Amap of Europe looks much different today than it did just a decade or two ago. In the late 1980s, Europe was divided into two political spheres—the democratic West and the Sovietdominated East. Only a few countries were neutral in this Cold War, or ideological conflict, between Eastern and Western Europe. Today, the Soviet Union no longer exists.Neither does the former Soviet-era country of Yugoslavia. Nearly 20 new countries have risen from the ashes of their remains. Croatia is one of these newly independent states. As one of the six former Yugoslavia’s socialist republics, Croatia gained its independence after the fall of Communism. Many people place Croatia in the western part of a region identified as the Balkan Peninsula. But this is a misconception. The “Balkan Peninsula” is not a correct geographical term. Rather, it is the product of gross misunderstanding by historians, political scientists, the media, and others who fail to fully grasp the region’s many and complex geographical differences. Such mistakes may seem trivial. But if unchallenged, they can contribute to a flawed understanding of the region and its people. This is particularly true when all people living from southern Greece to Slovenia and northern Croatia are placed under the same “Balkans” roof. Geographically, the Balkan region is not a peninsula; it is a mountain range located primarily in Bulgaria. Peninsulas, after all, are areas of land surrounded on three sides by water. On a map, it is clear that the land occupied by Croatia does not fit this definition. Because of the great historical, cultural, and ethnic diversity of the people in this part of southeastern Europe, it is a serious mistake to place them all in one group.
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