Orílẹ̀-èdè Olómìnira Àpapọ̀ Sósíálístì ilẹ̀ Yugoslafia (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ; SFRY ) je orile-ede Yugoslafia to wa lati igba Ogun Agbaye Keji (1943) titi di igba to je tituka deede ni 1992 larin awon Ogun Yugoslafia . O je orile-ede sosialisti ati ile apapo to ni awon orile-ede olominira mefa: Bosnia ati Herzegovina , Kroatia , Macedonia , Montenegro , Serbia , ati Slovenia . Serbia, bakanna, tun ni igberiko aladawa meji ti Vojvodina ati Kosovo .
Socijalistička Federativna Republika Jugoslavija a Социјалистичка Федеративна Република Југославијаb
Socialistična federativna republika Jugoslavija c
Orílẹ̀-èdè Olómìnira Àpapọ̀ Sósíálístì ilẹ̀ Yugoslafia Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
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1943–1992
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Flag
Coat of arms
Motto Bratstvo i jedinstvo (English : ["Brotherhood and Unity "] error: {{lang}}: text has italic markup (help ) )
Anthem Hej, Slaveni /Хеј, Словени (English : ["Hey, Slavs "] error: {{lang}}: text has italic markup (help ) )
Location of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Capital
Belgrade
Language(s)
Serbo-Croatian , Slovene and Macedonian
Government
Federal socialist republic ,Single-party socialist state
President
- 1945 - 1953 (first)
Ivan Ribar
- 1953 - 1980
Josip Broz Tito
- 1991 - 1992 (last)
Stjepan Mesić
Prime Minister
- 1945 - 1953 (first)
Josip Broz Tito
- 1989 - 1991 (last)
Ante Marković
Historical era
Cold War
- Proclamation
November 29 , 1943
- UN membership
24 October 1945
- Constitutional reform
21 February 1974
- Secessions
25 June 1991 - 27 April
Area
- July 1989
255,804 km2 (98,766 sq mi)
Population
- July 1989 est.
23,724,919
Density
92.7 /km2 (240.2 /sq mi)
Currency
Yugoslav dinar
Calling code
+38
a State name in Serbo-Croatian and Macedonian languages (the name is identical in both), spelled in the Latin alphabet . (See Etymology section for details.)
b State name in Serbo-Croatian and Macedonian languages (the name is identical in both), spelled in the Cyrillic alphabet . (See Etymology section for details.)
c State name in the Slovene language . Slovene used the Latin alphabet exclusively. (See Etymology section for details.)