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|   | According to some Wikipedia Editors, it was the ''House of Bunić''. The Bunic name is a Slavic translation and is hardly used even in today’s Croatia. There was an '''edited war''' over the whole matter and eventually with the strength of references it was changed.    |   | According to some Wikipedia Editors, it was the ''House of Bunić''. The Bunic name is a Slavic translation and is hardly used even in today’s Croatia. There was an '''edited war''' over the whole matter and eventually with the strength of references it was changed.    | 
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| − | After [[World War Two]] the Slavicisation of the of Dalmatia (today part of [[Croatia]]) was continued as government policy under the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. All cities, towns, villages, family and peoples surnames that are not of Slavic origin were being translated.<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?ei=kr8HTJqhAYOBOMOI5Ag&ct=result&id=fIFpAAAAMAAJ&dq=croatization+against+italian&q=croatization+against+italian#search_anchor Balkan Babel:] The Disintegration of Yugoslavia from the Death of Tito to the Fall of Milosevic ''by'' Sabrina P. Ramet. '''Note''': Croatisation is a form of Slavicisation.</ref>  | + | After [[World War Two]] the Slavicisation of the of Dalmatia (today part of [[Croatia]]) was continued as government policy under the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. All cities, towns, villages, family and peoples surnames that are not of Slavic origin were being translated.<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/books?ei=kr8HTJqhAYOBOMOI5Ag&ct=result&id=fIFpAAAAMAAJ&dq=croatization+against+italian&q=croatization+against+italian#search_anchor Balkan Babel:] The Disintegration of Yugoslavia from the Death of Tito to the Fall of Milosevic ''by'' Sabrina P. Ramet. '''Note''': Croatisation is a form of ''Slavicisation''.</ref>  | 
|   | The policy was firstly implemented on a large scale with the creation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1918.<ref> ''Croatisation or Slavicisation''  was a policy  firstly implemented under the rule  of the [[Austria|Austro]]-Hungarian Empire</ref>  |   | The policy was firstly implemented on a large scale with the creation of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1918.<ref> ''Croatisation or Slavicisation''  was a policy  firstly implemented under the rule  of the [[Austria|Austro]]-Hungarian Empire</ref>  | 
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