Vardar Banovina Explained

Native Name:Вардарска бановина
Vardarska banovina
Conventional Long Name:Vardar Banovina
Common Name:Vardar Banovina
Subdivision:Banovina
Nation:Yugoslavia
S1:Italian protectorate of Albania (1939–1943)Kingdom of Albania
Flag S1:Flag of Albania (1939–1943).svg
S2:Kingdom of Bulgaria
Flag S2:Flag of Bulgaria.svg
S3:German-occupied Serbia
Flag S3:Flag of the German Reich (1935–1945).svg
S4:Democratic Federal Macedonia
Flag S4:Flag of Macedonia (1944–1946).svg
Year Start:1929
Year End:1941
Image Map Caption:Vardar Banovina (red) within
the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (light yellow)
Capital:Skopje
Stat Area2:36,672
Stat Pop1:1,323,546
Stat Pop2:1,574,243
Stat Year1:1921
Stat Year2:1931
Today:Kosovo
North Macedonia
Serbia

The Vardar Banovina, or Vardar Banate (Macedonian: Вардарска бановина|Vardarska banovina; Serbian: Вардарска бановина|translit=Vardarska Banovina; Albanian: Banovina e Vardarit|italics=no), was a province (banate) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941.

History

It was located in the southernmost part of the country, encompassing the whole of today's North Macedonia, southern parts of Southern and Eastern Serbia and southeastern parts of Kosovo and Serbia. It was named after the Vardar River and its administrative capital was the city of Skopje. According to the 1930 statistics of the Central Press Bureau of the Ministerial Council[1] out of the 9 Yugoslav banovinas, the "Vardarska" banovina was the largest at 38879km2; while its population, was the fourth at 1,386,370 inhabitants. Following the First World War in Vardar Macedonia and the so-called Western Outlands, the local Macedonian Bulgarian population was not recognized and state-policy of Serbianisation occurred.[2] [3] [4] It also suffered the worst health problems, especially typhus and smallpox, and required one Institute of Hygiene, 3 health stations and 6 dispensaries and convalescent homes. On the other hand, unlike the banovinas that until the creation of Yugoslavia had belonged to the Austro-Hungarian empire and the lands of Montenegro, it had inherited no debts. According to the 1931 Constitution of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, the Vardar Banovina was bounded on the north by the boundaries of the Zeta and Morava Banovinas, and on the east, south and west by the State frontiers with Bulgaria, Greece, and Albania. In 1941, the World War II Axis Powers occupied the Vardar Banovina and divided it between Bulgaria, German-occupied Serbia, and Albania under Italy. Following World War II, the southern portion of the region became Socialist Republic of Macedonia while the northern portions were made a part of the Socialist Republic of Serbia, both within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

Bans of Vardar Banovina

Cities and towns

See also

External links

42°N 46°W

Notes and References

  1. Published in the: Central Press Bureau of the Ministerial Council, Belgrade 1930
  2. Poulton, Hugh (2003). "Macedonians and Albanians as Yugoslavs". In Djokić, Dejan (ed.). Yugoslavism: Histories of a Failed Idea, 1918–1992. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 123. .
  3. Papavizas, George C. (2015). Claiming Macedonia: The Struggle for the Heritage, Territory and Name of the Historic Hellenic Land, 1862-2004. McFarland. pp. 92-93, .
  4. Horowitz. Shale. Structural Sources of Post-Communist Market Reform: Economic Structure, Political Culture, and War. International Studies Quarterly. 48. 4. 2004. 765. 10.1111/j.0020-8833.2004.00324.x. free.