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It is a member of both the UN and the OSCE, independent since May 2006.
Neighbouring lands are Hungary, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Romania, Bulgaria, Macedonia and Albania. The country
shares 287 km of its border with Albania, 527 km with Bosnia and
Herzegovina, 318 km with Bulgaria, 266 km with Croatia, 151 km with
Hungary, 221 km with Macedonia, and 476 km with Romania Serbs (Slavs)
settled the territory of today Serbia in the 6th and 7th century.
Through the history, this territory was ruled among other, by Roman
Empire, Byzantine, Turkish Ottoman Empire, Hungarian forces and
Habsburgs. Stefan I Nemanja, the founder of the Nemanjić dynasty, rose
to power in 1170 and started renewing the Serbian state in the Raška
region. The Byzantine emperor recognized him as Veliki Župan of
Raška. Stefan I Nemanja was succeeded by his middle son Stefan, whilst
his first-born Vukan was given the rule of the Zeta region (present-day
Montenegro). Important role on the territory of today Montenegro played
the family Crnojević, the most prominent member of which was Ivan (1465-90).
Ivan's son Đurađ Crnojević (1490-96) was the last ruler from this
dynasty. Beginning with the Crnojević dynasty, Zeta was more often
referred as Crna Gora (Montenegro.). Stefan Nemanja (son) was also known as “Prvovenčani” (First-Crowned) and he ruled from 1196-1227.
Stefan I Nemanja's youngest son Rastko Nemanja became a monk and took
the name of St. Sava and he won 1219 a recognition of an autocephalous
Serbian Orthodox Church. The next generation of Serbian rulers were
the sons of Stefan Prvovencani - Radoslav, Vladislav and Uros I. Uros I
was succeeded by his son Dragutin. Later on, when Dragutin abdicated in
favor of his younger brother Milutin. King Milutin was succeeded on the
throne by his son Stefan, later dubbed Stefan Dečanski (who built the
Visoki Dečani Monastery in today Kosovo). Under Stefan Dušan, who
became king in 1331 and car in 1346, Serbia became the most powerful
empire in the Balkan Peninsula. Serbia was noted for its high economic,
social, and cultural level amog European states in that time. In 1389
the Turkish Ottoman Empire destroyed the Serbian power on the plain of
Kosovo Polje, and the following years the Ottomans finally incorporated
the rest of Serbia into the Empire. 1718 the Peace of Passarowitz
(Požarevac). The liberation struggle of Serbia began in 1804, when
Karađorđe(1752-1817) led a rebellion that finally freed the pašaluk
(province) of Belgrade from the Turks. The Treaty of Bucharest (1812)
forced Turkish recognition of Serbian autonomy, but Russian
preoccupation with Napoleon's invasion allowed the Turks to renew in
Serbia. The following years were a constant fight between two
Dynasties: Karađorđević and Obrenović. Miloš Obrenović, who in 1817
probably procured the assassination of his rival Karađorđe and became
ruler in Serbia. Absolutist tendencies of Miloš Obrenović caused
popular resentment and forced his abdication in 1839; his son, Mihailo
shared the same fate. In 1842, Aleksandar Karađorđević took the
throne. Aleksandar Karađorđević ruled for 16 years till 1858. The
Congress of Paris in 1856 placed Serbia under the collective guarantee
of the European powers while continuing to acknowledge Turkish
suzerainty. Miloš Obrenović returned to power in 1858, but died two
years later. Miloš's son Mihailo Obrenović returned to the throne in
1860. In 1867 the last Turkish troops left Serbia. Upon the
assassination of Mihailo in 1868, his cousin, Prince Milan Obrenović,
succeeded. Milan, who was pro-western, granted more power to the
Skupština (Parliament) and who was proclaimed as King of Serbia. The
Congress of Berlin (1878) recognized Serbia's complete independence and
increased its territory. The assassinations of King Aleksandar
Obrenović (son of Milan Obrenović) and the queen in 1903 marked the end
of the Obrenović dynasty. With the accession of Peter I, the
Karađorđević dynasty fixed itself. Peter I restored the constitution of
1889 and in 1904 appointed as premier Nikola Pašić, leader of the
strongly nationalist and pro-Russian party. The creating of a Balkan
League (Serbia, Montenegro, Bulgaria, and Greece) was to liberate the
Balkan from both Austro-Hungarian and Turkish rule. When Gavrilo
Prinicip, a Serbian nationalist assassinated in Sarajevo Austrian
Archduke Francis Ferdinand in 1914, the Austrian-Hungarian empire
declared war on Serbia, thus precipitating World War I. The Serbian
troops and government were evacuated to Corfu, where in 1917 Serbian,
Croatian, Slovenian, and Montenegrin representatives proclaimed the
union of South Slavs. In 1918 the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes, headed by Peter I Karađorđević officially came into
existence. On 3 October 1929 the country was formally named Kingdom
Yugoslavia. Younger son of Petar I, Aleksandar I Karađorđević, since
1914 conducted royal duties instead of his ill father. He was King of
Yugoslavia from 1921. to 1934. During his reign, Alexander ruled as
dictator. He was assassinated in Marsei (France), on 9 October 1934. A
board of three members ruled instead of the young Petar II
Karađorđević, who became King in 1941. Montenegro was under the
Vladikas from the Petrović dynasty (1697-1918): Danilo Petrović, the
founder of the Petrović dynasty (1697-1735), Sava Petrović
(1735-1782), Vasilije Petrović (1750-1766), Petar I Petrović, known
also as Petar Cetinski (1782-1830), Petar II Petrović – Njegoš
(1830-1851), Prince Danilo (1852-1860) and King Nikola I, who was in
family relations with Serbian King Petar I Karađorđevic (from
1860-1918). 1878, at the Congress of Berlin, Montenegro was recognised
as an independent state. After World War II, with some smaller
territorial changes the new Federative People’s Republic of Yugoslavia
(latter Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia) was formed.
Yugoslavia became a state with six republics (one of which was Serbia,
and one Montenegro) and was ruled by Josip Broz Tito. After he died in
1980, political and national conflicts within the Socialist Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRJ) became stronger and stronger. Croatians’
and Slovenians´ dissatisfaction became greater with time because they
supported the idea of SFRJ as a federation while Serbia supported the
creation of a strong state controlled from Belgrade. Serbian
nationalism grew under Slobodan Milošević in the mid-80s. The
unilateral declaration of independence by Serbian territories in
Croatia (Republika Srpska Krajina) and in Bosnia-Herzegovina (Republika
Srpska), and the wars in Croatia and in Bosnia-Herzegovina (1992-1995),
were supported by Belgrade. In the 90s there was also a conflict
between the governments in Belgrade (Serbia) and Podgorica
(Montenegro). The Belgrade political and military activities outside
Serbia resulted in UN sanctions and international isolation of Serbia
and Montenegro. The first conflicts in the province of Kosovo after
World War II began in the 60s, but since the early 80s there have been
constant conflicts between Serbs and Kosovo-Albanians. Pressure from
Belgrade on Kosovo resulted in the 1999 NATO bombardment of Serbia and
Montenegro. The era of Slobodan Milošević ended on 5 October 2000.
After an extended period of UN economic sanctions, mismanagement of the
economy by the Milošević regime, and damage to infrastructure and
industry during the NATO 1999 air strikes, Serbia and Montenegro have
been left with an economy only half the size it was in 1989. With the
end of the Milošević regime, official normalisation between Belgrade
and Podgorica began, resulting in the transformation of the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia into a loose union called the State Union of
Serbia and Montenegro, founded in February 2003. The Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia (FRY - so named on 17 April 1992) was the self-proclaimed
successor to the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRJ). Each
republic, Montenegro and Serbia, maintains its own central banks. A
donor conference held in June 2001 raised USD 1.3 billion, earmarked
for economic restructuring. An agreement rescheduling the country's USD
4.5 billion Paris Club government debts was concluded in 2001; 66% of
the debts were written-off. The Parliament of Serbia and Montenegro
(Skupština) is unicameral. Parliamentary elections were on 25 February
2003, with new elections scheduled for 2005, but they didn’t take
place. Crime, corruption and political conflict are still enormous
problems.
Kosovo (or in Serbian language Kosovo i Metohija, in Albanian language
Kosova) is in all official/state documents in Serbia presented as a
part of Serbia. However, since June 1999, Kosovo has been administered
under the civil authority of the United Nations Mission in Kosovo
(UNMIK), pursuant to UN Security Council Resolution 1244. This
Resolution recognised the continuing sovereignty and territorial
integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (called
Serbia-Montenegro since February 2003, whereas since 2006 Serbia and
Montenegro are two independent states) over Kosovo, but also called for
"substantial autonomy and meaningful self-administration for Kosovo".
But, Kosovo is a de facto protectorate run by UN administration. The
permanent status of Kosovo is yet to be resolved. While the Kosovo
Albanian majority seeks independence from Serbia, the Serbian community
in Kosovo and authorities in Belgrade maintain that the province should
remain in Serbia.
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