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Ivanovo, Pančevo

Ivanovo (Serbian Cyrillic: Иваново; Hungarian: Sándoregyháza; Bulgarian: Иваново; German: Alexanderkirchen) is a village located in the Pančevo municipality, in the South Banat District of Vojvodina, Serbia. It has a population of 974 inhabitants.

Ivanovo
Иваново (Serbian)
Иваново (Bulgarian)
Sándoregyháza (Hungarian)
Roman Catholic Church Saint Wendelin
Ivanovo
Location of Ivanovo within Serbia
Ivanovo
Ivanovo (Serbia)
Ivanovo
Ivanovo (Europe)
Coordinates: 44°44′11″N 20°42′03″E / 44.73639°N 20.70083°E / 44.73639; 20.70083
CountrySerbia
ProvinceVojvodina
DistrictSouth Banat
MunicipalitiesPančevo
Area
 • Total42.57 km2 (16.44 sq mi)
Population
 (2022)
 • Total974
 • Density23/km2 (59/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
26233
Area code+381(0)13
Car platesPA

Name edit

The Serbian name of the village means Ivan's place of residence. According to a legend, a Bulgarian Paulician man called Ivan Guran was the first to make his home in the present day territory of the village.[2][3] The Hungarian and German names of the village mean place of residence of Alexander's church. Both names refer to Bishop of Csanád, Sándor Bonnaz, who had a major role in funding the local church, which had been built between 1889 and 1899.[4][5]

Location edit

Ivanovo is located in the southern part of the Town of Pančevo, administrative unit in the South Banat District, and south of its administrative center, Pančevo itself. Village of Omoljica, also part of Pančevo, is just to the northwest, upstream the Nadela. Across the Danube is the village of Ritopek, in the municipality of Grocka, which is part of the City of Belgrade.[6][7]

Geography edit

Ivanovo is situated at the mouth of the channeled Nadela river into the Danube's arm of Dunavac. The village is situated among the floodplains of the Danube: Ponjavica on the east, which has been declared a nature park, and Ivanovačko Ostrvo, on the south, which has been declared a natural monument. Ivanovačko ostrvo occupies the river island (ada) of Ivanovo, just south of the village, which has been formed by the Nadela, Dunavac and Danube, at its 1,137 km (706 mi).[6][7] The area is the remaining patch of once vast flooded forests of Podunavlje. River and canal banks are inhabited by the relics Pančić's frog grass (Senecio pancicii) and wild grape vine (Vitis vinifera subsp. sylvestris).[8]

The village is almost from all sides encircled by the rivers and canals (Veliki kanal, etc.), giving an island feel.[9] The section along the Dunavac and the Danube itself is protected by an embankment,[6] which protects the village as it is located 5 metres (16 ft) below the Danube's level.[8]

Ivanovo is located in the vast Banat plain, surrounded by the pastures and the groves of poplar and black locust. Along the village, the avenues of walnut trees and lindens are planted.[9]

The waters around the village are a natural spawning area of common carp, so the fishing is quite developed, though mostly a recreational one. The surrounding floodplains are inhabited by storks, herons, swans, geese and ducks.[9] Protected white-tailed eagle nests in the area.[8]

History edit

The village was founded in 1868,[3][9] and it is the youngest settlement of this administrative area. It was first settled by Banat Bulgarians (Paulicians), and fifteen years later by Germans and Hungarian (Székelys of Bukovina).[3]

Ivanovo is founded in connection with the communal works which were planned for the area. They included the vast melioration, mostly draining of the floodplains in order to obtain arable land. Other project was prevention of the flooding and construction of the embankment along the Danube's bank.[9]

The settlement was a part of Habsburg's military frontier (Austrian Empire) since its founding, then it belonged to the Torontál county of Austria-Hungary. After World War I, that area was a part of provisional Torontalsko-tamiške županja (Treaty of Trianon), in 1922 of Belgrade oblast and since 1929 of the Danube Banovina in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In the time after World War II its belonged to the Srez Pančevo of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The communal area of Ivanovo was a part of the municipal region of Pančevo from all these centuries to the present.

In 1944, Red Army troops which participated in the final expulsion of the German occupational forces from Serbia were stationed in and around Ivanovo, including Marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin.[9]

In 2010s, families from Belgrade and Pančevo began buying old houses and renovating them into the summer houses so Ivanovo serves as an air spa and excursion place for the population of the nearby polluted cities.[9] Unlike other rural areas in Vojvodina and central Serbia, where village houses and estates were sold for severely reduced prices since the 2000s, the real estate prices in Ivanovo remained high, despite the village, being at the ending part of the road, has been described as "appendix" of Pančevo.[8]

Characteristics edit

Though fairly small, the village has cultural venues, elementary school founded in 1888 and today named "Moša Pijade", community health center and post office. There is a Roman Catholic church in Ivanovo, dedicated to Wendelin of Trier, and in 2018 it was announced that an Orthodox church will be built, too.[9]

In the center of the village, a cannon was put on display. The cannon was used by the Red Army during the 1944 to expel the Germans.[9]

Demography edit

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
19212,271—    
19312,299+0.12%
19482,169−0.34%
19532,196+0.25%
19612,066−0.76%
19711,893−0.87%
19811,947+0.28%
19911,439−2.98%
20021,131−2.17%
20111,053−0.79%
Source: [10][11][12]
Year Total Hungarians Banat Bulgarians Germans Serbs Other nationalities
1880 724 8.14% 64.36% 22.23% 5.27%
1910 2,530 51.93% 30.15% 16.75% 0.51% 0.66%
1948 2,169 61.31% 34.80% 0.46% 1.56% 1.87%
2002 1,131 39.96% 27.14% 0.35% 19.71% 12.84%

Economy edit

Prior to World War II, the arm of the Danube served as a winter shelter (zimovnik) for ships during the harsh winters when the river would freeze, and as an occasional port. Until some time after the war, there was a regular ferry service to Ritopek, across the Danube. A buttons factory "Inga" was operational from 1948 to 1962.[9] The entry section into the Dunavac arm still serves as the winter shelter.[8]

In the 21st century, the settlement is almost completely agricultural, while a number of denizens is employed in Pančevo. Due to the meadows which surround it, and the groves of black locust, the area is suitable for beekeeping.[9] Fruit growing is also developed.[8]

In the center of the village there is a restaurant, today called Bife Aurelija, which has been working since 1870.[9]

Apart from the road which connects it to Omoljica, across the bridge over Nadela, Ivanovo can be reached from Ritopek, via a seasonal ferry,[9] through the Dunavac arm.[8]

Culture edit

In 2001, local Bulgarian people have formed the cultural association Ivanovo 1868.[13] There is also a Hungarian cultural-artistic association "Bonnaz Sándor" which has an ethno-house.[14]

Numerous festivities are held in the local cultural venue, including the annual international salon of art photography,[9] founded in 2007. Photo-safari is also organized annually, so as the "Golden Accordion" festival.[8] Organizers of the photography festival and safari are the cultural center "Žarko Zrenjanin" and the photo-group "Dunavac".[14]

In all of Serbia, the traditional shepherd's game called popika survived today only in Ivanovo. The old, contest-type game is played on grassy fields, somewhat resembles baseball, and the players are divided into "servants" and "masters". The origin is unknown and both the Bulgarians and the Hungarians claim it.[8]

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). stat.gov.rs (in Serbian). Statistical Office of Serbia. Archived from the original (PDF) on 14 November 2015. Retrieved 24 October 2019.
  2. ^ Vučković, Marija (2008). "Savremena istraživanja malih etničkih zajednica" [Contemporary studies of small ethnic communities]. XXI Vek (in Serbo-Croatian). 3: 2–8. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
  3. ^ a b c "Najznačajnija mesta u kojima žive Palćeni" [Most important places in which live Paulicians]. XXI Vek (in Serbo-Croatian). 3: 9–12. 2008. Retrieved 1 March 2019.
  4. ^ Crkva Sveti Vendelin Ivanovo on the Official Website by Diocese of Zrenjanin (in Serbian), Retrieved on 2017-01-01.
  5. ^ Sándor Bonnaz on the Website by Catholic Hierarchy (in English), Retrieved on 2017-01-02.
  6. ^ a b c Slobodan Radovanović (2007). Belgrade and surrounding places. Smederevska Palanka: Magic Map. ISBN 978-86-7802-004-9.
  7. ^ a b Turističko područje Beograda. Geokarta. 2007. ISBN 978-86-459-0099-2.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Olga Janković (27 June 2021). Најјужније "парче раја" јужног Баната [The southern Banat's southernmost "piece of heaven"]. Politika-Magazin, No. 1239 (in Serbian). pp. 19–21.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Miroslav Stefanović (20 May 2018). "Село у којем се слушта тишина" [Village in which you listen to the silence]. Politika-Magazin, No. 1077 (in Serbian). pp. 20–21.
  10. ^ Final results of the census of population from 31 January 1921, page 354. Kingdom of Yugoslavia - General State Statistics, Sarajevo. June 1932.
  11. ^ Final results of the census of population from 31 March 1931, page 54. Kingdom of Yugoslavia - General State Statistics, Belgrade. 1937.
  12. ^ Comparative overview of the number of population in 1948, 1953, 1961, 1971, 1981, 1991, 2002 and 2011 – Data by settlements, page 29. Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia, Belgrade. 2014. ISBN 978-86-6161-109-4.
  13. ^ Decenija KUD Ivanovo 1868, article on the Website by RTV Pančevo, Retrieved on 2017-01-13.
  14. ^ a b Olga Janković (22 April 2023). Фото-авантура у Иванову [Photo-adventure in Ivanovo]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 21.

Sources edit

  • Samu Borovszky, Magyarország vármegyéi és városai. Torontal vármegye, Budapest 1912.

External links edit

  • Ivanovo on the Official Website by the Municipality of Pančevo.

ivanovo, pančevo, ivanovo, serbian, cyrillic, Иваново, hungarian, sándoregyháza, bulgarian, Иваново, german, alexanderkirchen, village, located, pančevo, municipality, south, banat, district, vojvodina, serbia, population, inhabitants, ivanovo, Иваново, serbia. Ivanovo Serbian Cyrillic Ivanovo Hungarian Sandoregyhaza Bulgarian Ivanovo German Alexanderkirchen is a village located in the Pancevo municipality in the South Banat District of Vojvodina Serbia It has a population of 974 inhabitants Ivanovo Ivanovo Serbian Ivanovo Bulgarian Sandoregyhaza Hungarian Village Selo Roman Catholic Church Saint WendelinCoat of armsIvanovoLocation of Ivanovo within SerbiaShow map of VojvodinaIvanovoIvanovo Serbia Show map of SerbiaIvanovoIvanovo Europe Show map of EuropeCoordinates 44 44 11 N 20 42 03 E 44 73639 N 20 70083 E 44 73639 20 70083CountrySerbiaProvinceVojvodinaDistrictSouth BanatMunicipalitiesPancevoArea 1 Total42 57 km2 16 44 sq mi Population 2022 Total974 Density23 km2 59 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code26233Area code 381 0 13Car platesPA Contents 1 Name 2 Location 3 Geography 4 History 5 Characteristics 6 Demography 7 Economy 8 Culture 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources 13 External linksName editThe Serbian name of the village means Ivan s place of residence According to a legend a Bulgarian Paulician man called Ivan Guran was the first to make his home in the present day territory of the village 2 3 The Hungarian and German names of the village mean place of residence of Alexander s church Both names refer to Bishop of Csanad Sandor Bonnaz who had a major role in funding the local church which had been built between 1889 and 1899 4 5 Location editIvanovo is located in the southern part of the Town of Pancevo administrative unit in the South Banat District and south of its administrative center Pancevo itself Village of Omoljica also part of Pancevo is just to the northwest upstream the Nadela Across the Danube is the village of Ritopek in the municipality of Grocka which is part of the City of Belgrade 6 7 Geography editIvanovo is situated at the mouth of the channeled Nadela river into the Danube s arm of Dunavac The village is situated among the floodplains of the Danube Ponjavica on the east which has been declared a nature park and Ivanovacko Ostrvo on the south which has been declared a natural monument Ivanovacko ostrvo occupies the river island ada of Ivanovo just south of the village which has been formed by the Nadela Dunavac and Danube at its 1 137 km 706 mi 6 7 The area is the remaining patch of once vast flooded forests of Podunavlje River and canal banks are inhabited by the relics Pancic s frog grass Senecio pancicii and wild grape vine Vitis vinifera subsp sylvestris 8 The village is almost from all sides encircled by the rivers and canals Veliki kanal etc giving an island feel 9 The section along the Dunavac and the Danube itself is protected by an embankment 6 which protects the village as it is located 5 metres 16 ft below the Danube s level 8 Ivanovo is located in the vast Banat plain surrounded by the pastures and the groves of poplar and black locust Along the village the avenues of walnut trees and lindens are planted 9 The waters around the village are a natural spawning area of common carp so the fishing is quite developed though mostly a recreational one The surrounding floodplains are inhabited by storks herons swans geese and ducks 9 Protected white tailed eagle nests in the area 8 History editThe village was founded in 1868 3 9 and it is the youngest settlement of this administrative area It was first settled by Banat Bulgarians Paulicians and fifteen years later by Germans and Hungarian Szekelys of Bukovina 3 Ivanovo is founded in connection with the communal works which were planned for the area They included the vast melioration mostly draining of the floodplains in order to obtain arable land Other project was prevention of the flooding and construction of the embankment along the Danube s bank 9 The settlement was a part of Habsburg s military frontier Austrian Empire since its founding then it belonged to the Torontal county of Austria Hungary After World War I that area was a part of provisional Torontalsko tamiske zupanja Treaty of Trianon in 1922 of Belgrade oblast and since 1929 of the Danube Banovina in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia In the time after World War II its belonged to the Srez Pancevo of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia The communal area of Ivanovo was a part of the municipal region of Pancevo from all these centuries to the present In 1944 Red Army troops which participated in the final expulsion of the German occupational forces from Serbia were stationed in and around Ivanovo including Marshal Fyodor Tolbukhin 9 In 2010s families from Belgrade and Pancevo began buying old houses and renovating them into the summer houses so Ivanovo serves as an air spa and excursion place for the population of the nearby polluted cities 9 Unlike other rural areas in Vojvodina and central Serbia where village houses and estates were sold for severely reduced prices since the 2000s the real estate prices in Ivanovo remained high despite the village being at the ending part of the road has been described as appendix of Pancevo 8 Characteristics editThough fairly small the village has cultural venues elementary school founded in 1888 and today named Mosa Pijade community health center and post office There is a Roman Catholic church in Ivanovo dedicated to Wendelin of Trier and in 2018 it was announced that an Orthodox church will be built too 9 In the center of the village a cannon was put on display The cannon was used by the Red Army during the 1944 to expel the Germans 9 Demography editHistorical populationYearPop p a 19212 271 19312 299 0 12 19482 169 0 34 19532 196 0 25 19612 066 0 76 19711 893 0 87 19811 947 0 28 19911 439 2 98 20021 131 2 17 20111 053 0 79 Source 10 11 12 Year Total Hungarians Banat Bulgarians Germans Serbs Other nationalities 1880 724 8 14 64 36 22 23 5 27 1910 2 530 51 93 30 15 16 75 0 51 0 66 1948 2 169 61 31 34 80 0 46 1 56 1 87 2002 1 131 39 96 27 14 0 35 19 71 12 84 Economy editPrior to World War II the arm of the Danube served as a winter shelter zimovnik for ships during the harsh winters when the river would freeze and as an occasional port Until some time after the war there was a regular ferry service to Ritopek across the Danube A buttons factory Inga was operational from 1948 to 1962 9 The entry section into the Dunavac arm still serves as the winter shelter 8 In the 21st century the settlement is almost completely agricultural while a number of denizens is employed in Pancevo Due to the meadows which surround it and the groves of black locust the area is suitable for beekeeping 9 Fruit growing is also developed 8 In the center of the village there is a restaurant today called Bife Aurelija which has been working since 1870 9 Apart from the road which connects it to Omoljica across the bridge over Nadela Ivanovo can be reached from Ritopek via a seasonal ferry 9 through the Dunavac arm 8 Culture editIn 2001 local Bulgarian people have formed the cultural association Ivanovo 1868 13 There is also a Hungarian cultural artistic association Bonnaz Sandor which has an ethno house 14 Numerous festivities are held in the local cultural venue including the annual international salon of art photography 9 founded in 2007 Photo safari is also organized annually so as the Golden Accordion festival 8 Organizers of the photography festival and safari are the cultural center Zarko Zrenjanin and the photo group Dunavac 14 In all of Serbia the traditional shepherd s game called popika survived today only in Ivanovo The old contest type game is played on grassy fields somewhat resembles baseball and the players are divided into servants and masters The origin is unknown and both the Bulgarians and the Hungarians claim it 8 Gallery edit nbsp Impression of the floodplains nbsp A stork s nest on the roof of a house nbsp The mouth of the Nadela into the Danube nbsp Flooded forest nbsp Bridge across the DunavacSee also editList of cities towns and villages in Vojvodina List of places in SerbiaReferences edit Naseљa opshtine Panchevo PDF stat gov rs in Serbian Statistical Office of Serbia Archived from the original PDF on 14 November 2015 Retrieved 24 October 2019 Vuckovic Marija 2008 Savremena istrazivanja malih etnickih zajednica Contemporary studies of small ethnic communities XXI Vek in Serbo Croatian 3 2 8 Retrieved 28 February 2019 a b c Najznacajnija mesta u kojima zive Palceni Most important places in which live Paulicians XXI Vek in Serbo Croatian 3 9 12 2008 Retrieved 1 March 2019 Crkva Sveti Vendelin Ivanovo on the Official Website by Diocese of Zrenjanin in Serbian Retrieved on 2017 01 01 Sandor Bonnaz on the Website by Catholic Hierarchy in English Retrieved on 2017 01 02 a b c Slobodan Radovanovic 2007 Belgrade and surrounding places Smederevska Palanka Magic Map ISBN 978 86 7802 004 9 a b Turisticko podrucje Beograda Geokarta 2007 ISBN 978 86 459 0099 2 a b c d e f g h i Olga Jankovic 27 June 2021 Naјјuzhniјe parche raјa јuzhnog Banata The southern Banat s southernmost piece of heaven Politika Magazin No 1239 in Serbian pp 19 21 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Miroslav Stefanovic 20 May 2018 Selo u koјem se slushta tishina Village in which you listen to the silence Politika Magazin No 1077 in Serbian pp 20 21 Final results of the census of population from 31 January 1921 page 354 Kingdom of Yugoslavia General State Statistics Sarajevo June 1932 Final results of the census of population from 31 March 1931 page 54 Kingdom of Yugoslavia General State Statistics Belgrade 1937 Comparative overview of the number of population in 1948 1953 1961 1971 1981 1991 2002 and 2011 Data by settlements page 29 Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia Belgrade 2014 ISBN 978 86 6161 109 4 Decenija KUD Ivanovo 1868 article on the Website by RTV Pancevo Retrieved on 2017 01 13 a b Olga Jankovic 22 April 2023 Foto avantura u Ivanovu Photo adventure in Ivanovo Politika in Serbian p 21 Sources editSamu Borovszky Magyarorszag varmegyei es varosai Torontal varmegye Budapest 1912 External links editIvanovo on the Official Website by the Municipality of Pancevo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ivanovo Pancevo amp oldid 1178588754, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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