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  1. Yugoslav Canadians are Canadians of full or partial Yugoslav ancestry. At the 2016 Census, the total number of Canadians whose origins lie in former Yugoslavia, majority of whom indicated specific ethnic origin, was 386,340 or 1.12% of the total population.

  2. The interwar period saw a major increase in Serbian immigration to Canada. [5] More than 30,000 Yugoslavs came to Canada between 1919 and 1939, including an estimated 10,000 Serbs. Many of these immigrants were single, working men who settled in the northern region of the province of Ontario. [3]

  3. Canadian people of Serbian descent ‎ (1 C, 142 P) Canadian people of Slovenian descent ‎ (1 C, 28 P)

  4. 29 de ene. de 2007 · Yugoslavia used to be the land of the South Slavs. It occupied 255 084 km2 of the Balkan peninsula in southeastern Europe, bordering the Adriatic Sea between Albania and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

  5. Finalmente en 1963 el país adoptó el nombre de República Federativa Socialista de Yugoslavia (RFSY), a la postre el de mayor longevidad y el de mayor publicidad. Fue esta Yugoslavia un estado socialista europeo formado por las repúblicas socialistas de Bosnia y Herzegovina, Croacia, Eslovenia, Macedonia, Montenegro y Serbia.

  6. Historia y precedentes. El término yugoslavos ha sido y es utilizado por aquellos que consideran que serbios, croatas, bosníacos y montenegrinos son un único pueblo, y que los eslovenos y macedonios pese a diferencias lingüísticas y religiosas derivadas de los imperios que dominaron sus tierras en el pasado, son parte importante y crucial de la identidad yugoslava.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › YugoslavismYugoslavism - Wikipedia

    Yugoslavism, Yugoslavdom, or Yugoslav nationalism is an ideology supporting the notion that the South Slavs, namely the Bosniaks, Croats, Macedonians, Montenegrins, Serbs and Slovenes, but also Bulgarians, belong to a single Yugoslav nation separated by diverging