Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Europe Trip 2025 - Ljubljana - History

These photos are from the National Museum of Contemporary History in Ljubljana.


Pre-WW1

Slovenia was in the Austrian part, and Croatia in the Hungarian part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire:

The Austro-Hungarian Empire: the first "European Union" - not voluntary, but people liked Franz Josef. Two of my grandparents were born in Austria-Hungary during his reign.


WW1










This is what war is: destruction and suffering. This photo was coloured by AI.

The original.

It's often children who suffer the most. In the beginning of the XX century, in poor regions in Europe, shoes were a luxury, and children often walked barefoot, even in winter.






A mass of dead soldiers on the eastern front.

Demolished fortress XI, Dunkowiczki in Przemyśl (today Poland), 1915.














Kingdom of Yugoslavia

Many nations gained independence after WW1. Smaller ones joined up and created Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia.

Kingdom of Yugoslavia. Note: Slovenia had no access to the Adriatic sea.


Map of the international telephone connections of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1933



Travel destinations - in the upper right corner: Warszawa. Notice that Koper is not marked - Trieste was the go to place.

Snow in Ljubljana

Romanian born queen Maria with her children.


The king becomes a dictator in 1929.


Slovenian emigrants before leaving for America in 1930.


Croatian and Macedonian extremists assassinated king Aleksander in 1934.


Slovenian actress





WW2


WW2 started in Yugoslavia in April 1941.

Yugoslav partisan.

Styrian (Austria) uniform.



The new Europe with Germany where Poland used to be and Croatia where Slovenia used to be.




In 1943-44 when Ljubljana was under German control a German-allied Slovene Home Guard was created by Leon Rupnik and others. 






Communist Yugoslavia


Tito - the man who created communist Yugoslavia.






Arrival of the returned Slovene Home Guards in Kranj, 30 May 1945.

Many of them will be killed by Tito.

























People tried to escape the worker's paradise, in this case communist Czechoslovakia.





Students critisizing market reforms? Yugoslavia was not like Poland.










Building a motorway







Building a nuclear power plant



The same thing was going on in other communist countries that allowed citizens to travel abroad, for example Poland.



Tito died in Ljubljana in 1980.


Independent Slovenia







Tito street renamed to Danube street. The same thing was happening in other communist states: renaming of streets, squares, schools, even cities.



Like in other communist countries, many state enterprises went bust when communism ended. 





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