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Balkan Idols: Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States

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28. J. Gardner Wilk<strong>in</strong>son, Dalmatia <strong>and</strong> Montenegro, vol. 1 (London: John Murray,<br />

1848), pp. 530–531.<br />

29. Ibid., p. 472.<br />

30. See among numerous works on the mean<strong>in</strong>g of Kosovo, Voj<strong>in</strong> Matić,<br />

Psihoanaliza mitske prosˇlosti (A psychoanalysis of the mythical past) (Belgrade:<br />

Prosveta, 1976); Wayne S. Vuc<strong>in</strong>ich <strong>and</strong> Thomas A. Emmert, eds., Kosovo: Legacy<br />

of a Medieval Battle, M<strong>in</strong>nesota Mediterranean <strong>and</strong> East European Monographs,<br />

vol. 1 (M<strong>in</strong>neapolis: University of M<strong>in</strong>nesota, 1991); Warren Zimmermann, Orig<strong>in</strong>s<br />

of a Catastrophe: <strong>Yugoslav</strong>ia <strong>and</strong> Its Destroyers. America’s Last Ambassador<br />

Tells What Happened <strong>and</strong> Why (New York: Times Books, 1996); <strong>and</strong> Warren Zimmermann,<br />

“The Demons of Kosovo,” National Interest, 52 (spr<strong>in</strong>g 1998).<br />

31. See Vuch<strong>in</strong>ich <strong>and</strong> Emmert, Kosovo: Legacy of a Medieval Battle.<br />

32. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to official <strong>Yugoslav</strong> census data, <strong>in</strong> 1921, 65.8 percent of Kosovo’s<br />

population were Albanian <strong>and</strong> 26 percent were Serbian. The first postwar<br />

census <strong>in</strong> 1948 shows that the percentage of Albanians grew <strong>and</strong> that of the<br />

Serbs decreased: Serbs were 23.6 percent <strong>and</strong> <strong>in</strong> 1981, only 13.2 percent Serbs<br />

lived <strong>in</strong> Kosovo. Accord<strong>in</strong>g to the last census <strong>in</strong> 1991, there were 81.6 percent<br />

Albanians <strong>and</strong> 9.9 percent Serbs. Nacionalni sastav stanovnisˇtva SFRJ (Population<br />

structure <strong>in</strong> SFRY by nationality) (Belgrade: Savremena adm<strong>in</strong>istracija, 1991).<br />

33. See Thomas A. Emmert, “Kosovo: Development <strong>and</strong> Impact of a National<br />

Ethic,” <strong>in</strong> Ivo Banac, John G. Ackerman, <strong>and</strong> Roman Szporluk, eds., Nation <strong>and</strong><br />

Ideology: Essays <strong>in</strong> Honor of Wayne S. Vuc<strong>in</strong>ich (New York: Eastern European<br />

Monographs, 1981), p. 80.<br />

34. Hobsbawm, Nations <strong>and</strong> <strong>Nationalism</strong> s<strong>in</strong>ce 1780, pp. 75–76.<br />

35. Radoslav M. Grujić, Pravoslavna srpska crkva (The Orthodox Serb Church)<br />

(Kragujevac: Svetlost-Kalenić, 1989), pp. 93–94.<br />

36. Ekmečić, Stvaranje Jugoslavije 1790–1918, vol. 1, p. 41.<br />

37. Slobodan Mileusnić, Sveti Srbi (Sa<strong>in</strong>tly Serbs) (Kragujevac: Kalenić, 1989),<br />

p. 9.<br />

38. See Ekmečić, preface to Stvaranje Jugoslavije 1790–1918, vol. I.<br />

39. Ranković, Bigović, <strong>and</strong> Milovanović, Vladika Nikolaj, p. 224.<br />

40. Ibid., p. 217.<br />

41. The data come from Relazioni religiose, 29 March 1986; Radovan Samardzˇić,<br />

Religious Communities <strong>in</strong> <strong>Yugoslav</strong>ia (Belgrade: Jugoslavenski Pregled,<br />

1981), p. 38; Intervju, 29 March 1991.<br />

42. See for example, Karlo Jurisˇić, “Ranije pokrsˇtenje Hrvata i problem nedostatka<br />

arheolosˇkih spomenika” (The earlier evangelization of the Croats <strong>and</strong><br />

the problem of the lack of preserved archeological monuments), <strong>in</strong> Počeci hrvatskog<br />

krsˇčanskog i drusˇtvenog zˇivota od VII do kraja IX stoljeća; Radovi drugog medjunarodnog<br />

simpozija o hrvatskoj crkvenoj i drusˇtvenoj povijesti (Orig<strong>in</strong>s of Croatian<br />

Christian <strong>and</strong> social life from the Twelfth to the end of the N<strong>in</strong>eteenth Century:<br />

Works of the Second International Symposium on Croat Church <strong>and</strong> Social History)<br />

(Split: Nadbiskupija Splitsko-Makarska, 1990). See also Nenad Gat<strong>in</strong> et al.,<br />

Starohrvatska sakralna arhitektura (Ancient Croatian sacred architecture) (Zagreb:<br />

Nakladni zavod Matice Hrvatske; Krsˇčanska sadasˇnjost, 1982).<br />

43. See Karlo Jurisˇić, Fra Lujo Marun, osnivač starohrvatske arheologije: 1857–<br />

1939 (Franciscan Lujo Marun, the founder of Croatian Archeology: 1857–1939)<br />

(Split: Zbornik Kačič, 1979).<br />

44. See, among many sources on this, the Roman Catholic Church of Pol<strong>and</strong><br />

website: http//www.ipipan.waw.<br />

250 notes to pages 7–10

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