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Bijelo Brdo

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Bijelo Brdo ( Serbian Cyrillic : Бијело Брдо , Hungarian : Darnó , German : Wellibardo ) is a village in the Erdut municipality in eastern Croatia . It is connected by the D213 road and by R202 railway . It has a total of 1,961 inhabitants (2011).

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12-603: Bijelo Brdo ( lit.   ' white hill ' ) may refer to: Bijelo Brdo, Croatia , a village near Erdut, Croatia Bijelo Brdo, Derventa , a village in Bosnia and Herzegovina Bijelo Brdo culture , an early medieval archaeological culture named after the Croatian village NK BSK Bijelo Brdo , a Croatian football club based in the village of Bijelo Brdo See also [ edit ] Belo Brdo [REDACTED] Topics referred to by

24-547: A total of 2,400 inhabitants, out of which Serbs 1,941 (80.87%), Croats 217 (9.04%), Yugoslavs 97 (4.04%), and other smaller communities. 45°31′03″N 18°52′23″E  /  45.51750°N 18.87306°E  / 45.51750; 18.87306 This Osijek-Baranja County geography article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Osijek-Baranja County Osijek-Baranja County ( pronounced [ôsijeːk bǎraɲa] , Croatian : Osječko-baranjska županija , Hungarian : Eszék-Baranya megye )

36-568: Is a county in Croatia , located in northeastern Slavonia and Baranja which is defined part of the Pannonian Plain . Its center is Osijek . Other towns include Đakovo , Našice , Valpovo , Belišće , and Beli Manastir . Osijek-Baranja County was established in 1992, with border changes in 1997. The Stifolder or Stiffoller Shvove are a Roman Catholic subgroup of the so-called Danube Swabians . Their ancestors arrived ca. 1717 - 1804 from

48-528: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Bijelo Brdo, Croatia The village is situated 15 km east from Osijek , in the Slavonia region on the banks of the Stara Drava branch, in the micro-region of Erdutska kosa , at an altitude of 93m above sea level. It covers an area of 36.64 km². Bijelo Brdo is important for archeological findings from

60-399: Is named after the people. Current Župan (prefect) : Ivan Anušić ( HDZ ) The county assembly is composed of 55 representatives, organized as follows: Directly elected minority councils and representatives are tasked with consulting tasks for the local or regional authorities in which they are advocating for minority rights and interests, integration into public life and participation in

72-621: The Bronze Age (Transdanubian cultural group) and two medieval cemeteries: one Avar-Slavic from VII-IX. century and another from X-XI. century, which became the eponymous site of the Bijelo Brdo culture . Before the Ottoman rule , the village was once called Trnovac , the neighboring Hungarians called it Dorno . During the Ottoman rule, the population from upper Podrinje and Polimlje settled here. During

84-614: The Vienna War (1683–1699), at the time of the Turkish withdrawal the settlement was destroyed and the inhabitants fled to Bosnia. A considerable number of Serbs, in the almost desolate Trnovac, settled at the time of the Great Migrations of the Serbs under Arsenije III Čarnojević . In 1706, the village numbered 63 houses and in that year became part of a Dalj estate. The colonization of Slavonia

96-667: The Hochstift Fulda and surroundings ( Roman Catholic Diocese of Fulda ), and settled in the Baranja area, such as in Jagodnjak, etc. They retained their own German dialect and culture, until the end of WW2. After WW2, the majority of Danube Swabians were expelled to Allied-occupied Germany and Allied-occupied Austria as a consequence of the Potsdam Agreement . Only a few people can speak the old Stiffolerisch Schvovish dialect. A salami

108-550: The county elected their own local minority councils as well. Several minorities in Osijek-Baranja County have their Minority Councils. Here is the list of minorities' Councils with links to their respective Statutes and name of Osijek-Baranja County in their language. Bosniaks , Montenegrins , Macedonians , Rusyns and Slovenes have one representative each. The Serbian Joint Council of Municipalities , consisting of Erdut , Jagodnjak and Šodolovci municipalities

120-451: The management of local affairs. At the 2023 Croatian national minorities councils and representatives elections Albanians , Germans , Hungarians , Roma , Serbs and Slovaks of Croatia each fulfilled legal requirements to elect 25 members minority councils of the Osijek-Baranja County while Bosniaks , Macedonians , Montenegrins and Slovenes of Croatia electing individual representatives. Numerous municipalities, towns or cities in

132-429: The same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bijelo_Brdo&oldid=1252509256 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

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144-432: Was carried out in a systematic fashion through centuries but particularly during the period of WWII. Among people inhabiting poor areas, Slavonia was famed as a promised land which could feed large numbers of people, where there was a lot of fertile land and favorable living conditions. The 2011 census recorded a total of 1,961 inhabitants. The 2001 census had a total of 2,119 inhabitants in 720 households. 1991 census,

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