Historical population of Banja Luka

The ethnic composition of the Banja Luka municipality.
Serbs
Croats
No clear majority (Serbs, Croats, Muslims (Bosniaks), Yugoslavs)
Uninhabited or no data

This article presents information about the historical population of Banja Luka.

Population growth

Note: The population figures for 1969 and onwards are for the entire Banja Luka metropolitan area.

Year Population
1895 13,566
1939 32,000
1971 158,736
1981 183,618
1991 195,139
1999 220,000
2004 222,000

Historical data

Percentage breakdown

City of Banja Luka

Bosnian Muslim (from 1994 Bosniaks)

Orthodox (from 1948 Serbs)

Catholics (from 1948 Croats)

Yugoslavs

Municipality of Banja Luka

Bosnian Muslim (from 1994 Bosniaks)

Orthodox Serbs

Catholics (from 1948 Croats)

Yugoslavs

Analysis

Banja Luka is the second largest city in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which traces permanent human settlement back to the Neolithic age. The city primarily consists of those who are either Bosnian, Serbian, or Croatian. Generally speaking, the population of those of the Bosnian nationality has fluctuated over the years. There was a sharp decline in the population of the Bosnian in Banja Luka from 1879 to 1991, while there was a sharp and consistent increase in the Serbian population in the city in that time frame. Meanwhile, the population of those who were Croatian remained relatively the same in Banja Luka over the years, with a gradual decline starting after WII.

On the municipal level numbers tend to stay relatively the same. It is noted that the Serbian population has declined due to some of the rural parts that were included in the city, and the in-migration that occurred after the 1969 earthquake. There was a sharp drop in the Bosnian population on the municipal level in 1910, which can be attributed to massive emigration (partly due to Agrarian Reform), and the fact that many Bosnian peoples had to declare themselves as Croats, Serbs or undecided Muslims until 1971 when their national identity was created.

See also

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