Čakovec ( Croatian pronunciation: [tʃâkoʋets] ; Hungarian : Csáktornya ; Latin : Aquama ; German : Tschakathurn ) is a city in Northern Croatia , located around 90 kilometres (56 miles) north of Zagreb , the Croatian capital. Čakovec is both the county seat and the largest city of Međimurje County , the northernmost, smallest and most densely populated Croatian county .
28-411: The city administrative area of Čakovec includes the following settlements : The adjacent villages of Belica , Nedelišće , Pribislavec , Strahoninec and Šenkovec are seats of separate municipalities, although they are all located within 5 km (3 mi) of the city's centre. At the 2001 census, the city of Čakovec had a population of 15,790 within its limits, which was a slight decrease from
56-607: A Gymnasium and three high schools that offer education in the fields of technology, crafts, economics and construction . The Teacher's Training College ( Croatian : Visoka učiteljska škola ) is the city's only institution for higher education that lasts more than 3 years. In recent years, the city opened its own institution of higher education called MEV - Međimursko veleučilište u Čakovcu (Polytechnic of Međimurje in Čakovec), offering 3-year studies (180 ECTS points) in Computer Science and Management of Tourism and Sport. The city
84-471: A big estate where industry, crafts and trade developed. In 1848, the ban Josip Jelačić captured Čakovec from the Hungarians and annexed it with Croatia. The first railroad track was built here in 1860 to help connect Budapest with the ports of Fiume and Trieste . Another earthquake hit the town in 1880. The town was connected by railroad with Mursko Središće and Lendava in 1889 and in 1893 electricity
112-570: A central bus station with a taxi rank, located near the central square. In the adjacent village of Pribislavec there's a small sports airport, where an annual aero-meeting takes place, as well as panoramic flights over the city and county in the summer. The airport is located approximately three kilometers east from the downtown. The city districts/neighborhoods ( Croatian : gradske četvrti/kvartovi ) of Čakovec are: I. Centar II. Jug III. Martane IV. Buzovec V. Sajmište VI. Globetka VII. Špice The sports-related activities in
140-403: A few confectioners' shops and restaurants. Other businesses in the town center are mostly clothing stores, bookshops, electronics stores and finance companies. A hospital and the central bus station are located only a few steps from town centre. The largest hotel in Čakovec is located across the park, about 300–400 meters from the central square, and there is also a smaller one in close proximity of
168-535: A free market town and the date is celebrated today as "City Day". The Čakovec Castle which was owned by the House of Zrinski between the 16th and the 18th century is known today as the "Zrinski Old Town" ( Stari grad Zrinskih ) and is considered the main landmark of the city. It is located in the Zrinski Park ( Perivoj Zrinskih ) only a few steps from the central square. When count Johann Michael von Althan became
196-449: A part of the center for sports and recreation and hosted several group matches of the 2003 World Women's Handball Championship . Beginning in the late 1990s and early 2000s several large shopping centers and car showrooms emerged in the city, mostly in its northwestern part. Čakovec was twice rewarded The Green Flower award for the tidiest continental city in Croatia, in 2008 and 2009. Čakovec
224-473: Is a relatively new neighborhood, with modern houses and buildings including the Church of Saint Anthony of Padua ( Crkva Svetog Antuna Padovanskog ) and a new elementary school with a sports hall, outdoor basketball and handball grounds and a running track. The city has a casino, designed by architect Henrik Böhm . At the central square there is a library, a theater, a cinema, a large shopping center and
252-463: Is also known for its School of Animated Film (ŠAF - Škola Animiranog Filma), which has been hosting an annual international animated film summer workshop for several decades, bringing world-renowned animators to Čakovec. The city of Čakovec has a highly developed industry and it is the focal point for communication , business , trade and education in the Međimurje County. The economy of
280-407: Is considered to have started on 15 March 1546, when Nikola IV Zrinski of Szigetvár became the owner of the area. At that time the castle was lavishly decorated, surrounded by a park and sculptures of famous army leaders and monarchs. Duke Juraj IV Zrinski granted privileges to the inhabitants of the Čakovec fortress and its suburbs on 29 May 1579. This was the starting point for Čakovec to become
308-787: Is the first city of the former Yugoslavia to have installed completely electronic information spots, located at the Republic Square and the Franciscan Square in the Center and at the Square of Saint Anthony of Padua in the Jug district. Čakovec is known as the city of traffic circles , because, during the late 1990s and early 2000s, all of its traffic lights in the inner part of the city were removed and replaced with traffic circles or rotaries, virtually eliminating traffic jams. The only remaining traffic lights in
SECTION 10
#1732870078164336-681: Is usually named by the largest or most urban settlement and typically includes several rural settlements. The Constitution of Croatia allows a naselje or a part thereof to form some form of local government . This form of local government is typically used to subdivide larger municipalities and cities; municipality may comprise several units named mjesni odbor (local committee/board), a city usually consists of several units (which may comprise one or more settlements) named gradski kotar/gradska četvrt ( city district or borough ; pl. gradski kotari/gradske četvrti ), and/or mjesni odbor (local committee/board; pl. mjesni odbori ). Historically,
364-405: The 1991 census, when it was 15,999. With its surrounding suburbs included it had a population of 30,455 at the 2001 census. The city's present day population primarily consists of ethnic Croats at 93.8%, with the largest minority being Romani at 3.8% of the municipality. Other ethnic groups are Serbs , Hungarians , Slovenes and Albanians . According to the geographer Strabo 's reports in
392-461: The 1st century, today's location of the city of Čakovec was the site of Aquama ( wet town ) in Roman times and at the time a marshland, a military post and a legionnaire camp. The name Čakovec ( Hungarian : Csáktornya , German : Csakathurn or Tschakathurn ) comes from the first name of the ispán Csák Hahót . With the beginning of the 13th century he erected the timber fortification which
420-607: The basis of official settlement (naselje) data from the Register of Spatial Units by the State Geodetic Administration. As of 2023 , there are 6 757 settlements in Croatia. Rural individual settlements are usually referred to as selo (village; pl. sela ). Municipalities (or communes) in Croatia comprise one or more either urban or rural settlements. A city usually includes an eponymous large settlement and several urban, suburban or rural settlements. A municipality
448-440: The city are located on the southern bypass. Although Čakovec is a small city by global parameters, its large working force which comes from all over the county, its location and importance in the region caused many traffic jams on the crossroads. Čakovec is home of many famous Croatian punk bands, including Bakterije and Motorno Ulje. The city of Čakovec currently has three elementary schools and several secondary schools including
476-436: The city is based on textile, footwear, food processing and metal plants. The Čakovec-based company TIZ Zrinski is the largest printing and publishing company in the county as well as one of the major such companies in northern Croatia. Many books published in the country are printed in this factory. The city is also a base for several companies engaged in construction, production of building materials, and plastics . Some of
504-469: The city of Čakovec are mostly centered in its northwestern part, where the center for sports and recreation is located. The center includes a football and athletics stadium with 7,000 places, an indoor hall mostly used for handball, basketball and volleyball matches and a swimming pool complex, where several swimming schools are organized throughout the year. Čakovec is currently twinned with these cities or municipalities: This list contains some of
532-522: The historical buildings in Čakovec are located in the town center or in the centrally located Zrinski Park , and the town's historical core has been well preserved. The Čakovec Castle near the park houses a museum with some 17,000 exhibits. Other landmark buildings in the town centre are a palace built in the Vienna Secession style ( Secesijska palača ), and Saint Nicholas' Church ( Crkva Svetog Nikole ). The Southern Čakovec ( Čakovečki jug )
560-433: The largest companies based in the city include the textile and clothing manufacturers Čateks and Međimurska trikotaža Čakovec (MTČ) as well as the footwear manufacturer Jelen, while the companies Čakovečki mlinovi (bakery) and Vajda (meat products) are major fresh food producers in the city. Promming is also one of the biggest factories in Čakovec, they produce metal shelves designed specially for supermarkets. Most of
588-399: The late 1990s and throughout the 2000s, several modern buildings were built and opened to the public. In 1999, a brand new fitness complex including four indoor swimming pools and a jacuzzi was opened as part of the city's center for sports and recreation. In 2003 a renovated sports hall, originally built in the 1970s and belonging to the construction industry high school, was also opened as
SECTION 20
#1732870078164616-722: The main square. The city of Čakovec is easily accessible by road or a railroad track. The road infrastructure is good and includes a new expressway connecting the Hungary border-crossing point in Goričan with Zagreb , Karlovac and the Adriatic Sea coast. There is also a southern bypass which was built in the beginning of the second half of the first decade in the 21st century. The city is connected to local municipalities with an efficient public transportation system. It has two train stations: Čakovec main train station and Čakovec-Buzovec, as well as
644-404: The methodology of delineating settlements in Croatia changed substantially in the first decade after World War II , when the number of settlements was recorded at 12,044 in the 1948 census, but then reduced to 6,704 in the 1953 census. At the time, the definition of a settlement was an inhabited place with a separate name, an independent settlement was a settlement that had a distinct territory, and
672-1111: The notable people who were either born in Čakovec, lived in the city for a longer time or were in some significant way related to it. Bjelovar , Bjelovar-Bilogora Slavonski Brod , Brod-Posavina Dubrovnik , Dubrovnik-Neretva Pazin , Istria Karlovac , Karlovac Koprivnica , Koprivnica-Križevci Krapina , Krapina-Zagorje Gospić , Lika-Senj Čakovec , Međimurje Osijek , Osijek-Baranja Požega , Požega-Slavonia Rijeka , Primorje-Gorski Kotar Sisak , Sisak-Moslavina Split , Split-Dalmatia Šibenik , Šibenik-Knin Varaždin , Varaždin Virovitica , Virovitica-Podravina Vukovar , Vukovar-Srijem Zadar , Zadar Zagreb , Zagreb 46°23′09″N 16°26′00″E / 46.38583°N 16.43333°E / 46.38583; 16.43333 Naselje Settlements in Croatia , in Croatian naselje ( pl. naselja ) are
700-510: The owner of Međimurje in 1719, the next year Čakovec and the whole region was detached from Croatia and included into Zala county (i.e. into the main part of the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary ). In 1738, the town was devastated by an earthquake, in 1741 by a large fire. At the end of the 18th century, the owners of the town became counts from the Festetics family , and the town was turned into
728-767: The third-level spatial division of the country, and usually indicate existing or former human settlement . Each Croatian city or town ( grad , pl. gradovi ) or municipality ( općina , pl. općine ) consists of one or more settlements. A settlement can be part of only one second-level spatial division, whose territory is the sum of exclusive settlement territories. Settlements are not necessarily incorporated places , as second-level local authorities (towns and municipalities), known as jedinice lokalne samouprave , delegate some of their functions to so-called jedinice mjesne samouprave ( gradski kotar , gradska četvrt , or područje mjesnog odbora ). The Croatian Bureau of Statistics publishes their decennial census data on
756-564: Was introduced. Čakovec was the seat of a district ( Hungarian : járás ) in Zala county of the Kingdom of Hungary until 1918 when it was captured by an armed force on behalf of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes . It again became part of Hungary between 1941-45 during World War II, until it was returned on 6 April 1945 by the Soviet Red Army with Marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin in command. In
784-577: Was later named Csák's tower ( Croatian : Čakov toranj ). It was mentioned for the first time in 1328 and the place appeared in the official books in 1333. From 1350 to 1397, it was in the possession of the House of Laczkfy , from 1405 to 1461 of the Counts of Celje and from 1473 to 1540 of the House of Ernušt . The town as well as Međimurje region was at the time part of the Varaždin county . The period of more significant economic and cultural growth of Čakovec
#163836