Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - An Introduction to the Balkans
Episode Date: April 10, 2023Located in southeastern Europe is the Balkan Peninsula. It is home to multiple ethics groups, languages, and religions. It has one of the most dynamic and confusing histories of anywhere in Europe, ...with multiple migrations of people arriving over the centuries. Not surprisingly, it has also been the source of many conflicts, some of which are still ongoing today. Learn more about the Balkans, its history, and what it consists of on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsor If you’re looking for a simpler and cost-effective supplement routine, Athletic Greens is giving you a FREE 1 year supply of Vitamin D AND 5 free travel packs with your first purchase. Go to athleticgreens.com/EVERYWHERE. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Located in southeastern Europe is the Balkan Peninsula. It's home to multiple ethnic groups,
languages, and religions. It has one of the most dynamic and confusing histories of anywhere in
Europe, with multiple migrations of people arriving over the centuries. Not surprisingly,
it's also been the source of many conflicts, some of which are still ongoing today.
Learn more about the Balkans, its history, and what consists of, on this episode of Everything Everywhere
daily. Do you ever climb into bed, ready to sleep, only to have your mind start racing
the moment your head hits the pillow? Thoughts bouncing around, replaying the day or jumping ahead
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Episodes are every Monday and Thursday. The Balkans are a very confusing part of the world.
I was planning on doing individual episodes for many of the countries in the region, as well as
specific periods in history, so I figured it might be best to first do an episode giving a rough
overview for the region. The Balkan Peninsula consists of pretty much everything in
southeastern Europe. The countries which are part of the Balkans, in part or in full,
are Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Albania, Serbia, Kosovo,
North Macedonia, Greece, Turkey, Bulgaria, and Romania. Some of these, while they reside on
the Balkan Peninsula, are usually not considered to be Balkan countries. So for the purpose of this
episode, I'm going to ignore Greece, Turkey, Bulgaria, and Romania. The focus of this episode
will be the countries formerly part of Yugoslavia and Albania. The Balkan Peninsula gets its name
from the Balkan Mountains, which is a narrow mountain range residing almost entirely in Bulgaria
and a little bit in Serbia. Nonetheless, the entire region is more commonly referred to as the Balkans,
even though most countries are not technically in the Balkan mountain range. Starting with the Iron Age,
the people in the Balkans were mostly culturally Greek. The people there spoke Greek or Greek-based
languages and practiced Greek religion. For the most part, the Greeks near the sea in major city
states like Athens looked upon these people as not very sophisticated and sort of like rubes.
This is also where Macedonia was located, which produced Philip II and Alexander the Great,
who conquered both Greece and Persia. Rome conquered the region and divided into several provinces.
Elyricum, Macedonia, Thrace, Apyrus, Moesia, Panonia, and Dalmatia.
And don't worry if you don't remember all these, because we're just getting started with the Balkan subdivisions.
The region was an important part of the Byzantine Empire after the fall of Rome and the West.
The Byzantines were primarily Greek-speaking and practiced what we would now call Orthodox Christianity.
When Rome fell in the West, Germanic tribes began moving around Europe,
and one of the places where tribes such as the Goths migrated was down to the Balkans.
Starting in the 7th and 8th centuries, Slavic people migrated south to the Balkan Peninsula.
This Slavic migration was one of the most profound in European history.
The descendants of many of these Slavic migrants are still there today.
In fact, the word Yugoslavia literally means land of the southern Slavs.
As the Slavs moved in, they displaced or absorbed many of the people already living there.
including Greeks, Illyrians, and Thracians. As the Byzantine Empire waned in power,
the Ottomans filled the vacuum, bringing with them Turkic peoples and Islam. Venice also
controlled a sizable part of the Adriatic coast. The Ottoman Empire controlled the region for hundreds
of years and didn't lose control until the 19th century. The 19th century saw the rise of various
nationalist uprisings, including Bulgaria, Serbia, Albania, Greece, and Bosnia. The late 19th and early 20th century
saw the creation of the kingdoms of Serbia and Bulgaria, and much of the Balkans came under the
control of the Austrian Empire. After World War I, which began in the Balkans in Sarajevo,
the kingdom of Yugoslavia was created. And this lasted until World War II when the Germans
invaded and occupied the region, including Albania. After the war, both Albania and Yugoslavia
came under the control of communist governments, both ruled by independent-minded dictators who were
not afraid to break with the Soviet Union.
Yosef Brose Tito in Yugoslavia and Enverhosha in Albania.
In 1991, the communist governments in both countries fell.
In Albania, it resulted in open elections.
In Yugoslavia, it resulted in the fragmentation of the country and a series of bloody
wars which lasted throughout the 1990s.
That is a very rough history of the region, which skips almost everything.
The thing I want to stress is that the Balkans have been home to several large empowers.
and it's the intersection of several ethnic and religious groups.
There's a reason why the term Balkanization exists.
With that, I'd now like to go through each Balkan country
and provide a brief outline for each one individually
and explain how they all differ from other countries in the region.
I'll start with Slovenia.
Slovenia is the westernmost of the countries in the Balkans,
both geographically and culturally.
It only suffered from a 10-day war after declaring independence in 1991.
Only 63 people were killed in the conflict, 19 of which were Slovenian.
Slovenia borders Austria and Italy, and it is a predominantly Catholic country with the strongest
ties to Western Europe.
It was the first of the former Yugoslavian countries to join the European Union and NATO.
The Slovenian language is a Slavic language, but it isn't considered to be mutually
intelligible with Serbian or Croatian.
Slovenia has the highest living standard of any Balkan country, and its capital Lubliana
is one of the smallest in Europe.
bordering Slovenia is Croatia. Croatia, like Slovenia, is a predominantly Catholic and
Slavic country. It has a crescent shape with an interior lobe and a coastal lobe. The Adriatic
coast of Croatia is known as the Dalmatian coast and gets its name from the ancient Roman province.
The official language of the country is Croatian, but more on that in a bit because it's actually
a bit confusing. Croatia has the second highest standard of living of any Balkan country, and was the second
to join the EU in 2013.
The Croatian War of Independence lasted from 1991 to 1995
and resulted in the deaths of over 15,000 Croats.
Just southeast of Croatia along the Adriatic coast is Montenegro.
Montenegro is the smallest of the countries which were part of Yugoslavia.
Unlike other Balkan countries, Montenegro had a more circuitous route to independence.
In 1992, they were part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,
which was the short-lived successor state to the socialist federal republic of Yugoslavia,
which then changed its name in 2003 to just Serbia and Montenegro.
In 2006, Montenegro voted in a referendum to secede from Serbia,
becoming an independent country.
Unlike Slovenia and Croatia, Montenegro is primarily an Orthodox country.
Also, unlike the previous two countries,
the system of writing is mostly in Cyrillic, not Latin characters.
Montenegro is small enough that you could set up camp in any city and still be able to explore the whole country.
That is exactly what I did when I stayed in Herzegnovi, which is located in the northwestern part of the Bay of Cotor.
Believe it or not, Montenegro is home to the largest vineyard in Europe.
Montenegro is a part of NATO, but is not a member of the European Union.
Further down the coast from Montenegro is Albania.
Albania is a completely different kettle of fish from the rest of the Balkans.
For starters, the Albanian language isn't really closely related to any other existing language.
It's not Slavic, and Albanians are not a Slavic people. They are their own thing.
Evner Hosia, the communist leader of Albania from 1944 to 1985, was a very different type
of communist leader. He broke away from the Soviet sphere of influence and chartered an independent
communist path. He was, however, still incredibly paranoid, and created a series of cement bunkers
around the country to protect them in the event of an invasion.
Albania is mostly a Muslim country, however, it's extremely secular.
There are ethnic Albanians located in many neighboring countries, although by far, most are in the
neighboring country of Kosovo.
Kosovo had a unique path towards independence.
Unlike Montenegro, which split from Serbia via referendum, Kosovo fought a war for independence
in 1998 and 1999, and then unilaterally declared independence in 2008.
Kosovo is predominantly ethnic Albanians who speak Albanian, although there are some pockets of ethnic
Serbians in small border villages. Kosovo is recognized as an independent state by over 100 countries,
however, it's still not a member of the United Nations. Serbia still recognizes Kosovo as being
part of Serbia, and Kosovo's ascension to the UN is blocked by Russia on Serbia's behalf.
Many important Serbian historical and religious sites are located inside Kosovo, which is still a
point of contention. One monastery I visited in Kosovo was protected almost like a military fortress.
Southeast of Kosovo is North Macedonia. As I explained in a previous episode, North Macedonia had a
naming dispute with Greece, which culturally claims the name Macedonia, which is one of its provinces.
Macedonians, linguistically, are basically Bulgarians who just happened to have lived on a
parcel of land that became part of Yugoslavia in the early 20th century instead of Bulgaria.
The Macedonian and Bulgarian languages are considered to be mutually intelligible.
North Macedonia, for the most part, was spared the wars which afflicted the rest of the Balkans
after the disillusion of Yugoslavia.
However, the Kosovo war did affect North Macedonia profoundly.
Thousands of Kosovo immigrants entered the country, and small ethnically Albanian regions
near the Kosovo border appealed for independence.
North of North Macedonia is the largest of the former Yugoslavian countries, Serbia.
Serbia, despite itself not being a huge country, borders eight other countries.
Its capital Belgrade is the largest city in the Balkans and the only one with a population over one million people.
Serbia is a Slavic country with a mostly orthodox population, and its language is Serbian, which again I'm going to get to in a bit.
Serbia was the antagonist in all the wars for independence after the breakup of Yugoslavia.
And Serbia is also the world's largest exporter of raspberries.
I want to finish this world-wind tour of the Balkans with the most Balkan of all the Balkan countries, Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Bosnia is a country that was designed by committee, pretty much literally.
There are three ethnic groups in the country, Croats who are mostly Catholic, Serbs who are mostly Orthodox, and Bosniaks who are mostly Muslim.
The Bosnian War, which took place between 1992 and 1995, was the bloodiest of all the post-Sovies.
Yugoslavian wars. Almost 60,000 people died on all sides during the conflict.
The three ethnic groups in Croatia actually have their own elected officials who rotate in the
position of precedent every eight months. Serbs and Croats who are Bosnian citizens all have
passports for Serbia and Croatia in addition to Bosnia. Only Bosniaks, however, are allowed to play
for the Bosnia national team in World Cup competitions. The Serbian part of Bosnia is an
autonomous area called the Republic of Serbska, and there is a tiny part of Serbska called
the Bruchko district, which is a rare political condominium. That is, it's jointly run by two
governments, the government of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the government of Serbska.
In Sarajevo, it's still possible to see evidence of the war. Where mortar shells landed
and killed someone, they used red resin to fill in the holes in the pavement so you can see
the shape of the detonation. These are known as Sarajevo roses.
And I finally want to talk about languages.
Croatian, Serbian, Bosnian, and Montenegrin are all basically the same language.
I was once photographing a floral festival in Montenegro, and I was at lunch with some journalists
from all those countries I just mentioned.
They were all talking at the table with each other in their native languages during lunch.
I knew they all also spoke English, having spoken to them earlier, so during a pause in their
conversation, I asked the group this simple question. What is the name of the language you are speaking?
Everyone had a different answer. Despite speaking the same language with everyone, they couldn't agree
on a name for the very thing they all had in common. And that, in a nutshell, sort of summarizes
the Balkans. The Balkans are actually a wonderful place to travel to and is by far the cheapest place
to visit in Europe. The wars in the region are now a quarter century gone and no one wants to return to
those days. I'm sure that the borders in the region are still not yet finished, but any future
changes are going to be done peacefully. In this episode, I've just skimmed the surface of what
each of the countries in the region are about, let alone their long histories. In future episodes,
I'll be going into more depth about the people, places, and events which made the Balkans
what it is today. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett. I just want to thank everyone.
including the show's producers who support the show over on Patreon.
If you'd like to support the show, just head over to patreon.com,
which is currently the only place where you can get show merchandise.
Also, if you want to talk to other listeners about the show,
head over to our Facebook group or Discord server,
both of which have links in the show notes.
