Zagreb Points

The Zagreb Points (Croatian: Zagrebačke punktacije) was the name of a resolution released on November 7, 1932, in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia which condemned Serb hegemony in that country and called for a return to political life as it was in 1918.

The document was released after the January 6th Dictatorship of King Alexander resulted in new administrative subdivisions and a new royal constitution. It had the backing of the Peasant-Democrat Coalition and the Party of Rights. The document resulted in other parties producing the Novi Sad Points, Sarajevo Points (Yugoslav Muslim Organization) and Ljubljana Points (Slovene People's Party) to voice their demands for an end to the dictatorship. Croatian Peasant Party leader Vladko Maček was imprisoned for three years as a direct result of the document.[1]

Contributors

Croatian Peasant Party

Independent Democratic Party

  • Dušan Bošković
  • Dušan Kecmanović
  • Sava Kosanović
  • Većeslav Vilder
  • Hinko Krizman

Croatian Party of Rights

gollark: Compute the main and variance then multiply and add until you get back to the definition of IQ.
gollark: You'd just rerun the statistics™.
gollark: You wouldn't rework the tests.
gollark: Since IQ is defined relatively, iterating this process means you will kill all but one person.
gollark: It simply posts a 🙊 emoji on all messages by someone.

References

  1. "Zagrebačke punktacije". Croatian Encyclopedia (in Croatian). Retrieved 18 August 2015.
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