Kneževo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

{{Infobox settlement

| settlement_type = Town and municipality

| subdivision_type = Country

| subdivision_name = {{Nowrap|{{Flag|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}}}

| subdivision_type1 = Entity

| subdivision_name1 = {{Nowrap|{{Flag|Republika Srpska}}}}

| subdivision_type2 =

| subdivision_name2 =

| timezone = CET

| utc_offset = +1

| timezone_DST = CEST

| utc_offset_DST = +2

| unit_pref = Metric

| map_caption = Location within Bosnia and Herzegovina

| population_as_of = 2013 census

| name = Kneževo

| official_name =

| native_name = Кнежево

| image_skyline = Knezevo124 crop.jpg

| image_caption = Kneževo

| image_shield = Kneževo_(grb).svg

| image_map = Kneževo_municipality.svg

| area_total_km2 = 332.9

| population_total = 9793

| population_density_km2 = auto

| coordinates = {{coord|44|29|24|N|17|22|45|E|region:BA|display=inline,title}}

| area_code = 51

| website = [https://web.archive.org/web/20150714171428/http://www.opstinaknezevo.com// Official Kneževo Municipality Website]

| footnotes =

| leader_title = Municipal mayor

| leader_name = Goran Borojević

| leader_party = SNSD

| image_map1 = Kneževo-naselja.PNG

}}

Kneževo ({{lang-sr-cyr|Кнежево}}), formerly Skender Vakuf ({{lang-sr-cyrl|Скендер Вакуф}}), is a town and municipality located in Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina. As of 2013, it has a population of 9,793 inhabitants.

Name

Up until the 1992–1995 Bosnian War, the town was known as Skender Vakuf. During the war, the town was renamed Kneževo by the Serb authorities as part of their ethnic cleansing policies.{{Cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7R9_DAAAQBAJ&q=Skender+Vakuf&pg=PA13 |title = Post-War Bosnia: Ethnicity, Inequality and Public Sector Governance|isbn = 9780230501379|last1 = Bieber|first1 = F.|date = 2005-12-16}} Accordingly, many media outlets in the region continue to refer to the area as Skender Vakuf-Kneževo.{{Cite web|url=http://www.novosti.rs/vesti/planeta.300.html:618063-MASOVNA-TUCA-Devetorica-se-potukla-zbog-bureka|title = MASOVNA TUČA: Devetorica se potukla zbog bureka!}}

History

File:Споменик близу Кнежева3.jpg]]

A Roman basilica has been found in Imljani and Javorani, and the remains of the Roman road from Servitium (Banja Luka) to Levsaba (Travnik) were also found in the vicinity. Tombstones of the Stećak type date back to the 14th and 15th centuries, when the area was part of the Kingdom of Bosnia. The town was founded during the reign of the Ottoman Empire. It was first mentioned in the records of a Muslim judge from Jajce in 1693, while there is no record of it in the census of the Bosnia Eyalet of 1604. Two generations of imams are mentioned in the records, which means it was most likely founded in the latter half of the 17th century. The architecture of the Old Mosque in Skender Vakuf also indicates it was built in the latter half of the 17th century. The charitable endowment (vakuf) that is reflected in the town's traditional name Skender Vakuf (after Ali-dedo Skender) contributed to its urbanization.[http://www.pcgn.org.uk/Bosnia-Aug06.pdf Language Evolution in Bosnia] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120616191501/http://www.pcgn.org.uk/Bosnia-Aug06.pdf |date=2012-06-16 }} The Old Mosque was significant and one of the first in the region. It was destroyed, along with the New Mosque, in 1992 during the Bosnian War. In the Korićani Cliffs massacre of 21 August 1992, some 200 Bosniak and Croat detainees were massacred in the municipality by the Bosnian Serb police and army forces from Prijedor. After the Bosnian War, a part of the municipality was split off to form the Dobretići municipality of the entity of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina .

Geography

File:Ријека Угар.jpg

File:Поглед на Осмачу.jpg

File:Jezero Bočac i Čemernica.jpg

File:PZPP012 zasticeni predio kanjon ugar-vrbas-crna rijeka.jpg

File:PPP022 PARK PRIRODE ČEMERNICA, KNEŽEVO 2.jpg

Kneževo is located between the rivers Ugar, Vrbas and Vrbanja and surrounded by the mountain chains of Čemernica and Ranča to the west, Vlašić to the south and Ježica to the northeast. The municipality has an official altitude of {{convert|864|m|ft}}, but in reality it ranges from {{convert|600|to|1493|m|ft}}. Kneževo is {{convert|50|km}} southeast of Banja Luka by the M56 motorway.

Neighbouring municipalities are Čelinac (far north), Kotor Varoš (east), Travnik, Dobretići, Jajce (south), Mrkonjić Grad (west) and the city of Banja Luka (northwest). The southern border is defined by the border of the Republika Srpska with the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the country's other entity. The mountainous region in the south is forested and inpenetrable; its limestone mountains reach a height of {{convert|1493|m|ft}}.{{cite work|author=Vojnogeografski institut|year=1955|title=Vlašić|publisher=Vojnogeografski institut|location=Belgrade|language=Serbo-Croatian}}{{cite web |url=http://www.kartabih.com/ |title = Karta BiH - Karta Bosne i Hercegovine}}Spahić M. et al. (2000): Bosna i Hercegovina (1:250.000). Izdavačko preduzeće „Sejtarija“, Sarajevo.{{cite book|editor=Mučibabić B.|year=1998|title=Geografski atlas Bosne i Hercegovine|publisher=Geodetski zavod BiH|place=Sarajevo|isbn= 9958-766-00-0}}

Settlements

Aside from the town of Kneževo, the municipality includes the following settlements:

{{div col|colwidth=22em}}

Imamovići

Mušanovići

{{div col end}}

Demographics

= Population =

class="wikitable"

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

|Settlement

|1961.

|1971.

|1981.

|1991.

|2013.

|Total

|9,190

|21,219

|22,948

|19,418

|9,793

1

|Bokani

|

|

|

|466

|310

2

|Imljani

|

|

|

|1,565

|823

3

|Javorani

|

|

|

|1,289

|759

4

|Kneževo

|992

|1,688

|2,910

|3,759

|3,958

5

|Kostići

|

|

|

|517

|342

6

|Rađići

|

|

|

|1,405

|864

7

|Šolaji

|

|

|

|586

|435

8

|Vlatkovići

|

|

|

|730

|302

9

|Živinice

|

|

|

|1,223

|607

=Ethnic composition=

class="wikitable"

! colspan="8" |Ethnic composition – Kneževo town

|2013.

|1991.

|1981.

|1971.

Total

|3,958 (100,0%)

|3,759 (100,0%)

|2,910 (100,0%)

|1,688 (100,0%)

Serbs

|

|2,484 (66,08%)

|1,491 (51,24%)

|723 (42,83%)

Bosniaks

|

|1,063 (28,28%)

|1,118 (38,42%)

|923 (54,68%)

Yugoslavs

|

|111 (2,953%)

|205 (7,045%)

|5 (0,296%)

Others

|

|59 (1,570%)

|7 (0,241%)

|4 (0,237%)

Croats

|

|42 (1,117%)

|45 (1,546%)

|17 (1,007%)

Montenegrins

|

|

|28 (0,962%)

|10 (0,592%)

Albanians

|

|

|14 (0,481%)

|6 (0,355%)

Macedonians

|

|

|1 (0,034%)

|

Hungarians

|

|

|1 (0,034%)

|

class="wikitable"

! colspan="8" |Ethnic composition – Kneževo municipality

|2013.

|1991.

|1981.

|1971.

Total

|9,793 (100,0%)

|19,418 (100,0%)

|22,948 (100,0%)

|21,419 (100,0%)

Serbs

|9,288 (94,84%)

|13,263 (68,30%)

|15,953 (69,52%)

|15,926 (74,35%)

Bosniaks

|429 (4,381%)

|1,071 (5,516%)

|1,141 (4,972%)

|947 (4,421%)

Others

|45 (0,460%)

|145 (0,747%)

|64 (0,279%)

|78 (0,364%)

Croats

|31 (0,317%)

|4,770 (24,56%)

|5,395 (23,51%)

|4,431 (20,69%)

Yugoslavs

|

|169 (0,870%)

|322 (1,403%)

|9 (0,042%)

Montenegrins

|

|

|53 (0,231%)

|21 (0,098%)

Albanians

|

|

|15 (0,065%)

|6 (0,028%)

Slovenes

|

|

|2 (0,009%)

|1 (0,005%)

Hungarians

|

|

|2 (0,009%)

|

Macedonians

|

|

|1 (0,004%)

|

After the war, the majority of the old Skender Vakuf municipality became part of the new Kneževo municipality of the Republika Srpska entity. Four Croatian pre-war settlements became part of the new Dobretići municipality of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina entity.

Culture

{{expand section|date=September 2014}}

File:Crkva (Živinice).jpg

File:Crkva brvnara u Javoranima2.jpg

The municipality houses several cultural monuments, such as the Old Church of St. Nicholas from 1757, the 18th-century Church of Prophet Elijah.

In Imljani there is a monument dedicated to the 43 fallen soldiers of the Army of Republika Srpska who fell on the Vlašić battlefield on 20 March 1995.{{cite news|title=ПАРАСТОС У ИМЉАНИМА|publisher=RTRS|date=2012-03-20|url=http://www.rtrs.tv/vijesti/vijest.php?id=58122}}

Politics

The mayor of Knezevo is Bore Škeljić, of the Serb Democratic Party (SDS).{{cite journal|publisher=Izbori.ba|url=http://www.izbori.ba/Rezultati/RezultatiPotvrdjeni/files/Glavni_report_trka_8_opstina_068.html |title=LOKALNI IZBORI 2012 - POTVRĐENI REZULTATI |date=2012-11-06}}

Notable people

{{expand list|date=September 2014}}

  • Radojka Lakić, National Hero of Yugoslavia
  • Luka Radetić, National Hero of Yugoslavia
  • Dujko Komljenović, National Hero of Yugoslavia
  • Lazar Tešanović, Chetnik officer, born in Javorani
  • Željko Raljić, journalist
  • Momir Ćelić, professor
  • Tihomir Radetić, film director
  • Radenko Mijatović, president of Football Association of Slovenia{{Cite web|url=https://www.nzs.si/NZS/Predstavitev_NZS/Predsednik_NZS|title=Predsednik NZS predstavitev}}

Annotations

According to the 1991 census, the municipality consisted of: Bastaji, Bokani, Borak, Bregovi, Brnjići, Bunar, Čarići, Ćukovac, Davidovići, Dobratići, Donji Orašac, Golo Brdo, Gornji Orašac, Imljani, Javorani, Kobilja, Kostići, Kričići - Jejići, Melina, Mijatovići, Milaševci, Mokri Lug, Paunovići, Pavlovići, Prisika, Rađići, Skender Vakuf, Slipčevići, Šolaji, Vitovlje Malo, Vlatkovići, Vukovići, Zapeće, Zasavica, Zubovići and Živinice.

In 1995, the municipality included Bastaji, Bokani, Borak, Bregovi, Čarići, Ćukovac, Golo Brdo, Imljani, Javorani, Kobilja, Kostići, Malići, Mokri Lug, Paunovići, Rađići, Kneževo, Šolaji, Vlatkovići and Živinice; the southwestern settlements of Davidovići, Dobretići, Kričići and Melina became part of the municipality of Dobretići in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

References

{{Reflist}}