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Croats of Serbia

Croats of Serbia (Serbian: Хрвати у Србији, romanizedHrvati u Srbiji) or Serbian Croats (Serbo-Croatian: Српски Хрвати / Srpski Hrvati) are a recognized national minority in Serbia. According to the 2022 census, the population of ethnic Croats in Serbia is 39,107, constituting 0.6% of the total population. The vast majority of them live in the northern autonomous province of Vojvodina, where they number 32,684 and make up 1.9% of the province's population. An additional 11,104 people declared themselves as Bunjevci in the 2022 census; there are differing views whether Bunjevci should be regarded as Croats or as members of a distinct ethnic group. The majority of the Sokac community consider themself as Croats. Not all Croats have Bunjevac or Sokac ancestors.

Croats of Serbia
Хрвати у Србији
Hrvati u Srbiji
Flag of the National Council of the Croat minority in Serbia
Total population
39,107 Serbian citizens, 0.59% of the population of Serbia (2022)[1]
Regions with significant populations
 Vojvodina32,684 (1.88%)[2]
Belgrade4,554 (0.27%)[2]
Languages
Croatian, Serbian, Bunjevac
Religion
Roman Catholicism
Related ethnic groups
Bunjevci, Šokci, South Slavs

History edit

During the 15th century, Croats mostly lived in the Syrmia region. It is estimated that they were a majority in 76 out of 801 villages that existed in the present-day territory of Vojvodina.[3]

According to 1851 data, it is estimated that the population of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar, the historical province that was predecessor of present-day Vojvodina, included, among other ethnic groups, 62,936 Bunjevci and Šokci and 2,860 Croats.[4][page needed] Subsequent statistical estimations from the second half of the 19th century (conducted during Austro-Hungarian period) counted Bunjevci and Šokci as "others" and presented them separately from Croats (in 1910 Austro-Hungarian census, 70,000 Bunjevci were categorized as "others").[5]

The 1910 Austro-Hungarian census also showed large differences in the numbers of those who considered themselves Bunjevci and Šokci, and those who considered themselves Croats. According to the census, in the city of Subotica there were only 39 citizens who declared Croatian as their native language, while 33,390 citizens were listed as speakers of "other languages" (most of them declared Bunjevac as their native language).[6] In the city of Sombor, 83 citizens declared Croatian language, while 6,289 citizens were listed as speakers of "other languages" (mostly Bunjevac).[6] In the municipality of Apatin, 44 citizens declared Croatian and 7,191 declared "other languages" (mostly Bunjevac, Šokac and Gypsy).[6] [dead link]

In Syrmia, which was then part of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, according to the 1910 census results[7] Croats were a relative or absolute majority in Gibarac (843 Croats or 86.46% out of total population), Kukujevci (1,775 or 77.61%), Novi Slankamen (2,450 or 59.22%), Petrovaradin (3,266 or 57.02%), Stari Slankamen (466 or 48.19%), Hrtkovci (1,144 or 45.43% ) and Morović (966 or 41.67%). Other places which had a significant minority of Croats included Novi Banovci (37.70%), Golubinci (36.86%), Sremska Kamenica (36.41%), Sot (33.01%), Sremska Mitrovica (30.32%), Sremski Karlovci (29.94%) and Ljuba (29.86%).

In 1925, Bunjevac-Šokac Party and Pučka kasina organized in Subotica the 1000th-anniversary celebration of the establishment of Kingdom of Croatia, when in 925 Tomislav of Croatia became first king of the Croatian Kingdom. On the King Tomislav Square in Subotica a memorial plaque was unveiled with the inscription "The memorial plaque of millennium of Croatian Kingdom 925-1925. Set by Bunjevci Croats".[8] Besides Subotica, memorial plaques of King Tomislav were also revealed in Sremski Karlovci and Petrovaradin.

In 2020 the birth home of ban Josip Jelačić built in the 18th century and located in Petrovaradin, was bought by the Republic of Serbia from private owners. It was later reconstructed and given as a gift to the Croatian community.[9]

 
Coat of arms of Croats of Serbia, in official use since 2005

Coat of arms edit

Flag and coat of arms of Croats of Serbia were adopted on 11 June 2005 in a session of the Croat National Council, in Subotica.

Politics edit

The Croat National Council is a body of self-government of the Croatian minority in Serbia.[10] On 11 June 2005 the Council adopted the historical coat of arms of Croatia, a checkerboard consisting of 13 red and 12 white fields (the difference with the Croatian coat of arms being the crown on top).

Demographics edit

In the results of census taking is a disagreement between real ethnicity and declared ethnicity.[11] Most citizens who declare that they belong to a specific ethnic/minority group, already come from families with mixed family backgrounds (e.g. mixed marriages between different nationalities/ethnicities, interreligious marriages). The Republic of Serbia is using a "segregated model of multiculturalism".[12] The national councils receive funds from the state and province to finance their own governing body, cultural, and educational organisations.[13] The amount of money for the national councils, depends on the results of a census in which the Serbian population can register and self-declare as a member of a state-recognized minority of their choice.[14][15]

Today, most members of the Šokci community consider themselves Croats. The Bunjevci in the Hungarian and Serbian Bačka area, are split between those who declare themselves as a distinct ethnic group with their own language and those who identify themselves as a Croatian sub-ethnic group.[16] The latter are represented in Serbia by the Croat National Council,[17][18] and the former by the Bunjevac National Council.[19][20] Not all Croats in Serbia have Bunjevac or Sokac origins.

The number of Croats in Serbia was somewhat larger in previous censuses that were conducted between 1948 and 1991. Proponents of a separate Bunjevac nation argue that the number of Croats may have been smaller at that time, as the communist authorities counted in the people to as Croats, who self-declared as Bunjevac or Sokac. Robert Skenderović emphasizes that already before 1918 and the Communist rule, Bunjevci have made strong efforts to be recognized as part of the Croatian people.[21]

The largest recorded number of Croats in a census was in 1961 when there were 196,409 Croats (including Bunjevci and Šokci) in the Socialist Republic of Serbia (around 2.57% of the total population of Serbia at the time). Since 1961 census, the Croat population in Serbia is in a constant decrease.

 
Saint Lawrence the Martyr Catholic Church in Sonta
Year
(census data)
Number of ethnic Croats Percent of national population
1948 169,894[22] 2.6%
1953 162,158[22] 2.3%
1961 196,411[22] 2.6%
1971 184,913[22] 2.2%
1981 149,368[22] 1.6%
1991 105,406[22] 1.1%
1991* 97,344 1.2%
2002* 70,602[23] 0.9%
2011* 57,900[24] 0.8%
2022*(*) 39,107[25] 0.6%

* - excluding Kosovo

(*) - excluding 11,104 Bunjevci.

 
Linguistic map of Vojvodina according to the 1910 census. Territories with Croatian-speaking inhabitants are colored in orange.
 
Croats in Vojvodina according to the 2002 census - based on settlement data
 
Main Croatian settlements in Vojvodina (2002 census)

In the 2022 census of the Republic of Serbia: 39,107 Croats and 11,104 Bunjevci are registered, of which the census methodology has not made a subdivision of percentage respondents identifying themselves as ethnic Bunjevac Croats or as a separate Bunjevac ethnicity, in conjunction with their belief of being a distinct Bunjevac people.[26] According to the 2011 census, there were 57,900 Croats in Serbia or 0.8% of the country's population.[27] Of these, 47,033 lived in Vojvodina,[28] where they formed the fourth largest ethnic group, representing 2.8% of the population. A further 7,752 lived in the national capital Belgrade, with the remaining 3,115 in the rest of the country.

Croats of Šokac origin constituting the largest part of population in three villages: Sonta (in the municipality of Apatin), Bački Breg and Bački Monoštor (both in the municipality of Sombor).[29] [page needed] And Croats of Bunjevac origin are living traditionally in Subotica, which is their cultural and political center; in Bajmok, Bikovo, Donji Tavankut and Gornji Tavankut, Đurđin, Ljutovo, Mala Bosna, Sombor, and Stari Žednik.

Year
(census data)
Number of ethnic Croats Percent of national population
1495 7,500 3.9%
1787 38,161 8.0%
1828 67,692 7.8%
1840 66,362 7.3%
1857 60,690 5.9%
1880 72,298 6.1%
1890 80,404 6.0%
1900 81,198 5.7%
1910 91,366 6.0%
1921 129,788 8.5%
1931 132,517 8.2%
1940 101,035 6.1%
1948 134,232 8.1%
1953 128,054 7.5%
1961 145,341 7.8%
1971 138,561 7.1%
1981 109,203 5.4%
1991 74,226 3.7%
2002 56,546 2.7%
2011 47,033 2.4%

source:[30]
note1: The numbers were adjusted for the present borders of Vojvodina.
note2: Croats are counted together with Bunjevci and Šokci for data before 1991.

Language edit

Croatian, a standard variety of the pluricentric language Serbo-Croatian, is listed, since 2002, as one of the six official languages of Vojvodina.

The European Union has an active policy to promote the use of regional or minority languages in Serbia.[31]

Bunjevac dialect edit

Some members of the Bunjevac community, preserved a Neo-ShtokavianYounger Ikavian dialect of the Serbo-Croatian pluricentric language, also known as Bunjevac dialect (bunjevački dijalekt) or Bunjevac speech (bunjevački govor).[32] Their accent is purely Ikavian, with /i/ for the Common Slavic vowels yat.[33] Since 2021, Croatia has categorized the Neo-Stokavian Younger Ikavian dialect to be the Bunjevac dialect with three sub-branches: Danubian (also known as Bunjevac), Littoral-Lika, and Dalmatian (also known as Bosnian–Dalmatian).[34] Its speakers largely use the Latin alphabet and are living in parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina, parts of Croatia, southern parts (inc. Budapest) of Hungary as well in parts of the autonomous province Vojvodina of Serbia.

There have been three meritorious people who preserved the Bunjevac dialect in two separate dictionaries: Grgo Bačlija[35] and Marko Peić[36] with "Ričnik bački Bunjevaca"[37] (editions 1990, 2018), and Ante Sekulić[38] with "Rječnik govora bačkih Hrvata" (2005).

For decades, there has been an unresolved language battle within the Bunjevac community and between Serbia and Croatia over the status of the Bunjevac speech.[39][40][41]

The dialect, of the in Serbia residating Danubian Bunjevci, was standardised in the Republic of Serbia in 2018 and officially approved as a standard dialect by the Ministry of Education for teaching in schools.[42][43][44][45] With the standardisation of the Bunjevac dialect, activists and members of the Bunjevac National Council are striving for language secession, with the political aim that the Bunjevac dialect will gain in Serbia the political-linguistic status of independent language. Theodora Vuković has provided, in 2009, the scientific methodology for the finalization of the standardisation process of the Bunjevac dialect corpus in Serbia,[46][47] classified as the Serbian Bunjevac dialect variety of the Danubian branch of the Neo-Shtokavian Younger Ikavian dialect. Speakers use in general the standardised dialect variety for writing and conversation in formal situations.[48]

Organizations edit

  • Bunjevac Croatian Cultural and Educational Society in Serbia, HKPD "Matija Gubec" Tavankut, www.hkpdmatijagubec.org.rs
  • Croatian Community in Belgrade "Tin Ujević"
  • Institute for Culture of Croats of Vojvodina "Zavod za kulturu vojvođanskih Hrvata", www.zkvh.org.rs

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Final results - Ethnicity". Почетна. 2023-07-14. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  2. ^ a b "Population by ethnicity, by areas" (PDF). Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  3. ^ [site web|http://www.mtafki.hu/konyvtar/kiadv/etnika/ethnicMAP/005_session_e.html Károly Kocsis, Saša Kicošev: Changing ethnic patterns on the present territory of Vojvodina]
  4. ^ Dr Dušan J. Popović, Srbi u Vojvodini, knjiga 3, Novi Sad, 1990.
  5. ^ Juraj Lončarević: Hrvati u Mađarskoj i Trianonski ugovor, Školske novine, Zagreb, 1993, ISBN 953-160-004-X
  6. ^ a b c . www.talmamedia.com. Archived from the original on 29 March 2008. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  7. ^ A magyar szent korona országainak 1910. évi népszámlálása; Budapest 1912
  8. ^ Bara, Mario (2006-01-08). "Hrvatska seljačka stranka u narodnom preporodu bačkih Hrvata" [The Croatian Peasants' Party in the national movement of Bačka Croats (Summary)]. Pro Tempore (in Croatian) (3): 59–75. ISSN 1334-8302.
  9. ^ Srdić, Milan. "Rodna kuća bana Josipa Jelačića vraćena Hrvatskoj nacionalnoj zajednici". www.rts.rs. RTS, Radio televizija Srbije, Radio Television of Serbia. Retrieved 2020-07-20.
  10. ^ "Statut Hrvatskog nacionalnog vijeća u Republici Srbiji".
  11. ^ Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia (2015). "SELF-EVALUATION SERBIAN OSCE CHAIRMANSHIP" (PDF). p. 78. ... there are problems with "faking" a particular national minority background in order to benefit from affirmative action measures. In this context, the question can be raised whether there are limits to self-identification, i.e. whether belonging to a particular ethnic group can be based solely on one's sentiments or is self-identification limited by objective criteria.
  12. ^ Sara Zarkovic. "The Politics of Multiculturalism in the Northern Autonomous Province of Vojvodina: (Serbian) Youth Discourse on Multiculturalism in Novi Sad". p. 120.
  13. ^ Stjepanović, Dejan (2015). "The Claimed Co-ethnics and Kin-State Citizenship in Southeastern Europe". Ethnopolitics. 14 (2): 152. doi:10.1080/17449057.2014.991151. hdl:20.500.11820/8f5ce80b-bfb3-470c-a8b0-620df2a7760f. S2CID 146354988.
  14. ^ Knežević, Aleksandar. "From ethno-statistics to ethno-politics. Is the population census a reliable source of data for ethno-demographic research?" (PDF).
  15. ^ Mina Djurić Nikolić and Laura Trimajova (2015). "A Tale of Two Serbias? Census-taking in 2002 and 2011" (PDF). Census-taking in Serbia is particularly important as the results dictate budgetary fund allocations for each respective ministry; as such, the need for accuracy cannot be overstated
  16. ^ Vuković, Petar (2017). "Bunjevci from Bačka: Language situation". In Repanšek, Luka; Šekli, Matej (eds.). 12th Slavic Linguistics Society Annual Meeting Book of Abstracts. Založba ZRC; Slovenian Academy of Arts and Sciences. pp. 198–199. ISBN 978-9-61050-027-8.
  17. ^ "Hrvatska manjina u Republici Srbiji". hrvatiizvanrh.gov.hr. Središnji državni ured za Hrvate izvan Republike Hrvatske (Central State Office for Croats Outside the Republic of Croatia).
  18. ^ "Statement by the Presidency of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts regarding the Bunjevci Croats" (PDF). www.info.hazu.hr. Glasnik HAZU. 2014. p. 53. The Presidency of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, in a session held on 12 September 2014, made the following statement explaining that the Bunjevci Croats form an integral part of the Croatian national corpus. The Presidency of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, one of the fundamental institutions of the Croatian nation and of all the citizens of the Republic of Croatia, among the roles of which belongs the preservation of national identity, made the following statement in a session held on 12 September 2014: The Bunjevci, a Croatian ethnic group, are made up of three branches: the Dalmatian-Herzegovinian branch; the Primorje-Lika branch; and the Danube Region branch. Not encroaching on the right of any individual to express their national affiliation based on their origin, history, traditional culture, customs and language – the western new-Štokavian and Ikavian – the Bunjevci Croats form an integral part of the Croatian national corpus.
  19. ^ "O Bunjevcima (About the Bunjevci)". bunjevci.net. Bunjevačkog informativnog centra (Bunjevac Information Center of the Bunjevac National Council).
  20. ^ "National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia | National Assembly activities". www.parlament.gov.rs.
  21. ^ Robert, Skenderović (29 Januar 2020). "Bunjevačke Hrvate nisu stvorili komunisti". www.subotica.info. Bunjevačke Hrvate nisu stvorili komunisti. Nisu ih stvorili jer ih nisu ni mogli stvoriti. Bunjevci su se izjašnjavali Hrvatima i prije 1945. godine. Zapravo, izjašnjavali su se već i prije 1918. godine, ali je poznato da je hrvatstvo Bunjevaca bilo proganjano i prije i poslije Prvoga svjetskog rata. Ipak, nakon dugotrajne borbe bački su Bunjevci konačno uoči Drugoga svjetskog rata uspjeli biti prihvaćeni kao Hrvati. Uspjeli su to u monarhističkoj Jugoslaviji i to zato jer su srpski političari tada odlučili prekinuti neprijateljstvo prema Hrvatima.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  22. ^ a b c d e f Damir Magaš (2015). "Population and Settlements of Croatia". The Geography of Croatia. University of Zadar. p. 321.
  23. ^ "Ethnic Minorities in Serbia: An Overview" (PDF). OSCE. February 2008. p. 12.
  24. ^ "2011 Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia: Ethnicity" (PDF). Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. 29 November 2012. p. 8. (PDF) from the original on 4 September 2016. Retrieved 17 March 2018.
  25. ^ "Final results - Ethnicity". Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. 28 April 2023. Retrieved 22 October 2023.
  26. ^ "Population by ethnicity (Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia)". Retrieved 5 May 2023.
  27. ^ "Official Census 2011 Results". Republički zavod za statistiku. Archived from the original on 16 April 2013. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  28. ^ Republički zavod za statistiku Republike Srbije
  29. ^ Popis stanovništva, domaćinstva i stanova u 2002, Stanovništvo - nacionalna ili etnička pripadnost, podaci po naseljima, knjiga 1, Republički zavod za statistiku, Beograd, Februar 2003.
  30. ^ Tóth Antal: Magyarország és a Kárpát-medence regionális társadalomföldrajza, 2011, p. 67-68
  31. ^ The Committee of Experts of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages (17 March 2023). "Fifth evaluation report on Serbia". p. 17; 32-37.
  32. ^ . Hrvatska Riječ (in Croatian). 2021-03-08. Archived from the original on 2021-07-31.
  33. ^ "Masumi Kameda. Language Ideologies of the Bunjevac Minority in Vojvodina: Historical Backgrounds and the Post-1991 Situation" (PDF). 2014. pp. 95–119.
  34. ^ "Bunjevački govori". Razlikuju se tri ogranka Bunjevačkih govora – podunavski, primorsko-lički i dalmatinski, a svi su kulturno bliski prema povijesnim, etnološkim i lingvističkim istraživanjima.
  35. ^ . Hrvatska Riječ. 02-12-2021. p. Hitovi:74. Archived from the original on 2021-12-02. Retrieved 2022-01-03.
  36. ^ "Masumi Kameda. Language Ideologies of the Bunjevac Minority in Vojvodina: Historical Backgrounds and the Post-1991 Situation" (PDF). 2014. p. 113 (95–119).
  37. ^ "REČNIK BAČKIH BUNJEVACA".
  38. ^ "Sombor: Predstavljen "Rječnik govora bačkih Hrvata" akademika dr. Ante Sekulića/". February 2008.
  39. ^ Monique Kostadinović Randwijk. Bunjevac European Center. . www.bunjevac.org. Archived from the original on 2022-01-15. Retrieved 2022-01-15. A few Bunjevac leaders and political activists, who are influential in the Bunjevac National Council, are strongly involved in developing a "national" identity of Bunjevci: stimulating folklore activities, and searching for political and linguistic support to transform Bunjevac dialect in to a distinct language.
  40. ^ Bojan Belić (2014). "Bunyev(s): linguistic frontier to be?". изворни научни чланак УДК 81'27(497.113). 12 (2): 613. It appears that the concept of standardization, whatever it may mean to the various parties involved, occupies a central position, or – actually – the central position in the Bunyev language debate, for it looks as though it is only thanks to standardization that a speech variety may gain the label of language.
  41. ^ Hrvatska katolička mreža (20 March 2021). "Ne postoji bunjevački jezik, nego bunjevački govor". From the scientific and linguistic point of view, we can say that it is a traditional Croatian language. Numerous records speak of this, all Croatian linguists, all world Slavic linguists, and even leading Serbian linguists have never questioned the Croatian origin of the Bunjevac dialect. Željko Jozić
  42. ^ "Odluka o utvrđivanju standarda bunjevačkog jezika: 18/2018-192" Одлука о утврђивању стандарда буњевачког језика: 18/2018-192 [Decision of the National Council of Bunjevci no. 18/2018-192] (in Serbian). from the original on 2021-09-02. Retrieved 2020-07-30 – via Pravno-informacioni sistem RS.
  43. ^ (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 2020-06-09. Retrieved 2020-07-30 – via Pravno-informacioni sistem RS.
  44. ^ "Одлука о утврђивању стандарда буњевачког језика: 18/2018-192". 2018. DECISION."Official Gazette of RS", No. 18 of March 9, 2018. The standard of the Bunjevac language is determined:- the established standard must be applied in textbooks and teaching of the Bunjevac language / speech;- the established standard must be applied in the media registered in order to achieve the public interest of information in the Bunjevac language;- The National Council of the Bunjevac National Minority may support in co-financing only those publications in the Bunjevac language that are in accordance with the established standard of the Bunjevac language;
  45. ^ Šolaja, Dragan (2007-10-25). "Bunjevački jezik u školskom programu". Blic (in Serbian). from the original on 2012-10-08. Retrieved 2011-05-25.
  46. ^ Vuković, Teodora (January 2015). "Vuković,Theodora. Izrada modela dijalekatskog korpusa bunjevačkog govora".
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on 2022-03-05. Retrieved 2022-07-30. Bunjevački rečnik je audio-rečnik koji za cilj ima da predstavi realnu, svakodnevnu i spontanu upotrebu bunjevačkog govora. Zamišljen je kao baza koja će moći da se dopunjuje i proširuje. Kao osnova rečnika korišćeni su audio snimci prikupljani tokom istraživanja bunjevačkih običaja i govora od strane Balkanoločkog instituta Srpske akademije nauka i umetnosti tokom 2009. godine. Rezultati tog istraživanja objavljeni su monografiji ,,Bunjevci - Etnodijalektološka istraživanja 2009"1. Iz tog korpusa uzete su reči i primeri njihove upotrebe, a značenja reči su preuzete iz ,,Rečnika bačkih Bunjevaca"2. Za svaku reč, kao i za primere postoji zvučni zapis, kako bi bilo moguće čuti njihov autentičan izgovor. Bunjevački govor pripada mlađim štokavskim dijalektima ikavskog narečja. Bunjevci naseljavaju oblast Bačke, i to pretežno mesta u okolini Subotice i Sombora. Pomenuta istraživanja Balkanološkog instituta, obuhvataju govore iz okoline Subotice, tačnije ruralne zajednice Bikovo, Klisa, Đurđin, Mala Bosna, Stari Žednik i Tavankut. Izostavljene su zajednice iz Sombora i Bunjevci iz Mađarske. Bunjevački rečnik je 2013. godine započela Teodora Vuković, studentkinja master studija na Filološkom fakultetu u Beogradu, uz podršku prof. dr Biljane Sikimić sa Balkanološkog instituta Srpske akademije nauka i umetnosti. Projekat podržavaju Balkanološki institut i Nacionalni savet bunjevačke nacionalne manjine. SANU, 2012
  48. ^ Mark E. Karan and Kerry M. Corbett (2014). Dialogue on Dialect Standardization. Dialogue on Dialect Standardization (PDF). Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 55–61. ISBN 978-1-4438-6661-3. Retrieved 2022-01-16. In every region there is a linguistic variation. This linguistic variation has to be respected, because it is the identity of people. That is where differentiation between the culture is. Dialect standardization only happens when the people involved have enough or modify their identity to that or affiliation associated with a larger group, standardization is possible and often occurs. Before a standardization process, speaker use their dialects for all of their speech functions. After a standardization process, speaker use the standardized variety for at least some of their speech functions. For example, reading and writing and conversation in formality situations often call for use of standardized dialect variety. Thus, the standardization process is fundamentally a shift in language use patterns.
  49. ^ Vanja, koji je rođeni Beograđanin, dijete iz mješovitoga braka, od majke Srpkinje i oca Hrvata iz Istre. Krsno ime mu je Franjo, a kršten je u katoličkoj crkvi u Beogradu. Vanja, who is born in Belgrade, a child of mixed marriage, from a Serb mother and a Croat father from Istria. His baptismal name is Franjo, and he was baptized in the Catholic Church in Belgrade. 2010, https://www.jutarnji.hr/sport/vanja-udovicic-ima-tri-drzavljanstva-a-krsno-ime-mu-je-franjo/2129490/

External links edit

  • (in Croatian) Hrvatska riječ weekley
  • (in Croatian)
  • (in Croatian) Published 17 Feb 2011 by Večernji list.

croats, serbia, serbian, croatian, redirects, here, language, serbo, croatian, serbian, Хрвати, Србији, romanized, hrvati, srbiji, serbian, croats, serbo, croatian, Српски, Хрвати, srpski, hrvati, recognized, national, minority, serbia, according, 2022, census. Serbian Croatian redirects here For the language see Serbo Croatian Croats of Serbia Serbian Hrvati u Srbiјi romanized Hrvati u Srbiji or Serbian Croats Serbo Croatian Srpski Hrvati Srpski Hrvati are a recognized national minority in Serbia According to the 2022 census the population of ethnic Croats in Serbia is 39 107 constituting 0 6 of the total population The vast majority of them live in the northern autonomous province of Vojvodina where they number 32 684 and make up 1 9 of the province s population An additional 11 104 people declared themselves as Bunjevci in the 2022 census there are differing views whether Bunjevci should be regarded as Croats or as members of a distinct ethnic group The majority of the Sokac community consider themself as Croats Not all Croats have Bunjevac or Sokac ancestors Croats of SerbiaHrvati u SrbiјiHrvati u SrbijiFlag of the National Council of the Croat minority in SerbiaTotal population39 107 Serbian citizens 0 59 of the population of Serbia 2022 1 Regions with significant populations Vojvodina32 684 1 88 2 Belgrade4 554 0 27 2 LanguagesCroatian Serbian BunjevacReligionRoman CatholicismRelated ethnic groupsBunjevci Sokci South Slavs Contents 1 History 2 Coat of arms 3 Politics 4 Demographics 5 Language 5 1 Bunjevac dialect 6 Organizations 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksHistory editDuring the 15th century Croats mostly lived in the Syrmia region It is estimated that they were a majority in 76 out of 801 villages that existed in the present day territory of Vojvodina 3 According to 1851 data it is estimated that the population of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar the historical province that was predecessor of present day Vojvodina included among other ethnic groups 62 936 Bunjevci and Sokci and 2 860 Croats 4 page needed Subsequent statistical estimations from the second half of the 19th century conducted during Austro Hungarian period counted Bunjevci and Sokci as others and presented them separately from Croats in 1910 Austro Hungarian census 70 000 Bunjevci were categorized as others 5 The 1910 Austro Hungarian census also showed large differences in the numbers of those who considered themselves Bunjevci and Sokci and those who considered themselves Croats According to the census in the city of Subotica there were only 39 citizens who declared Croatian as their native language while 33 390 citizens were listed as speakers of other languages most of them declared Bunjevac as their native language 6 In the city of Sombor 83 citizens declared Croatian language while 6 289 citizens were listed as speakers of other languages mostly Bunjevac 6 In the municipality of Apatin 44 citizens declared Croatian and 7 191 declared other languages mostly Bunjevac Sokac and Gypsy 6 dead link In Syrmia which was then part of the Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia according to the 1910 census results 7 Croats were a relative or absolute majority in Gibarac 843 Croats or 86 46 out of total population Kukujevci 1 775 or 77 61 Novi Slankamen 2 450 or 59 22 Petrovaradin 3 266 or 57 02 Stari Slankamen 466 or 48 19 Hrtkovci 1 144 or 45 43 and Morovic 966 or 41 67 Other places which had a significant minority of Croats included Novi Banovci 37 70 Golubinci 36 86 Sremska Kamenica 36 41 Sot 33 01 Sremska Mitrovica 30 32 Sremski Karlovci 29 94 and Ljuba 29 86 In 1925 Bunjevac Sokac Party and Pucka kasina organized in Subotica the 1000th anniversary celebration of the establishment of Kingdom of Croatia when in 925 Tomislav of Croatia became first king of the Croatian Kingdom On the King Tomislav Square in Subotica a memorial plaque was unveiled with the inscription The memorial plaque of millennium of Croatian Kingdom 925 1925 Set by Bunjevci Croats 8 Besides Subotica memorial plaques of King Tomislav were also revealed in Sremski Karlovci and Petrovaradin In 2020 the birth home of ban Josip Jelacic built in the 18th century and located in Petrovaradin was bought by the Republic of Serbia from private owners It was later reconstructed and given as a gift to the Croatian community 9 nbsp Coat of arms of Croats of Serbia in official use since 2005Coat of arms editFlag and coat of arms of Croats of Serbia were adopted on 11 June 2005 in a session of the Croat National Council in Subotica Politics editThe Croat National Council is a body of self government of the Croatian minority in Serbia 10 On 11 June 2005 the Council adopted the historical coat of arms of Croatia a checkerboard consisting of 13 red and 12 white fields the difference with the Croatian coat of arms being the crown on top Demographics editSee also Ethnic groups of Vojvodina In the results of census taking is a disagreement between real ethnicity and declared ethnicity 11 Most citizens who declare that they belong to a specific ethnic minority group already come from families with mixed family backgrounds e g mixed marriages between different nationalities ethnicities interreligious marriages The Republic of Serbia is using a segregated model of multiculturalism 12 The national councils receive funds from the state and province to finance their own governing body cultural and educational organisations 13 The amount of money for the national councils depends on the results of a census in which the Serbian population can register and self declare as a member of a state recognized minority of their choice 14 15 Today most members of the Sokci community consider themselves Croats The Bunjevci in the Hungarian and Serbian Backa area are split between those who declare themselves as a distinct ethnic group with their own language and those who identify themselves as a Croatian sub ethnic group 16 The latter are represented in Serbia by the Croat National Council 17 18 and the former by the Bunjevac National Council 19 20 Not all Croats in Serbia have Bunjevac or Sokac origins The number of Croats in Serbia was somewhat larger in previous censuses that were conducted between 1948 and 1991 Proponents of a separate Bunjevac nation argue that the number of Croats may have been smaller at that time as the communist authorities counted in the people to as Croats who self declared as Bunjevac or Sokac Robert Skenderovic emphasizes that already before 1918 and the Communist rule Bunjevci have made strong efforts to be recognized as part of the Croatian people 21 The largest recorded number of Croats in a census was in 1961 when there were 196 409 Croats including Bunjevci and Sokci in the Socialist Republic of Serbia around 2 57 of the total population of Serbia at the time Since 1961 census the Croat population in Serbia is in a constant decrease nbsp Saint Lawrence the Martyr Catholic Church in Sonta Year census data Number of ethnic Croats Percent of national population 1948 169 894 22 2 6 1953 162 158 22 2 3 1961 196 411 22 2 6 1971 184 913 22 2 2 1981 149 368 22 1 6 1991 105 406 22 1 1 1991 97 344 1 2 2002 70 602 23 0 9 2011 57 900 24 0 8 2022 39 107 25 0 6 excluding Kosovo excluding 11 104 Bunjevci nbsp Linguistic map of Vojvodina according to the 1910 census Territories with Croatian speaking inhabitants are colored in orange nbsp Croats in Vojvodina according to the 2002 census based on settlement data nbsp Main Croatian settlements in Vojvodina 2002 census In the 2022 census of the Republic of Serbia 39 107 Croats and 11 104 Bunjevci are registered of which the census methodology has not made a subdivision of percentage respondents identifying themselves as ethnic Bunjevac Croats or as a separate Bunjevac ethnicity in conjunction with their belief of being a distinct Bunjevac people 26 According to the 2011 census there were 57 900 Croats in Serbia or 0 8 of the country s population 27 Of these 47 033 lived in Vojvodina 28 where they formed the fourth largest ethnic group representing 2 8 of the population A further 7 752 lived in the national capital Belgrade with the remaining 3 115 in the rest of the country Croats of Sokac origin constituting the largest part of population in three villages Sonta in the municipality of Apatin Backi Breg and Backi Monostor both in the municipality of Sombor 29 page needed And Croats of Bunjevac origin are living traditionally in Subotica which is their cultural and political center in Bajmok Bikovo Donji Tavankut and Gornji Tavankut Đurđin Ljutovo Mala Bosna Sombor and Stari Zednik Year census data Number of ethnic Croats Percent of national population 1495 7 500 3 9 1787 38 161 8 0 1828 67 692 7 8 1840 66 362 7 3 1857 60 690 5 9 1880 72 298 6 1 1890 80 404 6 0 1900 81 198 5 7 1910 91 366 6 0 1921 129 788 8 5 1931 132 517 8 2 1940 101 035 6 1 1948 134 232 8 1 1953 128 054 7 5 1961 145 341 7 8 1971 138 561 7 1 1981 109 203 5 4 1991 74 226 3 7 2002 56 546 2 7 2011 47 033 2 4 source 30 note1 The numbers were adjusted for the present borders of Vojvodina note2 Croats are counted together with Bunjevci and Sokci for data before 1991 Language editCroatian a standard variety of the pluricentric language Serbo Croatian is listed since 2002 as one of the six official languages of Vojvodina The European Union has an active policy to promote the use of regional or minority languages in Serbia 31 Bunjevac dialect edit Main article Bunjevac dialect Further information Younger Ikavian dialect and Dialects of Serbo Croatian Some members of the Bunjevac community preserved a Neo Shtokavian Younger Ikavian dialect of the Serbo Croatian pluricentric language also known as Bunjevac dialect bunjevacki dijalekt or Bunjevac speech bunjevacki govor 32 Their accent is purely Ikavian with i for the Common Slavic vowels yat 33 Since 2021 Croatia has categorized the Neo Stokavian Younger Ikavian dialect to be the Bunjevac dialect with three sub branches Danubian also known as Bunjevac Littoral Lika and Dalmatian also known as Bosnian Dalmatian 34 Its speakers largely use the Latin alphabet and are living in parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina parts of Croatia southern parts inc Budapest of Hungary as well in parts of the autonomous province Vojvodina of Serbia There have been three meritorious people who preserved the Bunjevac dialect in two separate dictionaries Grgo Baclija 35 and Marko Peic 36 with Ricnik backi Bunjevaca 37 editions 1990 2018 and Ante Sekulic 38 with Rjecnik govora backih Hrvata 2005 For decades there has been an unresolved language battle within the Bunjevac community and between Serbia and Croatia over the status of the Bunjevac speech 39 40 41 The dialect of the in Serbia residating Danubian Bunjevci was standardised in the Republic of Serbia in 2018 and officially approved as a standard dialect by the Ministry of Education for teaching in schools 42 43 44 45 With the standardisation of the Bunjevac dialect activists and members of the Bunjevac National Council are striving for language secession with the political aim that the Bunjevac dialect will gain in Serbia the political linguistic status of independent language Theodora Vukovic has provided in 2009 the scientific methodology for the finalization of the standardisation process of the Bunjevac dialect corpus in Serbia 46 47 classified as the Serbian Bunjevac dialect variety of the Danubian branch of the Neo Shtokavian Younger Ikavian dialect Speakers use in general the standardised dialect variety for writing and conversation in formal situations 48 Organizations editBunjevac Croatian Cultural and Educational Society in Serbia HKPD Matija Gubec Tavankut www hkpdmatijagubec org rs Croatian Community in Belgrade Tin Ujevic Institute for Culture of Croats of Vojvodina Zavod za kulturu vojvođanskih Hrvata www zkvh org rsNotable people editJosip Jelacic Ban of Croatia Ilija Okrugic poet and playwright Stjepan Horvat geodesist and professor Marijan Benes former boxer born in Belgrade to a Croat father and a Serb mother Ratko Rudic water polo coach and a former water polo player Stjepan Filipovic People s Hero of Yugoslavia Franjo Mihalic long distance runner and Olympic silver medalist Josip Leko politician who served as the Speaker of the Croatian Parliament Jovan Mikic athlete Davor Stefanek wrestler and former world champion 27 better source needed Vanja Udovicic politician and former professional water polo Serb mother and Croat father 49 Ivica Vrdoljak footballer Ivan Saric sportsman Tomislav Zigmanov Serbian Croat politician author publisher and academic Slavoljub Muslin notable football player Neda Arneric Serbian and Yugoslav actress Serb mother and a Croatian father she was considered a sex symbol of Yugoslav cinematography Aljosa Vuckovic Serbian actor Tamara Boros table tennis playerSee also edit nbsp Croatia portal nbsp Serbia portal Croat National Council Croatia Serbia relations Janjevci Operation Storm Persecution of Croats in Serbia during the Yugoslav Wars Serbs of CroatiaReferences edit Final results Ethnicity Pochetna 2023 07 14 Retrieved 2023 12 07 a b Population by ethnicity by areas PDF Retrieved 2023 12 07 site web http www mtafki hu konyvtar kiadv etnika ethnicMAP 005 session e html Karoly Kocsis Sasa Kicosev Changing ethnic patterns on the present territory of Vojvodina Dr Dusan J Popovic Srbi u Vojvodini knjiga 3 Novi Sad 1990 Juraj Loncarevic Hrvati u Mađarskoj i Trianonski ugovor Skolske novine Zagreb 1993 ISBN 953 160 004 X a b c Bacs Bodrog County www talmamedia com Archived from the original on 29 March 2008 Retrieved 27 January 2022 A magyar szent korona orszagainak 1910 evi nepszamlalasa Budapest 1912 Bara Mario 2006 01 08 Hrvatska seljacka stranka u narodnom preporodu backih Hrvata The Croatian Peasants Party in the national movement of Backa Croats Summary Pro Tempore in Croatian 3 59 75 ISSN 1334 8302 Srdic Milan Rodna kuca bana Josipa Jelacica vracena Hrvatskoj nacionalnoj zajednici www rts rs RTS Radio televizija Srbije Radio Television of Serbia Retrieved 2020 07 20 Statut Hrvatskog nacionalnog vijeca u Republici Srbiji Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia 2015 SELF EVALUATION SERBIAN OSCE CHAIRMANSHIP PDF p 78 there are problems with faking a particular national minority background in order to benefit from affirmative action measures In this context the question can be raised whether there are limits to self identification i e whether belonging to a particular ethnic group can be based solely on one s sentiments or is self identification limited by objective criteria Sara Zarkovic The Politics of Multiculturalism in the Northern Autonomous Province of Vojvodina Serbian Youth Discourse on Multiculturalism in Novi Sad p 120 Stjepanovic Dejan 2015 The Claimed Co ethnics and Kin State Citizenship in Southeastern Europe Ethnopolitics 14 2 152 doi 10 1080 17449057 2014 991151 hdl 20 500 11820 8f5ce80b bfb3 470c a8b0 620df2a7760f S2CID 146354988 Knezevic Aleksandar From ethno statistics to ethno politics Is the population census a reliable source of data for ethno demographic research PDF Mina Djuric Nikolic and Laura Trimajova 2015 A Tale of Two Serbias Census taking in 2002 and 2011 PDF Census taking in Serbia is particularly important as the results dictate budgetary fund allocations for each respective ministry as such the need for accuracy cannot be overstated Vukovic Petar 2017 Bunjevci from Backa Language situation In Repansek Luka Sekli Matej eds 12th Slavic Linguistics Society Annual Meeting Book of Abstracts Zalozba ZRC Slovenian Academy of Arts and Sciences pp 198 199 ISBN 978 9 61050 027 8 Hrvatska manjina u Republici Srbiji hrvatiizvanrh gov hr Sredisnji drzavni ured za Hrvate izvan Republike Hrvatske Central State Office for Croats Outside the Republic of Croatia Statement by the Presidency of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts regarding the Bunjevci Croats PDF www info hazu hr Glasnik HAZU 2014 p 53 The Presidency of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts in a session held on 12 September 2014 made the following statement explaining that the Bunjevci Croats form an integral part of the Croatian national corpus The Presidency of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts one of the fundamental institutions of the Croatian nation and of all the citizens of the Republic of Croatia among the roles of which belongs the preservation of national identity made the following statement in a session held on 12 September 2014 The Bunjevci a Croatian ethnic group are made up of three branches the Dalmatian Herzegovinian branch the Primorje Lika branch and the Danube Region branch Not encroaching on the right of any individual to express their national affiliation based on their origin history traditional culture customs and language the western new Stokavian and Ikavian the Bunjevci Croats form an integral part of the Croatian national corpus O Bunjevcima About the Bunjevci bunjevci net Bunjevackog informativnog centra Bunjevac Information Center of the Bunjevac National Council National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia National Assembly activities www parlament gov rs Robert Skenderovic 29 Januar 2020 Bunjevacke Hrvate nisu stvorili komunisti www subotica info Bunjevacke Hrvate nisu stvorili komunisti Nisu ih stvorili jer ih nisu ni mogli stvoriti Bunjevci su se izjasnjavali Hrvatima i prije 1945 godine Zapravo izjasnjavali su se vec i prije 1918 godine ali je poznato da je hrvatstvo Bunjevaca bilo proganjano i prije i poslije Prvoga svjetskog rata Ipak nakon dugotrajne borbe backi su Bunjevci konacno uoci Drugoga svjetskog rata uspjeli biti prihvaceni kao Hrvati Uspjeli su to u monarhistickoj Jugoslaviji i to zato jer su srpski politicari tada odlucili prekinuti neprijateljstvo prema Hrvatima a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c d e f Damir Magas 2015 Population and Settlements of Croatia The Geography of Croatia University of Zadar p 321 Ethnic Minorities in Serbia An Overview PDF OSCE February 2008 p 12 2011 Census of Population Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia Ethnicity PDF Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia 29 November 2012 p 8 Archived PDF from the original on 4 September 2016 Retrieved 17 March 2018 Final results Ethnicity Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia 28 April 2023 Retrieved 22 October 2023 Population by ethnicity Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia Retrieved 5 May 2023 Official Census 2011 Results Republicki zavod za statistiku Archived from the original on 16 April 2013 Retrieved 3 February 2013 Republicki zavod za statistiku Republike Srbije Popis stanovnistva domacinstva i stanova u 2002 Stanovnistvo nacionalna ili etnicka pripadnost podaci po naseljima knjiga 1 Republicki zavod za statistiku Beograd Februar 2003 Toth Antal Magyarorszag es a Karpat medence regionalis tarsadalomfoldrajza 2011 p 67 68 The Committee of Experts of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages 17 March 2023 Fifth evaluation report on Serbia p 17 32 37 Grgo Baclija Bunjevacki je govor a ne jezik Hrvatska Rijec in Croatian 2021 03 08 Archived from the original on 2021 07 31 Masumi Kameda Language Ideologies of the Bunjevac Minority in Vojvodina Historical Backgrounds and the Post 1991 Situation PDF 2014 pp 95 119 Bunjevacki govori Razlikuju se tri ogranka Bunjevackih govora podunavski primorsko licki i dalmatinski a svi su kulturno bliski prema povijesnim etnoloskim i lingvistickim istrazivanjima In memoriam Grgo Baclija 1939 2021 Hrvatska Rijec 02 12 2021 p Hitovi 74 Archived from the original on 2021 12 02 Retrieved 2022 01 03 Masumi Kameda Language Ideologies of the Bunjevac Minority in Vojvodina Historical Backgrounds and the Post 1991 Situation PDF 2014 p 113 95 119 RECNIK BACKIH BUNJEVACA Sombor Predstavljen Rjecnik govora backih Hrvata akademika dr Ante Sekulica February 2008 Monique Kostadinovic Randwijk Bunjevac European Center EDUCATION Bunjevac Cultural Heritage Speech amp Tradition www bunjevac org Archived from the original on 2022 01 15 Retrieved 2022 01 15 A few Bunjevac leaders and political activists who are influential in the Bunjevac National Council are strongly involved in developing a national identity of Bunjevci stimulating folklore activities and searching for political and linguistic support to transform Bunjevac dialect in to a distinct language Bojan Belic 2014 Bunyev s linguistic frontier to be izvorni nauchni chlanak UDK 81 27 497 113 12 2 613 It appears that the concept of standardization whatever it may mean to the various parties involved occupies a central position or actually the central position in the Bunyev language debate for it looks as though it is only thanks to standardization that a speech variety may gain the label of language Hrvatska katolicka mreza 20 March 2021 Ne postoji bunjevacki jezik nego bunjevacki govor From the scientific and linguistic point of view we can say that it is a traditional Croatian language Numerous records speak of this all Croatian linguists all world Slavic linguists and even leading Serbian linguists have never questioned the Croatian origin of the Bunjevac dialect Zeljko Jozic Odluka o utvrđivanju standarda bunjevackog jezika 18 2018 192 Odluka o utvrђivaњu standarda buњevachkog јezika 18 2018 192 Decision of the National Council of Bunjevci no 18 2018 192 in Serbian Archived from the original on 2021 09 02 Retrieved 2020 07 30 via Pravno informacioni sistem RS PDF js viewer in Serbian Archived from the original on 2020 06 09 Retrieved 2020 07 30 via Pravno informacioni sistem RS Odluka o utvrђivaњu standarda buњevachkog јezika 18 2018 192 2018 DECISION Official Gazette of RS No 18 of March 9 2018 The standard of the Bunjevac language is determined the established standard must be applied in textbooks and teaching of the Bunjevac language speech the established standard must be applied in the media registered in order to achieve the public interest of information in the Bunjevac language The National Council of the Bunjevac National Minority may support in co financing only those publications in the Bunjevac language that are in accordance with the established standard of the Bunjevac language Solaja Dragan 2007 10 25 Bunjevacki jezik u skolskom programu Blic in Serbian Archived from the original on 2012 10 08 Retrieved 2011 05 25 Vukovic Teodora January 2015 Vukovic Theodora Izrada modela dijalekatskog korpusa bunjevackog govora ONLINE RECNIK BUNJEVACKOG GOVORA Archived from the original on 2022 03 05 Retrieved 2022 07 30 Bunjevacki recnik je audio recnik koji za cilj ima da predstavi realnu svakodnevnu i spontanu upotrebu bunjevackog govora Zamisljen je kao baza koja ce moci da se dopunjuje i prosiruje Kao osnova recnika korisceni su audio snimci prikupljani tokom istrazivanja bunjevackih obicaja i govora od strane Balkanolockog instituta Srpske akademije nauka i umetnosti tokom 2009 godine Rezultati tog istrazivanja objavljeni su monografiji Bunjevci Etnodijalektoloska istrazivanja 2009 1 Iz tog korpusa uzete su reci i primeri njihove upotrebe a znacenja reci su preuzete iz Recnika backih Bunjevaca 2 Za svaku rec kao i za primere postoji zvucni zapis kako bi bilo moguce cuti njihov autentican izgovor Bunjevacki govor pripada mlađim stokavskim dijalektima ikavskog narecja Bunjevci naseljavaju oblast Backe i to pretezno mesta u okolini Subotice i Sombora Pomenuta istrazivanja Balkanoloskog instituta obuhvataju govore iz okoline Subotice tacnije ruralne zajednice Bikovo Klisa Đurđin Mala Bosna Stari Zednik i Tavankut Izostavljene su zajednice iz Sombora i Bunjevci iz Mađarske Bunjevacki recnik je 2013 godine zapocela Teodora Vukovic studentkinja master studija na Filoloskom fakultetu u Beogradu uz podrsku prof dr Biljane Sikimic sa Balkanoloskog instituta Srpske akademije nauka i umetnosti Projekat podrzavaju Balkanoloski institut i Nacionalni savet bunjevacke nacionalne manjine SANU 2012 Mark E Karan and Kerry M Corbett 2014 Dialogue on Dialect Standardization Dialogue on Dialect Standardization PDF Cambridge Scholars Publishing pp 55 61 ISBN 978 1 4438 6661 3 Retrieved 2022 01 16 In every region there is a linguistic variation This linguistic variation has to be respected because it is the identity of people That is where differentiation between the culture is Dialect standardization only happens when the people involved have enough or modify their identity to that or affiliation associated with a larger group standardization is possible and often occurs Before a standardization process speaker use their dialects for all of their speech functions After a standardization process speaker use the standardized variety for at least some of their speech functions For example reading and writing and conversation in formality situations often call for use of standardized dialect variety Thus the standardization process is fundamentally a shift in language use patterns Vanja koji je rođeni Beograđanin dijete iz mjesovitoga braka od majke Srpkinje i oca Hrvata iz Istre Krsno ime mu je Franjo a krsten je u katolickoj crkvi u Beogradu Vanja who is born in Belgrade a child of mixed marriage from a Serb mother and a Croat father from Istria His baptismal name is Franjo and he was baptized in the Catholic Church in Belgrade 2010 https www jutarnji hr sport vanja udovicic ima tri drzavljanstva a krsno ime mu je franjo 2129490 External links edit in Croatian Hrvatska rijec weekley in Croatian Zajednica protjeranih Hrvata iz Srijema Backe i Banata in Croatian Hrvati Vojvodine Josipovicu i Tadicu zastitite nas Otvoreno pismo Published 17 Feb 2011 by Vecernji list Portals nbsp Croatia nbsp Serbia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Croats of Serbia amp oldid 1217493566, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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