• Serbia Vrbas Oblast, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes Vrbas Banovina, Kingdom of Yugoslavia All pages with titles containing Vrbas Vrba (disambiguation)...
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  • pages with titles containing Vrba Vrbas (disambiguation) This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Vrba. If an internal link led you...
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  • Rudolf Vrba (born Walter Rosenberg; 11 September 1924 – 27 March 2006) was a Slovak-Jewish biochemist who, as a teenager in 1942, was deported to the Auschwitz...
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  • Thumbnail for Vrbas, Serbia
    Serbian. During the SFRY period, the town was renamed Titov Vrbas (meaning 'Tito's Vrbas'), after Josip Broz Tito. Like all other towns in communist Yugoslavia...
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  • Thumbnail for Vrbas Oblast
    Vrbas Oblast (Serbo-Croatian: Врбас област, romanized: Vrbas Oblast) was one of the oblasts of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes from 1922 to 1929...
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  • Thumbnail for Vrbas (river)
    The Vrbas (Serbian Cyrillic: Врбас, pronounced [ʋr̩̂ba(ː)s]) is a major river with a length of 250 kilometres (160 mi), in western Bosnia and Herzegovina...
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  • Thumbnail for Vrba–Wetzler report
    The Vrba–Wetzler report is one of three documents that comprise what is known as the Auschwitz Protocols, otherwise known as the Auschwitz Report or the...
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  • klub Vrbas (Serbian Cyrillic: Омладински кошаркашки клуб Врбас; transl. Vrbas Youth Basketball Club), commonly referred to as OKK Vrbas or KK Vrbas, is...
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  • Thumbnail for Vrbas Banovina
    The Vrbas Banovina or Vrbas Banate (Serbo-Croatian: Vrbaska banovina / Врбаска бановина), was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between...
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  • Thumbnail for Elisabeth Vrba
    Elisabeth S. Vrba (born May 17, 1942) is a paleontologist at Yale University who developed the turnover-pulse hypothesis. Vrba earned her Ph.D. in Zoology...
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