It seems that I can enter the Schengen visa, but unfortunately I have used it up once.
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Kosovo Museum Highlights: Must-See Features and Attractions
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The predecessor of the Kosovo Museum was a local administrative building, and later became the army headquarters of the former Yugoslavia. It only became a museum of Kosovo in 1963. The Kosovo Museum chronicles the difficult journey of Kosovo's statehood, supported by the United States and European Union countries. There are some archaeological artifacts on display in the museum, as well as some retrospectives on the history of Kosovo before the Middle Ages.
Explore near Kosovo Museum: Where to Stay, Eat, and Visit
Kosovo Museum Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
Some reviews may have been translated by Google Translate
It seems that I can enter the Schengen visa, but unfortunately I have used it up once.
The Kosovo region, located in southwest Serbia, is an autonomous region of Serbia, adjacent to Montenegro, Albania and North Macedonia. Kosovo covers an area of about 1.09 10,000 square kilometers and has a population of about 1.81 million (2022). The capital, Pristina, has a population of about 600,000 and is the most populous city in the region. Kosovo declared independence in 2008, and about half of the world's countries now recognize its status, but Kosovo is not in the United Nations. Neither Russia nor Ukraine recognizes its status, with Russia, Ukraine and Serbia all Orthodox countries, with Kosovo in the majority of Albanians, mainly believing in Islam.
Formerly the local administrative building of the Ottoman province of Kosovo, it has since been transformed into a museum. The museum contains a large collection of archaeological and ethnic relics, perhaps best known as the goddess on the throne of the terracotta statue unearthed in Pristina in 1960, and the city's insignia.
Kosovo, a conservative war-torn country, is not known for a long time.
A large number of archaeological and ethnic artifacts include the terracotta statue "Goddess on the Throne" (Goddess on the Throne), unearthed in Pristina in 1960, which became the city's badge.