- Source: Treaty of Nettuno
The Treaty of Nettuno was an agreement made between the governments of the Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes on July 20, 1925, which permitted Italians to freely immigrate into Yugoslavia's coastal region of Dalmatia. Its ratification in the Yugoslav parliament took three years, as opposition Croatian Peasant Party representatives were infuriated with the treaty, calling it colonization by Benito Mussolini.
Following the assassination of Stjepan Radić, a new ruling coalition under Anton Korošec managed to ratify the treaty by a single vote on August 13, 1928, a move that came too late to placate the Italians yet further outraged the Croats.
See also
Rijeka
Sušak, Rijeka
Treaty of Rome (1924)
References
Sources
Rothschild, Joseph (1974). East Central Europe Between the Two World Wars. University of Washington Press. p. 227. ISBN 9780295953571.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Treaty of Nettuno
- Treaty of Rome (1924)
- List of treaties
- Svetozar Pribićević
- Sušak, Rijeka
- Land reform in interwar Yugoslavia
- Croatian Peasant Party
- Italy–Yugoslavia relations
- August 1928
- July 1925