Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Old City of Dubrovnik' has mentioned 'Croatia' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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This article is about a city in Croatia. | WIKI |
City in Dubrovnik-Neretva, Croatia | WIKI |
Dubrovnik (Croatian:xc2xa0[dxc7x94broxcbx90xcax8bnixcbx90k] (listen);[2] historically Ragusa) is a city on the Adriatic Sea in southern Croatia. | WIKI |
In 1991 Croatia and Slovenia, which at that time were republics within Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, declared their independence. | WIKI |
At that event, Socialist Republic of Croatia was renamed Republic of Croatia. | WIKI |
Despite the demilitarisation of the old town in early 1970s in an attempt to prevent it from ever becoming a casualty of war, following Croatia's independence in 1991 Yugoslavia's Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), by then composed primarily of Serbs, attacked the city. | WIKI |
Montenegro, led by president Momir Bulatovixc4x87, and prime minister Milo xc4x90ukanovixc4x87, coming to power in the Anti-bureaucratic revolution and allied to Slobodan Miloxc5xa1evixc4x87 in Serbia, declared that Dubrovnik should not remain in Croatia because they claimed it historically had never been part of an independent Croatia, but rather more historically aligned with the coastal history of Montenegro. | WIKI |
The 1996 Croatia USAF CT-43 crash, near Dubrovnik Airport, killed everyone on a United States Air Force jet, including United States Secretary of Commerce Ron Brown, The New York Times Frankfurt Bureau chief Nathaniel C. Nash, and 33 other people. | WIKI |
Old City of DubrovnikNative name Croatian: Stari grad DubrovnikThe Old Harbour at DubrovnikLocationDubrovnik-Neretva County, Croatia UNESCO World Heritage SiteTypeCulturalCriteriai, iii, ivDesignated1979 (3rd Session)Referencexc2xa0no.95Europe and North AmericaExtension1994Endangered1991xe2x80x931998 Cultural Good of CroatiaOfficial nameStari grad Dubrovnik | WIKI |
Orlando) as a symbol of loyalty to Sigismund of Luxembourg (1368xe2x80x931437), King of Hungary and Croatia (as of 1387), Prince-Elector of Brandenburg (between 1378 and 1388 and again between 1411 and 1415), German King (as of 1411), King of Bohemia (as of 1419) and Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire (as of 1433), who helped by a successful war alliance against Venice to retain Ragusa's independence. | WIKI |
Dubrovnik Airport is the third busiest airport in Croatia. | WIKI |
However, Dubrovnik, unlike Croatia's other major centres, is not accessible by rail;[79] until 1975 Dubrovnik was connected to Mostar and Sarajevo by a narrow gauge railway (760xc2xa0mm)[80][81] built during the Austro-Hungarian rule of Bosnia. | WIKI |
These include the University of Dubrovnik, the Libertas University (Dubrovnik International University), Rochester Institute of Technology Croatia (former American College of Management and Technology), a University Centre for Postgraduate Studies of the University of Zagreb, and an Institute of History of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts. | WIKI |
Bad Homburg vor der Hxc3xb6he, Germany Beyoxc4x9flu, Turkey Graz, Austria Helsingborg, Sweden Monterey, United States Ragusa, Italy Ravenna, Italy Rueil-Malmaison, France Sanya, China Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina Venice, Italy Vukovar, Croatia | WIKI |