići, nema vam države ni na igrici 🤣🤣🤣!
@@Domagoj0610 Rod smo bili i uvek cemo biti dobri brate, to je bitnije, jer samo postujuci pretke moze nam biti bolje. Nekad su se nasa plemena zvala Etrurcani, Iliri i jos dalje Asi i daleko veca je bila nasa zemlja od Ilirskog poluostrva. Potekli smo iz Indije, jer nasa plemena dele istu kulturu kao i oni. Tako da postoji kroz kulturu, jezik i tradicije vecita povezanost koja je starija od bilo koje jugoslovenske republike. Pobismo se gore od Kaina i Avelja za ovih 150 godina u bratoubilackim ratovima... Greh nacinismo za koji imamo duznost da operemo pred Bogom u ime nase dece i njihove. Karma se prenosi pokoljenjima i zato umiremo kao balkanska plemena
@@As14789 tako je, uvijek bili i bit cemo nadam se vec kad je zajednistvo zbog toliko budala nemoguce da cemo zivjeti mirno i da cemo se uvazavati
Ah yes, my favorite Yugoslav leader: Josip *Bronz* Tito
Reading the comments make you realize why Yugoslavia failed
Nice video! good job🎉🎉
I like how it just disappears during WW2 for a moment before the partisans pop up.
nice video, will probably be successful
0:14 In 1919 Peter the first was king not the second, He's from WW2 period
Pinned comment
@@tunityguy I noticed before the pinned comment 🤷🏻♂️
2:25 the way yugoslavia disappeared with the sound effect
I was born in January 2003, really weird to think I was born just before Yugoslavia dissolved
Yugoslavia didn’t dissolve in 2003, it just changed its name but the territory was exactly the same between 2003 and 2006 when Montenegro gained independence.
It's so good!
Error - Serbian troops did not have access to the Ground Safety Zone (the buffer between AP Kosovo and Central Serbia) until 2001. The territory should've been colored in blank before Serbian troops re-entered the territory.
Also it's Josip Broz Tito, not "Bronz".
Everyone: Lets play games! Come on. Don't be a nerd.
Serbia: No playing before finishing homework.🗿
Great country!
🎶Uz Marchala Tita...
Hey, you seem to have forgotten that Southern Dobrudja was part of Romania during the interwar period.
Nope. That area is not shown in the map.
@@EmperorTigerstar Well it is, but barely. At about the height of the "Banovinas" text and the longitude of the Easternmost end of the island of Imbros for reference the border should start going in the bottom right direction hitting the right end of the map frame at about the height of the border between the "Banovinas" and "Militarily Occupied" boxes.
So sad 😭😭😭
😂🤣
Love Serbia from Bharat 🇮🇳🇷🇸
May Yugoslavia reign again 😊🙏
May Yugoslavia never rise again
@@TH-camEntertainer-k9pagreed
It feels so weird that I'm only 18, but still technically lived at the same time as Yugoslavia. (If you count Serbia and Montenegro as Yugoslavia)
They called themselves Yugoslavia, so we did live in a time when Yugoslavia still existed, even if the union of states was dissolved functionally 14-15 years before we were alive, and the territory of Serbia(and Montenegro) and Croatia was cut down to what it is today by 1996.
Yeah I was born in 2005 right before Serbia and Montenegro split up!
Damn, that thud once Yugoslavia is destroyed by the Axis was a nice touch
You should have it last till 2008 showing Montenegro and Kosovo declared their independence in 2006 and 2008 respectively.
They weren’t Yugoslavia at that point.
@@EmperorTigerstarI get your point, but the name change from Yugoslavia to Serbia and Montenegro really didn't mean much, since the borders didn't change at all, and it was still viewed by the international community as the Yugoslav rump state.
Montenegro I would’ve shown but not Kosovo because Kosovo declared independence after Serbia and Montenegro split up.
Great video!!!
However, some mistakes
It isn’t Josip Bronz Tito, but Josip Broz Tito
Also, after october 2000, prime minister isn’t Zoran Zizić, but Zoran Djindjić
With Dj or dj being a single letter in serbo-croatian, but totally different than Z or Ž
Very stable, hope it does'nt have a bunch of Revolts!
0:10 It was called "State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs" before joining with Serbia
Serbs still lived there in Bosnia and Herzegovina
@@CJMapping serbs were settled by turks in bosnia, croatia and all of europe
“Mr Tito…I don’t feel so good….”
Словения, Хорватия и Босния выходят
Югославия: ВЫ НЕ ВЫЙДИТЕ!!!
Македония: А мозьна мне выйти?
Югославия: Да-да... А о чём я? А! НЕ ВЫЙДИТЕ!!!
Minor typo: you wrote Bronz instead of Broz for Tito
You also said "or" instead of "of".
@@tylerbozinovski427 touché
Ironic how Slovenia and Crotia (along with bosnia) were the first states to ever be part of Yugoslavia and the first ones to break off the union.
In fact, after the collapse of Austro-Hungary, they proclaimed the state of the Slovenians, Croats and Serbs, however, that state was never recognized by the Atante powera, the Paris Peace Treaty formed the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, so no, they did not have any legally recognized state
Anatolians ≠ turks
@@play_boy7543 Very interesting
@@play_boy7543State EXISTED. Its reckognition is not important law element.
@@ReplyToMeIfUrRetarded seethe harder
Gde su moji Srbi? Lajk ako si Crbin, 🇷🇸🇧🇦🇲🇪
Bosanski Srbin 👍🏽
Bošnjaci I Crnogorci su Srpski Narod
@@AcknowledgeMeKid Slažem se brate moj, 💪🇷🇸
@@regardstringent220 Hrvati i Slovenci nisu Srbi, Oni imaju drugo Poreklo. Ali Srednja i Istočna Bosna i Crna Gora i Kosovo su Srpske Zemlje.
@@regardstringent220 Bošnjaci nisu postojali pre 1993 Godine, zvali su se Samo Muslimani. I na Vikipediji piše da su Bošnjaci i Srbi mnogo bliži jednim drugima (Genetski) nego što je iko od njih Hrvatima, to onda logično znači da Su Bošnjaci Srbi, jer oni U Ranom sredjnjem Veku nisu Postojali kao Bošnjaci, bili su Srbi ali sada su Islamizovani.
Religion and nationalism is truly the biggest obstacle in human progress and unity
Hey have you seen christopher's ww2 every day with army size video? Could you make a reaction video?
I don’t do reaction videos.
@@EmperorTigerstarWhat's your opinion on Hitler?
There's a typo
Josip Bronz Tito
0:45 you can see the modern day borders
And the deserved borders if Mostar and Syrmia went entirely to Croatia
What about the trading of Banat border towns with Romania in 1923 and 24? Is that territory too small to appear at this scale?
It was not State of Serbs,Croats and Slovenes but State of Slovenes,Croats and Serbs, also you should have mapped chetniks as they only became colabarators when partizans started to push back Germans and Italians
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_of_Slovenes,_Croats_and_Serbs#:~:text=The%20State%20of%20Slovenes%2C%20Croats,Pre%C4%8Dani)%20residing%20in%20what%20were
💀🤡
State of slovenians croats and serbs united with kingdom of serbia and thats how kingdom of serbs croats and slovenians appeared.
How do you make a Yugoslavia video and misspell Josip Broz Tito?
Broz not “Bronz”. Also “Federal Republic of of Yugoslavia”.
0:34 In 1922 notice how the new province borders divide up the Albanian majority region of Kosovo between 3 different oblasts. presumably so they dont have a majority in any of the oblasts which could lead to seperatism.
Metohija was historically part of Zeta and Kosovo did not have any clear border prior to 1945.
I like these kind of videos. However, a chance is missed to visualize the WWII period in a more insightful manner. First of all, the whole of Yugoslavia should be light blue after the Axis invasion, since it was militarily occupied. It would be enlightening to show the various subdivisions, some of them with a degree of self-rule (like the "Independent" State of Croatia, the Governorate of Montenegro and the Governorate of Dalmatia), in varying shades of grey. If any, the Chetniks were representing the government-in-exile, and should be shown in blue until August 1944, when the Supreme Command of the Yugoslav Army, still led by Mihailovic, was dissolved by the king. The partisans should ofcourse be shown in red from the start.
Similarly, it would be helpful to show the independent former Yugoslav republics after 1991, including Montengro from 2006 and ending with Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence in 2008.
Josip Bronz Tito :D
Not Peter II from 1919 to June 1921, its Alexander I
This made me cry, the fall of the civilisation that was more influential than the Roman Empire. 😢 💙🤍♥️
Srpsko obrazovanje:
Best ever❤
Autonomous Province of Kosovo and Metohija had had a bit different borders than it had later
jesi li ti Srbin?
@@regardstringent220 Да, што?
@@ratare40 Pozdrav iz Republike Srpske brate moj, 🇷🇸💪
bro that pfp 💀💀
@@DoisMitosEmBuscaDeAventuras what about it?
Rip Yugoslavia
It deserved better
Yugoslavia was like China. It built itself after the war then destroyed in another, then built, then destroyed, then built and then finally destroyed.
The fact that for a while Yugoslavia had both Tito and king is just mas
What's that state in Northeastern Croatia just after the Yugoslav war?
It's not really a state, it's a region of Croatia called Eastern Slavonia (or Podunavlje) which was occupied by Yugoslav/Serbian forces and peacefully reintegrated into Croatia in 1998
@@TheGrejp thank you. I didn't think it was a state but it was shown with borders in the map so I was interested
I hope that nothing bad happens in 1941 and 1991
Nice
Yugoslavia didn't deserve to dissapear.
It sucked.
@@YabuturtleSaid by a guy who doesn't even know where it was located 😂😂😂
that music changes when axis occupied yugoslavia
Love you Serbia from east Africa
7:57 whats the country between Vojvodina and Croatia? Is that a part of Bosnia that was ceded to croatia
That is the Serbian Autonomous Oblast of Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia
And it was UN administered until 1998 when it was returned to Croatia
So it was Serbia that created its own enemy of Kosovo what a fascinating experience of watching bravo Kosovo ☕🗿
Would leave a like if you weren’t a Cuckfederate
Not necessarily Serbia itself but communists.
@@JohnDoe-ls5wg ah