BOSNIA AND HERCEGOVINA

bŏzˈnēə, hĕrtsəgōvēˈnə, Serbo-Croatian Bosna i Hercegovina, country (1995 est. pop. 3,202,000), 19,741 sq mi (51,129 sq km), on the Balkan peninsula, S Europe. It is bounded by Croatia on the west and north and Serbia and Montenegro on the east. A narrow, undeveloped outlet to the Adriatic along the Neretva River in the southwest is its only outlet to the sea. The country is commonly referred to as Bosnia. Sarajevo is its capital.

Land and People

The country consists of two regions—Bosnia in the north, with Sarajevo as its chief city; and Hercegovina in the south, with Mostar as its chief city. Lying mostly in the Dinaric Alps, the nation has no port facilities. The Sava and its tributaries are the chief rivers. Much of the area is forested, and timber is an important product of Bosnia. Much of Hercegovina's terrain is denuded.

The ethnically diverse population speaks Serbo-Croatian. The country's Serbs (about 40% of the population, largely Eastern Orthodox), Bosnian Muslims (about 38%), and Croats (about 22%, mostly Roman Catholics) formerly formed a complex patchwork, but civil war and the flight of refugees forcibly segregated much of the population. Some inhabitants have gradually returned to their pre-conflict places of residence since the fighting's end.

Economy

Never particularly robust, Bosnia and Hercegovina's economy was shattered by the civil war that broke out after independence. Traditionally, the economy has depended on agriculture, although it now provides less than half of the country's food needs. Corn, wheat, oats, and barley are the principal products of Bosnia and tobacco, cotton, fruits, and grapes of Hercegovina. Mining is important, and there are significant deposits of lignite, iron ore, and copper. Steel, textiles, wood products, rugs, timber, machinery, and transportation equipment are its most significant products, and there has been some development of its hydroelectric resources. When it was part of Yugoslavia, Bosnia also had a thriving armament industry.

History

Early History

The area was part of the Roman province of Illyricum. Bosnia was settled by Serbs in the 7th cent.; it appeared as an independent country by the 12th cent. but later at times acknowledged the kings of Hungary as suzerains. Medieval Bosnia reached the height of its power in the second half of the 14th cent., when it controlled many surrounding territories. Bosnia also annexed the duchy of Hum, which, however, regained autonomy in 1448 and became known as Hercegovina. During this period the region was weakened by religious strife among Roman Catholics, Orthodox, and Bogomils. Thus disunited, Bosnia fell to the Turks in 1463. Hercegovina held out until 1482, when it too was occupied and joined administratively to Bosnia. The nobility and a large part of the peasantry accepted Islam.

Foreign Domination

Under Turkish rule, Bosnia and Hercegovina's economy declined. Physical remoteness facilitated the retention of medieval social structure, including serfdom (remnants of which lasted until the 20th cent.). Refusal by the Turkish to institute reforms led to a peasant uprising (1875) that soon came to involve outside powers and led to the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78. After the war, the Congress of Berlin (1878) placed Bosnia and Hercegovina under Austro-Hungarian administration and occupation, while recognizing the sovereignty of the Turkish sultan. Austria-Hungary improved economic conditions in the area but sought unsuccessfully to combat rising Serb nationalism, which mounted further when Bosnia and Hercegovina were completely annexed in 1908.

The assassination (1914) of Archduke Francis Ferdinand by a Serb nationalist in Sarajevo precipitated World War I. In 1918, Bosnia and Hercegovina were annexed to Serbia. The dismemberment of Yugoslavia during World War II led to Bosnia and Hercegovina's incorporation into the German puppet state of Croatia. Much partisan guerrilla warfare raged in the mountains of Bosnia during the war. In 1946, Bosnia and Hercegovina became one of the six constituent republics of Yugoslavia. Under the Communist regime Bosnia remained relatively undeveloped. Economic problems and ethnic quarrels during the 1980s led to widespread dissatisfaction with the central government.

Independence and Civil War

In Oct., 1991, following the secession of Slovenia, Croatia, and Macedonia, the Croats and Muslims of Bosnia and Hercegovina, fearing Serbian domination, voted for a declaration of independence from Yugoslavia. In 1992, the sovereignty of Bosnia and Hercegovina was recognized by the European Community (now the European Union) and the United States, and it entered the United Nations. Many Bosnian Serbs opposed the new republic, in which they were a minority, and Serb troops, both from Serbia and Bosnia, began to carve out the Serb-populated areas and declared the Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Hercegovina. Croats in Bosnia, also fearing Muslim domination, declared their own Croatian Community of Herceg-Bosna.

An arms embargo reinforced the disparity between the well-armed Serbs and their foes, and Muslims were forced from their homes and towns as part of an "ethnic cleansing" policy carried out mostly by the Serbs. Thousands were killed, many were placed in detention camps, and many more fled the country. (Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic was among a number of Serbs later indicted in absentia by a United Nations tribunal for war crimes.) The major Western powers rejected military intervention but endorsed the establishment of six "safe areas" with a United Nations presence, where Muslims would supposedly not be attacked.

Fighting between Muslims and Croats intensified in 1993. Shelling, mainly by Serb forces, destroyed much of Sarajevo and laid waste to other cities throughout the country. In 1994, Yugoslavian and Croatian forces fought in support of Bosnian Serbs and Croats, respectively. The Bosnian government army launched major offensives from Bihac and elsewhere, and the balance of power among Serbs, Croats, and Muslims shifted from time to time.

In 1994, Bosnian Muslims and Croats agreed to a cease-fire and established a joint Federation of Bosnia and Hercegovina. During 1995, Serb forces shelled the besieged Sarajevo and launched attacks on the UN-proclaimed "safe areas" of Tuzla, Zepa, and Srebrenica. There were mass deportations of Muslims and widespread instances of rape and execution of civilians, especially in Srebrenica. Croat and Muslim forces later made heavy inroads against Serbs in western Bosnia.

In late 1995, the Muslim-dominated Bosnian government and the leaders of Croatia and Serbia met under U.S. auspices in Dayton, Ohio, and negotiated a peace accord. It called for a Bosnian republic with a central government and two semiautonomous regions, roughly equal in size, one dominated by Serbs, the other by Muslims and Croats in federation. The accord provided for the dispatch of NATO-led troops for peacekeeping purposes; the forces originally were to stay until June, 1998. In addition, a high representative of the Peace Implementation Council (the nations overseeing the peace process) is the final authority on the civilian aspects of the settlement. Although the accord was implemented and conditions have slowly improved, much distrust remains among members of all three communities, who now typically live in ethnically homogeneous areas. NATO-led peacekeeping forces remain in the region. Bosnian disillusionment with the moderates who had held power since 1998 resulted in electoral victories for the ethnic nationalist parties in the 2002.

Bibliography

See B. E. Schmitt, The Annexation of Bosnia, 1908–1909 (1937, repr. 1971); J. G. Wilkinson, Dalmatia and Montenegro (2 vol., 1848; repr. 1971); L. J. Cohen, Political Cohesion in a Fragile Mosaic: The Yugoslav Experience (1983); H. Lydall, Yugoslavia in Crisis (1989); N. Malcom, Bosnia: A Short History (1996); D. Rohde, Endgame: The Betrayal and Fall of Srebrenica (1997).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Bosnia and Hercegovina  - 460 results

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...bibliographical references and index. 1. Bosnia and Hercegovina - Politics and government - 1992 - 2. Nationalism - Bosnia and Hercegovina. 3. Bosnia and Hercegovina - History - Partition, 1995. I. Title...
...Yugoslav War, 1991- -- Atrocities. 2. Yugoslav War, 1991- -- Bosnia and Hercegovina. 3. Muslims -- Bosnia and Hercegovina -- History -- 20th century. 4. Bosnia and Hercegovina -- Ethnic relations. I. Title. DR1313.7.A85C54 1995 949.7024...
...0-7146-8431-7 (pbk.) 1. Bosnia and Hercegovina-History-1945-1922.2. Yugoslav...NOTES 1. Anon., Bosnia-Hercegovina: Undeveloped Resources, in...19. Grunberg, K., Bosnia-Hercegovina: The Land Question, 1878-1910...
...index. ISBN 0-275-96165-6 (alk. paper) 1. Yugoslav War, 1991- Peace. 2. Yugoslav War, 1991- Bosnia and Hercegovina. 3. Bosnia and Hercegovina History 1992- 4. Crisis management. I. Title. DR1313.7.P43S58 1998 949.703 DC21 98-4943...
...forces Somalia. 3. United Nations Peacekeeping forces Bosnia and Hercegovina. I. Title. KZ6376.B68 2001 327.172-dc21 00-064952...Somalia 51 5. Bosnia 83 6. Conclusion...
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journal articles on: Bosnia and Hercegovina  - 106 results

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...Politics in Post-Communist Bosnia-Hercegovina (1). by Aydin Babuna...aimed at the annexation of Bosnia-Hercegovina to Serbia or to Croatia, tried...component of the population of Bosnia-Hercegovina since the Ottoman period. These...
...of the First Muslim Party in Bosnia-Hercegovina. by Aydin Babuna...INTRODUCTION The occupation of Bosnia-Hercegovina by the Austro-Hungarian Empire...equally with kmets (tenants in Bosnia-Hercegovina).(2) Of particular importance...
...Croatian Project to Partition Bosnia-Hercegovina, 1990-1994. by Attila...Croatian efforts to partition Bosnia-Hercegovina have resulted in disaster...traditionally viewed the whole of Bosnia-Hercegovina as a Croatian land and Bosnias...
Bosnia in the Historic Mirror: a Commentary by Peter Hudis...accords and the arrival of 60,000 U.S. and NATO troops into Bosnia-Herzegovina has brought to a close a crucial chapter in...developments have resulted in the effective partitioning of Bosnia along ethnic lines. By using the troop deployment to freeze...
Information Operations in Bosnia by Stephen W. Shanahan , Garry...EVEN BEFORE TAKING his division to Bosnia-Herzegovina in November 1996, then...three rival ethnic groups-the Serbs, Bosnians and Croats-continue to comply with...
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magazine articles on: Bosnia and Hercegovina  - 48 results

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Doing Better on Bosnia: Enforce the Law, Protect Rights...Sharp The countries donating aid to Bosnia have designated this year and next the...the international community. For the Bosnians, these exhortations must seem a bit rich...
...Ten Commandments to Cleanse the Guilt in Bosnia by Jonathan Eyal With the traditional...An international force will remain in Bosnia, to maintain regional stability and ensure...THE PRESENCE OF INTERNATIONAL FORCES IN BOSNIA UNDER NATOs command has clearly reduced...
Bosnia: Bosnia Seeks Credit Rating by Benjamin Beasley-Murray MILESTONES TAKING NOTE The European Union Police Mission that moved into Bosnia and Herzegovina this January was joined by other new visitors to the war-battered...
Bosnia Mufti Honored Dr. Mustafa Ceric, the grand mufti of Bosnia, was the guest of honor at a dinner hosted by the Fellowship Foundation, which sponsors the Annual Prayer Breakfast attended...
Bosnia: after the War without End by Colin Finlay , Christina M. Gonzalez "Peace is back. People want it." says...siege of Sarajevo fron 1992 through 1995. The city, ring,ed by mountains, had come under attack bv nationalist Bosnian Serbs after Bosnia and Herzegovina declared independence from Yugoslavia. The victims were Bosnian Muslims, Croats, Serbs loyal...
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newspaper articles on: Bosnia and Hercegovina  - 8 results

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...responsible for the unlawful confinement, murder, rape and inhumane treatment of the non-Serb civilian population in Bosnia-Hercegovina during the 1992-95 war. Detainees were terrorised by random brutality and sexual violence, the UN says. The terror...
...held out the promise to Croatia, Macedonia, Albania, Bosnia-Hercegovina and the union of Serbia and Montenegro that those...there is one thing the Serbs, Macedonians, Croats, Bosnian Muslims and Albanians can agree upon it is that they...
...England v Poland; Scotland v Bosnia Hercegovina; Macedonia v Republic of Ireland...qualifiers: England v Luxembourg; Bosnia Hercegovina v Scotland; Belarus v Wales...Poland (Wembley), Scotland v Bosnia, Northern Ireland v Germany...
...match. PORTUGAL belatedly secured their place at next summers World Cup with an impressive performance against Bosnia-Hercegovina in Zenica. After scraping a 1-0 win in Lisbon at the weekend with a laboured showing, Carlos Queirozs side upped...
...Brigade?" he asked. Four hundred Virginia soldiers from the historic brigade will participate in the mission to Bosnia-Hercegovina. * John McCaslin, a nationally syndicated columnist, can be reached at 202/636-3284 or by e-mail at jmccaslin...
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encyclopedia articles on: Bosnia and Hercegovina  - 2 results

 
 
HERCEGOVINA see Bosnia and Herzegovina . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA boz ne , herts gove n , Serbo-Croatian Bosna i Hercegovina, country (2005 est. pop. 4,025,000...country is commonly referred to as Bosnia. Sarajevo is its capital. Land...formed from two historical regions Bosnia in the north, with Sarajevo as its...


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