City and municipality in Bosnia and Hercegovina
City
Gradiška municipality by population proportional to the settlement with the highest and lowest population Gradiška (Serbian Cyrillic :Градишка ) is a city inRepublika Srpska ,Bosnia and Herzegovina . As of 2013, it has a population of 51,727 inhabitants, while the city of Gradiška has a population of 14,368 inhabitants.
It is geographically located in easternKrajina region, and the town is situated on theLijevče plain, on the right bank of theSava river across fromStara Gradiška ,Croatia , and about 40 km (25 mi) north ofBanja Luka .
In theRoman period this town was of strategic importance; a port of the Roman fleet was situated here. Among notable archaeological findings are aviaduct .
Gradiški Brod is mentioned for the first time as a town inc. 1330. It had a major importance as the location where the Sava river used to be crossed. By 1537, the town and its surroundings came under Ottoman rule.
TheOttoman built a fortress, which served as theBosnia Eyalet 's northern defense line. The town was also calledBerbir because of the fortress.
Following the outbreak of theFirst Serbian Uprising (1804), in theSanjak of Smederevo (modernCentral Serbia ), theJančić's Revolt broke out in the Gradiška region against theOttoman government in theBosnia Eyalet , following the erosion of the economic, national and religious rights ofSerbs .Hajduks also arrived from Serbia, and were especially active on theKozara .Jovan Jančić Sarajlija organized the uprising with help from MetropolitanBenedikt Kraljević . The peasants took up arms on 23 September 1809, in the region of Gradiška, beginning fromMašići . The fighting began on 25 September, and on the same night, the Ottomans captured and executed Jančić. The rebels retreated to their villages, except those in Kozara and Motajica who continued, and offered strong resistance until their defeat in mid-October, after extensive looting and burning of villages by the Ottomans.[ 1] Another revolt broke out in 1834, in Mašići.[ 2]
Ottoman rule ended with theAustro-Hungarian occupation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (1878), following theHerzegovina Uprising (1875–77) .Austro-Hungarian rule in Bosnia and Herzegovina ended in 1918, when the South Slavic Austro-Hungarian territories proclaimed theState of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs , which subsequently joined theKingdom of Serbia into theKingdom of Yugoslavia .
From 1929 to 1941 Gradiška was part of theVrbas Banovina of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
DuringYugoslavia , the town was known asBosanska Gradiška (Босанска Градишка ). During theBosnian War , the town was incorporated intoRepublika Srpska (RS). After the war, the RS National Assembly changed the name, omittingbosanska ("Bosnian"), as was done with many other towns (Kostajnica ,Dubica ,Novi Grad ,Petrovo ,Šamac ).
In the night of18 November 2004 ,Catholic priest andparson Kazimir Višaticki wasmurdered in theclergy house of the St. Roch parish in Gradiška.[ 3]
Aside from the town of Gradiška, the municipality includes total of 74 other settlements:
Population of settlements – Gradiška municipality Settlement 1885. 1895. 1910. 1921. 1931. 1948 1953. 1961. 1971. 1981. 1991. 2013. Total 29,962 37,797 41,868 45,190 57,235 46,013 48,056 50,143 53,581 58,095 59,974 51,727 1 Berek 482 412 2 Bistrica 795 432 3 Bok Jankovac 754 1,161 4 Brestovčina 360 1,027 5 Bukovac 349 371 6 Čatrnja 768 697 7 Cerovljani 604 367 8 Čikule 369 255 9 Cimiroti 331 202 10 Donji Karajzovci 600 548 11 Donji Podgradci 957 758 12 Dubrave 2,581 1,534 13 Elezagići 561 528 14 Gašnica 443 324 15 Gornja Lipovača 992 500 16 Gornji Karajzovci 537 484 17 Gornji Podgradci 2,378 1,656 18 Gradiška 5,590 9,932 6,363 9,585 13.475 16,841 14,368 19 Grbavci 991 594 20 Jablanica 745 438 21 Kijevci 381 212 22 Kočićevo 631 463 23 Kozinci 908 1,661 24 Krajišnik 528 617 25 Kruškik 1,074 1,119 26 Laminci Brezici 1,415 1,847 27 Laminci Dubrave 591 438 28 Laminci Jaružani 394 287 29 Laminci Sređani 574 456 30 Liskovac 1,467 1,080 31 Lužani 275 238 32 Mačkovac 476 266 33 Mašići 1,359 1,153 34 Miloševo Brdo 439 241 35 Nova Topola 2,191 2,324 36 Orahova 2,479 1,185 37 Petrovo Selo 358 329 38 Rogolji 741 668 39 Romanovci 1,199 976 40 Rovine 1,016 1,422 41 Seferovci 502 504 42 Sovjak 307 208 43 Trebovljani 425 348 44 Trošelji 550 559 45 Turjak 415 268 46 Vakuf 416 342 47 Vilusi 887 736 48 Vrbaška 1,057 779 49 Žeravica 335 482
Ethnic composition – Gradiška city Nationality 2013. 1991. 1981. 1971. Total 14,368 (100,0%) 16,841 (100,0%) 13,475 (100,0%) 9,585 (100,0%) Serbs 11,122 (77,41%) 6,502 (38,61%) 4,251 (31,55%) 2,911 (30,37%) Bosniaks 2,408 (16,76%) 7,188 (42,68%) 5,033 (37,35%) 5,377 (56,10%) Croats 294 (2,046%) 781 (4,637%) 730 (5,417%) 808 (8,430%) Unaffiliated 214 (1,489%) Others 174 (1,211%) 582 (3,456%) 99 (0,735%) 121 (1,262%) Yugoslavs 38 (0,264%) 1,788 (10,62%) 3 218 (23,88%) 306 (3,192%) Roma 34 (0,237%) 42 (0,312%) 9 (0,094%) Albanians 29 (0,202%) 44 (0,327%) 25 (0,261%) Ukrainians 17 (0,118%) Unknown 16 (0,111%) Montenegrins 14 (0,097%) 29 (0,215%) 12 (0,125%) Slovenes 5 (0,035%) 20 (0,148%) 14 (0,146%) Macedonians 3 (0,021%) 9 (0,067%) 2 (0,021%)
Ethnic composition – Gradiška Municipality Nationality 2013. 1991. 1981. 1971. Total 51,727 (100,0%) 59,974 (100,0%) 58,095 (100,0%) 53,581 (100,0%) Serbs 41,863 (80,93%) 35,753 (59,61%) 32,825 (56,50%) 35,038 (65,39%) Bosniaks 7,580 (14,65%) 15,851 (26,43%) 13,026 (22,42%) 12,688 (23,68%) Croats 826 (1,597%) 3,417 (5,697%) 3,544 (6,100%) 4,415 (8,240%) Unaffiliated 416 (0,804%) Roma 395 (0,764%) 232 (0,399%) 29 (0,054%) Others 340 (0,657%) 1,642 (2,738%) 660 (1,136%) 849 (1,585%) Ukrainians 111 (0,215%) Yugoslavs 76 (0,147%) 3,311 (5,521%) 7,638 (13,15%) 415 (0,775%) Unknown 43 (0,083%) Albanians 30 (0,058%) 70 (0,120%) 56 (0,105%) Montenegrins 29 (0,056%) 57 (0,098%) 61 (0,114%) Slovenes 14 (0,027%) 31 (0,053%) 25 (0,047%) Macedonians 4 (0,008%) 12 (0,021%) 5 (0,009%)
Serbian Orthodox church in Gradiška. Monument dedicated to the fallen Serb fighters of theBosnian War Memorial fountain dedicated toDiana Budisavljević The town has aSerbian Orthodox cathedral dedicated to theMother of God . There is also amosque called theDžamija Begluk .
Local football clubKozara have played in the top tier of theBosnia and Herzegovina football pyramid but spent most seasons in the country's second levelFirst League of the Republika Srpska .
The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2018):[ 4]
Activity Total Agriculture, forestry and fishing 320 Mining and quarrying 4 Manufacturing 2,916 Electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply 171 Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities 234 Construction 267 Wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles 1,956 Transportation and storage 452 Accommodation and food services 543 Information and communication 71 Financial and insurance activities 114 Real estate activities 24 Professional, scientific and technical activities 323 Administrative and support service activities 77 Public administration and defense; compulsory social security 581 Education 840 Human health and social work activities 661 Arts, entertainment and recreation 62 Other service activities 222 Total 9,838
Alojzije Mišić , Roman Catholic bishopAmar Hrnjić Bosnian footballerAtif Dudaković , Bosnian war-time army generalBranko Grahovac , football goalkeeperDženan Čišija , Swedish politicianGoran Zakarić , Bosnian footballerKristajan Zelonka Serbian footballerMarko Marin , German footballerMilan Janković , footballerMiodrag Latinović , retired footballerNazif Hajdarović , footballerNordin Gerzić , Swedish footballerOgnjen Ožegović , Serbian footballer, European U-19 championOzren Perić , footballerRatko Varda , basketball playerSafet Halilović , politicianTatjana Pašalić , poker presenterVaso Čubrilović , politician and historian, member of Black Hand organisation and participant inthe conspiracy to kill Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria .Veljko Čubrilović , member of Black Hand organisationVinko Marinović , former Serbian footballer, now managerVlado Jagodić , former footballer, now managerZlatko Janjić , footballerZvjezdan Misimović , Bosnian footballerInternational relations [ edit ] Twin towns and sister cities [ edit ] Gradiška istwinned with:[ 5]
Gradiška also cooperates with:[ 6]
Banja Luka , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Bihać , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Bijeljina , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Bosanska Krupa , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Cazin , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Čelinac , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Doboj , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Kozarska Dubica , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Foča , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Goražde , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Gračanica , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Gradačac , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Kalesija , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Konjic , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Maglaj , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Modriča , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Mostar , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Novi Grad , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Odžak , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Orašje , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Prijedor , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Prnjavor , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Sanski Most , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Srebrenik , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Šamac , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Teslić , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Tešanj , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Tuzla , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Vareš , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Velika Kladuša , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Žepče , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Živinice , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2016)Laktaši , Bosnia and Herzegovina (2018)Čačak , Serbia (2018)Herceg Novi , Montenegro (2018)Hersonissos , Greece (2018)Labin , Croatia (2018)Nova Gorica , Slovenia (2018)Ragusa , Italy (2018)Shkodër , Albania (2018)Tirana , Albania (2018)Daruvar , Croatia (2020)Lipik , Croatia (2020)Jesi , Italy (2020)Marche , Italy (2020)Mošćenička Draga , Croatia (2020)Kotor , Montenegro (2020)Tepelenë , Albania (2020)Wikimedia Commons has media related to
Gradiška .
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Republika Srpska