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Kragujevac

Kragujevac (Serbian Cyrillic: Крагујевац, pronounced [krǎɡujeʋats] (listen)) is the fourth largest city in Serbia and the administrative centre of the Šumadija District. It is the historical centre of the geographical region of Šumadija in central Serbia, and is situated on the banks of the Lepenica River. According to the 2022 census, City of Kragujevac has 171,628 inhabitants.

Kragujevac
Крагујевац (Serbian)
City of Kragujevac
From top: City Assembly Building, The 21 October Museum, National Museum of Kragujevac, Temple of the Assumption of the Most Holy Theotokos, Architecture in Kragujevac, Theatre building, Monument to the executed pupils and teachers, Second Kragujevac Gymnasium
Location of Kragujevac within Serbia.
Coordinates: 44°00′36.3″N 20°55′1.9″E / 44.010083°N 20.917194°E / 44.010083; 20.917194Coordinates: 44°00′36.3″N 20°55′1.9″E / 44.010083°N 20.917194°E / 44.010083; 20.917194
CountrySerbia
RegionŠumadija and Western Serbia
DistrictŠumadija
Founded1476
Government
 • MayorNikola Dašić (SNS)
Area
 • Rank22nd in Serbia
 • Urban82.83 km2 (31.98 sq mi)
 • Administrative835 km2 (322 sq mi)
Elevation
173 m (568 ft)
Population
 (2011 census)[3]
 • Rank4th in Serbia
 • Urban
150,835
 • Urban density1,800/km2 (4,700/sq mi)
 • Administrative
179,417
 • Administrative density210/km2 (560/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
СРБ-34 000
Area code+381 34
ISO 3166 codeSRB
Licence platesKG
Websitewww.kragujevac.rs

Kragujevac was the first capital of modern Serbia and the first constitution in the Balkans, the Sretenje Constitution, was proclaimed in the city in 1838. A unit of the Scottish Women's Hospitals for Foreign Service was located there in World War I. During the Second World War, Kragujevac was the site of a massacre by the Nazis in which 2,778 Serb men and boys were killed.

Modern Kragujevac is known for its large munitions (Zastava Arms) and automobile (FCA Srbija) industries, as well as its status as an education centre housing the University of Kragujevac, one of the region's largest higher education institutions.

Etymology

The name Kragujevac comes from 'kraguj' the Serbian name for cinereous vulture. In the Middle Ages, this bird was common in the woods of the area, and was used for hunting. The city's name means 'kraguj's tower', and the bird is represented on the city's coat of arms.[4][5]

History

Early and medieval

Over 200 archaeological sites in Šumadija confirm that the region's first human settlement took place around 40,000 years ago during the Paleolithic era. The Jerina cave, located near the village of Gradac in the direction of Batočina, is dated to have been inhabited from around 37,000 BP to 27,000 BP. Dugouts dated to 5,000 BC have been found in the city's vicinity, in the localities of Grivac, Kusovac, Divostin, Donje Grbice and Dobrovodica.[6] These remains belong to the Neolithic Starčevo culture, which, in this area, spread along the river valleys of Lepenica and Gruža. The best known artifacts are the fertility figurines called Divostinke ("Girls from Divostin").[7]

At the time of Roman conquest in 9 AD, the territory of the present-day city was largely inhabited by Illyrians (mainly the Dardani) and Celts (the Scordisci).[6] By the late 6th and early 7th centuries, large-scale Slavic raids and settlement began, along with invasions from Hunnic and Germanic tribes. Later, the area would become part of the First Bulgarian Empire. With the weakening of both the Bulgarian and Eastern Roman empires, Stefan Nemanja, Grand Prince of the consolidated medieval Serbian state, captured the territory between 1198 and 1199. Although it is hypothesized that the current area of the city was densely settled by the time of Stefan Nemanja's conquest, it does not appear in medieval Serbian documents.[6]

The first written mention of the city was in an Ottoman cadastral survey (defter) in 1476 after the city's incorporation into the Sanjak of Smederevo.[8] Referred to as 'Kraguyfoça', the settlement, after Ottoman conquest, consisted of a square formerly used as a market with 32 houses. The surrounding region was largely empty; even the forests that once dominated the region had been burned. By the end of the same century, however, the Ottoman administration began to slowly resettle the city's area; by the 1536 cadastral survey, the town had 7 Muslim neighborhoods (mahalas) with 56 houses in total, along with a Christian community of 29 houses. On the left bank of the Lepenica, a mosque was erected.[6][9]

Habsburg-Ottoman conflict and major revolts

In spite of its newfound consolidation under Turkish rule, the town's location in strategic borderland between the Habsburg monarchy and the Ottoman Empire made it an area of frequent conflict in the modern era. During the Great Turkish War, the Austrians, under Louis of Baden, pushed the Turks far to the south of the city. Although this occupation was short-lived, it spelled an end to consolidated Ottoman rule in the region. Soon after, in 1718, Kragujevac became a part of the Habsburg Kingdom of Serbia following conquest by Prince Eugene of Savoy and the signing of Treaty of Passarowitz. Under Austrian occupation, the area around the city was fortified, and the Muslim population driven out. In 1725 the first officially recorded cases of vampirism occurred in Kragujevac, in which two alleged vampires were accused of murdering 42 people. In other parts of Habsburg ruled Kingdom of Serbia similar cases followed after which the Serbian word vampir entered German and later other world languages.[10] As the Ottomans retook the town in 1739, and lost it again in 1789 to the same enemy, the town was ripe for new rule—this time under Serbian rebels.[6][11]

 
A scale model of royal complex founded by Miloš Obrenović

As a settlement central to the Sanjak of Smederevo under Ottoman rule, Kragujevac was of utmost strategic importance to its agitating, largely rural Serb inhabitants. Therefore, it became a centre of the Serbian Revolution, a national awakening of Serbs led by their vojvoda, Karađorđe. First liberated on 5 April 1804 during the First Serbian Uprising, the city was finally freed from imperial rule during the Second Serbian Uprising in 1815.[citation needed]

In 1818, Kragujevac, though largely depopulated following the conflicts of the preceding centuries, was proclaimed capital of the Principality of Serbia on 6 May 1818 by Miloš Obrenović in the medieval Vraćevšnica monastery. To mark the occasion, he built the Amidža Konak, perhaps ironically a lone cultural souvenir of Ottoman rule.[12] The first Serbian constitution, the Sretenje Constitution, was proclaimed in the city on 15 September 1835. It was one of the most liberal constitutions in Europe had ever seen.[citation needed]

Industrial development

Although Kragujevac lost its capital status to Belgrade in 1841, its importance only increased during the remainder of the 19th century as it grew into a city marked by its industry. Following centuries of economic underdevelopment, the underpinnings of the city's modernization—and Serbia's main munitions manufacturer, Zastava Arms—were laid in the commissioning of the city's foundry complex in 1835. Known under its Serbian acronym VTZ, the complex was completed in 1850, and the first cannon was cast in 1853. Colloquially styled the 'Knez's arsenal', its first director, Charles Loubry, was a French engineer authorized to take over this duty by a significantly larger figure than the Serbian knez—the Emperor of France, Napoleon III.[13]

 
The Kragujevac cannon foundry in its working days as part of the VTZ

Following the creation of the VTZ, industrial development continued at an unprecedented pace. The first telephone exchange was installed in 1858, and in 1868 the first industrial brewery was opened by Nikola Mesarović. The first printing press was founded in 1870. To connect the city's burgeoning military industry as well as its production of iron ploughs to the rest of Serbia's regions, the BelgradeNiš railroad was built in 1886. To serve its industrial population, Serbia's first grammar school (gimnazija), the city's first pharmacy, and its first cinema, located in a local kafana, were all built during the remainder of the 19th century, along with Kragujevac's Great (or Upper) Park and, in 1891, its first regulatory urban plan.[6][14] The city's industrialism characterized it among its European peers, along with its workers' demonstrations, known as the Crveni barjak ('Red flag') demonstrations, first held on 27 February 1876.[13] Today, the beginnings of the town's industry, the now-defunct VTZ, have been recognized by the Serbian government as vital to Serbia's cultural heritage and, as of 2017, consists of 151 individual objects, of which 31 are protected as unique heritage, including the old foundry, the machine workshop, the chimney, the fire lookout tower, the railroad bridge over the Lepenica River, and the cartridge factory. Once known by its non-industrial residents as the 'Forbidden City' (Zabranjeni Grad), the complex is now open to the public.[13]

World War I

During World War I, Kragujevac again became the capital of Serbia (1914–1915), and the seat of many state institutions—the Supreme Army Command was housed within the court house building.[6][15]

A unit of the Scottish Women's Hospital for Women's Service was based there from December 1914 to November 1915. A list of those working in the hospital can be viewed on the website "Imperial War Museum: Lives of the First World War " and more information on these units is below.[16]

During the war, Kragujevac lost around 15% of its population. On the night of 2 June 1918, a group of occupying Slovak soldiers from the Austro-Hungarian 71st infantry regiment mutinied in the city centre. The soldiers, led by Viktor Kolibík, had recently returned from captivity in Russia and were to be immediately deployed to the Italian Front. The mutiny failed, and 44 mutineers were executed.[17]

Yugoslavia

Following World War I, Kragujevac became a part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In the period before the Second World War, the city continued its cultural and economic development with the founding of the Gundulić Theatre and the Kragujevac Academic Theatre as well as a number of new factories.[18]

 
King Peter's Street

Following the Nazi invasion of Yugoslavia, the city came under direct Nazi occupation. After a joint Partisan-Chetnik attack on German forces in nearby Gornji Milanovac, Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel calculated that 50 people were to be shot for every German soldier wounded and 100 people were to be shot for every German soldier killed. Franz Böhme therefore ordered the deaths of nearly 2,800 men and boys between 19 and 21 October 1941 in the Kragujevac massacre.[19][20] The dead included a class from the city's First Gymnasium; today, a monument to the executed pupils is the symbol of the city.[21] The massacre inspired a poem titled Krvava Bajka (A Bloody Fairy Tale) by Desanka Maksimović.[22]

The city was liberated from Nazi Germany on 21 October 1944.[6]

In the post-war period, Kragujevac continued to develop its industry. Its main products were passenger cars, trucks and industrial vehicles, hunting arms, industrial chains, leather, and textiles. The biggest industry was Zastava Automobiles, which at one point employed tens of thousands people.[23]

The first product of the Zastava Automobiles car company, the FIAT 750, was manufactured in 1955 under a licence to Fiat Automobiles (now FCA). In the following three decades, more than five million passenger cars (FIAT 750, Zastava 1300, Zastava 101, Zastava 128, Zastava Yugo, Yugo Florida, Fiat 500L) were manufactured and marketed in 74 countries worldwide.[24] Perhaps most infamous among the automobiles produced is the Yugo, also marketed as the Zastava Korral.

The city's industry greatly suffered under international economic sanctions during the Milošević era in the 1990s, and some parts were reduced to rubble by the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia.[25]

Kragujevac today

The city today remains an industrial heart of Serbia, and has grown with the influx of students and refugees from the Yugoslav wars. In 2010, the city government signed a memorandum with the German development agency GIZ and in 2012 city hall adopted a strategy of urban development of the central city zone to be completed by 2030. As of December 2017, many objects within the complex deteriorated and the right bank of the Lepenica is urbanistically neglected. The authenticity and representative values of the complex must be preserved, but where it is allowed, the industrial and workers quarters will be transformed into the residential and commercial areas, traffic corridors and used for the numerous educational and cultural institutions Serbia's industrial city continues to cherish.[13]

Geography and infrastructure

Kragujevac lies 180 metres (591 feet) above sea level.[26] The coordinates of the city are 44°00'36.3 N and 20°55'01.9 E. It is located in the valley of the river Lepenica. The city covers an area of 835 square kilometres (322 sq mi), surrounded by the slopes of the Rudnik, Crni Vrh, and Gledić mountains.[26] Kragujevac is the traditional centre of Šumadija, a region characterized by its rolling hills and fertile orchards.[26]

Cityscape

The architecture of Kragujevac displays a fusion of many different styles. Historically, Ottoman (nowadays almost completely gone) and 19th century Vienna Secession style architecture have played an important role in the city's landscape.[27]

Newer architecture dominates the city's panorama. A blend of Viennese, Balkan as well as Brutalism is present, as showcased in the monuments to the Kragujevac massacre.[28] Post-war concrete apartment blocks built during the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia period are prominent.[28] Today, glass office buildings reflect the ambitious business aspirations of the city. Some important buildings in Kragujevac include:

  • The "old" (or "Pridvorina") church of Descent of the Holy Spirit, built in 1818 as a part of Prince Miloš's court[29]
  • The Old Parliament, built in the court of the church where the first parliamentary meeting was held in 1859
  • The Amidža Konak, built by Prince Miloš as a residential house (now exhibition) and an example of regional Serbian architecture[30]
  • The Prince Mihailo Konak, built in 1860 to blend local tradition with European architectural concepts and now the National Museum
  • The grammar school (gimnazija), built between 1885 and 1887 in European style to serve as the first educational institution of its kind in Serbia, educating prominent Serbian figures such as Svetozar Marković, Nikola Pašić, and Radomir Putnik

The Upper (Great) Park is the largest park in Kragujevac. It was established in 1898. It is covered with more than 10 hectares (25 acres) of greenery, and a dense canopy of century-old trees, renovated walkways and benches are the right place for rest, walk and relaxation. In the park and its immediate vicinity there are sports facilities for basketball, football, volleyball, tennis, and indoor and outdoor swimming pools.[28] Lower (Small) Park is located in the city centre, within the Milos Wreath complex. At its centre there is a monument to the Fallen People of Šumadija. The Ilina Voda park, a legacy of Svetozar Andrejević, was established in 1900. It covers an area of 7 hectares (17 acres).

There is a fountain with a small waterfall, five mini lakes connected by a small stream, and a small zoo with about 100 animals and a garden with various types of trees characteristic of Šumadija. The curiosity in the park is the largest sculpture of Easter eggs (3 metres (10 ft) high) in Europe and the second in the world; made from recycled metal, set in 2004.[31] Scenic attractions nearby include the Aranđelovac, Gornji Milanovac, Vrnjačka Banja, and Mataruška Banja, Karađorđe's castle, the Church of Saint George in Topola 40 kilometres (25 miles) away, the Old Kalenić monastery 55 kilometres (34 miles) away, the resorts of Rogot (28 km (17 mi)) and Stragari (34 km (21 mi)) with the old Blagoveštenje and Voljavča monasteries.

Transportation

Kragujevac has developed transportation infrastructure, with a variety of road connections to the Serbian capital, Belgrade. It can be reached using Serbian IB-class roads 24 (an expressway) and 25. In the coming years, the city will also be accessible via Pan-European Corridor X or, in Serbia, the A1 motorway. The town is also connected to nearby Jagodina and Gornji Milanovac via class IIA road numbers 170 and 176 (via Bar, Montenegro), respectively.[32]

Kragujevac is connected by bus lines with almost all cities in the country. The most frequent departures (every half-hour) are to Belgrade. The central bus station is about a kilometre away from the city centre. Kragujevac can also be reached by train. The central train station is located close to the central bus station.[33]

The company responsible for public transportation in Kragujevac is the City Traffic Agency (GSA). The integrated public transport is performed by two companies: Arriva Litas and Vulović Transport. There are 22 urban bus lines and 14 lines that connect nearby rural areas operating according to established timetable.[34] There are also 7 taxi and 3 rent-a-car companies operating in Kragujevac.[35] Car parking system with 10 parking lots and zoned street parking (three zones with 4,244 parking spaces) is operated by public service company Parking Service Kragujevac.[36]

Climate

Kragujevac has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfa), and with a July mean temperature of 22.6 °C (72.7 °F). Winds most often blow from southwest and northwest, while they often blow from southeast in January, February and March.[37]

Climate data for Kragujevac (1991–2020, extremes 1961–2020)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 20.6
(69.1)
25.2
(77.4)
29.4
(84.9)
32.0
(89.6)
35.4
(95.7)
39.4
(102.9)
43.9
(111.0)
40.4
(104.7)
37.8
(100.0)
34.7
(94.5)
27.6
(81.7)
21.0
(69.8)
43.9
(111.0)
Average high °C (°F) 5.7
(42.3)
8.2
(46.8)
13.1
(55.6)
18.4
(65.1)
23.0
(73.4)
26.9
(80.4)
29.3
(84.7)
29.6
(85.3)
24.3
(75.7)
18.8
(65.8)
12.7
(54.9)
6.5
(43.7)
18.0
(64.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 1.3
(34.3)
3.0
(37.4)
7.1
(44.8)
12.1
(53.8)
16.7
(62.1)
20.7
(69.3)
22.6
(72.7)
22.3
(72.1)
17.3
(63.1)
12.2
(54.0)
7.4
(45.3)
2.4
(36.3)
12.1
(53.8)
Average low °C (°F) −2.4
(27.7)
−1.3
(29.7)
2.0
(35.6)
6.1
(43.0)
10.5
(50.9)
14.4
(57.9)
15.9
(60.6)
15.6
(60.1)
11.6
(52.9)
7.2
(45.0)
3.3
(37.9)
−0.9
(30.4)
6.8
(44.2)
Record low °C (°F) −27.6
(−17.7)
−24.4
(−11.9)
−18.3
(−0.9)
−5.8
(21.6)
−0.6
(30.9)
2.7
(36.9)
7.2
(45.0)
4.6
(40.3)
−2.2
(28.0)
−6.6
(20.1)
−16.4
(2.5)
−20.7
(−5.3)
−27.6
(−17.7)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 42.1
(1.66)
40.1
(1.58)
46.6
(1.83)
54.3
(2.14)
70.3
(2.77)
77.2
(3.04)
65.8
(2.59)
56.0
(2.20)
53.6
(2.11)
54.2
(2.13)
44.6
(1.76)
47.0
(1.85)
651.8
(25.66)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 12.8 12.5 11.6 11.9 13.4 11.3 9.3 7.6 9.7 10.2 10.7 12.8 133.8
Average snowy days 8.5 7.7 3.8 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 2.5 6.6 29.9
Average relative humidity (%) 79.5 74.9 68.5 66.6 69.4 67.7 64.2 65.3 70.7 75.4 76.7 80.8 71.6
Mean monthly sunshine hours 71.9 91.3 148.4 184.7 225.7 260.1 293.3 280.2 197.0 148.5 92.5 62.3 2,055.9
Source: Republic Hydrometeorological Service of Serbia[38][39]

Municipalities and settlements

 
Defunct city municipalities with settlements
Defunct city municipalities

From May 2002 until March 2008, the city of Kragujevac was divided into the following city municipalities:

 
Image from central Kragujevac
Settlements

List of settlements in the city of Kragujevac:

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
194885,468—    
195393,465+1.80%
1961105,711+1.55%
1971130,551+2.13%
1981164,823+2.36%
1991180,084+0.89%
2002175,802−0.22%
2011179,417+0.23%
Source: [40]

According to the 2011 census results, the city's administrative area has a population of 179,417 inhabitants.

Around 70% (126,312 inhabitants) are of working age (aged 15 to 64). The employed population in 2014 was 42,148 (47.0% of whom were women), most of whom work in metalworking (22%) and medical and social services (13%). 54.6% of persons older than 15 have only secondary education, while 17.7%% hold a college or university degree.[41]

Around 93% of total city area is covered with water supply system, 78% with sewage system, 72% with natural gas supply network, and 92% with cell phone networks.[42]

Ethnic groups

Ethnic group Population
2011[43]
%
Serbs 172,052 95.90%
Romani 1,482 0.83%
Montenegrins 645 0.36%
Macedonians 297 0.17%
Croats 192 0.11%
Yugoslavs 175 0.10%
Gorani 101 0.06%
Muslims 97 0.05%
Others 4,376 2.44%
Total 179,417

Politics

 
District court

Results of the 2012 local elections (there are 87 seats in local assembly) are the following:[44]

Economy

 
Kragujevac Cannon Foundry in 1856

Kragujevac has been an important industrial and trading centre of Serbia for more than two centuries, known for its automotive and firearms industries. The former state-owned Zastava Automobiles company was purchased by Fiat in 2008, and new company, FCA Srbija, was established.[45] Fiat was joined by partners Magneti Marelli (exhaust systems and control panels), Johnson Controls (car seats and interiors), Sigit (thermoplastic and rubber components) and HTL (wheels).

Weapons manufacturing in Kragujevac began with foundation of the VTZ in 1853 and has since grown to become Serbia's primary supplier of firearms through the Zastava Arms corporation.[46] Today, Zastava Arms exports more than 95% of its products to over forty countries in the world. By the decisions of the Ministry of Defence of Serbia, Zastava Arms became a part of the Defense Industry of Serbia in 2003. The most important partners of Zastava Arms are Yugoimport SDPR, Army and Police of Serbia, Century Arms, and International Golden Group.[citation needed]

Rapp Marine Group (components for ships, oil platforms and machines), Meggle AG (dairy products), Unior Components (broaches, welded construction, thermal treatment), Metro Cash and Carry, Mercator and Plaza centres (retail) established their operations in Kragujevac. Many other local companies provide key manufacturing and production establishments.[citation needed]

According to the National Bank of Serbia, there were 30 commercial banks operating in Serbia as of December 2016,[47] of which Direktna Banka has its headquarters in Kragujevac.[48]

The Kragujevac Fair was established in 2005. It comprises 1,600 square metres (17,222 sq ft) of area dedicated to trade and exhibitions and 1,000 square metres (10,764 sq ft) of area for other activities (administration, Media centre, restaurant etc.).[49]

As of September 2017, Kragujevac contains one of 14 free economic zones established in Serbia.[50]

The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2019):[51]

Activity Total
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 163
Mining and quarrying 56
Manufacturing 15,673
Electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply 875
Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities 809
Construction 2,044
Wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles 7,946
Transportation and storage 2,424
Accommodation and food services 2,094
Information and communication 1,274
Financial and insurance activities 1,218
Real estate activities 91
Professional, scientific and technical activities 2,222
Administrative and support service activities 1,353
Public administration and defense; compulsory social security 2,717
Education 4,461
Human health and social work activities 4,914
Arts, entertainment and recreation 999
Other service activities 869
Individual agricultural workers 928
Total 53,130

Society and culture

Education

There are 22 primary and 8 secondary schools in Kragujevac.[52] There are also 3 special schools: a school for hearing impaired children,[53] the music school "Dr Miloje Milojević",[54] and the school for children with disabilities "Vukašin Marković".[55]

The University of Kragujevac was established on 21 May 1976. It is the fourth largest university in Serbia and is organized into 12 faculties and two institutes which are spread over six nearby cities (Kragujevac, Čačak, Kraljevo, Užice, Jagodina and Vrnjačka Banja). Around 16,000 students are currently enrolled at the university. It has around 1,350 employees, out of which 900 are teaching and research staff.[56]

The University Library in Kragujevac is of a generally scientific character, and its primary users are university teaching staff and students. Its area is 1,500 square metres (16,000 square feet) and includes several storage rooms, a reading area and the university gallery. The library keeps around 100,000 copies of books, 2,500 doctoral and master thesis, 450 titles of domestic journals and 105 titles of foreign journals.[57]

Culture

 
Museum of Genocide in Kragujevac.
 

There are many cultural institutions in Kragujevac that have gained regional and national significance in the arts. These institutions include:

  • Knjaževsko-srpsko pozorište (founded in 1835)
  • the National Library "Vuk Karadžić" (founded in 1866)
  • the cultural and artistic group "Abrasević" (founded in 1904)
  • The "October in Kragujevac Memorial Park", located in Šumarice, commemorating the tragic events of 21 October 1941
  • The National Museum, with various displays including those pertaining to archaeology, ethnic diversity, the history of Kragujevac and Šumadija, and many paintings (the archaeology department has a rich collection of 10,000 display items and over 100,000 study items, while the painting department has over 1,000 pieces of prominent Serbian art of extraordinary value)[58]
  • The "Old Foundry Museum", located within the old gun foundry, presents the industrial development of Kragujevac and Serbia using a collection of 5,800 pieces: weapons and equipment, machines and tools, archive material, photos, paintings, trophies and medals.[59]
  • The Historical Archives of Šumadija, collecting and filing the archives and issues of the seven municipalities of Šumadija and has at its disposal 700 metres (2,297 feet) of archive issues with 780 registries and hundreds of thousands of original historical documents

There are three fine and applied arts associations in Kragujevac: the Art KG, the branch of the Serbian Association of Painters ULUS and the Association of Painters of Kragujevac, the ULUK. The most important annual and biannual cultural events include:

  • the International Festival of Chamber Choir Music
  • the International Festival of Chamber Music
  • the International Small Forms Theatre Festival
  • Arsenal Fest
  • the International Saloon of Antiwar Cartoons
  • the International Art Workshop "Balkan Bridges"
  • the International Jazz Festival
  • the International Puppet Theatre Festival

Sports

Kragujevac is home to Čika Dača Stadium, the third largest stadium in Serbia by seat capacity. The largest and most important sports association in Kragujevac is Radnički, which brings together 19 clubs: football, athletics, volleyball, handball, boxing, wrestling etc. FK Radnički 1923 is the city's most successful football club and competes in the Serbian SuperLiga. Kragujevac is also known for having the oldest Serbian football club founded in the Kingdom of Serbia, FK Šumadija 1903.[60]

KK Radnički is the city's premier basketball team. Besides the Basketball League of Serbia it also competes in the local Adriatic Basketball League. Radnički volleyball club is one of strongest volleyball teams in Serbia, and water polo club VK Radnički Kragujevac competes in the Serbian Water polo League A and has won the domestic league and the LEN Trophy in 2013. The city is home to the CROSS OVER Basketball Summer Camp, and the Bandy Federation of Serbia.[61] The team of Kragujevac plays against the one from Subotica.

The Faculty of Economics of the university in Kragujevac is the founder of the futsal club KMF Ekonomac. The club was founded by Professor Veroljub Dugalić, several teaching assistants and a group of Faculty of Economics students on 7 November 2000. The club is playing in Serbia's Prva Futsal Liga and has won the Serbian championship eight times and Serbian Futsal Cup twice.

Local media

Radio stations

  • Radio Kragujevac (94.7)
  • Radio 9 (95.9)
  • TDI Radio (97.9)
  • Radio Centar (98.7)
  • Radio Bravo (103.7)
  • Radio Stari Grad (RSG) (104.3)
  • Radio Zlatousti (90.50)
  • Radio 34 (88.9)

TV stations

  • Televizija Kragujevac

Newspapers

  • Kragujevačke novine

Gallery

Notable people

International relations

 
Kragujevac twinning agreement

Twin towns – Sister cities

Kragujevac is twinned with:[63]

Partnerships and cooperation

The town has other forms of cooperation and city friendship similar to the twin/sister city programmes with:

See also

Notes and references

Notes

  • Spasić, Živomir. Prestonica Kragujevac: prilozi istoriji Kneževine Srbije: 1818–1841. Prizma, 1998.

References

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  3. ^ "2011 Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia: Comparative Overview of the Number of Population in 1948, 1953, 1961, 1971, 1981, 1991, 2002 and 2011, Data by settlements" (PDF). Statistical Office of Republic Of Serbia, Belgrade. 2014. ISBN 978-86-6161-109-4. Retrieved 27 June 2014.
  4. ^ Bakić 1972, pp. 39–40.
  5. ^ Bakić, Dragoljub. Pet vekova Kragujevca (in Serbo-Croatian). N.B. Vuk Karadzic Kragujevac. pp. 39–40.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Brane Kartalović (22 August 2017), "Kragujevac od paleolita do oslobođenja", Politika (in Serbian), p. 14
  7. ^ Brane Kartalović (29 June 2021). "Neolit u srcu Šumadije" [Neolithic in the heart of Šumadija]. Politika (in Serbian). p. 14.
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  20. ^ Stevan K. Pavlowitch (2008). Hitler's new disorder: the Second World War in Yugoslavia. Columbia University Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-231-70050-4.
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  27. ^ . Kucacolovica.com. Archived from the original on 10 March 2016. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  28. ^ a b c Westmark, Omri (29 October 2020). "A Glimpse of Kragujevac (Photography & Impressions)". explanders.com.
  29. ^ "How Prince Milos' sharp wit allowed him to build the first church in the dukedom of Serbia". 381info.com. 17 June 2020.
  30. ^ Trajković, Ljubica D. (1956). Serbie. La Presse Touristique. p. 221.
  31. ^ "Parks in Kragujevac". Tourist Organization of Kragujevac. Retrieved 16 December 2016.
  32. ^ "How to Arrive to Kragujevac?". Tourist Organization of Kragujevac. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
  33. ^ "How to arrive to Kragujevac". Tourist Organization of Kragujevac. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
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External links

  • City of Kragujevac official website

kragujevac, serbian, cyrillic, Крагујевац, pronounced, krǎɡujeʋats, listen, fourth, largest, city, serbia, administrative, centre, Šumadija, district, historical, centre, geographical, region, Šumadija, central, serbia, situated, banks, lepenica, river, accord. Kragujevac Serbian Cyrillic Kraguјevac pronounced krǎɡujeʋats listen is the fourth largest city in Serbia and the administrative centre of the Sumadija District It is the historical centre of the geographical region of Sumadija in central Serbia and is situated on the banks of the Lepenica River According to the 2022 census City of Kragujevac has 171 628 inhabitants Kragujevac Kraguјevac Serbian CityCity of KragujevacFrom top City Assembly Building The 21 October Museum National Museum of Kragujevac Temple of the Assumption of the Most Holy Theotokos Architecture in Kragujevac Theatre building Monument to the executed pupils and teachers Second Kragujevac GymnasiumFlagSealLocation of Kragujevac within Serbia Coordinates 44 00 36 3 N 20 55 1 9 E 44 010083 N 20 917194 E 44 010083 20 917194 Coordinates 44 00 36 3 N 20 55 1 9 E 44 010083 N 20 917194 E 44 010083 20 917194CountrySerbiaRegionSumadija and Western SerbiaDistrictSumadijaFounded1476Government MayorNikola Dasic SNS Area 1 2 Rank22nd in Serbia Urban82 83 km2 31 98 sq mi Administrative835 km2 322 sq mi Elevation173 m 568 ft Population 2011 census 3 Rank4th in Serbia Urban150 835 Urban density1 800 km2 4 700 sq mi Administrative179 417 Administrative density210 km2 560 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal codeSRB 34 000Area code 381 34ISO 3166 codeSRBLicence platesKGWebsitewww wbr kragujevac wbr rsKragujevac was the first capital of modern Serbia and the first constitution in the Balkans the Sretenje Constitution was proclaimed in the city in 1838 A unit of the Scottish Women s Hospitals for Foreign Service was located there in World War I During the Second World War Kragujevac was the site of a massacre by the Nazis in which 2 778 Serb men and boys were killed Modern Kragujevac is known for its large munitions Zastava Arms and automobile FCA Srbija industries as well as its status as an education centre housing the University of Kragujevac one of the region s largest higher education institutions Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Early and medieval 2 2 Habsburg Ottoman conflict and major revolts 2 3 Industrial development 2 4 World War I 2 5 Yugoslavia 2 6 Kragujevac today 3 Geography and infrastructure 3 1 Cityscape 3 2 Transportation 3 3 Climate 4 Municipalities and settlements 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnic groups 6 Politics 7 Economy 8 Society and culture 8 1 Education 8 2 Culture 8 3 Sports 8 4 Local media 9 Gallery 10 Notable people 11 International relations 11 1 Twin towns Sister cities 11 2 Partnerships and cooperation 12 See also 13 Notes and references 13 1 Notes 13 2 References 14 External linksEtymology EditThe name Kragujevac comes from kraguj the Serbian name for cinereous vulture In the Middle Ages this bird was common in the woods of the area and was used for hunting The city s name means kraguj s tower and the bird is represented on the city s coat of arms 4 5 History EditEarly and medieval Edit Over 200 archaeological sites in Sumadija confirm that the region s first human settlement took place around 40 000 years ago during the Paleolithic era The Jerina cave located near the village of Gradac in the direction of Batocina is dated to have been inhabited from around 37 000 BP to 27 000 BP Dugouts dated to 5 000 BC have been found in the city s vicinity in the localities of Grivac Kusovac Divostin Donje Grbice and Dobrovodica 6 These remains belong to the Neolithic Starcevo culture which in this area spread along the river valleys of Lepenica and Gruza The best known artifacts are the fertility figurines called Divostinke Girls from Divostin 7 At the time of Roman conquest in 9 AD the territory of the present day city was largely inhabited by Illyrians mainly the Dardani and Celts the Scordisci 6 By the late 6th and early 7th centuries large scale Slavic raids and settlement began along with invasions from Hunnic and Germanic tribes Later the area would become part of the First Bulgarian Empire With the weakening of both the Bulgarian and Eastern Roman empires Stefan Nemanja Grand Prince of the consolidated medieval Serbian state captured the territory between 1198 and 1199 Although it is hypothesized that the current area of the city was densely settled by the time of Stefan Nemanja s conquest it does not appear in medieval Serbian documents 6 The first written mention of the city was in an Ottoman cadastral survey defter in 1476 after the city s incorporation into the Sanjak of Smederevo 8 Referred to as Kraguyfoca the settlement after Ottoman conquest consisted of a square formerly used as a market with 32 houses The surrounding region was largely empty even the forests that once dominated the region had been burned By the end of the same century however the Ottoman administration began to slowly resettle the city s area by the 1536 cadastral survey the town had 7 Muslim neighborhoods mahalas with 56 houses in total along with a Christian community of 29 houses On the left bank of the Lepenica a mosque was erected 6 9 Habsburg Ottoman conflict and major revolts Edit In spite of its newfound consolidation under Turkish rule the town s location in strategic borderland between the Habsburg monarchy and the Ottoman Empire made it an area of frequent conflict in the modern era During the Great Turkish War the Austrians under Louis of Baden pushed the Turks far to the south of the city Although this occupation was short lived it spelled an end to consolidated Ottoman rule in the region Soon after in 1718 Kragujevac became a part of the Habsburg Kingdom of Serbia following conquest by Prince Eugene of Savoy and the signing of Treaty of Passarowitz Under Austrian occupation the area around the city was fortified and the Muslim population driven out In 1725 the first officially recorded cases of vampirism occurred in Kragujevac in which two alleged vampires were accused of murdering 42 people In other parts of Habsburg ruled Kingdom of Serbia similar cases followed after which the Serbian word vampir entered German and later other world languages 10 As the Ottomans retook the town in 1739 and lost it again in 1789 to the same enemy the town was ripe for new rule this time under Serbian rebels 6 11 A scale model of royal complex founded by Milos Obrenovic As a settlement central to the Sanjak of Smederevo under Ottoman rule Kragujevac was of utmost strategic importance to its agitating largely rural Serb inhabitants Therefore it became a centre of the Serbian Revolution a national awakening of Serbs led by their vojvoda Karađorđe First liberated on 5 April 1804 during the First Serbian Uprising the city was finally freed from imperial rule during the Second Serbian Uprising in 1815 citation needed In 1818 Kragujevac though largely depopulated following the conflicts of the preceding centuries was proclaimed capital of the Principality of Serbia on 6 May 1818 by Milos Obrenovic in the medieval Vracevsnica monastery To mark the occasion he built the Amidza Konak perhaps ironically a lone cultural souvenir of Ottoman rule 12 The first Serbian constitution the Sretenje Constitution was proclaimed in the city on 15 September 1835 It was one of the most liberal constitutions in Europe had ever seen citation needed Industrial development Edit Although Kragujevac lost its capital status to Belgrade in 1841 its importance only increased during the remainder of the 19th century as it grew into a city marked by its industry Following centuries of economic underdevelopment the underpinnings of the city s modernization and Serbia s main munitions manufacturer Zastava Arms were laid in the commissioning of the city s foundry complex in 1835 Known under its Serbian acronym VTZ the complex was completed in 1850 and the first cannon was cast in 1853 Colloquially styled the Knez s arsenal its first director Charles Loubry was a French engineer authorized to take over this duty by a significantly larger figure than the Serbian knez the Emperor of France Napoleon III 13 The Kragujevac cannon foundry in its working days as part of the VTZ Following the creation of the VTZ industrial development continued at an unprecedented pace The first telephone exchange was installed in 1858 and in 1868 the first industrial brewery was opened by Nikola Mesarovic The first printing press was founded in 1870 To connect the city s burgeoning military industry as well as its production of iron ploughs to the rest of Serbia s regions the Belgrade Nis railroad was built in 1886 To serve its industrial population Serbia s first grammar school gimnazija the city s first pharmacy and its first cinema located in a local kafana were all built during the remainder of the 19th century along with Kragujevac s Great or Upper Park and in 1891 its first regulatory urban plan 6 14 The city s industrialism characterized it among its European peers along with its workers demonstrations known as the Crveni barjak Red flag demonstrations first held on 27 February 1876 13 Today the beginnings of the town s industry the now defunct VTZ have been recognized by the Serbian government as vital to Serbia s cultural heritage and as of 2017 consists of 151 individual objects of which 31 are protected as unique heritage including the old foundry the machine workshop the chimney the fire lookout tower the railroad bridge over the Lepenica River and the cartridge factory Once known by its non industrial residents as the Forbidden City Zabranjeni Grad the complex is now open to the public 13 World War I Edit During World War I Kragujevac again became the capital of Serbia 1914 1915 and the seat of many state institutions the Supreme Army Command was housed within the court house building 6 15 A unit of the Scottish Women s Hospital for Women s Service was based there from December 1914 to November 1915 A list of those working in the hospital can be viewed on the website Imperial War Museum Lives of the First World War and more information on these units is below 16 During the war Kragujevac lost around 15 of its population On the night of 2 June 1918 a group of occupying Slovak soldiers from the Austro Hungarian 71st infantry regiment mutinied in the city centre The soldiers led by Viktor Kolibik had recently returned from captivity in Russia and were to be immediately deployed to the Italian Front The mutiny failed and 44 mutineers were executed 17 Yugoslavia Edit Main articles Kragujevac massacre and Zastava Automobiles Following World War I Kragujevac became a part of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes later renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia In the period before the Second World War the city continued its cultural and economic development with the founding of the Gundulic Theatre and the Kragujevac Academic Theatre as well as a number of new factories 18 King Peter s Street Following the Nazi invasion of Yugoslavia the city came under direct Nazi occupation After a joint Partisan Chetnik attack on German forces in nearby Gornji Milanovac Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel calculated that 50 people were to be shot for every German soldier wounded and 100 people were to be shot for every German soldier killed Franz Bohme therefore ordered the deaths of nearly 2 800 men and boys between 19 and 21 October 1941 in the Kragujevac massacre 19 20 The dead included a class from the city s First Gymnasium today a monument to the executed pupils is the symbol of the city 21 The massacre inspired a poem titled Krvava Bajka A Bloody Fairy Tale by Desanka Maksimovic 22 The city was liberated from Nazi Germany on 21 October 1944 6 In the post war period Kragujevac continued to develop its industry Its main products were passenger cars trucks and industrial vehicles hunting arms industrial chains leather and textiles The biggest industry was Zastava Automobiles which at one point employed tens of thousands people 23 The first product of the Zastava Automobiles car company the FIAT 750 was manufactured in 1955 under a licence to Fiat Automobiles now FCA In the following three decades more than five million passenger cars FIAT 750 Zastava 1300 Zastava 101 Zastava 128 Zastava Yugo Yugo Florida Fiat 500L were manufactured and marketed in 74 countries worldwide 24 Perhaps most infamous among the automobiles produced is the Yugo also marketed as the Zastava Korral The city s industry greatly suffered under international economic sanctions during the Milosevic era in the 1990s and some parts were reduced to rubble by the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia 25 Kragujevac today Edit The city today remains an industrial heart of Serbia and has grown with the influx of students and refugees from the Yugoslav wars In 2010 the city government signed a memorandum with the German development agency GIZ and in 2012 city hall adopted a strategy of urban development of the central city zone to be completed by 2030 As of December 2017 many objects within the complex deteriorated and the right bank of the Lepenica is urbanistically neglected The authenticity and representative values of the complex must be preserved but where it is allowed the industrial and workers quarters will be transformed into the residential and commercial areas traffic corridors and used for the numerous educational and cultural institutions Serbia s industrial city continues to cherish 13 Geography and infrastructure EditKragujevac lies 180 metres 591 feet above sea level 26 The coordinates of the city are 44 00 36 3 N and 20 55 01 9 E It is located in the valley of the river Lepenica The city covers an area of 835 square kilometres 322 sq mi surrounded by the slopes of the Rudnik Crni Vrh and Gledic mountains 26 Kragujevac is the traditional centre of Sumadija a region characterized by its rolling hills and fertile orchards 26 Kragujevac is centre of Sumadija region National Reserve Veliki Sturac Mountain RudnikCityscape Edit The architecture of Kragujevac displays a fusion of many different styles Historically Ottoman nowadays almost completely gone and 19th century Vienna Secession style architecture have played an important role in the city s landscape 27 Newer architecture dominates the city s panorama A blend of Viennese Balkan as well as Brutalism is present as showcased in the monuments to the Kragujevac massacre 28 Post war concrete apartment blocks built during the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia period are prominent 28 Today glass office buildings reflect the ambitious business aspirations of the city Some important buildings in Kragujevac include The old or Pridvorina church of Descent of the Holy Spirit built in 1818 as a part of Prince Milos s court 29 The Old Parliament built in the court of the church where the first parliamentary meeting was held in 1859 The Amidza Konak built by Prince Milos as a residential house now exhibition and an example of regional Serbian architecture 30 The Prince Mihailo Konak built in 1860 to blend local tradition with European architectural concepts and now the National Museum The grammar school gimnazija built between 1885 and 1887 in European style to serve as the first educational institution of its kind in Serbia educating prominent Serbian figures such as Svetozar Markovic Nikola Pasic and Radomir PutnikThe Upper Great Park is the largest park in Kragujevac It was established in 1898 It is covered with more than 10 hectares 25 acres of greenery and a dense canopy of century old trees renovated walkways and benches are the right place for rest walk and relaxation In the park and its immediate vicinity there are sports facilities for basketball football volleyball tennis and indoor and outdoor swimming pools 28 Lower Small Park is located in the city centre within the Milos Wreath complex At its centre there is a monument to the Fallen People of Sumadija The Ilina Voda park a legacy of Svetozar Andrejevic was established in 1900 It covers an area of 7 hectares 17 acres There is a fountain with a small waterfall five mini lakes connected by a small stream and a small zoo with about 100 animals and a garden with various types of trees characteristic of Sumadija The curiosity in the park is the largest sculpture of Easter eggs 3 metres 10 ft high in Europe and the second in the world made from recycled metal set in 2004 31 Scenic attractions nearby include the Aranđelovac Gornji Milanovac Vrnjacka Banja and Mataruska Banja Karađorđe s castle the Church of Saint George in Topola 40 kilometres 25 miles away the Old Kalenic monastery 55 kilometres 34 miles away the resorts of Rogot 28 km 17 mi and Stragari 34 km 21 mi with the old Blagovestenje and Voljavca monasteries View of Kragujevac House of prince Mihailo Obrenovic III Kragujevac Cathedral Pedestrian zone Amidzin KonakTransportation Edit Kragujevac has developed transportation infrastructure with a variety of road connections to the Serbian capital Belgrade It can be reached using Serbian IB class roads 24 an expressway and 25 In the coming years the city will also be accessible via Pan European Corridor X or in Serbia the A1 motorway The town is also connected to nearby Jagodina and Gornji Milanovac via class IIA road numbers 170 and 176 via Bar Montenegro respectively 32 Kragujevac is connected by bus lines with almost all cities in the country The most frequent departures every half hour are to Belgrade The central bus station is about a kilometre away from the city centre Kragujevac can also be reached by train The central train station is located close to the central bus station 33 The company responsible for public transportation in Kragujevac is the City Traffic Agency GSA The integrated public transport is performed by two companies Arriva Litas and Vulovic Transport There are 22 urban bus lines and 14 lines that connect nearby rural areas operating according to established timetable 34 There are also 7 taxi and 3 rent a car companies operating in Kragujevac 35 Car parking system with 10 parking lots and zoned street parking three zones with 4 244 parking spaces is operated by public service company Parking Service Kragujevac 36 Climate Edit Kragujevac has a humid subtropical climate Koppen climate classification Cfa and with a July mean temperature of 22 6 C 72 7 F Winds most often blow from southwest and northwest while they often blow from southeast in January February and March 37 Climate data for Kragujevac 1991 2020 extremes 1961 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 20 6 69 1 25 2 77 4 29 4 84 9 32 0 89 6 35 4 95 7 39 4 102 9 43 9 111 0 40 4 104 7 37 8 100 0 34 7 94 5 27 6 81 7 21 0 69 8 43 9 111 0 Average high C F 5 7 42 3 8 2 46 8 13 1 55 6 18 4 65 1 23 0 73 4 26 9 80 4 29 3 84 7 29 6 85 3 24 3 75 7 18 8 65 8 12 7 54 9 6 5 43 7 18 0 64 4 Daily mean C F 1 3 34 3 3 0 37 4 7 1 44 8 12 1 53 8 16 7 62 1 20 7 69 3 22 6 72 7 22 3 72 1 17 3 63 1 12 2 54 0 7 4 45 3 2 4 36 3 12 1 53 8 Average low C F 2 4 27 7 1 3 29 7 2 0 35 6 6 1 43 0 10 5 50 9 14 4 57 9 15 9 60 6 15 6 60 1 11 6 52 9 7 2 45 0 3 3 37 9 0 9 30 4 6 8 44 2 Record low C F 27 6 17 7 24 4 11 9 18 3 0 9 5 8 21 6 0 6 30 9 2 7 36 9 7 2 45 0 4 6 40 3 2 2 28 0 6 6 20 1 16 4 2 5 20 7 5 3 27 6 17 7 Average precipitation mm inches 42 1 1 66 40 1 1 58 46 6 1 83 54 3 2 14 70 3 2 77 77 2 3 04 65 8 2 59 56 0 2 20 53 6 2 11 54 2 2 13 44 6 1 76 47 0 1 85 651 8 25 66 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 12 8 12 5 11 6 11 9 13 4 11 3 9 3 7 6 9 7 10 2 10 7 12 8 133 8Average snowy days 8 5 7 7 3 8 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 5 6 6 29 9Average relative humidity 79 5 74 9 68 5 66 6 69 4 67 7 64 2 65 3 70 7 75 4 76 7 80 8 71 6Mean monthly sunshine hours 71 9 91 3 148 4 184 7 225 7 260 1 293 3 280 2 197 0 148 5 92 5 62 3 2 055 9Source Republic Hydrometeorological Service of Serbia 38 39 Municipalities and settlements Edit Defunct city municipalities with settlements Defunct city municipalitiesFrom May 2002 until March 2008 the city of Kragujevac was divided into the following city municipalities Aerodrom Pivara Stanovo Stari Grad Stragari Image from central Kragujevac SettlementsList of settlements in the city of Kragujevac Adzine Livade Baljkovac Belosevac Botunje Bukorovac Velika Sugubina Velike Pcelice Veliki Senj Vinjiste Vlakca Golocelo Gornja Sabanta Gornje Grbice Gornje Jarusice Gornje Komarice Grosnica Desimirovac Divostin Dobraca Donja Sabanta Donje Grbice Donje Komarice Dragobraca Draca Drenovac Dulene Đuriselo Erdec Erdoglija Jabucje Jovanovac Kamenica Korman Kotraza Kutlovo Luznice Ljubicevac Mala Vrbica Mali Senj Marsic Maslosevo Mironic Novi Milanovac Opornica Pajazitovo Poskurice Prekopeca Ramaca Resnik Rogojevac Tresnjevak Trmbas Ugljarevac Cvetojevac Cerovac Cumic SljivovacDemographics EditHistorical populationYearPop p a 194885 468 195393 465 1 80 1961105 711 1 55 1971130 551 2 13 1981164 823 2 36 1991180 084 0 89 2002175 802 0 22 2011179 417 0 23 Source 40 According to the 2011 census results the city s administrative area has a population of 179 417 inhabitants Around 70 126 312 inhabitants are of working age aged 15 to 64 The employed population in 2014 was 42 148 47 0 of whom were women most of whom work in metalworking 22 and medical and social services 13 54 6 of persons older than 15 have only secondary education while 17 7 hold a college or university degree 41 Around 93 of total city area is covered with water supply system 78 with sewage system 72 with natural gas supply network and 92 with cell phone networks 42 Ethnic groups Edit Ethnic group Population2011 43 Serbs 172 052 95 90 Romani 1 482 0 83 Montenegrins 645 0 36 Macedonians 297 0 17 Croats 192 0 11 Yugoslavs 175 0 10 Gorani 101 0 06 Muslims 97 0 05 Others 4 376 2 44 Total 179 417Politics Edit District court Results of the 2012 local elections there are 87 seats in local assembly are the following 44 Together for Sumadija United Regions of Serbia 37 Let s Get Kragujevac Moving 18 Democratic Party Social Democratic Party of Serbia 12 SPS PUPS JS 10 Liberal Democratic Party Serbian Renewal Movement 5 Democratic Party of Serbia 5 Economy Edit FIAT Chrysler Automobiles Serbia Kragujevac Cannon Foundry in 1856 Kragujevac has been an important industrial and trading centre of Serbia for more than two centuries known for its automotive and firearms industries The former state owned Zastava Automobiles company was purchased by Fiat in 2008 and new company FCA Srbija was established 45 Fiat was joined by partners Magneti Marelli exhaust systems and control panels Johnson Controls car seats and interiors Sigit thermoplastic and rubber components and HTL wheels Weapons manufacturing in Kragujevac began with foundation of the VTZ in 1853 and has since grown to become Serbia s primary supplier of firearms through the Zastava Arms corporation 46 Today Zastava Arms exports more than 95 of its products to over forty countries in the world By the decisions of the Ministry of Defence of Serbia Zastava Arms became a part of the Defense Industry of Serbia in 2003 The most important partners of Zastava Arms are Yugoimport SDPR Army and Police of Serbia Century Arms and International Golden Group citation needed Rapp Marine Group components for ships oil platforms and machines Meggle AG dairy products Unior Components broaches welded construction thermal treatment Metro Cash and Carry Mercator and Plaza centres retail established their operations in Kragujevac Many other local companies provide key manufacturing and production establishments citation needed According to the National Bank of Serbia there were 30 commercial banks operating in Serbia as of December 2016 47 of which Direktna Banka has its headquarters in Kragujevac 48 The Kragujevac Fair was established in 2005 It comprises 1 600 square metres 17 222 sq ft of area dedicated to trade and exhibitions and 1 000 square metres 10 764 sq ft of area for other activities administration Media centre restaurant etc 49 As of September 2017 Kragujevac contains one of 14 free economic zones established in Serbia 50 The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity as of 2019 51 Activity TotalAgriculture forestry and fishing 163Mining and quarrying 56Manufacturing 15 673Electricity gas steam and air conditioning supply 875Water supply sewerage waste management and remediation activities 809Construction 2 044Wholesale and retail trade repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles 7 946Transportation and storage 2 424Accommodation and food services 2 094Information and communication 1 274Financial and insurance activities 1 218Real estate activities 91Professional scientific and technical activities 2 222Administrative and support service activities 1 353Public administration and defense compulsory social security 2 717Education 4 461Human health and social work activities 4 914Arts entertainment and recreation 999Other service activities 869Individual agricultural workers 928Total 53 130Society and culture EditEducation Edit First Kragujevac Gymnasium University of Kragujevac There are 22 primary and 8 secondary schools in Kragujevac 52 There are also 3 special schools a school for hearing impaired children 53 the music school Dr Miloje Milojevic 54 and the school for children with disabilities Vukasin Markovic 55 The University of Kragujevac was established on 21 May 1976 It is the fourth largest university in Serbia and is organized into 12 faculties and two institutes which are spread over six nearby cities Kragujevac Cacak Kraljevo Uzice Jagodina and Vrnjacka Banja Around 16 000 students are currently enrolled at the university It has around 1 350 employees out of which 900 are teaching and research staff 56 The University Library in Kragujevac is of a generally scientific character and its primary users are university teaching staff and students Its area is 1 500 square metres 16 000 square feet and includes several storage rooms a reading area and the university gallery The library keeps around 100 000 copies of books 2 500 doctoral and master thesis 450 titles of domestic journals and 105 titles of foreign journals 57 Culture Edit Knjazevsko srpski Theatre Museum of Genocide in Kragujevac Arsenal Fest 2016 There are many cultural institutions in Kragujevac that have gained regional and national significance in the arts These institutions include Knjazevsko srpsko pozoriste founded in 1835 the National Library Vuk Karadzic founded in 1866 the cultural and artistic group Abrasevic founded in 1904 The October in Kragujevac Memorial Park located in Sumarice commemorating the tragic events of 21 October 1941 The National Museum with various displays including those pertaining to archaeology ethnic diversity the history of Kragujevac and Sumadija and many paintings the archaeology department has a rich collection of 10 000 display items and over 100 000 study items while the painting department has over 1 000 pieces of prominent Serbian art of extraordinary value 58 The Old Foundry Museum located within the old gun foundry presents the industrial development of Kragujevac and Serbia using a collection of 5 800 pieces weapons and equipment machines and tools archive material photos paintings trophies and medals 59 The Historical Archives of Sumadija collecting and filing the archives and issues of the seven municipalities of Sumadija and has at its disposal 700 metres 2 297 feet of archive issues with 780 registries and hundreds of thousands of original historical documentsThere are three fine and applied arts associations in Kragujevac the Art KG the branch of the Serbian Association of Painters ULUS and the Association of Painters of Kragujevac the ULUK The most important annual and biannual cultural events include the International Festival of Chamber Choir Music the International Festival of Chamber Music the International Small Forms Theatre Festival Arsenal Fest the International Saloon of Antiwar Cartoons the International Art Workshop Balkan Bridges the International Jazz Festival the International Puppet Theatre FestivalSports Edit Cika Daca Stadium Jezero Hall Kragujevac is home to Cika Daca Stadium the third largest stadium in Serbia by seat capacity The largest and most important sports association in Kragujevac is Radnicki which brings together 19 clubs football athletics volleyball handball boxing wrestling etc FK Radnicki 1923 is the city s most successful football club and competes in the Serbian SuperLiga Kragujevac is also known for having the oldest Serbian football club founded in the Kingdom of Serbia FK Sumadija 1903 60 KK Radnicki is the city s premier basketball team Besides the Basketball League of Serbia it also competes in the local Adriatic Basketball League Radnicki volleyball club is one of strongest volleyball teams in Serbia and water polo club VK Radnicki Kragujevac competes in the Serbian Water polo League A and has won the domestic league and the LEN Trophy in 2013 The city is home to the CROSS OVER Basketball Summer Camp and the Bandy Federation of Serbia 61 The team of Kragujevac plays against the one from Subotica The Faculty of Economics of the university in Kragujevac is the founder of the futsal club KMF Ekonomac The club was founded by Professor Veroljub Dugalic several teaching assistants and a group of Faculty of Economics students on 7 November 2000 The club is playing in Serbia s Prva Futsal Liga and has won the Serbian championship eight times and Serbian Futsal Cup twice Local media Edit Radio stations Radio Kragujevac 94 7 Radio 9 95 9 TDI Radio 97 9 Radio Centar 98 7 Radio Bravo 103 7 Radio Stari Grad RSG 104 3 Radio Zlatousti 90 50 Radio 34 88 9 TV stations Televizija Kragujevac Newspapers Kragujevacke novineGallery Edit Monument to the executed pupils and teachers Description Monument to slain people from Sumadija in the wars Stone lion in Sumarice park World War I memorial Zastava main gate Densely populated city quarters City center Main streetNotable people Edit Radomir Putnik Jovan Ristic Milan Obrenovic II Prince of Serbia 1839 Mihailo Obrenovic III Prince of Serbia 1839 1842 and 1860 1868 Tomislav Nikolic President of Serbia 2012 2017 Filip Kostic Footballer Radomir Putnik first Serbian Field Marshal Voivoda Chief of the General Staff 1890 1892 1903 1905 1908 1915 and Minister of Defense 1904 1905 1906 1908 1912 Jovan Ristic President of the Ministry of Serbia 1867 1873 1878 1880 1887 1888 Minister of Foreign Affairs 1867 1872 1873 1875 1876 1880 1887 and President of Serbian Academy of Science and Arts 1899 Dusan Simovic Chief of General Staff 1938 1940 Nikola Koka Jankovic sculptor and full member of Serbian Academy of Science and Arts Radoje Domanovic writer and teacher Zoran Spasojevic writer Dragan Todorovic writer and multimedia artist Milan Dedinac poet Draginja Adamovic poet Mille Markovic boxer sex club owner and convicted criminal and gangster 62 circular reference Dragisa Nedovic songwriter composer and musician Vidosav Stevanovic novelist story writer poet playwright and publicist Dragoslav Srejovic archaeologist and historian Natasa Kandic founder of the Humanitarian Law Center Mirko Babic actor Dragomir Bojanic Gidra actor Branislav Jerinic actor Gorica Popovic actor Nikola Rakocevic actor Milovan Minimaks Ilic radio and television host Bora Dugic flautist Cune Gojkovic singer Ljubica Maric composer 1909 2003 Marija Serifovic singer Eurovision Song Contest winner of 2007 Jelena Tomasevic singer Vesna Despotovic Serbian basketball player Olympic bronze medalist 1980 and EuroBasket bronze medalist 1980 Stevan Pletikosic Serbian sport shooter six time Olympic participant Olympic bronze medalist 1992 two time ISSF World Shooting Championships silver medalist 1994 2006 and European Shooting Championship silver medalist 1995 Nikola Loncar Serbian basketball player Olympic silver medalist 1996 FIBA World Championship gold medalist 1998 FIBA European Championship gold 1997 and bronze medalist 1999 and Euroleague champion with KK Partizan 1992 Katarina Bulatovic Montenegrin handball player Olympic silver medalist 2012 and European Women s Handball Championship gold medalist 2012 Marija Lojpur handball player 2013 World Championship silver medalist Jelena Milovanovic basketball player Olympic bronze medalist 2016 and EuroBasket Women 2015 gold medalist 2015 Predrag Đorđevic footballer Danko Lazovic footballer Stefan Ilic footballer World U 20 champion Ana Mihajlovic fashion model winner of the 2002 Elite Model Look Aleksa Ristic basketball player Fiba 3x3 Debrecen masters Đorđe Kostic basketball player Fiba 3x3 Debrecen masters Ivan Nedeljkovic basketball player Fiba 3x3 Debrecen masters Filip Popovic basketball player Fiba 3x3 Debrecen masters Slavko Perovic footballer Filip Holender Hungarian footballerInternational relations Edit Kragujevac twinning agreement See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Serbia Twin towns Sister cities Edit Kragujevac is twinned with 63 Suresnes France since 1967 Pitesti Romania since 1971 Bydgoszcz Poland since 1971 Sinchon North Korea since 1976 64 Ohrid North Macedonia since 2001 Bielsko Biala Poland since 2002 65 Springfield USA since 2002 Ingolstadt Germany since 2003 Reggio Emilia Italy since 2004 Mogilev Belarus since 2006 Jericho Palestine since 2012Partnerships and cooperation Edit The town has other forms of cooperation and city friendship similar to the twin sister city programmes with Trencin Slovakia Sinchon South Korea Bat Yam Israel since 1992 Drama Greece Hanover Germany Mostar Bosnia and Herzegovina 66 Karlovac Croatia Foca Bosnia and Herzegovina Opole Poland 67 Carrara Italy Naples Italy 68 See also Edit Geography portal Europe portal Serbia portalList of places in Serbia University of Kragujevac First Kragujevac Gymnasium Sumarice Memorial Park Kragujevac massacre Knjazevsko srpski teatar Joakimfest Arsenal Fest Sumadija fairground Gruza LakeNotes and references EditNotes Edit Spasic Zivomir Prestonica Kragujevac prilozi istoriji Knezevine Srbije 1818 1841 Prizma 1998 References Edit Municipalities of Serbia 2006 Statistical Office of Serbia Retrieved 28 November 2010 Naseљa opshtine Kraguјevac PDF stat gov rs in Serbian Statistical Office of Serbia Retrieved 24 October 2019 2011 Census of Population Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia Comparative Overview of the Number of Population in 1948 1953 1961 1971 1981 1991 2002 and 2011 Data by settlements PDF Statistical Office of Republic Of Serbia Belgrade 2014 ISBN 978 86 6161 109 4 Retrieved 27 June 2014 Bakic 1972 pp 39 40 sfn error no target CITEREFBakic1972 help Bakic Dragoljub Pet vekova Kragujevca in Serbo Croatian N B Vuk Karadzic Kragujevac pp 39 40 a b c d e f g h Brane Kartalovic 22 August 2017 Kragujevac od paleolita do oslobođenja Politika in Serbian p 14 Brane Kartalovic 29 June 2021 Neolit u srcu Sumadije Neolithic in the heart of Sumadija Politika in Serbian p 14 Tapu Tahrir Defteri 491 Ottoman government Free Download amp Streaming Internet Archive 1569 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Map of the Belgrade Pashaluk GIF Terkepek adatbank transindex ro Retrieved 12 August 2015 Prvi i najkrvaviviji vampiri u istoriji bili su iz Kragujevca 20 September 2020 Kocina Krajina Projekat Rastko Retrieved 6 January 2016 Photos of San Antonio Images of San Antonio Texas USA Members virtualtourist com Retrieved 12 August 2015 a b c d Brane Kartalovic 29 December 2017 Kragujevac se seli na desnu obalu Lepenice Kragujevac moves over to the right bank of the Lepenica Politika in Serbian Kragujevac Beautiful Serbia Voiceofserbia org Retrieved 12 August 2015 Kragujevac Stadt En europeonline magazine eu 21 October 1941 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Scottish Women s Hospitals Unit at Kraguievatz Serbia Imperial War Museum Lives of the First World War Retrieved 13 October 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Kragujevac 1918 telecom gov sk Retrieved 4 August 2016 Knjazevsko Srpski Teatar Joakimvujic com Archived from the original on 8 October 2009 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Blic Online Engleska krvava bajka u Kragujevcu Blic co rs Archived from the original on 30 July 2012 Retrieved 16 September 2011 Stevan K Pavlowitch 2008 Hitler s new disorder the Second World War in Yugoslavia Columbia University Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 231 70050 4 Monument to the executed pupils Kragujevac Serbia Address Attraction Reviews TripAdvisor Retrieved 12 August 2015 Krvava Bajika profile sites google com accessed 2 August 2015 About Zastava Kragujevac Voice of Serbia Retrieved 6 January 2016 Welcome to Zastava arms Zastava arms rs Retrieved 12 August 2015 Collateral damage and the workers of the Zastava factory Marxist com Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 12 August 2015 a b c 21 Oktobar Kragujevac PDF privatizacija privreda gov rs Privatization Agency of the Republic of Serbia Kragujevac City Tour Kuca Colovica Kucacolovica com Archived from the original on 10 March 2016 Retrieved 12 August 2015 a b c Westmark Omri 29 October 2020 A Glimpse of Kragujevac Photography amp Impressions explanders com How Prince Milos sharp wit allowed him to build the first church in the dukedom of Serbia 381info com 17 June 2020 Trajkovic Ljubica D 1956 Serbie La Presse Touristique p 221 Parks in Kragujevac Tourist Organization of Kragujevac Retrieved 16 December 2016 How to Arrive to Kragujevac Tourist Organization of Kragujevac Retrieved 17 December 2016 How to arrive to Kragujevac Tourist Organization of Kragujevac Retrieved 17 December 2016 Public Transportation in Kragujevac City Traffic Agency Retrieved 17 December 2016 Public Transportation in Kragujevac Tourist Organization of Kragujevac Retrieved 17 December 2016 Parking in Kragujevac Parking Service Kragujevac Archived from the original on 6 November 2018 Retrieved 17 December 2016 Statistical data for Kragujevac City of Kragujevac Archived from the original on 23 October 2016 Retrieved 17 December 2016 Monthly and annual means maximum and minimum values of meteorological elements for the period 1991 2020 in Serbian Republic Hydrometeorological Service of Serbia Archived from the original on 20 April 2022 Retrieved 20 April 2022 Monthly and annual means maximum and minimum values of meteorological elements for the period 1981 2010 in Serbian Republic Hydrometeorological Service of Serbia Archived from the original on 20 July 2021 Retrieved 25 February 2017 2011 Census of Population Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia PDF stat gov rs Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia Archived from the original PDF on 14 July 2014 Retrieved 11 January 2017 Statistical Yearbook PDF Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia Retrieved 17 December 2016 Infrastruktura Zvanichan saјt grada Kraguјevca Kragujevac rs Retrieved 12 August 2015 Popis stanovnishtva domaћinstava i stanova 2011 u Republici Srbiјi PDF stat gov rs Republicki zavod za statistiku Archived from the original PDF on 11 August 2014 Retrieved 16 December 2016 24 sednica GIK a Sednice Zvanichan saјt grada Kraguјevca Kragujevac rs Retrieved 28 May 2012 Jacobs A J 2019 The Automotive Industry and European Integration The Divergent Paths of Belgium and Spain Springer p 426 ISBN 9783030174316 About Zastava Arms Zastava Arms Retrieved 16 December 2016 List of Bank in Serbia National Bank of Serbia Retrieved 16 December 2016 About Direktna Banka Direktna Banka Kragujevac Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 16 December 2016 About Sumadija Sajam Sumadija Sajam Retrieved 16 December 2016 Mikavica A 3 September 2017 Slobodne zone mamac za investitore politika rs in Serbian Retrieved 17 March 2019 Zaposleni u Republici Srbiјi 2019 Godishњi prosek PDF stat gov rs in Serbian Statistical Office of Republic of Serbia 31 January 2020 Retrieved 15 March 2020 Obrazovaњe Zvanichan saјt grada Kraguјevca Kragujevac rs Archived from the original on 27 June 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Dobrodosli na skolazagluve edu rs Skola za gluve Kragujevac Skolazagluve edu rs 27 January 2015 Archived from the original on 20 October 2017 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Muzichka shkola dr Miloјe Miloјeviћ Muzicka kg com Archived from the original on 1 August 2015 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Skola Vukasin Markovic Sosovukasinmarkovickg edu rs Retrieved 12 August 2015 University of Kragujevac Kg ac rs 21 May 1976 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Introduction Ub kg ac rs 5 June 1985 Archived from the original on 2 February 2019 Retrieved 12 August 2015 National Museum of Kragujevac Archived from the original on 14 April 2019 Retrieved 6 January 2016 Old Foundry Museum Retrieved 6 January 2016 History of Football Association of Serbia Football Association of Serbia Retrieved 17 December 2016 Federation of International Bandy About About FIB National Federations Serbia Serbia Archived from the original on 4 October 2009 Mille Markovic Kragujevac Twin Cities Information service of Kragujevac City Archived from the original on 10 March 2010 Retrieved 24 December 2015 Yugoslav Survey Yugoslav Survey A Record of Tacts and Information Belgrade Jugoslavija Publishing House 19 146 1978 ISSN 0044 1341 Bielsko Biala Partner Cities 2008 Urzedu Miejskiego w Bielsku Bialej Retrieved 10 December 2008 Mostar Gradovi prijatelji Mostar Twin Towns Mostar Official City Website in Macedonian Archived from the original on 30 October 2013 Retrieved 19 December 2013 Opole Official Website Twin Towns in English and Polish Urzad Miasta Opola Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 18 June 2009 Vacca Maria Luisa Comune di Napoli Gemellaggi Naples Twin Towns Comune di Napoli in Italian Archived from the original on 22 July 2013 Retrieved 8 August 2013 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kragujevac Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Kragujevac City of Kragujevac official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kragujevac amp oldid 1130124850, 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