Tomislavgrad
Tomislavgrad | |
---|---|
Country | Bosnia and Herzegovina |
Government | |
• Municipality president | Ivan Vukadin (HDZ BiH) |
Population (1991 census) | |
• Total | 30,009 |
Time zone | UTC+1 (CET) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+2 (CEST) |
Area code | +387 34 |
Website | http://www.duvno-online.com |
Tomislavgrad, known as Duvno in the former Yugoslavia, is a town in southwestern Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is in the Herzeg-Bosnia Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Demographics
1971
33.135 total
- Bosnian Croats - 29.272 (88,34%)
- Bosnian Muslims (Bosniaks) - 2.760 (8,32%)
- Bosnian Serbs - 970 (2,92%)
- Yugoslavs - 40 (0,12%)
- Others - 93 (0,30%)
1981
30.666 total
- Bosnian Croats - 26.712 (87,10%)
- Bosniaks - 2.895 (9,44%)
- Bosnian Serbs - 671 (2,18%)
- Yugoslavs - 256 (0,83%)
- Others - 132 (0,45%)
1991
In 1991 there were 30,009 residents in the municipality of Tomislavgrad, including:
- 25,976 Bosnian Croats (86.56%)
- 3,148 Bosniaks (10.49%)
- 576 Bosnian Serbs (1.91%)
- 107 Yugoslavs (0.35%)
- 202 others and unknown (0.69%)
The town itself had 5,993 inhabitants, including:
- 67% Bosnian Croats
- 27% Bosniaks
- 4% Bosnian Serbs
- 1% Yugoslavs
- 1% others
History
There has been settlement in the area since Roman times when the town was known as Daelminium. When the Croats settled the area in the seventh century it was renamed to Županjac.
In 1925 the town was renamed to Tomislavgrad (Tomislav's City), in a celebration for king Tomislav I who was crowned in the vicinity 925.
In 1945, there was a crackdown on Croatian nationalism by the socialist state of Yugoslavia, resulting in the town's name being changed to Duvno. When Yugoslavia dissolved in the 1990s, the town was again renamed to Tomislavgrad. The biggest village in Tomislavgrad is Vinica.
Villages
Baljci, Blažuj, Bogdašić, Borčani, Bukova Gora, Bukovica, Cebara, Crvenice, Ćavarov Stan, Dobrići, Donji Brišnik, Eminovo Selo, Galečić, Gornja Prisika, Gornji Brišnik, Grabovica, Jošanica, Kazaginac, Kolo, Kongora, Korita, Kovači, Krnjin, Kuk, Letka, Lipa, Liskovača, Lug, Mandino Selo, Mesihovina, Mijakovo Polje, Mokronoge, Mrkodol, Omerovići, Omolje, Oplećani, Pasić, Podgaj, Prisoje, Radoši, Rašćani, Rašeljke, Renići, Roško Polje, Rošnjače, Sarajlije, Seonica, Srđani, Stipanjići, Šujica, Tomislavgrad, Vedašić, Vinica, Vojkovići, Vranjače, Vrilo, Zaljiće, Zaljut i Zidine.
See also
STIPANJICI