Centar Municipality, Sarajevo
Centar Центар | ||
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Municipality | ||
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Location of Centar Municipality, Sarajevo within Bosnia and Herzegovina. | ||
Country | Bosnia and Herzegovina | |
Government | ||
• Municipality president | Dževad Bećirević (SDP) | |
Area | ||
• Total | 33 km2 (13 sq mi) | |
Population (2013 census) | ||
• Total | 59,238 | |
• Density | 1,795/km2 (4,650/sq mi) | |
Time zone | CET (UTC+1) | |
• Summer (DST) | CEST (UTC+2) | |
Area code(s) | +387 33 | |
Website | http://www.centar.ba |
Centar (translated Center) is a municipality of central Sarajevo in Bosnia. It is located between the older parts of the city under Stari Grad, and the newer more modern parts of the city under the municipalities Novi Grad and Novo Sarajevo.
The Centar municipality, according to the government website, is the administrative, business, commercial, cultural, educational, and medical centre of Sarajevo. Although some of these may be disputed, Centar is certainly the most important part of Sarajevo, housing most major branches of the city and national governments.
The municipality of Centar occupies 3,313 hectrates of land, of which close to 17% is housing. The amount of private and state owned land is nearly equal, with 1600 and 1713 hectrates respectively. The municipality celebrates May 2 as "Centar Municipality Day", in commemoration of the heroic defense by citizens of the aggressor's assault on the Building of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Centar is also home to many Olympic complexes such as Dvorana Mirza Delibašić and sports venues Asim Ferhatović Hase Stadium and Olympic Hall Zetra.
History
The Siege of Sarajevo had a tremendous effect on Centar. Prior to the aggression, Centar municipality had 79.000 citizens, of which the majority were Bosniaks. 7,000 citizens of the municipality were killed by the aggressors during the war, as major battles took place on its grounds. There was also a heavy presence of land mines in the area, however in December 2003 the government succeeded in clearing all land mines from the area. Since the end of the war, the municipality has received 12 major awards, indicating its current well-being and prosperity.
Demographics
1971
126.598 total
- Bosniaks - 74,354 (58.73%)
- Serbs of Bosnia and Herzegovina - 27,658 (21.84%)
- Croats of Bosnia and Herzegovina - 12,903 (10.19%)
- Yugoslavs - 5,944 (4.69%)
- Others - 5,739 (4.55%)
1991
79.286 total
- Bosniaks - 39,761 (50.14%)
- Serbs - 16,631 (20.97%)
- Croats - 5,428 (6.84%)
- Yugoslavs - 13,030 (16.43%)
- Others - 4,436 (5.62%)
Sarajevo (part of settlement), 1991. census
total: 76.771
- Bosniaks - 38,860 (50.61%)
- Serbs - 15,192 (19.78%)
- Yugoslavs - 12,958 (16.87%)
- Croats - 5,415 (7.05%)
- others and unknown - 4,346 (5.66%)
Communities and neighborhoods
- Bardakčije
- Betanija - Šip
- Breka - Koševo II
- Ciglane - Gorica
- Donji Velešići
- Džidžikovac - Koševo I
- Hrastovi - Mrkovići
- Koševsko Brdo
- Marijin Dvor - Crni Vrh
- Mejtaš - Bjelave
- MZ Park - Višnjik
- Pionirska Dolina – Nahorevo
- Skenderija - Podtekija
- Soukbunar
- Trg Oslobođenja
References
- Official results from the book: Ethnic composition of Bosnia-Herzegovina population, by municipalities and settlements, 1991. census, Zavod za statistiku Bosne i Hercegovine - Bilten no.234, Sarajevo 1991.
Gallery
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Koševski Potok, summer 2010
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Koševski Potok, winter 2008
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Centar Municipality, Sarajevo. |
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Coordinates: 43°52′8″N 18°24′31″E / 43.86889°N 18.40861°E