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  1. Maria (born Princess Maria of Romania; 6 January 1900 – 22 June 1961), known in Serbian as Marija Karađorđević (Serbian Cyrillic: Марија Карађорђевић), was Queen of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes from 1922 to 1929 and Queen of Yugoslavia from 1929 to 1934 as the wife of King Alexander I.

  2. En el momento de las apariciones, el pueblo de Medjugorje estaba en Bosnia y Herzegovina, parte de la República Federativa Socialista de Yugoslavia, una federación de varias naciones eslavas.

  3. After the assassination of HM King Alexander I in Marseilles 9 October 1934 she continued to care for her sons and became the Queen Mother. She was very active with the Red Cross during World War II, and sent a lot of humanitarian help to Yugoslavia, but always signed herself with the alias Maria K. Djordjevic.

  4. Our Lady of Medjugorje (Croatian: Međugorska Gospa), also called Queen of Peace (Croatian: Kraljica mira) and Mother of the Redeemer (Croatian: Majka Otkupiteljica), is the title given to alleged visions of Mary, the mother of Jesus, said to have begun in 1981 to six Herzegovinian Croat teenagers in Medjugorje, Bosnia and Herzegovina (at the time in SFR Yugoslavia).

  5. Yugoslavia (en serbocroata: Jugoslavija, Југославија) [nota 1] fue un Estado ubicado en el sudeste de Europa que existió durante la mayor parte del siglo XX. Limitaba con Austria e Italia al noroeste, Hungría al norte, Rumania y Bulgaria al este, Grecia al sur, Albania al suroeste y el mar Adriático al oeste.

  6. Prince Alexander was born in 15 January 15 1982 at Inova Fairfax Hospital in Fairfax, Virginia, Alexander is the third and youngest child of the last crown prince of Yugoslavia, Alexander, and his first wife, Princess Maria da Gloria of Orléans-Braganza. He is the fraternal twin of Philip.

  7. 21 de jun. de 2014 · Maria of Romania, Queen of Yugoslavia | Unofficial Royalty. by Scott Mehl © Unofficial Royalty 2014. photo: Wikipedia. Queen Maria of Yugoslavia was born Princess Marie of Romania on January 6, 1900, in Gotha, Duchy of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, now in Thuringia, Germany.