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Background Stats: compare key data on Croatia & Serbia

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Definitions

  • Daylight Savings Time end date: Rules that determine the date on which daylight savings time ends. Clocks are moved backwards on this date.
  • Daylight Savings Time start date: Rules that determine the date on which daylight savings time begins. Clocks are moved forward on this date.
  • Full name: Full names (translated to english) of the United Nations member states, as of 2014. For a list of full names in the respective original languages of each country, check this link.
  • Independence day date: Date.
  • Land border length: The length of each country's land border. Islands are listed as having a 0.0 km.
  • National anthems: National anthem.
  • National identity card: Description.
  • National tree: Name of tree.

    No date was available from the Wikipedia article, so we used the date of retrieval.

  • Neighboring countries and territories: The countries and territories neighboring each country. "L" means they share only a land border and "M" means they have only maritime boundaries. A blank means they share both.
  • Number of maritime boundary neighbours: Number of states and territories with which each country shares a maritime border. Two countries separated from each other by a body of water have a maritime border with each other.
  • Overview: A geopolitical overview of every sovereign country in the world, briefly examining their recent history and place on the global stage. The texts are taken from the BBC News website.
STAT Croatia Serbia
Daylight Savings Time end date 01:00 UTC on last Sunday October Last Sunday October
Daylight Savings Time start date 01:00 UTC on last Sunday March Last Sunday March
Full name Republic of Croatia Republic of Serbia
Independence day date October 8 February 15
Land border length 2,197 km
Ranked 80th. 8% more than Serbia
2,027 km
Ranked 84th.
National anthems Lijepa na\u0161a domovino ( Our Beautiful Homeland ) Bo\u017ee pravde ( God of Justice or Lord, Give Us Justice )
National identity card The Croatian identity card is compulsory at 16. The Li\u010dna karta (\u041b\u0438\u0447\u043d\u0430 \u043a\u0430\u0440\u0442\u0430) is compulsory at the age of 16, but it can be obtained when a person turns 10. It is issued only to Serbian citizens with permanent residence in Serbia as well as foreign citizens residing in Serbia. While it is the most often used official identification document, three other hold the same status \u2014 Passport, Driver's licence and Refugee ID card. Old style IDs, that refer to a the no longer existing states of SFRY or FRY , will be valid until their expire date and no longer than December 31, 2016.
National tree Pedunculate oak Oak , Serbian Spruce
Neighboring countries and territories Bosnia and Herzegovina Hungary (L) Italy (M) Montenegro Serbia (L) Slovenia Albania (L) Bosnia and Herzegovina (L) Bulgaria (L) Croatia (L) Hungary (L) Republic of Macedonia (L) Montenegro (L) Romania (L) Kosovo (L) Kosovo, which some countries consider part of Serbia, borders Albania
Number of maritime boundary neighbours 4
Ranked 31st.
0.0
Ranked 151st.
Overview <p>Croatia&#039;s declaration of independence in 1991 was followed by four years of war and the best part of a decade of authoritarian nationalism under President Franjo Tudjman.</p> <p>By early 2003 it had made enough progress in shaking off the legacy of those years to apply for EU membership, becoming the second former Yugoslav republic after Slovenia to do so.</p> <p>A country of striking natural beauty with a stunning Adriatic coastline, Croatia is again very popular as a tourist destination.</p><br> <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17212572">Full Article</a> <p>Serbia became a stand-alone sovereign republic in the summer of 2006 after Montenegro voted in a referendum for independence from the Union of Serbia and Montenegro. </p> <p>When the vote was followed by a formal declaration of independence by Montenegro, a special session of parliament in Belgrade declared Serbia to be the legal successor to the now defunct Union. </p> <p>Serbia and Montenegro, the two republics still left in the old Yugoslav federation, had agreed in 2002 to scrap remnants of the ex-communist state and create the new, looser Union of Serbia and Montenegro.</p><br> <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-17907947">Full Article</a>

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