Vukovar

Vukovar
City
City of Vukovar
Grad Vukovar

Republic of Croatia Square, with monument to Dr Franjo Tuđman

Flag

Coat of arms
Nickname(s): Grad Heroj (Hero City)
Vukovar

Location of Vukovar within Croatia

Vukovar

Location of Vukovar within Vukovar-Srijem County

Coordinates: 45°21′00″N 19°00′12″E / 45.35000°N 19.00333°E / 45.35000; 19.00333Coordinates: 45°21′00″N 19°00′12″E / 45.35000°N 19.00333°E / 45.35000; 19.00333
Country  Croatia
County Vukovar-Syrmia
Government
  Mayor Ivan Penava (HDZ)
Area
  City 100.26 km2 (38.71 sq mi)
Elevation 108 m (354 ft)
Population (2011)[1]
  City 27,683
  Density 280/km2 (720/sq mi)
  Urban 26,468
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 32 000
Area code(s) 032
Vehicle registration VU
Website www.vukovar.hr

Vukovar (Croatian pronunciation: [v̞ûkɔv̞aːr]; Serbian Cyrillic: Вуковар[Note 1]) is a city in eastern Croatia. It has Croatia's biggest river port, located at the confluence of the Vuka River and the Danube. Vukovar is the seat of the Vukovar-Syrmia County. The city's registered population was 26,468 in the 2011 census, with a total of 27,683 in the municipality.[1]

Name

The name Vukovar means 'town on the Vuka River' (Vuko from the Vuka River, and vár from the Hungarian word for 'fortress'). The name of the Vuka River itself originates from the Slavic word 'vuk', meaning 'wolf'. In other languages, the city in German is known as Wukowar, in Hungarian as Vukovár or Valkóvár, and in Serbian as Вуковар. In the late 17th century, the medieval Croatian name Vukovo was supplanted by the Hungarian Vukovár.[2]

Geography

Satellite picture of Vukovar on the Danube river

Vukovar is located in the Eastern part of the Republic of Croatia and is the centre of the Vukovar-Syrmia County. Its location places it at the border of the historical provinces of Eastern Slavonia and Western Syrmia.

The city is positioned on important transport routes. Transport routes from the northwest to the southeast in the Danube Valley have gone through the Vukovar area.

After steam ships were introduced in the mid-19th century, and with the arrival of present-day tourist ships, Vukovar is connected with Budapest and Vienna upstream and all the way to Romania downstream. The Vukovar harbour is an important import and export station. The Danube has always been and remains the connection of the people of Vukovar with Europe and the world.[3]

It is located 20 km (12 mi) northeast of Vinkovci and 36 km (22 mi) southeast of Osijek, with an elevation of 108 m (354 ft). Vukovar is located on the main road D2 Osijek—Vukovar—Ilok and on the Vinkovci—Vukovar railway (and road D55). The city is spread out along the Danube River. Vukovar proper is in the southeast while Borovo Naselje forms a distinct unit in the northwest.

Municipal area

Francistian monastery with Church of Saints Philip and James, Vukovar.

The administrative municipal area of the city contains the following settlements:[1]

In SFR Yugoslavia, the municipalities were generally larger, and the Vukovar municipality spanned the region from Vera and Borovo in the north, Ilok in the east and Tovarnik in the south, but it was since divided into several municipalities.

Historically, Vukovar was divided into the Old Vukovar, New Vukovar and former workers' Bata village with Bata Shoes (now Borovo) factory, today known as the Vukovar suburb Borovo Naselje.

History

Early history

There are numerous archaeological sites in the Vukovar area, they date from the Bronze Age and early and late Iron Age. The Vučedol Culture, which was named for the location Vučedol, located five kilometres downstream on the Danube, holds particular importance for this area. The Vučedol Dove, found in 1938, became the symbol of the city. Also, the Orion from Vučedol, which is considered to be the oldest calendar in Europe, has equal importance.

The Vučedol culture flourished between 3000 and 2200 BC[4] (the Eneolithic period of earliest copper-smithing), centered in Syrmia and eastern Slavonia on the right bank of the Danube river, but possibly spreading throughout the Pannonian plain and western Balkans and southward. It was thus contemporary with the Sumer period in Mesopotamia, the Early Dynastic period in Egypt and the earliest settlements of Troy (Troy I and II). Some authors regard it as an Indo-European culture.

The Romans reached the Danube in their conquests during the final decades B.C. They constructed numerous fortifications as part of their border (limes) with the barbarian tribes . The Roman civilization in this area has brought the improvement of agriculture : marshes were drained and the first vineyards were planted. After the fall of the Roman Empire , the Migration Period and the Avar and Slavic expansion onward, brought about significant changes.[3]

Slavic tribes settled in this area in the 6th century. In the 9th century the region was part of the Slavic Balaton Principality ruled by prince Pribina, part of the Principality of Pannonian Croatia ruled by prince Ljudevit, and part of the Bulgarian Empire. In the 11th–12th century, the region was part of the Kingdom of Croatia; from the 13th to 16th century part of the Kingdom of Hungary; and between 1526–1687[5] under Turkish domination.

Vukovar was the capital of the Syrmia County, a historic administrative subdivision (županija) of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-Hungary.

Vukovar was mentioned first in the 13th century as Volko, Walk, Wolkov (original Croatian/Slavic name of the town was Vukovo). In 1231, Vukovo obtained its first privileges and later the right to levy taxes on passages along the Danube and the Vuka.[6] During administration of the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, the town was a seat of the Valkó (Croatian: Vuka) county, which was located between the Drava and Sava rivers, while during Ottoman administration it was part of the Sanjak of Syrmia. At the end of the 17th century, the town's population numbered about 3,000 inhabitants.

Habsburg Monarchy

The area between the rivers Danube and Sava became the site of great conflict and interest of powerful states of that time. At that time Croats begin to inhabit this area. The preserved documents mention Vukovar in the early 13th century under the name "Volko", "Walk", "Wolkow", and finally under the Croatian name "Vukovo".

From the 14th century onward the more Hungarian version of the name, Vukovar, is more commonly used. At that time Croatia was in a union of states with Hungary.

In 1231, as one of the first cities in the state, Vukovar gained the status of a " Royal free city " proclaimed by the Charter of Duke Koloman. Vukovar then became the centre of the great Vukovar County which included the area between the Danube and Sava.

After the Ottoman dominion (16th and 17th century) a large part of the Vukovar area was bought by the German counts of Eltz, who will have a significant influence on the economic and cultural life of Vukovar in the following two centuries. At that time immigrants of German, Hungarian, Serbs, Jewish, Rusyn, Slovak, and Ukrainian descent begin to arrive. In this process this Croatian area became multinational and in 1745 Vukovar became the centre of the great Syrmia County. Since the Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699, Vukovar was part of the Habsburg Monarchy, Slavonia (Transleithania after the compromise of 1867), and soon after in the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, created when the Kingdom of Slavonia and the Kingdom of Croatia were merged in 1868.

In the late 19th and early 20th century, Vukovar was the seat of the Syrmia County of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia.

Yugoslavia

In 1918, Vukovar became part of the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (Yugoslavia in 1929).

Between 1918 and 1922, Vukovar was administrative seat of Syrmia (Srijem) county, and between 1922 and 1929 it was the administrative seat of Syrmia oblast. In 1920, the formative congress of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia was organized in the town. After 1929, Vukovar was part of the Sava Banovina, and beginning in 1939 it was part of the Banovina of Croatia. Between 1941 and 1944, Vukovar was part of the Independent State of Croatia.

During World War II the city was bombed by the Allies. In 2008 an unexploded bomb was found in the city from this period.[7] From 1945, it was part of the People's Republic of Croatia within new Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

After the creation of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and in the wake of communism gaining popularity throughout Europe, Vukovar became the location where in 1920 the Socialist Labor Party of Yugoslavia (Communists) (Socijalistička radnička partija Jugoslavije – komunista) was renamed the Communist Party of Yugoslavia (Komunistička partija Jugoslavije).

After World War II Vukovar developed to become a powerful centre of textile and food industry and as such became one of the most highly developed cities in the former country, Yugoslavia.

Croatian War of Independence

Vukovar water tower has been preserved as a symbol of the Battle of Vukovar and the Croatian War of Independence.
Vukovar architecture was heavily damaged during Croatian War of Independence 1991, baroque building "Worker's House" before renovation.

Vukovar was heavily damaged during the Croatian War of Independence. Approximately 2,000 self-organised defenders (the army of Croatia was still in an embryonic stage at that time) defended the city for 87 days against approximately 30,000 JNA troops supported by various paramilitary forces from Serbia and local Serbs supplemented with 110 vehicles and tanks and dozens of planes. The city suffered heavy damage during the siege and was eventually overrun. It is estimated that 2,000 defenders of Vukovar and civilians were killed, 800 went missing and 22,000 non-Serbs civilians were forced into exile.[8]

The damage to Vukovar during the siege has been called the worst in Europe since World War II, drawing comparisons with the World War II–era Stalingrad.[9][10] The city's water tower, riddled with bullet holes, was retained by city planners to serve as a testimony to the events of the early 1990s.

On 18 November 2006 approximately 25,000 people from all over the country gathered in Vukovar for the 15th anniversary of the fall of the city to commemorate those who were killed during the siege. A museum dedicated to the siege was opened in the basement of a now rebuilt hospital that had been damaged during the battle.[11] On 27 September 2007 the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia convicted two former Yugoslav Army officers and acquitted a third of involvement in the hospital massacre.[12]

As a result of the conflict, a deep ethnic divide exists between the Croat and Serb populations.

Demographics

Historical population
of Vukovar
YearPop.±%
1857 8,162    
1869 9,453+15.8%
1880 10,234+8.3%
1890 11,205+9.5%
1900 11,557+3.1%
1910 12,149+5.1%
1921 12,116−0.3%
1931 12,738+5.1%
1948 18,994+49.1%
1953 20,616+8.5%
1961 25,763+25.0%
1971 38,830+50.7%
1981 41,959+8.1%
1991 46,735+11.4%
2001 31,670−32.2%
2011 27,683−12.6%
Source: Naselja i stanovništvo Republike Hrvatske 1857–2001, DZS, Zagreb, 2005 & Popis stanovništva 2011

In the years from 1948 until 1991 Vukovar's population increased quickly due to industrial development. Primarily it was immigration that fed the growth in the Vukovar region and in the town particularly. The region's population distribution changed notably too when the town of Ilok became the second largest town in the region.

National structure of the population of Vukovar:[13][14][15]
Year Total Croats Serbs Germans Hungarians Others
2011 27,683 15,881 57.37% 9,654 34.87% 580.21% 3471.25% 1,7436.30%
2001 31,670 18,199 57.5% 10,412 32.9% 580.2% 3871.2% 2,6148.3%
1990 44,639 21,065 47.2% 14,425 32.3% 940.2% 6941.5% 8,36118.8%
1971 30,222 14,694 48.6% 9,132 30.2% 600.2% 8352.8% 5,50118.2%
1948 17,223 10,943 63.5% 4,390 25.5% 540.3% 9135.3% 9235.3%
1931 10,242 5,048 49.6% 1,702 16.6% 2,67026.1% 5715.6% 2152.0%
1910 10,359 4,092 39.5% 1,628 15.7% 3,50333.8% 9549.2% 1831.8%

The most significant change is the forced displacement and internment of the German civilian population after World War II. The confiscated houses and properties were then given to Croat and Serb colonists during Yugoslavia.

National structure (2011)

  Croats (57.37%)
  Serbs (34.87%)
  Others (7.76%)
Vukovar Municipality map.
National structure of the population in the municipality of Vukovar:
Year of census total Croats Serbs Others
2001 31,670 18,199 (57.46%) 10,412 (32.88%) 3,059 (9.66%)
1991 84,024 36,910 (43.93%) 31,910 (37.98%) 15,204 (18.09%)
1981 81,203 30,157 (37.14%) 25,146 (30.97%) 25,903 (31.89%)
1971 76,602 34,629 (45.21%) 28,470 (37.17%) 13,593 (17.09%)
1961 54,707 24,527 (44.83%) 22,774 (41.63%) 7,406 (13.54%)

The Croats were in the majority in most villages and in the region's eastern part, whereas the Serbs dominated in northwest. Vukovar's population was ethnically mixed and had 28 ethnic groups before the war.

Since the boundaries of the municipality have changed a few times, there are significant differences in the population census between '61 and '71, and '91 and '01.

Particularly since the war in Croatia, much of the native Croat population has moved to other areas of Croatia or emigrated to Western Europe (notably Germany or Austria) and many Serbs have either moved to Serbia or to Canada and Western Europe.

Fifteen years after the war, in 2006, the city's ethnic makeup shows equal percentages of Croat and Serb residents.[16] The city remains very divided, as a deeper sense of reconciliation has failed to take root. The ethnic communities remain separated by mistrust, divided institutions and disappointment. Separate schooling for Croat and Serb children remains in place. Incidents involving Croats and Serbs occur regularly, and public spaces have become identified not by the services they offer but by the ethnicity of those who gather there. Even coffee shops are identified as Croat or Serb.[17]

In 2013, the government's intention to implement in Vukovar the Constitutional Law on the Rights of Ethnic Minorities in Croatia that allowed for minorities, where they made up more than a third of a city's population, to be entitled to have their language used for official purposes,[18] provoked considerable popular opposition.[19]

Minority languages

Further information: Serbs of Vukovar

According to the 2011 Croatian census, the Serbian population of the city has exceeded one third, which is the legal prerequisite for the Serbian (Cyrillic) name of the city to become co-official. In 2013, this has re-ignited a political discussion on the matter, continuing on the 2009 local promulgation of Serbian Cyrillic as available for public use.[20]

Economy

Vukovar is the largest Croatian town and river port on the Danube. Its economy is based on trade, farming, viticulture, livestock breeding, textiles, the food-processing industry, the footwear industry and tourism.

Borovo, a manufacturer of footwear located in Vukovar, ended up devastated and demolished in 1991 during the war. In its prime it was employed 24,000 employees and tried to break into foreign markets with innovations in the manufacture of footwear, but today there are fewer more than 1000 employees.

Since the end of the war, much of the infrastructure in Vukovar has remained unrestored and unemployment is estimated to stand at 40 percent.[17]

Cultural heritage

Vukovar City Museum, Eltz Manor.

Among a number of attractive buildings, severely damaged in the recent war, the most interesting are the Eltz Manor of the Eltz noble family from the 18th century, Baroque buildings in the centre of the town, the Franciscan monastery with the parish church of Sts. Philip and James, the water tower, the birth house of the Nobel prize winner Lavoslav Ružička, the Orthodox church of St Nicholas, the palace of Syrmia County etc. Since 1998 and peaceful reintegration under Croatian control, many buildings have been rebuilt, but there are many ruins still in the town.

Outside the town, on the banks of the Danube toward Ilok, lies a notable archaeological site, Vučedol. The ritual vessel called the Vučedol Dove (vučedolska golubica) is considered the symbol of Vukovar. Vučedol is also a well-known excursion destination, frequented by anglers and bathers, especially the beautiful sand beach on Orlov Otok (Eagle's Island).

Great Vukovar Synagogue was built in 1889, it was devastating in 1941 and completely demolished by the communist regime of SFR Yugoslavia 1958.

Museums

Vukovar Municipal Museum

Vučedol dove is the historical symbol of Vukovar

Vukovar Municipal Museum[21] is founded in 1948 by a donation of Roman money, furniture, weapons, and paintings given to his city by Dr. Antun Bauer . The museum started in the Coach Post Building in the old baroque centre, but was moved to Castle Eltz in 1966. Up until 1991 the Museum had about 50 thousand exhibits in four separate divisions:

Heritage Museum, displayed the history of Vukovar from Prehistory to today and some of its most important collections included the items excavated at the archaeological site Vučedol and the Culture and History Collection, which contained documents, furniture, and pieces of art, and provided an authentic display of the life of the citizens of Vukovar and the Eltz family.

The Bauer Collection contained the most complete overview of modern Croatian art from the end of the 19th and the early 20th century with special emphasis on the period between the two world wars. Among more than one thousand pieces of art the Collection contained the works of Vlaho Bukovac , Mato Celestin Medović , Ico Kršnjavi, Ivan Meštrović , Fran Kršinić , Emanuel Vidović , and many others.

Memorial Museum of the Nobel Prize Winner Lavoslav Ružička, located in the house where he was born, it displayed original documents and medals from the life and work of the famous Nobel Prize winner, who received this prestigious award in 1939 for chemistry.

Memorial Museum of the 2nd Congress of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia was located in the Workers' Hall building, former Grand Hotel, where the congress was held in 1920. The materials connected to the development of the labour movement and the founding of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia was exhibited and presented here.

During Croatian War of Independence, Castle Eltz suffered significant damage and the collections which were kept there were also damaged: some of the exhibits were completely destroyed, some have disappeared and cannot be recovered, and some of them were taken to Serbia. After years of effort and diplomatic activity by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Croatia that part of the collection was returned to Vukovar on 13 December 2001. In the period from 1991 to 1997 the Vukovar City Museum was operating in the Mimara Museum in Zagreb.

Vukovar arcades

Near the end of 1992 a collection was founded with the name Vukovar Museum in Exile which began the creation of a collection of donations by Croatian, and soon after also European, artists for the City of Vukovar. To this day that collection has gathered over 1400 pieces of modern Croatian and European art. This collection represented the beginning of the cultural restoration of Vukovar and it is displayed at the restored Castle Eltz today, along with other museum collections which are part of the permanent collection of the Museum.

Now that it is renovated, the Castle Eltz complex represents a unique museum and gallery , science, and multimedia centre, which preserves and presents cultural heritage as an element of national identity and the continuity of life in this area.

In 2013 the Vukovar City Museum won a prestigious Anton Štifanić Award for special contribution to the development of tourism in the Republic of Croatia and in 2014 won the Simply the Best award.

Vučedol Culture Museum

Vučedol Culture Museum[22] is open on the tenth of June 2015. Is one of the most modern museums in Croatia. In addition to the specificity and uniqueness which the Museum is drawing from its contents, the attractiveness of the Museum is guaranteed by its location and architectural design.

Namely, the Museum is positioned on one side almost at the very Danube riverbank and on the other side, on four flours, in the hill, while its flat green roof is a promenade on which you are arriving to the archaeological locality. As for the content, the permanent exhibition is displayed in 19 rooms on almost 1200 square meters. In addition to using state of the art technologies, multimedia and interactive contents, the way of life on Vučedol culture localities, spreading through 12 European countries, is displayed.

Events

Radnički Dom ("Worker's House")

Vukovar during the year there are many cultural events. Certainly the most important is Danube region Vukovar Film Festival.

Institutions

Vukovar is the seat of several local organizations and institutions such as Vukovar-Srijem County, Polytechnic Lavoslav Ružička Vukovar, Gymnasium Vukovar, etc. It is also the seat of several organizations and institutions of Serb minority in Croatia such as Joint Council of Municipalities, Association for Serbian language and literature in the Republic of Croatia, Independent Democratic Serb Party, Party of Danube Serbs as well as the seat of the Consulate General of Republic of Serbia in Vukovar.

Education and media

History

In accordance with its position in the economic and administrative terms of Vukovar developed in educational, cultural and health center. For the 1730th Vukovar has developed popular education. From the Franciscan School has developed elementary school in Old Vukovar. New Vukovar has its own school.

They worked and denominational schools for children and Orthodox Jewish religion, and schools in the German , Serbian orthodox and Hungarian. Apprentice school was established in 1886. year, a gymnasium 1891st.

Printing was opened 1867th when they first came out and Vukovar in German newspaper "Der Syrmier-Bote".

Today

Vukovar has seven primary schools and five high schools, including one gymnasium (Gymnasium Vukovar) and one music school. The city is also home to the Lavoslav Ružička polytechnic, which offers study opportunities in the fields of economics and trade, law and kinesitherapy. Additionally, the University of Split runs dislocated studies in information technology, economics and law in Vukovar. Similarly, the University of Osijek offers programmes in economics and law.

Sport

Major sports facilities in the city of Vukovar are: Borovo Sports Hall (capacity 3,000 spectators) opened for maintenance International Table Tennis Championship of Yugoslavia, (Borovo 1978),[26] stadium FC Vukovar '91, sport and recreation center "Lijeva Bara" with a hall for martial arts, swimming pools Borovo Naselje , Borovo naselje Tennis Center, Sports Center "Hrgović" - tennis courts and horse riding, firing range, "Hill-7" as well as several football stadiums including Vukovar City Stadium and the FC Vuteks Sloga Stadium.

Use in popular culture

Notable people

International relations

Foreign representatives

Twin towns — Sister cities

Vukovar is twinned[28] with:

Picture gallery

Notes

  1. The official use of Serbian Cyrillic in Vukovar is subject to a dispute involving the local and national authorities, and is the source of a current political controversy. See #Minority languages.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Population by Age and Sex, by Settlements, 2011 Census: Vukovar". Census of Population, Households and Dwellings 2011. Zagreb: Croatian Bureau of Statistics. December 2012.
  2. Treasures of Yugoslavia, p.249.
  3. 1 2 "VUKOVAR TOURIST BOARD - The History of Vukovar". turizamvukovar.hr.
  4. Dating as in Ian Shaw, ed., A Dictionary of Archaeology, 2002, and elsewhere; dating methods are discussed in Aleksandar Durman and Bogomil Obelić,Radiocarbon dating of the Vučedol culture complex, 1989.
  5. Treasures of Yugoslavia, published by Yugoslaviapublic, Beograd, available in English, German and Serbo-Croatian, 664 pages, 1980
  6. Treasures of Yugoslavia, p.249
  7. "Bombs from the II World War found in Vukovar" (in Croatian). vktel.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  8. Tucker, Spencer (2010). A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, LLC. p. 2617. ISBN 978-1-85109-667-1.
  9. President after meeting with Del Ponte: Someone has to match what turned Vukovar into Stalingrad (Croatian)
  10. Seeney, Helen (22 August 2006). "Croatia: Vukovar is Still Haunted by the Shadow of its Past". Deutsche Welle. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010. Retrieved 6 May 2009.
  11. "Tens of thousands gather for 15th anniversary of Vukovar siege 1991 – 2006". Croatian World Network. AFP. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010. Retrieved 18 November 2010.
  12. "Two jailed over Croatia massacre". news.bbc.co.uk (BBC NEWS). 27 September 2007. Archived from the original on 18 November 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  13. "Stanovništvo grada Vukovara" (in Croatian). Retrieved 4 May 2013.
  14. "SAS Output". Dzs.hr. Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  15. "Državni zavod za statistiku Republike Hrvatske". Dzs.hr. Retrieved 2013-03-12.
  16. Vukovar: Day of remembrance, B92, 18 November 2006. Retrieved 2 October 2007.
  17. 1 2 Vukovar still divided 15 years on, B92, 27 November 2006. Retrieved 2 October 2007.
  18. Croatia plans Cyrillic signs for Serbs in Vukovar BBC, 3 January 2013.
  19. 25,000 protest against Cyrillic signs in 'Croatian Stalingrad' RT, 8 April 2013.
  20. Drago Hedl (1 February 2013). "Ekskluzivna reportaža iz Vukovara – Ćirilica će nevidljivi zid koji dijeli Hrvate i Srbe pretvoriti u betonski". Jutarnji list (in Croatian). Retrieved 2013-02-09.
  21. https://www.facebook.com/Gradski-muzej-Vukovar-Vukovar-Municipal-Museum-866079006746945/
  22. "Vukovar - Home of the Vučedol Dove - Way to Croatia". waytocroatia.hr.
  23. http://www.assitej-international.org/festival/vukovar-puppets-spring-2/
  24. http://vinkovci.com.hr/vinkovci/hrvatska/na-lutkarsko-proljece-dolaze-84-predstave
  25. "VUKOVAR TOURIST BOARD - Bonofest". turizamvukovar.hr.
  26. "Table Tennis - Championship of Yugoslavia Borovo 1978". delcampe.net.
  27. "Consulates- Vukovar, Croatia". mfa.gov.rs.
  28. shegrt1. "Gradovi i općine prijatelji Grada Vukovara". vukovar.hr.

Bibliography

  • Cresswell, Peterjon; Atkins, Ismay; Dunn, Lily (10 July 2006). Time Out Croatia (First ed.). London, Berkeley & Toronto: Time Out Group Ltd & Ebury Publishing, Random House Ltd. 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road, London SV1V 2SA. ISBN 978-1-904978-70-1. Retrieved 10 March 2010. 

External links

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