The place where the World War I started?

The story goes like this: unsatisfied with the fact that Bosnia had been annexed to Austrian-Hungarian empire, this group of mostly bosnian serb nationalists under the name of “Young Bosnia”, backed-up by Serbian secret society “Black Hand”, decided to assasin the Austrian heir to the throne, Franz Ferdinand during his Sarajevo visit. On June 28, after a set of strange and misfortunate coincidences, they succeded in doing so, and unwillingly triggered the chain of events that will lead to one of the biggest armed clashes in history, known as the World War One.

Prior to that, the group of revolutionaries held secret meetings, made plans and preparations for the assasination in this place, “Zlatna moruna” cafe, address Narodnog Fronta 2.
Not a lot of people know about this, even in Belgrade. Only a small plaque tells what has been in this place before it has been turned into a betting and gambling club. Maybe this says something about the way authorities in Serbia take care of the important historical places. Then again, maybe The First World War isn’t so significant event after all? You can bet on it.

the corner of Narodnog fronta and Kamenicke

The corner of Narodnog fronta and Kamenicke street.

 

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Comment by Owen | 2008-10-10

Why do I have to do arithmetic here and not for the latest comment? And is font size the sq

Comment by Owen | 2008-10-10

Why do I have to do arithmetic here and not for the latest comment? And is font size the square root of the spam-check sum?

And why do I get my previous comment offered back to me when I want to ask why most of it has burrowed under the right-hand side bar?

Just beta-testing you.

Comment by Owen | 2008-10-10

And why does the burrowing only happen with the first comment? And why do the third and fourth in an ongoing series just not appear?

Comment by Owen | 2008-10-10

But the fifth did appear - I won't hammer the nail through to the other side of the plank so no comment on what happens to this one. But feel free to delete the lot.

Comment by Viktor | 2008-10-11

Now my comment won't appear as well...

Comment by Viktor | 2008-10-11

hm, it ate my previous comment without warning.
Thanks for being the part of the experiment, Owen! As you can see, we're still testing this cutting-edge "internet" technology...