es | en | pt | fr
    • Presentación
    • Países
    • Instituciones
    • Participa
        JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
        Ver ítem 
        •   Inicio
        • Colombia
        • Universidades
        • Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano (Colombia)
        • Ver ítem
        •   Inicio
        • Colombia
        • Universidades
        • Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano (Colombia)
        • Ver ítem

        Migration in the Southern Balkans: From Ottoman Territory to Globalized Nation States

        Registro en:
        9783319137193
        https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/38233
        http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12010/20910
        10.1007/978-3-319-13719-3
        http://repositorioslatinoamericanos.uchile.cl/handle/2250/3506570
        Autor
        Vermeulen, Hans
        Baldwin-Edwards, Martin
        Boeschoten, Riki van
        Institución
        • Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano (Colombia)
        Resumen
        The idea for the current volume emerged in a working group on migration of the Via Egnatia Foundation (www.viaegnatiafoundation.eu).1 This working group was es- tablished during a conference the Foundation held in Bitola in February 2009. One of the purposes of the Foundation is to promote communication and understanding between the countries belonging to the ‘catchment area’ of the Via Egnatia—that is, Albania, the (former Yugoslav) Republic of Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece, and Turkey. In this book the term ‘Southern Balkans’ refers to these five countries. In the early nineteenth century the Southern Balkans was still part of the Ot- toman Empire. This started to change when the small Greek state was founded in 1830. Almost 50 years later the region saw the birth of another new nation state— Bulgaria (1878). In the period up to the Balkan Wars both states gained new terri- tory, but the Ottomans still controlled a broad corridor from the Albanian coast on the west to Istanbul in the east (Fig. 1). This corridor or belt—consisting mainly of Albania, Macedonia and Thrace—might be called the Via Egnatia region since the Via Egnatia runs straight through it from Dürres in the west to Istanbul in the east. The countries of the Via Egnatia region share a memory of a fairly recent Ottoman past involving at least part of their national territories. It can be considered a distinc- tive region especially in terms of the population movements during and following the Balkan Wars (1912–1913).
        Materias
        Migration
        Demography
        Development studies

        Mostrar el registro completo del ítem


        Red de Repositorios Latinoamericanos
        + de 8.000.000 publicaciones disponibles
        500 instituciones participantes
        Dirección de Servicios de Información y Bibliotecas (SISIB)
        Universidad de Chile
        Ingreso Administradores
        Colecciones destacadas
        • Tesis latinoamericanas
        • Tesis argentinas
        • Tesis chilenas
        • Tesis peruanas
        Nuevas incorporaciones
        • Argentina
        • Brasil
        • Colombia
        • México
        Dirección de Servicios de Información y Bibliotecas (SISIB)
        Universidad de Chile
        Red de Repositorios Latinoamericanos | 2006-2018
         

        EXPLORAR POR

        Instituciones
        Fecha2011 - 20202001 - 20101951 - 20001901 - 19501800 - 1900

        Explorar en Red de Repositorios

        Países >
        Tipo de documento >
        Fecha de publicación >
        Instituciones >

        Red de Repositorios Latinoamericanos
        + de 8.000.000 publicaciones disponibles
        500 instituciones participantes
        Dirección de Servicios de Información y Bibliotecas (SISIB)
        Universidad de Chile
        Ingreso Administradores
        Colecciones destacadas
        • Tesis latinoamericanas
        • Tesis argentinas
        • Tesis chilenas
        • Tesis peruanas
        Nuevas incorporaciones
        • Argentina
        • Brasil
        • Colombia
        • México
        Dirección de Servicios de Información y Bibliotecas (SISIB)
        Universidad de Chile
        Red de Repositorios Latinoamericanos | 2006-2018