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Croatian National-Integrational Ideleogies from the End of Illyrism to the Creation of Yugoslavia1

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2009

Mirjana Gross
Affiliation:
University of Zagreb

Abstract

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Type
Croatian National-Intergrational Ideologies
Copyright
Copyright © Center for Austrian Studies, University of Minnesota 1979

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References

2 The Party of Right championed the state right of Croatia. It was definitely not a party with rightist political ideas; in fact, in its time it was regarded as a leftist and radical group.

3 The Croats speak three dialects: Štokavian, kajkavian, and čakavian, according to the form of the interrogative pronoun “what” that is used by each. They accepted the Štokavian dialect as the basis for the Croatian literary language.

4 According to Karadžić, only people who spoke the Čakavian dialect were Croats. In his opinion, all Štokavian-speaking Croats were Serbs and Croats who spoke kajkavian were Slovenes.