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Macedonian Youth Secret Revolutionary Organization

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The Macedonian Youth Secret Revolutionary Organization or MMTRO ( Bulgarian : Македонска младежка тайна революционна организация , Macedonian : Македонска младинска тајна револуционерна организација ) was a secret pro-Bulgarian youth organization established by the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization , active in Macedonia between 1922 and 1941. The statue of MMTRO was approved personally by the leader of the IMRO, Todor Alexandrov . The aim of MMTRO was in concordance with the statue of IMRO – unification of all of Macedonia in an autonomous unit within Greater Bulgaria.

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13-628: It was established in 1921–1922 in Zagreb by students from Vardar Macedonia . It soon gained influence amongst Macedonian Bulgarians in Belgrade , Vienna , Graz , Prague , Ljubljana and other places where Macedonian students lived. In a short time its influence had spread amongst the student youth in Yugoslav and Greek Macedonia and across Europe. After the Skopje Student Trial of MMTRO followers,

26-649: Is a town and municipality located in the Ferizaj District of Kosovo . According to the 2011 census, the town of Hani i Elezit has 2,533 inhabitants, while the municipality has 9,403 inhabitants. It is one of the new formed municipalities formed in September 2005. It was previously part of the Kaçanik municipality. The town is located in the south-eastern part of Kosovo. The municipality covers an area of 82.9 km (32 sq mi). It borders Kaçanik municipality to

39-437: Is mainly based on three companies/enterprises: Sharr-Çimentorja ( cement factory), Kosovaplast ( plastic factory), and Salonit (roof covers factory). All the aforementioned were part of the Šar Combinate before 1989. Sharr-Çimentorja employs 770 people, Salonit employs 280 employees, and Kosovaplast has 100 employees. Cafes, restaurants and retail trade are also vibrant. Private shops and other commercial businesses operating in

52-865: The People's Republic of Macedonia (1946–1963), which was later renamed to Socialist Republic of Macedonia (1963–1991). Before the independence of the Republic of Macedonia , the region was also called Yugoslav Macedonia. After the breakup of Yugoslavia , besides North Macedonia , the region encompasses also Trgovište and Preševo municipalities in Central Serbia , as well the Elez Han municipality in Kosovo . Elez Han Hani i Elezit or Elez Han ( Albanian definite form : Hani i Elezit ; Serbian : Ђенерал Јанковић , Đeneral Janković ; officially Елез Хан, Elez Han )

65-689: The Treaty of Bucharest (1913) after the Balkan Wars . The territory is named after Vardar , the major river that cuts across the region from northwest to southeast, to distinguish it from both Greek Macedonia and the region around the Pirin Mountain in Bulgaria . The region was initially known as Serbian Macedonia although the use of the name Macedonia was prohibited later in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, due to

78-634: The Kosovo Assembly approved the renaming of the town to Elez Han for its publications in Serbian and English; the name remains Hani i Elezit in Albanian. In 2011, the population was 9,389. Apart from 30 Kosovar Bosniaks , the municipal unit is ethnically homogeneous ( Kosovar Albanian ). The municipality has ten villages, two of which are uninhabited. The municipality has a total of 250 family shops and small businesses registered. The economy of Hani i Elezit

91-483: The Pilot Municipal Unit are mostly family-operated enterprises, with approximately 200 employees. Nevertheless, a considerable part of population works in the agriculture sector or remains unemployed. There is one hospital providing primary health care. There are two doctors, one dentist, one lab technician and nine nurses. The hospital provides services until late afternoon, while emergency cases are treated by

104-525: The hospital in Kaçanik due to the lack of staff in Hani i Elezit. The Municipal Unit is making efforts to hire two additional doctors to increase efficiency, but this process is very slow due to the lack of vacant positions in the staffing table. There are three primary schools (1,673 pupils) located in Hani i Elezit and the villages of Paljivodenica and Gorance. There is a secondary school located in Hani i Elezit with

117-473: The implemented policy of Serbianisation of the local Slavic-speakers. From 1919 to 1922, the area (including parts of today Kosovo and Eastern Serbia) was part of South Serbia ( Serbian : Jужна Србија , Južna Srbija ), In 1929, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was divided into provinces called banovinas . Vardar Macedonia as part of South Serbia then became part of Vardar Banovina . During World War I it

130-502: The local intelligentsia devolved the organizational structure even further. When in 1941 the Yugoslav and Greek rulers were replaced by Bulgarian administration, the organization became marginalized, and ultimately dissolved. This North Macedonia -related article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Vardar Macedonia Vardar Macedonia ( Macedonian and Serbian : Вардарска Македонија , Vardarska Makedonija )

143-564: The north and with North Macedonia , the municipalities of Jegunovce (west), Čučer-Sandevo (east), Saraj and Gjorče Petrov (south). The town has been inhabited since the 1500s. Its name in Ottoman times was İlyas-Han , which it got because of the Han of Elez Dimca. The town was renamed after Serbian general Božidar Janković in 1914 by a decision of the Serbian Council of Ministers. In 2012,

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156-553: Was occupied by Bulgaria as part of the Military Inspection Area of Macedonia . After the war the present-day Strumica and Novo Selo municipalities were broken away from Bulgaria and ceded to Yugoslavia. During the Second World War , Bulgaria established two administrative districts in the region – Bitola and Skopje. In 1946, most of Vardar Macedonia as one of the six constituent countries of SFR Yugoslavia became

169-417: Was the name given to the territory of the Kingdom of Serbia (1912–1918) and Kingdom of Yugoslavia (1918–1941) roughly corresponding to today's North Macedonia . It covers the northwestern part of geographical Macedonia , whose modern borders came to be defined by the mid-19th century. Vardar Macedonia usually refers to the central part of the region of Macedonia attributed to the Kingdom of Serbia by

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