Anagramas & Información sobre | Palabra Inglés IMRO
IMRO
Número de letras
4
Es palíndromo
No
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Ejemplos de uso de IMRO en una oración
- Pavelić incorporated terrorist actions in the Ustaše program, such as train bombings and assassinations, staged a small uprising in Lika in 1932, culminating in the assassination of King Alexander in 1934 in conjunction with the IMRO.
- The party's full name consists of the acronyms "VMRO" (standing for Vnatrešna Makedonska Revolucionerna Organizacija and referencing the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO), a rebel movement formed in 1893) and "DPMNE" (Democratic Party for Macedonian National Unity, Demokratska partija za makedonsko nacionalno edinstvo).
- Their base of operation in Bulgaria was jeopardized by the Treaty of Niš, and the IMRO reacted by assassinating Bulgarian prime minister Aleksandar Stamboliyski in 1923, with the cooperation of other Bulgarian elements opposed to him.
- In Ohri (modern Ohrid) an armed band (çete) called the Special Muslim Organisation (SMO) composed mostly of notables was created in 1907 to protect local Muslims and fight Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (IMRO) bands.
- During that period the foreign representatives Delchev and Petrov became by rights members of the leadership of the Supreme Committee and so the IMRO even managed to gain de facto control of the SMAC.
- In practice, most of the followers of the IMRO were native Macedonian Bulgarians, though they also had some Aromanian allies, like Pitu Guli, Mitre The Vlach, Ioryi Mucitano and Alexandru Coshca.
- It was also anticipated that the IMRO volunteers would form the core of the armed forces of a future Independent Macedonia in addition to providing administration and education in the Florina, Kastoria and Edessa districts.
- Then Petrov had to deal with the problem of Bulgarian refugees who had to leave Yugoslavia and Greece, thus incurring IMRO Centralist faction leaders' hatred upon himself.
- Except for Bulgarian Exarchist Aromanians, as Guli's family, who were Bulgarophiles, most members of other ethnicities dismissed the IMRO as pro-Bulgarian.
- Imra (Kamkata-vari: Imro) was the chief creator deity of the Nuristani people before their conversion to Islam.
- The former centralists of the IMRO formed the Bulgarian Constitutional Clubs, and, like the PFP, they participated in 1908 Ottoman general election.
- Sandanski is portrayed by them as an Ottomanist, and collaborationist of the Young Turks, seen as Bulgarian enemies, and as the man who started the fratricidal war into the IMRO.
- According to Shaldev, a member of the Secret Macedonian-Adrianopolitan circle and IMRO, the main ideologists under whose influence Čupovski had fallen, were the Serbian professors Stojan Novaković, Jovan Cvijić and Aleksandar Belić.
- Following regular attacks by pro-Bulgarian IMRO komitadjis on Serbian colonists and gendarmes, the government appealed to Association against Bulgarian Bandits, responsible for the massacre of 53 inhabitants of the village of Garvan in 1923.
- Criticism was also made by IMRO publisher Johnny Lappin, who claimed that RTÉ did not have sufficient time to make fair judgements on all the submitted songs, failed to clarify in advance the role of the selection panel and overrode their own rules by approaching music publishers to submit songs.
- Between 1892 and 1894 the maganize Loza, which was run by IMRO revolutionaries, used a distinct style of writing for their monthly magazine: they dropped the usage of the letter ya (Я) and big yus (Ѫ) and instead used the letter i for je (J), while also taking some inspiration from Serbian grammar.
- The members of the jury that selected the finalist songs consisted of writer and performer Shay Healy, Universal Music Ireland managing director Dave Pennefather, publisher and IMRO board member Johnny Lappin, commentator and broadcaster Larry Gogan, and singer Eleanor Shanley.
- Tashko Georgiev – Bulgarian revolutionary, member of the IMRO and Chetnik of Petar Xristov "Germancheto".
- Many of the former left-wing IMRO government officials were purged from their positions, then isolated, arrested, imprisoned or executed on various (in many cases fabricated) charges including pro-Bulgarian leanings, demands for greater or complete independence of Yugoslav Macedonia, collaboration with the Cominform after the Tito-Stalin split in 1948, forming of conspirative political groups or organizations, demands for greater democracy and the like.
- In the tradition of the IMRO Komitadjis, these bands pursued the local Greek population, including Greek-identifying Slavophones, Aromanians, and Pontic Greeks, seeing them as an obstacle to an all-Bulgarian Macedonia.
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