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:
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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.
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WW1
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| This is what war is: destruction and suffering. This photo was coloured by AI. |
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| The original. |
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| 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. |
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| A mass of dead soldiers on the eastern front. |
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| 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.
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| Map of the international telephone connections of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1933 |
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| Travel destinations - in the upper right corner: Warszawa. Notice that Koper is not marked - Trieste was the go to place. |
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| Snow in Ljubljana |
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| Romanian born queen Maria with her children. |
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| The king becomes a dictator in 1929. |
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Slovenian emigrants before leaving for America in 1930.
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| Croatian and Macedonian extremists assassinated king Aleksander in 1934. |
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| Slovenian actress |
WW2
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| WW2 started in Yugoslavia in April 1941. |
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| Yugoslav partisan. |
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| Styrian (Austria) uniform. |
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| The new Europe with Germany where Poland used to be and Croatia where Slovenia used to be. |
Communist Yugoslavia
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| Tito - the man who created communist Yugoslavia. |
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| Arrival of the returned Slovene Home Guards in Kranj, 30 May 1945. |
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| Many of them will be killed by Tito. |
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| People tried to escape the worker's paradise, in this case communist Czechoslovakia. |
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| Students critisizing market reforms? Yugoslavia was not like Poland. |
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| Building a motorway |
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| Building a nuclear power plant |
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| The same thing was going on in other communist countries that allowed citizens to travel abroad, for example Poland. |
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| Tito died in Ljubljana in 1980. |
Independent Slovenia
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| Tito street renamed to Danube street. The same thing was happening in other communist states: renaming of streets, squares, schools, even cities. |
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| Like in other communist countries, many state enterprises went bust when communism ended. |
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