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Balkan$543617$ - traduzione in spagnolo

BALKAN INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION ORGANIZATION
Balkan Bloc; Balkan Entente; Balkan Pact (1934); Balkan pact (1934); Balkan entente; Balkan bloc

Balkan      
n. los Balcanes, nombre histórico y geográfico del sudeste de Europa
Balkan peninsula         
  • Approximate distribution of religions in [[Albania]]
  • Apollonia]] ruins near [[Fier]], Albania
  • Map showing religious denominations
  • observers}}
  • Dinaric Mountains]].
  • The Balkans in 850 AD
  • Modern political history of the Balkans from 1796 onwards
  • [[Belgrade]] is a major [[industrial city]] and the capital of Serbia.
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • [[Dubrovnik]] in Croatia, a UNESCO [[World Heritage Site]] since 1979
  • Ethnic map of the Balkans (1880)
  • Felix Romuliana Imperial Palace]], a UNESCO [[World Heritage Site]]
  • State entities on the former territory of [[Yugoslavia]], 2008
  • Bulgarian coast]].
  • Eastern Orthodox]] cathedral, later a mosque, then a museum, and now both a mosque and a museum
  • [[Lake Skadar]] is the [[largest lake]] in the Balkans and [[Southern Europe]].
  • The [[Jireček Line]]
  • View toward [[Rila]], the highest mountain of the Balkans and [[Southeast Europe]] (2,925 m).
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site]] since 2005.
  • primeval forest]] in the Balkans, and one of the last remaining in Europe.
  • World Heritage Site]] by UNESCO in 1980.
  • Tourism]] is an important part of the [[Greek economy]].
  • Tourism]] is a rapidly growing sector of the [[Slovenian economy]].
  • observers}}
  • supporting partners}}
  • [[Southeast European Cooperation Process]] (SEECP) member states
  • Montenegrin economy.]]
  • [[Pula Arena]], the only remaining Roman amphitheatre to have four side towers and with all three Roman architectural orders entirely preserved.
  • Botev]] at a height of 2,376 m.
  • Vlach]] shepherds in the past
  • Bulgarian Empire]] – [[Veliko Tarnovo]]
  • Western Balkan countries – [[Albania]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[Croatia]], [[Kosovo]], [[Montenegro]], [[North Macedonia]], and [[Serbia]]. Croatia (yellow) joined the EU in 2013.
GEOPOLITICAL AND CULTURAL REGION OF SOUTHEAST EUROPE
Balkan peninsula; Balkan Peninsula; Balkan Penninsula; Balkan penninsula; Balkan; The Balkans; Historical regions of the Balkans; List of historical regions of the Balkan Peninsula; Western Balkans; Balkan countries; Peninsula of Haemus; Balkan states; Balkan Pennisula; Haemus Peninsula; Balcans; Balkins; Balkanoid; Demographics of the Balkans; Demography of the Balkans; Balkan States; Balkans peninsula; Balkans Peninsula; Balkan cities over 200,000 people; South Balkan area; Historical regions of the Balkan Peninsula; Central Balkans; Balkan peoples; Balkanic Europe; Balkanic; Western Balkan; Western Balkan region; East Balkan; List of Balkan countries; Religion in the Balkans; Balkan people; Ethnic groups in the Balkans; Natural resources of the Balkans; Politcs of the Balkans
n. península de los Balcanes
Balkan         
  • Approximate distribution of religions in [[Albania]]
  • Apollonia]] ruins near [[Fier]], Albania
  • Map showing religious denominations
  • observers}}
  • Dinaric Mountains]].
  • The Balkans in 850 AD
  • Modern political history of the Balkans from 1796 onwards
  • [[Belgrade]] is a major [[industrial city]] and the capital of Serbia.
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • 45px
  • [[Dubrovnik]] in Croatia, a UNESCO [[World Heritage Site]] since 1979
  • Ethnic map of the Balkans (1880)
  • Felix Romuliana Imperial Palace]], a UNESCO [[World Heritage Site]]
  • State entities on the former territory of [[Yugoslavia]], 2008
  • Bulgarian coast]].
  • Eastern Orthodox]] cathedral, later a mosque, then a museum, and now both a mosque and a museum
  • [[Lake Skadar]] is the [[largest lake]] in the Balkans and [[Southern Europe]].
  • The [[Jireček Line]]
  • View toward [[Rila]], the highest mountain of the Balkans and [[Southeast Europe]] (2,925 m).
  • UNESCO World Heritage Site]] since 2005.
  • primeval forest]] in the Balkans, and one of the last remaining in Europe.
  • World Heritage Site]] by UNESCO in 1980.
  • Tourism]] is an important part of the [[Greek economy]].
  • Tourism]] is a rapidly growing sector of the [[Slovenian economy]].
  • observers}}
  • supporting partners}}
  • [[Southeast European Cooperation Process]] (SEECP) member states
  • Montenegrin economy.]]
  • [[Pula Arena]], the only remaining Roman amphitheatre to have four side towers and with all three Roman architectural orders entirely preserved.
  • Botev]] at a height of 2,376 m.
  • Vlach]] shepherds in the past
  • Bulgarian Empire]] – [[Veliko Tarnovo]]
  • Western Balkan countries – [[Albania]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]], [[Croatia]], [[Kosovo]], [[Montenegro]], [[North Macedonia]], and [[Serbia]]. Croatia (yellow) joined the EU in 2013.
GEOPOLITICAL AND CULTURAL REGION OF SOUTHEAST EUROPE
Balkan peninsula; Balkan Peninsula; Balkan Penninsula; Balkan penninsula; Balkan; The Balkans; Historical regions of the Balkans; List of historical regions of the Balkan Peninsula; Western Balkans; Balkan countries; Peninsula of Haemus; Balkan states; Balkan Pennisula; Haemus Peninsula; Balcans; Balkins; Balkanoid; Demographics of the Balkans; Demography of the Balkans; Balkan States; Balkans peninsula; Balkans Peninsula; Balkan cities over 200,000 people; South Balkan area; Historical regions of the Balkan Peninsula; Central Balkans; Balkan peoples; Balkanic Europe; Balkanic; Western Balkan; Western Balkan region; East Balkan; List of Balkan countries; Religion in the Balkans; Balkan people; Ethnic groups in the Balkans; Natural resources of the Balkans; Politcs of the Balkans
(adj.) = balcánico
Ex: The article is entitled "A Balkan journey: an outreach exploration to Albania, Bulgaria and Macedonia".
----
* Balkan region, the = balcanes, los
* Balkans, the = balcanes, los; países balcánicos, los

Definizione

Balkans
n. in the Balkans

Wikipedia

Balkan Pact

The Balkan Pact, or Balkan Entente, was a treaty signed by Greece, Romania, Turkey and Yugoslavia on 9 February 1934 in Athens, aimed at maintaining the geopolitical status quo in the region after the end of World War I. To present a united front against Bulgarian designs on their territories, the signatories agreed to suspend all disputed territorial claims against one another and their immediate neighbours following the aftermath of the war and a rise in various regional irredentist tensions.

Other nations in the region that had been involved in related diplomacy refused to sign the document, including Italy, Albania, Bulgaria, Hungary and the Soviet Union. The pact became effective on the day that it was signed and was registered in the League of Nations Treaty Series on 1 October 1934.

The Balkan Pact helped to ensure peace between the signatory nations but failed to end regional intrigues. Although the pact was designed against Bulgaria, on 31 July 1938, its members signed the Salonika Agreement with Bulgaria, which repealed the clauses of the Treaty of Neuilly-sur-Seine and Treaty of Lausanne that had mandated demilitarised zones at Bulgaria's borders with Greece and Turkey, which allowed Bulgaria to rearm.

With the 1940 Treaty of Craiova signed by Romania under Nazi Germany's pressure, and after the 1941 Axis invasions of Yugoslavia and Greece, the pact effectively ceased to exist and Turkey remained as its only signatory that had avoided any conflict during WWII, even after joining the Allies in 1945.