Goražde

{{For|the village in Montenegro|Goražde, Berane Municipality}}

{{More citations needed|date=October 2008}}

{{Infobox settlement

| name = Goražde

| official_name = Grad Goražde
Град Горажде
City of Goražde

| native_name = {{lang|sr|Горажде}}

| image_skyline = Goražde (collage).jpg

| imagesize = 300px

| image_caption = Goražde

| image_seal = Grb Gorazde.jpg

| settlement_type = City

| subdivision_type = Country

| subdivision_name = {{BIH}}

| subdivision_type1 = Entity

| subdivision_name1 = Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina

| subdivision_type2 = Canton

| subdivision_name2 = {{flag|Bosnian-Podrinje Canton}}

| subdivision_type3 = Geographical region

| subdivision_name3 = Podrinje

| leader_title = Mayor

| leader_name = Ernest Imamović

| leader_party = SDP BiH

| map_caption = Location of Goražde within Bosnia and Herzegovina

| image_map = BiH municipality location Goražde.svg

| area_total_km2 = 248.8

| area_urban_km2 = 23.8

| population_total = 20,897

| population_urban = 11,806

(4 local communities 13,970)

| population_as_of = 2013 census

| population_density_urban_km2 = 1944.97 (586.97)

| pushpin_map =

| pushpin_label_position =

| pushpin_map_caption =

| pushpin_mapsize =

| coordinates = {{coord|43|40|07|N|18|58|32|E|region:BA|display=it}}

| elevation_m = 345

| timezone = CET

| utc_offset = +1

| timezone_DST = CEST

| utc_offset_DST = +2

| postal_code_type = Postal code

| postal_code = 73000

| area_code = +387 38

| website = {{URL|http://www.gorazde.ba}}

| footnotes =

}}

Goražde ({{lang-sr-cyrl|Горажде}}, {{IPA|sh|ɡǒraʒde|pron}}) is a city and the administrative center of the Bosnian-Podrinje Canton Goražde of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is situated on the banks of the Drina river. As of 2013, the city has a population of 20,897 inhabitants, while the urban centre has 11,806 inhabitants.{{cite web|title=Naseljena Mjesta 1991/2013|url=http://www.statistika.ba/?show=12&id=11452|publisher=Statistical Office of Bosnia and Herzegovina|accessdate=April 9, 2022|language=Bosnian}}

Location

Goražde is situated on the banks of the River Drina in southeastern Bosnia. The city lies at the foot of the eastern slope of the Jahorina mountain at a height of {{convert|345|m|0|abbr=on}} above sea level. The settlement is situated on the alluvial terrace in a broad valley, formed by the erosion of the River Drina. The valley borders Biserna to the southeast (701 m (2,300 ft)), Samari to the south (696 m (2,283 ft)), Misjak to the southwest (618 m (2,028 ft)), Gubavica to the west (410 m (1,345 ft)) and Povrsnica to the north (420 m (1,378 ft)).

The River Drina flows between these and some other hills. Its valley, which, since ancient times has been part of the route going from the sea to the mainland (Dubrovnik–Trebinje–Gacko–Foča–the Drina valley), is the main traffic artery in the southeastern region of Bosnia. In Goražde this route meets another route coming from Sarajevo and central Bosnia via the Jabuka Mountain, passes down to the Drina valley and proceeds on to Plevlje.

History

=Medieval period=

File:Goražde Drina 2.JPG

With Gornje Podrinje, Goražde was part of the old Serbian State up to 1376, when it was annexed to the Bosnian State under the reign of King Tvrtko. After Tvrtko's death the town was ruled by the Hum Dukes among whom the best known was Herzog Stjepan Vukčić Kosača.

In 1379, Goražde was first mentioned as a trading settlement and in 1444 as a fortress. The origin of the town's name seems to have come from the Slavonic word "gorazd".

The Goražde market became well known in 1415 when merchants from Dubrovnik had intensive commercial relations with it.

=Ottoman rule=

The Ottomans conquered Goražde in 1465 and the place assumed oriental features. In 1477 there were four mahals in the town. From 1550–1557 Mehmed-paša Sokolović built a stone bridge across the Drina and a caravanserai.

During the Turkish rule Goražde was a significant trading centre, being at the crossroads of two important roads: the Bosnian road and the Dubrovnik road. The gross state income from the land amounted to 24,256 akchi in 1477. In 1711 it amounted to 26,000 akchi.

Two mosques built by the Sijerčić beys date back to the 18th century. Near Goražde stands the Eastern Orthodox Church of Saint George, built in 1454 by Stjepan Vukčić Kosača for his wife. The Goražde printing house, located in the church complex, worked there from 1519 to 1521. This was the first printing house to be established in Bosnia and Herzegovina and the second in the Balkans.

The composition of the Goražde population can be traced from the times of the Austro-Hungarian occupation. The Orthodox inhabitants originate from Stari Vlah in Sandžak, Brda in Montenegro, Herzegovina and southern Serbia. Aside from a few ancestral inhabitants, the Muslim population began to come in great numbers to Goražde and its surroundings in the 17th century.

The decline of Goražde in the 18th century and the first half of the 19th century is attributed, among other things, to the plague. Up to the middle of the 19th century Goražde was part of the Herzegovinian Sandjak, when it then became part of the Sarajevo Sandjak.

=Austro-Hungarian rule=

The period of the Austro-Hungarian occupation was marked by the decline of Goražde, although there was at the same time a certain rise. Due to its geographical position on the border Goražde was during World War I one of the main strongholds of Austria-Hungary used against Serbia and Montenegro.

=Yugoslavia=

The interwar Yugoslav Goražde, being no longer a frontier town, had normal conditions under which it developed and prospered.

In 1941 German troops entered the town after an air raid on April 17. Later on Italian troops were also stationed there.

The National Liberation Army took over the town for the first time on January 27, 1942, and remained there until May of the same year. During this period the National Liberation Committees were formed for the town of Goražde on the basis of the Foča Stipulations. At the same time Goražde was the headquarters of the National Liberation Army for eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina. In early March 1942 the Commander-in-Chief, Marshal Tito stayed in Goražde. Goražde was liberated twice more, in 1943 and 1944, and on March 6, 1945 it was finally liberated from the occupation.

From the end of World War II to 1961, a considerable number of groups of families came to live in Goražde from the neighbouring villages and some from other further places, having been attracted by the economic growth of Goražde. According to the census of 1961 Goražde had 8,812 inhabitants.

Before World War II, the industry of Goražde consisted mainly of retail trade and to a certain extent wholesale trade, the catering industry, handicraft and transport. During the occupation, from 1941 to 1945, the industry was destroyed and about 45% of the existing houses as well.

After World War II, a new period marked by a tremendous social and economic rise began. A number of new industrial enterprises have been founded, among which the most significant is a nitrogen factory.

Since then Goražde's industry has been systematically developing, its main branches being manufacturing, building, transport, trade and crafts. In 1981 Goražde's GDP per capita was 70% of the Yugoslav average.{{cite book | title=Atlas svijeta: Novi pogled na Zemlju | year=1984 | edition=3rd | publisher=Sveučilišna naklada Liber | location=Zagreb | language=hr | editor1-first=Radovan | editor1-last=Radovinović | editor2-first=Ivan | editor2-last=Bertić}}

=Bosnian War=

{{main|Siege of Goražde}}

File:Goražde Mosque.JPG

From 1992 to 1995 during the Bosnian War, Goražde was one of six Bosniak enclaves, along with Srebrenica and Žepa, surrounded and besieged by the Bosnian Serb Army. In April 1993 it was made into a United Nations Safe Area in which the United Nations was supposed to deter attacks on the civilian population.{{cite web|url=http://www.beyondintractability.org/cic_documents/Safe-Havens-Bosnia.pdf |title=The Bosnian 'Safe Havens' |author=Sophie Haspeslagh |publisher=Beyondtractabiliity.org |access-date=2013-11-23}} Between March 30 and April 23, 1994, the Serbs launched a major offensive against the town. After air strikes against Serb tanks and outposts and a NATO ultimatum, Serbian forces agreed to withdraw their artillery and armored vehicles {{convert|20|km|0|abbr=on}} from the town.Regan Richard (1996). Just war: principles and cases. CUA Press, p. 203. {{ISBN|0-8132-0856-4}} On 28 May 1995 it was again targeted by the Bosnian Serbs, who launched an assault on UN guard posts, overwhelming 33 British UN servicemen from the Royal Welch Fusiliers manning four observation posts{{Cite web |date=1995-05-28 |title=Serbs take 33 Britons hostage |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/serbs-take-33-britons-hostage-1621572.html |access-date=2023-11-03 |website=The Independent |language=en}} on the west bank of the Drina. The remaining troops, who were stationed on the east bank, managed to slip away and helped Bosniak reinforcements to prevent Bosnian Serbs from taking a key hill overlooking the town. This action is credited with saving the town from suffering the same fate of Srebrenica, where the Bosnian Serbs continued the siege after the failed attempt.{{cite news|title=Fusiliers' battle to save Bosnians|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/wales/2535155.stm|publisher=BBC|date=5 December 2002}}

After the Dayton Agreement, a land corridor was established between Goražde and the Federation.

Settlements

{{div col|colwidth=18em}}

{{div col end}}

Demographics

= Population =

class="wikitable"

! colspan="7" |Population of settlements – Goražde municipality

|Settlement

|1961.

|1971.

|1981.

|1991.

|2013.

|Total

|31,303

|34,685

|36,924

|37,505

|20,897

1

|Baćci

|

|

|

|1,421

|1,120

2

|Bogušići

|

|

|

|295

|244

3

|Budići

|

|

|

|388

|324

4

|Čovčići

|

|

|

|356

|250

5

|Dučići

|

|

|

|277

|273

6

|Goražde

|

|9,482

|13,022

|16,273

|12,512

7

|Grabovik

|

|

|

|284

|239

8

|Mravinjac

|

|

|

|387

|249

9

|Potrkuša

|

|

|

|144

|237

10

|Sedlari

|

|

|

|391

|211

11

|Vitkovići

|

|

|

|1,080

|942

12

|Zupčići

|

|

|

|792

|382

=Ethnic composition=

class="wikitable"

! colspan="8" |Ethnic composition – Goražde city

|2013.

|1991.

|1981.

|1971.

Total

|12,512 (100,0%)

|16,273 (100,0%)

|13,022 (100,0%)

|9,482 (100,0%)

Bosniaks

|

|9,568 (58,80%)

|6,746 (51,80%)

|5,266 (55,54%)

Serbs

|

|5,584 (34,31%)

|4,376 (33,60%)

|3,675 (38,76%)

Yugoslavs

|

|663 (4,074%)

|1,495 (11,48%)

|100 (1,055%)

Others

|

|396 (2,433%)

|83 (0,637%)

|55 (0,580%)

Croats

|

|62 (0,381%)

|75 (0,576%)

|133 (1,403%)

Montenegrins

|

|

|198 (1,521%)

|212 (2,236%)

Albanians

|

|

|23 (0,177%)

|17 (0,179%)

Macedonians

|

|

|13 (0,100%)

|10 (0,105%)

Slovenes

|

|

|13 (0,100%)

|14 (0,148%)

class="wikitable"

! colspan="9" |Ethnic composition – Goražde municipality

|2013.

|1991.

|1981.

|1971.

|1961.

Total

|20,897 (100,0%)

|37,573 (100,0%)

|36,924 (100,0%)

|34,685 (100,0%)

|31,303 (100,0%)

Bosniaks

|19,692 (94,23%)

|26,296 (69,99%)

|25,142 (68,09%)

|24,544 (70,76%)

|19,305 (61.67%)

Serbs

|707 (3,383%)

|9,843 (26,20%)

|9,107 (24,66%)

|9,293 (26,79%)

|9,569 (30.57%)

Others

|475 (2,273%)

|565 (1,504%)

|153 (0,414%)

|115 (0,332%)

|614 (1.96%)

Croats

|23 (0,110%)

|80 (0,213%)

|99 (0,268%)

|179 (0,516%)

|314 (1.00%)

Yugoslavs

|

|789 (2,100%)

|2,017 (5,463%)

|168 (0,484%)

|1,501 (4.80%)

Montenegrins

|

|

|243 (0,658%)

|280 (0,807%)

|

Roma

|

|

|89 (0,241%)

|38 (0,110%)

|

Albanians

|

|

|41 (0,111%)

|26 (0,075%)

|

Slovenes

|

|

|17 (0,046%)

|30 (0,086%)

|

Macedonians

|

|

|16 (0,043%)

|12 (0,035%)

|

Environment

=Natural environment=

The surrounding region of Goražde is composed of Paleozoic and Permian shales, sandstones and carbon sedimentary rocks. The hills are for the most part rounded and with gentle slopes. The higher ones are composed of limestone. Goražde with its surroundings has a mainly equable and fresh mountainous climate. The average annual temperature is 10.8 °C and the rainfall is fairly evenly distributed throughout the year. The town is supplied with water from six springs. A part of the population gets drinking water from ordinary wells. The construction of a water supply system began in 1962 from a spring in Čajniče, {{convert|16.5|km|mi|abbr=on}} from Goražde.

The River Drina has great significance for the founding and development of Goražde.

The greatest floods recorded since the 17th century occurred in 1677, 1731, 1737, 1896, 1911, 1922, 1952, 1974 and 2010.

=Built environment=

The main characteristic of the layout of the town is its elongated shape along the Ustiprača–Foča road. From 1465 to 1878 Goražde was part of the Ottoman Empire. In the 18th and 19th centuries Goražde was inhabited by Muslim and Orthodox communities. Up to World War II Goražde was made up of two separate parts: A Muslim and an Orthodox part. Nowadays this divide is disappearing. After World War II the town began to expand and be modernized, new streets were built, public and residential buildings were built in the centre and in the outskirts. From 1945 to 1961, 1130 council flats and 680 private homes were built. In 1961 there were a total of 616 buildings in the town.

Climate

{{Weather box

|location = Goražde (1961–1990)

|metric first = Y

|single line = Y

| Jan record high C = 17.2

| Feb record high C = 21.2

| Mar record high C = 27.0

| Apr record high C = 31.2

| May record high C = 34.2

| Jun record high C = 35.8

| Jul record high C = 38.2

| Aug record high C = 38.2

| Sep record high C = 34.8

| Oct record high C = 30.5

| Nov record high C = 26.0

| Dec record high C = 20.6

|year record high C = 38.2

| Jan high C = 2.6

| Feb high C = 7.0

| Mar high C = 12.5

| Apr high C = 17.0

| May high C = 22.1

| Jun high C = 25.0

| Jul high C = 27.4

| Aug high C = 27.4

| Sep high C = 23.6

| Oct high C = 17.2

| Nov high C = 9.5

| Dec high C = 3.4

|year high C = 16.2

| Jan mean C = -1.0

| Feb mean C = 1.8

| Mar mean C = 5.8

| Apr mean C = 10.1

| May mean C = 14.5

| Jun mean C = 17.4

| Jul mean C = 19.0

| Aug mean C = 18.7

| Sep mean C = 15.4

| Oct mean C = 10.3

| Nov mean C = 5.0

| Dec mean C = 0.4

|year mean C = 9.8

| Jan low C = -4.7

| Feb low C = -2.8

| Mar low C = -0.4

| Apr low C = 3.2

| May low C = 7.5

| Jun low C = 11.1

| Jul low C = 12.3

| Aug low C = 12.0

| Sep low C = 9.6

| Oct low C = 5.5

| Nov low C = 0.9

| Dec low C = -2.8

|year low C = 4.3

| Jan record low C = -23.5

| Feb record low C = -20.0

| Mar record low C = -15.0

| Apr record low C = -5.0

| May record low C = -2.0

| Jun record low C = 0.0

| Jul record low C = 4.5

| Aug record low C = 3.0

| Sep record low C = -2.0

| Oct record low C = -6.0

| Nov record low C = -16.0

| Dec record low C = -19.0

|year record low C = -23.5

|precipitation colour = green

| Jan precipitation mm = 55.2

| Feb precipitation mm = 52.9

| Mar precipitation mm = 51.6

| Apr precipitation mm = 66.9

| May precipitation mm = 70.6

| Jun precipitation mm = 80.0

| Jul precipitation mm = 63.1

| Aug precipitation mm = 67.2

| Sep precipitation mm = 68.2

| Oct precipitation mm = 67.8

| Nov precipitation mm = 85.1

| Dec precipitation mm = 71.6

|year precipitation mm = 800.0

|unit precipitation days = 0.1 mm

| Jan precipitation days = 9.7

| Feb precipitation days = 10.3

| Mar precipitation days = 10.2

| Apr precipitation days = 11.9

| May precipitation days = 11.2

| Jun precipitation days = 12.7

| Jul precipitation days = 9.1

| Aug precipitation days = 8.2

| Sep precipitation days = 8.8

| Oct precipitation days = 8.3

| Nov precipitation days = 11.0

| Dec precipitation days = 11.8

|year precipitation days = 123.2

|unit snow days = 1.0 cm

| Jan snow days = 17.0

| Feb snow days = 11.9

| Mar snow days = 3.3

| Apr snow days = 0.3

| May snow days = 0.0

| Jun snow days = 0.0

| Jul snow days = 0.0

| Aug snow days = 0.0

| Sep snow days = 0.0

| Oct snow days = 0.1

| Nov snow days = 3.2

| Dec snow days = 12.7

|year snow days = 48.6

| Jan humidity = 89.7

| Feb humidity = 87.2

| Mar humidity = 83.7

| Apr humidity = 80.7

| May humidity = 80.1

| Jun humidity = 80.5

| Jul humidity = 79.3

| Aug humidity = 80.6

| Sep humidity = 83.6

| Oct humidity = 87.7

| Nov humidity = 89.1

| Dec humidity = 90.4

|year humidity = 84.4

|source 1 = Meteorological Institute of Bosnia and Herzegovina{{cite web

| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20180501014844/http://atlasklime.fhmzbih.gov.ba/en/data-access/reference-period/5

| archive-date = 1 May 2018

| url = http://atlasklime.fhmzbih.gov.ba/en/data-access/reference-period/5

| title = Meteorlogical data for station Goražde in period 1961–1990

| publisher = Meteorological Institute of Bosnia and Herzegovina

| access-date = 30 April 2018}}

}}

In literature

The 1992–1995 siege of Goražde is the subject of several books, two of which are available in English; both underline the mixture of brutality and humanity that punctuated the era. Savo Heleta's Not My Turn to Die is written by a survivor who was a Bosnian Serb teenager whose family was once under the Serb bombardments and also under suspicion as Serbs in the mostly Bosniak town.{{cite web|url=http://www.savoheleta.com/ |title=Dr Savo Heleta | Author of NOT MY TURN TO DIE: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia |publisher=Savoheleta.com |access-date=2013-11-23}}{{cite book|title=Not My Turn to Die: Memoirs of a Broken Childhood in Bosnia: Savo Heleta: 9780814401651: Amazon.com: Books |isbn=978-0814401651 |last1=Heleta |first1=Savo |year=2008 |publisher=AMACOM }} Safe Area Goražde is a graphic novel by Joe Sacco, a reporter who visited the besieged town several times during that period.{{cite web|url=http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?isbn=9781560974703&atch=h |title=Safe Area Gorazde: The War in Eastern Bosnia 1992–1995 by Joe Sacco - Powell's Books |publisher=Powells.com |access-date=2013-11-23}}

Another book that is centred heavily on Goražde is No Escape Zone authored by Nick Richardson. Richardson is a former Fleet Air Arm pilot who was shot down in the region of Goražde during a NATO bombing mission. He spent several weeks inside the city and mentions the conditions and daily shelling the residents and UN forces faced.{{cite book|last=Richardson|first=Nick|title=No Escape Zone|year=2000|publisher=Little, Brown and Company|isbn=0-316-85314-3}}

Goraždans from the past (Goraždani iz prošlog vremena) by Hajrudin Somun, Sarajevo: Dobra knjiga, 2022. {{cite web|url=https://www.knjiga.ba/gorazdjani-iz-proslog-vremena-b8096.html|title=Knjiga Hajrudina Somuna 'Goraždani iz prošlog vremena'|last=knjiga.ba|website=knjiga.ba}}

Sports

Local football club FK Goražde play in the Bosnian second tier — First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina and host their games at the Stadion Midhat Drljević.

Local basketball team KK Radnički Goražde play in the Basketball Championship of Bosnia and Herzegovina and host their games at the City Hall Mirsad Hurić.

Twin towns – sister cities

{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina}}

Goražde is twinned with:{{cite web |title=Pregled odluka, sporazuma, deklaracija o bratimljenju/prijateljstvu općine Goražde|url=https://gorazde.ba/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/103012021.pdf|website=gorazde.ba|publisher=Goražde|language=bs|access-date=2021-02-25}}

{{div col|colwidth=20em}}

  • {{flagicon|TUR}} Adapazarı, Turkey
  • {{flagicon|MKD}} Delčevo, North Macedonia{{cite web|title=Službene novine grada Goražda|url=http://www.gorazde.ba/files/2019/sln9-10.pdf|website=gorazde.ba|publisher=Goražde|language=bs|date=2018-12-03|access-date=2020-11-13|archive-date=2020-05-15|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200515161446/http://www.gorazde.ba/files/2019/sln9-10.pdf|url-status=dead}}
  • {{flagicon|TUR}} Gaziemir, Turkey
  • {{flagicon|GER}} Gera, Germany
  • {{flagicon|TUR}} Güngören, Turkey
  • {{flagicon|TUR}} Karatay, Turkey{{cite web |title=Kardeş Şehirler|url=https://www.karatay.bel.tr/kardessehirler|website=karatay.bel.tr|publisher=Karatay|language=tr|access-date=2020-11-13}}
  • {{flagicon|TUR}} Keçiören, Turkey
  • {{flagicon|IRN}} Maragheh, Iran
  • {{flagicon|TUR}} Şahinbey, Turkey
  • {{flagicon|BIH}} Stari Grad (Sarajevo), Bosnia and Herzegovina

{{div col end}}

Notable people

See also

References

{{Reflist}}