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  1. Elizabeth of Bosnia (Serbo-Croatian: Elizabeta Kotromanić/ Елизабета Котроманић; Bosnian: Elizabeta Bošnjačka; Hungarian: Kotromanics Erzsébet; Polish: Elżbieta Bośniaczka; c. 1339 – January 1387) was queen consort of Hungary and Croatia, as well as queen consort of Poland, and, after becoming widowed, the regent of ...

  2. Jan 9, 2018 · With the older queen gone, Elizabeth was no longer living in her mother-in-law’s shadow and slowly started to play a more prominent position at court. She seems to have been well-educated, and probably wanted the same for her daughters.

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  4. Jul 10, 2021 · Twenty-six years after the July 1995 Srebrenica massacre, the only episode of Bosnia’s 1992-95 war to be legally defined as genocide, its survivors continue to grapple with the horrors they endured while also confronting increasingly aggressive downplaying and even denial of their ordeal.

  5. Elizabeta Kotromanić (also known as Elizabeta Bosanska) was the wife of Louis the Great and the first cousin of Tvrtko I Kotromanić. Despite the fact that he had a turbulent past with her husband Louis, he accepted the Hungarian administration again due to the political turmoil in Bosnia.

  6. Feb 22, 2022 · According to the United Nations, more than 10,000 were killed or reported missing, including 1,500 children. Knežević sent two of her children — 14-year-old Igor and six-year-old Olga — away on a...

  7. Apr 5, 2022 · The Bosnian War – which killed 100,000 civilians and soliders, displaced more than two million people, and saw tens of thousands of women raped – was long regarded, until the Russian invasion of Ukraine, as Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War II.

  8. Jul 8, 2020 · Srebrenica. Bosnian Muslims. Bosnian genocide. In July 1995, Serb forces murdered at least 7,000 Bosnian Muslims – an act so heinous it forced the US and UN to intervene in Bosnia’s war. What has...