Yugosalavia | 1953 | 1 Dinar | Coat of arms |
Yugoslavia
The
emblem of socialist Yugoslavia symbolized the country’s federal structure and
the principle of “brotherhood and unity.” Originally designed in 1943, it
featured torches bound by wheat and topped with a red star. The date 29
November 1943, commemorating the second session of the
Anti-Fascist Council of National Liberation of Yugoslavia (AVNOJ) in Jajce,
marked the foundation of post-war Yugoslavia as a federal state and was later
celebrated as Republic Day.
During World
War II, the state was known as Democratic Federal Yugoslavia,
renamed Federal
People’s Republic of Yugoslavia in 1945, and finally Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 1963. The original emblem
showed five
torches, representing five recognized nations, excluding
Bosniaks. Following the 1963 reforms, the emblem was redesigned with six
torches to represent the six federal republics. This final
version remained in use until Yugoslavia’s dissolution in 1992.
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