Save Western Civilization > Save Serbia
Look at this bosnian thread about battle of kosovo polje
Husar:
--- Quote from: Srbin on December 04, 2007, 05:17:11 AM ---
--- Quote from: Husar on December 04, 2007, 03:18:46 AM ---BOSNOMUSSLIMNAZIS......
......donkeys READY to be kicked out.
--- End quote ---
:::D :::D :::D
Where do you find theese kind of pictures :p :::D
--- End quote ---
It was certainly in "sarayevo",
...a bosnomuSSlimnazidonkey
praising alllllaaaaahhhah hahhahhah ah ah ah ah !!!!
;D ;D ;D
Srbin:
--- Quote from: Cojpe on December 03, 2007, 05:59:44 PM ---"balkanskih zemalja i Osmanskog carstva" :o
What "balkan lands" Albania (est1912) or Croatia or Bosnia 8;)
My G-d, Bosnian muslims are so funny :::D
Is it so hard to say that it was battle between Serbs and Ottoman empire?
We should kick their donkeys some more, just for being so wicked ;D
--- End quote ---
Ahaha, didn't notice that.
Srbin:
The first preserved mention of the name "Bosnia" is in the De Administrando Imperio, a politico-geographical handbook written by Byzantine emperor Constantine VII in 958 as a component part of "Baptized Serbia," however, by this time Bosnia was mostly converted from their slavic manichaistic religion to Bogumilism (a christian sect that slavic Bulgarians spread to Bosnia). The exact meaning and origin of the word is somewhat cloudy. The name "Bosnia" most probably comes from the name of the Bosna river around which it has been historically based, which was recorded in the Roman Age under the name Bossina.[3] More direct root of the river's names are unknown. Philologist Anton Mayer proposed a connection with the Indo-European root bos or bogh, meaning "running water".[4] Certain Roman sources similarly mention Bathinus flumen, or the Illyrian word Bosona, both of which would mean "running water" as well.[4] Other theories involve the rare Latin term Bosina, meaning boundary, and possible Slavic origins.[4]
The origins of the word Herzegovina can be identified with more precision and certainty. During the Early Middle Ages the region was known as Hum or Zahumlje, named after the Zachlumoi tribe of Slavs which inhabited it. In the 1440s, the region was ruled by powerful nobleman Stefan Vukčić Kosača. In a document sent to Friedrich III on January 20, 1448, Stefan Vukčić Kosača called himself Herzog of Saint Sava, lord of Hum and Primorje, great duke of the Bosnian kingdom (Herzog means duke in German) and so the lands he controlled would later become known as Herzog's lands or Herzegovina.[3] The name Herzegovina was first included in the official name of the then Ottoman province in the mid-nineteenth century.
This true?
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