Socialist Republic of Montenegro
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Socialist Republic of Montenegro Socijalistička Republika Crna Gora Социјалистичка Република Црна Гора |
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Constituent republic of Yugoslavia | ||||||
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Location of Montenegro in Yugoslavia | ||||||
Capital | Titograd | |||||
Government | Socialist republic | |||||
History | ||||||
• | ZAVNOCGB | 15 and 16 November 1945 | ||||
• | End of WWII | 8 May 1945 | ||||
• | FRY established | 28 April 1992 | ||||
Area | ||||||
• | 1991 | 13,810 km2 (5,332 sq mi) | ||||
Population | ||||||
• | 1991 | 615,035 | ||||
Density | 44.5 /km2 (115.3 /sq mi) | |||||
Today part of | Montenegro |
Socialist Republic of Montenegro (Serbo-Croatian: Socijalistička Republika Crna Gora, Социјалистичка Република Црна Гора), or SR Montenegro in shortened form, was one of the 6 republics forming the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. It is a predecessor of the modern-day Montenegro. On 7 July 1963, the People's Republic of Montenegro was renamed the "Socialist Republic of Montenegro" (a change ratified both by the Federal Constitution and the newly created Montenegrin Constitution in 1963). It was a non-national[clarification needed] free state[clarification needed] with Serbo-Croatian as the official language. In 1991, as the League of Communists in Montenegro changed its name to Democratic Party of Socialists of Montenegro after the first free elections, the adjective "Socialist" was deleted from the republic's title (ratified by the 1992 Constitution).
Demographics
Template:History of Montenegro 1971 census:
- Montenegrins: 355,632 (67.15%)
- Muslims: 70,236 (13.26%)
- Serbs: 39,512 or (7.46%)
- Albanians: 35,671 (6.74%)
- Yugoslavs: 10,943 (2.07%)
- Croats: 9,192 (1.74%)
- Total: 529,604 inhabitants
1981 census:
- Montenegrins: 400,488 (68.54%)
- Muslims: 78,080 (13.36%)
- Albanians: 37,735 (6.46%)
- Yugoslavs: 31,243 (5.35%)
- Serbs: 19,407 (3.32%)
- Croats: 6,904 (1.81%)
- Roma: 1,471 (0.25%)
- Macedonian: 875 (0.15%)
- Slovenes: 564 (0.1%)
- Hungarians: 238 (0.04%)
- Germans: 107 (0.02%)
- Russians: 96 (0.02%)
- Italians: 45 (0.01%)
- other: 816 (0.14%)
- No response: 301 (0.05%)
- Regional affiliation: 1,602 (0.27%)
- Unknown: 4,338 (0.74%)
- Total: 584,310 inhabitants
1991 census
- Montenegrins: 380,467 (61.86%)
- Muslims: 89,614 (14.57%)
- Serbs: 57,453 (9.34%)
- Albanians: 40,415 (6.57%)
- Yugoslavs: 26,159 (4.25%)
- Croats: 6,244 (1.02%)
- Roma: 3,282 (0.53%)
- Macedonians: 1,072 (0.17%)
- Slovenes: 369 (0.06%)
- Hungarians: 205 (0.03%)
- Germans: 124 (0.02%)
- Russians: 118 (0.02%)
- Italians: 58 (0.01%)
- other: 437 (0.07%)
- No response: 1,944 (0.32%)
- Regional belonging: 998 (0.16%)
- Unknown: 6,076 (0.99%)
- Total: 615,035 inhabitants
Heads of Institutions
President
- President of the Anti-Fascist Council of People's Liberation of Montenegro and Boka
- Dr Niko Miljanić (15 November 1943 - 14 July 1944)
- President of the Montenegrin Anti-Fascist Assembly of People's Liberation
- Dr Niko Miljanić (14 July 1944 - 21 November 1946)
- President of the Presidium of the Constitutional Assembly
- Miloš Rašović (21 November 1946 - 1 January 1947)
- Presidents of the Presidium of the People's Assembly
- Miloš Rašović (1 January 1947 - 6 November 1950)
- Nikola Kovačević (6 November 1950 - 4 February 1953)
- Presidents of the People's Assembly
- Nikola Kovačević (4 February 1950 - 15 December 1953)
- Blažo Jovanović (15 December 1953 - 12 July 1962)
- Filip Bajković (12 July 1962 - 5 May 1963)
- Andrija Mugoša (5 May 1963 - 5 May 1967)
- Veljko Milatović (5 May 1967 - 6 October 1969)
- Vidoje Žarković (6 October 1969 - April 1974)
- Budislav Šoškić (April 1974 - 5 April 1974)
- Presidents of the Presidency
- Veljko Milatović (5 April 1974 - 7 May 1982)
- Veselin Đuranović (7 May 1982 - 7 May 1983)
- Marko Orlandić (7 May 1983 - 7 May 1984)
- Miodrag Vlahović (7 May 1984 - 7 May 1985)
- Branislav Šoškić (6 May 1985 - 6 May 1986)
- Radivoje Brajović (6 May 1986 - 6 May 1988)
- Božina Ivanović (6 May 1988 - 13 January 1989)
- Slobodan Simović (acting) (13 January 1989 - 17 March 1989)
- Branko Kostić (17 March 1989 - 23 December 1990)
- Momir Bulatović (23 December 1990 - 1992)
Prime Minister
- Minister for Montenegro (in the central Yugoslav government)
- Milovan Đilas (7 March 1945 - April 1945)
- Prime Minister of Montenegro
- Blažo Jovanović (17 April 1945] - 4 February 1953)
- Presidents of the Executive Council
- Blažo Jovanović (4 February 1953 - 16 December 1953)
- Filip Bajković (16 December 1953 - 12 July 1962)
- Đorđije Pajković (16 December 1962 - 25 June 1963)
- Veselin Đuranović (25 June 1963 - 8 December 1966)
- Mijuško Šibalić (8 December 1966 - 5 May 1967)
- Vidoje Žarković (5 May 1967 - 7 October 1969)
- Žarko Bulajić (7 October 1969 - 6 May 1974)
- Marko Orlandić (6 May 1974 - 28 April 1978)
- Momčilo Cerović (28 April 1978 - 7 May 1982)
- Radivoje Brajović (7 May 1982 - 6 June 1986)
- Vuko Vukadinović (6 June 1986 - 29 March 1989)
- Radoje Kontić (29 March 1989 - 15 February 1991)
References
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- States and territories established in 1945
- States and territories disestablished in 1992
- Articles containing Serbo-Croatian-language text
- Wikipedia articles needing clarification from June 2015
- Communism in Montenegro
- Second Yugoslavia
- Subdivisions of Yugoslavia
- 20th century in Montenegro
- Former countries in the Balkans
- Former Slavic countries
- 1943 establishments in Montenegro
- 1992 disestablishments in Montenegro
- 1943 establishments in Yugoslavia
- 1992 disestablishments in Yugoslavia