Also known as Kraljevina Crna Gora, Montenegrin Kingdom, Montenegro, Crna Gora, Principality of Montenegro, Principality
1910–1918 kingdom in Southeastern Europe
The Kingdom of Montenegro was an independent country in Southeastern Europe that existed from 1910 to 1918, during a period of significant political change in the region. It matters historically because it represented one of the small Balkan states navigating the complex geopolitics of early 20th-century Europe before being absorbed into a larger South Slavic union following World War I.
AI-generated from the Wikipedia summary — may contain errors.
via Wikidata · CC0
~6 min read
Today part of Montenegro Serbia Kosovo
The Kingdom of Montenegro (Serbian: Краљевина Црна Горa / Kraljevina Crna Gora) was a monarchy in southeastern Europe, present-day Montenegro, during the tumultuous period of time on the Balkan Peninsula leading up to and during World War I. Officially it was a constitutional monarchy, but absolutist in practice. On 28 November 1918, following the end of World War I, with the Montenegrin government still in exile, the Podgorica Assembly proclaimed unification with the Kingdom of Serbia, which itself was merged into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes three days later, on 1 December 1918. This unification with Serbia lasted, through various successor states, for almost 88 years, ending in 2006.
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).