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Mostar

Mostar (UK: /mɒˈstɑːr/,[1][2] US: /ˈmstɑːr, ˈmɔːs-/;[3][4] Serbian Cyrillic: Мостар, pronounced [mǒstaːr] (listen)) is a city and the administrative center of Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina,[5] and the historical capital of Herzegovina.[6]

Mostar
Мостар
Grad Mostar
Град Мостар
City of Mostar
From top, left to right: A panoramic view of the heritage town site and the Neretva river from Lučki Bridge, Koski Mehmed Pasha Mosque, Mostar Clock Tower (Sahat Kula), Stari Most Museum, Bazzar Kujundžiluk in Mala Tepa heritage area and a night view of Stari Most and Neretva river.
Etymology: Serbo-Croatian: mostar, lit.'bridge keeper'
Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Mostar)
Coordinates: 43°20′37″N 17°48′27″E / 43.34361°N 17.80750°E / 43.34361; 17.80750Coordinates: 43°20′37″N 17°48′27″E / 43.34361°N 17.80750°E / 43.34361; 17.80750
Country Bosnia and Herzegovina
EntityFederation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Canton Herzegovina-Neretva
Geographical regionHerzegovina
Founded1452
Government
 • MayorMario Kordić (HDZ BiH)
Area
 • City1,165.63 km2 (450.05 sq mi)
Elevation
60 m (200 ft)
Population
 • City113,169
 • Density97/km2 (250/sq mi)
 • Urban
60,195
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Area code+387 (0) 36
Websitewww.mostar.ba

Mostar is situated on the Neretva River and is the fifth-largest city in the country.[7] Mostar was named after the bridge keepers (mostari) who in the medieval times guarded the Stari Most (Old Bridge) over the Neretva.[8] The Old Bridge, a UNESCO World Heritage Site,[9] built by the Ottomans in the 16th century, is one of Bosnia and Herzegovina's most visited landmarks, and is considered an exemplary piece of Islamic architecture in the Balkans.[10][11][12][13]

History

Ancient and medieval history

Human settlements on the river Neretva, between Mount Hum and the Velež Mountain, have existed since prehistory, as witnessed by discoveries of fortified enceintes and cemeteries. Evidence of Roman occupation was discovered beneath the present town.[9]

As far as medieval Mostar goes, although the Christian basilicas of late antiquity remained in use, few historical sources were preserved and not much is known about this period. The name of Mostar was first mentioned in a document dating from 1474, taking its name from the bridge-keepers (mostari); this refers to the existence of a wooden bridge from the market on the left bank of the river which was used by traders, soldiers, and other travelers. During this time it was also the seat of a kadiluk (district with a regional judge). Since Mostar was on the trade route between the Adriatic and the mineral-rich regions of central Bosnia, the settlement began to spread to the right bank of the river.[9]

Prior to 1474 the names of two towns appear in medieval historical sources, along with their later medieval territories and properties – the towns of Nebojša and Cimski grad. In the early 15th century the county (župa) of Večenike covered the site of the present-day Mostar along the right bank of the Neretva, including the sites of Zahum, Cim, Ilići, Raštani and Vojno. It was at the center of this area, which in 1408 belonged to Radivojević, who built Cim Fort (prior to 1443). Mostar is indirectly referred to in a 1454 charter of King Alfonso V of Aragon as Pons ("bridge"), for a bridge had already been built there. Prior to 1444, the Nebojša Tower was built on the left bank of the Neretva, which belonged to the late medieval county still known as Večenike or Večerić.[14] The earliest documentary reference to Mostar as a settlement dates from 3 April 1452, when Ragusans from Dubrovnik wrote to their fellow countrymen in the service of Serbian Despot Đorđe Branković to say that Vladislav Hercegović had turned against his father Stjepan and occupied the town of Blagaj and other places, including “Duo Castelli al ponte de Neretua.”.[15]

Ottoman period

 
The Old Town Street
 
Springtime in Mostar by Tivadar Kosztka Csontváry (1853–1919)

In 1468 the region came under Ottoman rule[15] and the urbanization of the settlement began. It was named Köprühisar, meaning fortress at the bridge, at the centre of which was a cluster of 15 houses. The town was organized into two distinct areas: čaršija, the crafts and commercial centre of the settlement, and mahala or a residential area.[16]

The town was fortified between the years 1520 and 1566, and the wooden bridge rebuilt in stone.[9] The stone bridge, the Old Bridge (Stari most), was erected in 1566 on the orders of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent[17] and at 28 m (92 ft) long and 20 m (66 ft) high, quickly became a wonder in its own time. Later becoming the city's symbol, the Old Bridge was designed by Mimar Hayruddin,[12] a student and apprentice of Ottoman architect Mimar Sinan. In the late 16th century, Köprühisar was one of the towns of the Sanjak of Herzegovina. The traveler Evliya Çelebi wrote in the 17th century that: the bridge is like a rainbow arch soaring up to the skies, extending from one cliff to the other... I, a poor and miserable slave of Allah, have passed through 16 countries, but I have never seen such a high bridge. It is thrown from rock to rock as high as the sky.[18]

The first church in the city of Mostar, a Serbian Orthodox Church, was built in 1834 during Ottoman rule.[19]

Austrian and Yugoslav period

 
People of Mostar in 1890–1900
 
People gathered waiting for Stjepan Radić to arrive in Mostar in 1925

Austria-Hungary took control over Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878 and ruled the region until the aftermath of World War I in 1918, when it became part of the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and then Yugoslavia. During this period, Mostar was the main urban centre of Herzegovina.[20] In 1881 the town became the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Mostar-Duvno and in 1939, it became a part of the Banovina of Croatia. During World War II, Mostar was also annexed city in the Nazi German fascist puppet state, the Independent State of Croatia.

During the period of Austro-Hungarian rule (1878–1918), Mostar's city council cooperated with the Austro-Hungarian administration to implement sweeping reforms in city planning: broad avenues and an urban grid were imposed on the western bank of the Neretva, and significant investments were made in infrastructure, communications and housing. City administrators like Mustafa Mujaga Komadina were central players in these transformations, which facilitated growth and linked the eastern and western banks of the city. Noteworthy examples of Austro-Hungarian architecture include the Municipality building, which was designed by the architect Josip Vancaš from Sarajevo, residential districts around the Rondo, and Gimnazija Mostar from 1902 designed by František Blažek.

 
8th Yugoslav Partisans' Corps in liberated Mostar, February 1945

After World War II, Mostar developed industries producing plastics, tobacco, bauxite, wine, aircraft and aluminium. Several dams (Grabovica, Salakovac, Mostar) were built in the region to harness the hydroelectric power of the Neretva. The city was a major industrial and tourist center and prospered economically during the time of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

Between 1948 and 1974 the industrial base was expanded with construction of a metal-working factory, cotton textile mills, and an aluminum plant. Skilled workers, both men and women, entered the work force and the social and demographic profile of the city was broadened dramatically; between 1945 and 1980, Mostar's population grew from 18,000 to 100,000.

Because Mostar's eastern bank was burdened by inadequate infrastructure, the city expanded on the western bank with the construction of large residential blocks. Local architects favored an austere modernist aesthetic, prefabrication and repetitive modules. Commercial buildings in the functionalist style appeared on the historic eastern side of the city as well, replacing more intimate timber constructions that had survived since Ottoman times. In the 1970s and 1980s, a healthy local economy fueled by foreign investment spurred recognition and conservation of the city's cultural heritage. An economically sustainable plan to preserve the old town of Mostar was implemented by the municipality, which drew thousands of tourists from the Adriatic coast and invigorated the economy of the city. The results of this ten-year project earned Mostar an Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1986.[21]

According to the 1991 census, Mostar had 127,000 inhabitants with roughly an equal number of Bosniaks (34.6%) and Croats (34%), 18.8% Serbs, and 13.6% of those who declared themselves Yugoslavs or Others.[22]

Bosnian War

 
War damage on the former Mostar frontline, 2001

After Bosnia and Herzegovina declared independence from Yugoslavia in April 1992, the town was besieged by the Yugoslav People's Army (JNA), following clashes between the JNA and Croat forces. The Croats were organized into the Croatian Defence Council (HVO)[23] and were joined by a sizable number of Bosniaks.[24] The JNA artillery periodically shelled neighbourhoods outside of their control from early April.[25]

On 7 June the Croatian Army (HV) launched an offensive code named Operation Jackal, the objective of which was to relieve Mostar and break the JNA siege of Dubrovnik. The offensive was supported by the HVO, which attacked the Army of Republika Srpska (VRS) positions around Mostar. By 12 June the HVO secured the western part of the city and by 21 June the VRS was completely pushed out from the eastern part. Numerous religious buildings and most of the city's bridges were destroyed or severely damaged during the fighting.[25] Among them were the Catholic Cathedral of Mary, Mother of the Church, the Franciscan Church and Monastery, the Bishop's Palace and 12 out of 14 mosques in the city. After the VRS was pushed from the city, the Serbian Orthodox Žitomislić Monastery and the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity were demolished.[26]

Throughout late 1992, tensions between Croats and Bosniaks increased in Mostar. In early 1993 the Croat–Bosniak War escalated and by mid-April 1993 Mostar had become a divided city with the western part dominated by HVO forces and the eastern part controlled by the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (ARBiH).[27] Fighting broke out in May when both sides of the city came under intense artillery fire.[28] The city was divided along ethnic lines, with a number of offensives taking place, resulting in a series of stalemates.[29][30][31] The Croat–Bosniak conflict ended with the signing of the Washington Agreement in 1994, and the Bosnian War ended with the Dayton Agreement in 1995. Around 2,000 people died in Mostar during the war.[32]

Two wars (Serb forces versus Bosniak and Croatian and Croat-Bosniak war) left Mostar physically devastated and ethno-territorially divided between a Croat-majority west bank (with ca. 55,000 residents) and a Bosniak-majority old City and east bank (with ca. 50,000 residents), with the frontline running parallel to the Neretva River. Most Serbs had fled the city.[33]

Post-war developments

 
The Old Bridge undergoing reconstruction in June 2003.

Since the end of the wider war in 1995, great progress has been made in the reconstruction of the city of Mostar. Over 15 million dollars has been spent on restoration.[citation needed] A monumental project to rebuild the Old Bridge, which was destroyed during the Bosnian War, to the original design, and restore surrounding structures and historic neighbourhoods was initiated in 1999 and mostly completed by spring 2004. The money for this reconstruction was donated by Spain[citation needed] (who had a sizable contingent of peacekeeping troops stationed in the surrounding area during the conflict), the United States, Turkey, Italy, the Netherlands, and Croatia. A grand opening was held on 23 July 2004 under heavy security. In parallel, the Aga Khan Trust for Culture and the World Monuments Fund, with funding provided by the World Bank, undertook a five-year-long restoration and rehabilitation effort to regenerate the most significant areas of historic Mostar, and particularly the urban tissue around the Old Bridge. Also in July 2004, the Stari Grad Agency was launched to operate and maintain the restored buildings, including the Old Bridge complex, and promote Mostar as a cultural and tourist destination.[34] In July 2005, UNESCO inscribed the Old Bridge and its closest vicinity onto the World Heritage List.

International reconstruction efforts also aimed at the reunification of the divided city. The February 1996 Mostar Agreement led to the adoption of the Interim Statute of the city the same month, and to a 1-year period of EU Administration of Mostar (EUAM), headed by former Bremen mayor Hans Koschnick, till early 1997.[35] After six years of implementation, in 2003 OHR Paddy Ashdown established an "international commission for reforming Mostar", whose final report noted how the HDZ/SDA power-sharing in Mostar had entrenched division and corruption, with "rampant parallelism" in administrative structures and usurpation of power by the municipalities over the City.[22]: 5  A new Statute was negotiated, and finally imposed in February 2004 by OHR Paddy Ashdown.[22]: 6  In November 2010, the Constitutional Court struck down as discriminatory the electoral framework for Mostar. The Bosniak and Croat ruling parties were unable, however, to reach a new compromise. Lacking a legal basis, local elections could not take place in Mostar in 2012 and 2016, and outgoing mayor Ljubo Bešlić (HDZ BiH) remained in office as the only person authorised to allocate the city budget on an emergency basis. Almost a decade without administration led to a decline in service provision, including trash collection. In October 2019 Irma Baralija won a case against Bosnia and Herzegovina at the European Court of Human Rights for the lack of elections in Mostar. Finally, a political deal, agreed under international mediation in June 2020, enabled legislative amendments in July 2020 and the conduct of the vote in Mostar on 20 December 2020.[36][37]

Architecture

 
Old Town of Mostar
 
Gimnazija Mostar, designed by architect František Blažek
 
Koski Mehmed Paša Mosque
 
Catholic church and Franciscan monastery of St. Peter and Paul

Mostar has architecturally noteworthy buildings in a wide range of styles. Historicist architectural styles reflected cosmopolitan interest and exposure to foreign aesthetic trends and were artfully merged with indigenous styles. Examples include the Italianate Franciscan church, the Ottoman Muslibegovića house, the Dalmatian Ćorović House and an Orthodox church which was built as gift from the Sultan.

The Ottomans used monumental architecture to affirm, extend and consolidate their colonial holdings. Administrators and bureaucrats – many of them indigenous people who converted from Christianity to Islam – founded mosque complexes that generally included Koranic schools, soup kitchens or markets.[21]

Old Bridge Area of the Old City of Mostar
UNESCO World Heritage Site
 
Old Bridge in the heart of the Old City of Mostar (viewed from the north)
CriteriaCultural: vi
Reference946
Inscription2005 (29th Session)
Area7.6 ha
Buffer zone47.6 ha

Out of the thirteen original mosques dating from the 16th and 17th centuries, seven have been lost during the 20th century for ideological reasons or by bombardment. One of the two 19th-century Orthodox churches has also disappeared, while the early 20th-century synagogue, after suffering severe damage in the World War II, has been converted into a theatre. Several Ottoman inns also survived, along with other buildings from this period of Mostar's history, such as fountains and schools.[9]

The majority of administrative buildings are from the Austro-Hungarian period and have neoclassical and Secessionist characteristics. A number of surviving late Ottoman houses demonstrate the component features of this form of domestic architecture – upper storey for residential use, hall, paved courtyard, and verandah on one or two storeys. The later 19th-century residential houses are predominantly in neoclassical style.[9]

A number of early trading and craft buildings still exist, notably some low shops in wood or stone, stone storehouses, and a group of former tanneries round an open courtyard. Once again, the 19th-century commercial buildings are predominantly neoclassical. A number of elements of the early fortifications are visible. Namely the Hercegusa Tower dating from the medieval period, whereas the Ottoman defence edifices are represented by the Halebinovka and Tara Towers – the watchtowers on the ends of the Old Bridge, and a stretch of the ramparts.[9]

The oldest single arch stone bridge in Mostar, the , was built in 1558 by the Ottoman architect Cejvan Kethoda. It is said that this was to be a test before the major construction of the Stari Most began. The Old Bridge was completed in 1566 and was hailed as one of the greatest architectural achievement in the Ottoman controlled Balkans. This single-arch stone bridge is an exact replica of the original bridge that stood for over 400 years and that was designed by Hajrudin, a student of the great Ottoman architect Sinan. It spans 28.7 m (94 ft) of the Neretva river, 21 m (69 ft) above the summer water level. The Halebija and Tara towers have always housed the guardians of the bridge and during Ottoman times were also used as storehouses for ammunition. The arch is a perfect semicircle 8.56 m (28.1 ft) in width and 4.15 m (13.6 ft) in height. The frontage and vault are made of regular stone cubes incorporated into the horizontal layers all along the vault. The space between vault, frontal walls and footpath is filled with cracked stone. The bridge footpath and the approaching roads are paved with cobblestones, as is the case with the main roads in the town. Stone steps enable people to ascend to the bridge either side. During the armed conflict between Bosniaks and Bosnian Croats in the Bosnian War in the 1990s, the bridge was destroyed by the HVO (Croatian Defence Council).[38]

The Cejvan Cehaj Mosque, built in 1552, is the oldest mosque in Mostar. Later a madrasa (Islamic school) was built on the same compound. The Old Bazaar, Kujundziluk is named after the goldsmiths who traditionally created and sold their wares on this street, and still sells authentic paintings and copper or bronze carvings of the Stari Most, pomegranates (the natural symbol of Herzegovina) or the stećaks (medieval tombstones).

The Koski Mehmed Paša Mosque, built in 1617 is open to visitors. Visitors may enter the mosque and take photos free of charge. The minaret is also open to the public and is accessible from inside the mosque. Just around the corner from the mosque is the Tepa Market. This has been a busy marketplace since Ottoman times. It now sells mostly fresh produce grown in Herzegovina and, when in season, the figs and pomegranates are extremely popular. Local honey is also a prominent specialty, being produced all around Herzegovina.

Culture

 
First Croatian printing office in Mostar, 1920

Magazine Most, along with Šantić's Poetry Evenings, was most important outlet for cultural and artistic production in the city and the region, offering space for upstart poets and writers.[39][40]Dani Matice Hrvatske is one of city's significant cultural events and it is commonly sponsored by the Croatian Government and the Government of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina. Mostar Summer is another umbrella event which includes Šantić Poetry Evenings, Mostar Summer Festival and Festival of Bosnia and Herzegovina choirs/ensembles. The city is a home of music festival called Melodije Mostara (Mostar Melodies) which has been held annually since 1995. Theatre festivals include Mostarska Liska (organized by the National Theatre Mostar) and The Mostar Spring (organized by the Matica hrvatska Mostar).[41][42]

Mostar Art institutions include:

Mostar cuisine is balanced between Western and Eastern influences. Traditional Mostar food is closely related to Turkish, Middle Eastern and other Mediterranean cuisines. However, due to years of Austrian rule and influence, there are also many culinary influences from Central Europe.[43][44] Some of the dishes include ćevapčići, burek, sarma, japrak, musaka, dolma, sujuk, sač, đuveč, and sataraš. Local desserts include baklava, hurmašice, sutlijaš, tulumbe, tufahije, and šampita.

Economy

 
Aluminij factory

Mostar's economy relies heavily on the aluminium and metal industry, banking services and the telecommunication sector.[citation needed] The city is home of some of the country's largest corporations.

Along with Sarajevo and Banja Luka, it is the largest financial center in Bosnia and Herzegovina. One of three largest banks in the country has its headquarters in Mostar.[45][46] Bosnia and Herzegovina has three national electric, postal and telecommunication service corporations; the seat of one per each group is placed in Mostar (electric utility provider Elektroprivreda HZHB, postal service company Hrvatska pošta Mostar and HT Eronet, the third largest telecommunication company in the country). These three companies (along with banks and aluminium factory) make a vast portion of overall economic activity in the city.[citation needed]

Prior to the 1992–1995 Bosnian War, Mostar relied on other important companies which had been closed, damaged or downsized. They included SOKO (military aircraft factory), Fabrika duhana Mostar (tobacco industry), and Hepok (food industry). In 1981, Mostar's GDP per capita was 103% of the Yugoslav average.[47]

Aluminum manufacturing company Aluminij Industries is the sole remaining large company that was prominent during the former Yugoslavia. It is one of the country's largest exporter companies and it has a number of international partners. It is one of the most influential companies in the region as well. The city of Mostar alone has direct income of €40 million annually from Aluminij.[citation needed]

Considering the fact that three dams are situated on the city of Mostar's territory, the city has a solid base for further development of production. There is also an ongoing project for the possible use of wind power and building of windmills. The private sector has seen a notable increase in small and medium enterprises over the past couple of years contributing to the positive business climate.[citation needed]

Mostar also hosts the annual International Economic Fair Mostar ("Međunarodni sajam gospodarstva Mostar")[48] which was first held in 1997.

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
194845,419—    
195340,559−2.24%
196172,453+7.52%
197189,580+2.14%
1981110,371+2.11%
1991126,628+1.38%
2013105,797−0.81%

In 2013 the municipality had a total population of 105,797 according to the census results and the city itself had a population of 60,195.[49]

Ethnic groups

Its population consists of the following ethnic groups: Croats (48.4%); Bosniaks (44.1%) and Serbs (4.1%). The city of Mostar has the largest population of Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina. As in many other cities, its demographic profile was significantly altered after the Bosnian War; in case of Mostar, most of the Serbs left or were forced out of the city.

According to the official data of the local elections of 2008, among 6 city election districts, three western ones (Croat-majority) had 53,917 registered voters, and those three on the east (Bosniak-majority) had 34,712 voters.[50]

The ethnic composition of the city of Mostar, per indicated census years:

Ethnic group 1910[51] 1931[52] 1948 [53] 1961[54] 1971[55] 1981[56] 1991 2013[57]
Bosniaks/Muslims 7,212 8,844 9,981 10,513 33,645 34,247 43,856 46,752
Croats/Catholics 4,307 5,764 6,062 27,265 32,782 36,927 43,037 51,216
Serbs/Orthodox 4,518 5.502 5,039 21,220 19,076 20,271 23,846 4,421
Yugoslavs 12,181 2,329 17,143 12,768 -
Others 355 185 332 1,274 1,748 1,789 3,121 3,408
Total 16,392 20,295 21,606 72,453 89,580 110,377 126,628 105,797

Settlements and neighborhoods

The City of Mostar (aside from city proper) includes the following settlements:

After the Bosnian War, following the Dayton Agreement, the villages of Kamena, Kokorina and Zijemlje were separated from Mostar to form the new municipality of Istočni Mostar (East Mostar), in the Republika Srpska.

Climate

Mostar, and Herzegovina area in general, experience a modified humid subtropical climate (Cfa) under the Köppen Climate Classification, with cold, humid winters and hot, drier summers.[58] In the summer months, occasional temperatures above 40 °C (104 °F) are not uncommon. In 1901, a temperature of 46.2 °C (115.2 °F) was measured in the city, which is the highest temperature to have even been recorded in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[59][60] The coldest month is January, averaging about 5 °C (41 °F), and the warmest month is July, averaging about 26 °C (78 °F). The sunniest months are between June and September. The remainder of the year is wet and mild.[61] Mostar is the sunniest city in the country with an average of 2291 solar hours a year.[62] Snow is relatively rare and it usually melts within a few hours or days.

During the 2012 European cold wave, Mostar experienced unusually cold weather with freezing temperatures lasting for days and a record snow depth of 82.5 cm (32 in).[63]

Climate data for Mostar (1981–2010, extremes 1949–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 20.0
(68.0)
25.0
(77.0)
27.6
(81.7)
31.5
(88.7)
35.6
(96.1)
41.2
(106.2)
42.5
(108.5)
43.1
(109.6)
38.8
(101.8)
32.5
(90.5)
27.4
(81.3)
19.4
(66.9)
43.1
(109.6)
Average high °C (°F) 9.1
(48.4)
11.1
(52.0)
15.2
(59.4)
19.5
(67.1)
25.1
(77.2)
28.9
(84.0)
32.5
(90.5)
32.7
(90.9)
27.0
(80.6)
21.3
(70.3)
14.4
(57.9)
9.8
(49.6)
20.6
(69.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 5.6
(42.1)
6.6
(43.9)
10.1
(50.2)
13.8
(56.8)
19.0
(66.2)
22.7
(72.9)
25.8
(78.4)
25.6
(78.1)
20.5
(68.9)
15.7
(60.3)
10.2
(50.4)
6.5
(43.7)
15.2
(59.3)
Average low °C (°F) 2.4
(36.3)
2.9
(37.2)
5.7
(42.3)
8.8
(47.8)
13.2
(55.8)
16.7
(62.1)
19.5
(67.1)
19.6
(67.3)
15.4
(59.7)
11.5
(52.7)
6.8
(44.2)
3.6
(38.5)
10.5
(50.9)
Record low °C (°F) −10.9
(12.4)
−9.6
(14.7)
−6.5
(20.3)
−1.2
(29.8)
3.3
(37.9)
8.0
(46.4)
8.4
(47.1)
9.6
(49.3)
6.4
(43.5)
−0.1
(31.8)
−4.8
(23.4)
−7.8
(18.0)
−10.9
(12.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 139
(5.5)
120
(4.7)
127
(5.0)
118
(4.6)
90
(3.5)
70
(2.8)
43
(1.7)
60
(2.4)
122
(4.8)
152
(6.0)
185
(7.3)
176
(6.9)
1,402
(55.2)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1 mm) 9.2 8.4 9.0 10.3 8.2 7.0 4.2 4.8 6.7 8.7 10.5 10.7 97.7
Average snowy days (≥ 1.0 cm) 2.9 1.5 0.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 1.2 6.3
Average relative humidity (%) 65.9 63.3 61.0 61.8 62.7 61.2 52.7 53.7 60.1 65.2 69.3 67.4 62.0
Mean monthly sunshine hours 125 129 164 180 240 271 328 306 226 174 120 111 2,374
Source 1: World Meteorological Organization[64]
Source 2: Meteorological Institute of Bosnia and Herzegovina,[65] altervista.org[66][better source needed]

Governance

 
Panoramic view of Mostar

The City of Mostar has the status of a municipality. The city government is led by the mayor - since 15 February 2021 Mario Kordić (HDZ BiH).

Interim Statute (1996–2004)

International reconstruction efforts aimed at the reunification of the divided city. The February 1996 Mostar Agreement led to the adoption of the Interim Statute of the city the same month, and to a 1-year period of EU Administration of Mostar (EUAM), headed by former Bremen mayor Hans Koschnick, till early 1997.[35]

The Interim Statute introduced a Yugoslav-style two-level of administration, with a City level with its own council and mayor (with two deputies) and six municipalities, each with its own administration and council, reflecting the wartime division: three in the Croat-majority West Mostar, and three in the Bosniak-majority East Mostar. A tiny "Central Zone" strip (not a municipality) was to host the rebuilt institutions of the city and, according to the original plans, also of the Federation entity. Mostar citizens would cast three votes: the first two for the City council's 48 members (half from a city-wide lift and half from candidates in each municipality, 4 each), and the third to elect the members of the councils of the six municipalities. Ethnic quotas and veto rights were to prevent any domination.[22]: 4 

2004 Statute

After six years of implementation, in 2003 OHR Paddy Ashdown established an "international commission for reforming Mostar", whose final report noted how the HDZ/SDA power-sharing in Mostar had entrenched division and corruption, with "rampant parallelism" in administrative structures and usurpation of power by the municipalities over the City.[22]: 5  The Mostar Commission, headed by another former German mayor, Norbert Winterstein, gathered members of all Mostar parties with the overarching aim of reuniting the city. A new Statute was negotiated, although few points of contention remained. Finally, in February 2004 OHR Paddy Ashdown imposed via its Bonn Powers the new City Statute and related amendments to the BiH Election Law and cantonal and Federation Constitutions. The 2004 Statute abolished the six municipalities and created a unified City administration with a single budget and one Mayor of Mostar, with no deputies. Ethnic quotas in the City council were replaced by minimum/maximum thresholds; 17 councillors would now be elected from a city-wide list, and 18 from the territories of the six former municipalities, now "city areas", which retained a single residual competence on "the distribution of revenues deriving from allocated construction land", managed by city area "commissions" formed by the 3 city councillors elected in each one. The "central zone" remained outside any city area, and its residents were only entitled to vote for the city-wide list.[22]: 6 

According to the City Statute, imposed by High Representative Paddy Ashdown on 28 January 2004 after local politicians failed to reach an agreement, the mayor of Mostar has to be elected by the city council with a two-thirds majority.[67][68] Ashdown abolished the six municipalities that were divided equally among Bosniaks and Croats and replaced them with six electoral units,[69] ridding Mostar of duplicate institutions and costs.[70] In the process Ashdown also reduced the number of elected officials from 194 to 35.[69] According to the City Statute, the constituent peoples of Bosnia and Herzegovina (Bosniaks, Croats, and Serbs) are guaranteed a minimum of four seats and a maximum of 15 seats.[69] 18 councillors are elected by election units (3 councillors from each of the 6 districts) and 15 councillors from a city-wide list.[68] This move was opposed by the Party of Democratic Action (SDA) and the Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina (HDZ BiH).[69]

2008 elections

On the basis of the 2008 election, the City Council was composed by 35 councillors from the following parties:

Relative winners were SDA with the greatest number of votes. However, neither party had enough votes to ensure election of the mayor from their party. The City Council met 16 times without success. Eventually OHR was involved and High Representative made some minor changes to the City Statute. After that Ljubo Bešlić (HDZ BiH) was reelected as a mayor.

2010 Constitutional Court ruling

Following an appeal by HDZ BiH, in November 2010 the Constitutional Court found the electoral framework for Mostar (2004 Statute) to be discriminatory and unconstitutional.[71] Among other things, the Constitutional Court noted that the votes of Mostar residents did not count the same, as the six electoral zones all elected 3 councillors despite their different population (with the smallest having 4 times fewer residents than the largest); and that the voters from the "central zone" counted less, as they only elected representatives from the city-wide list and not from any of the electoral zones. The Court annulled the relevant provisions of the Election Law of BiH and of the 2004 Statute, and ordered the Parliamentary Assembly of BiH and the Mostar city assembly to revise them within six months.[22]: 6  Yet, the Bosniak and Croat ruling parties did not get to a compromise.

Interim administration (2012–2020)

In the absence of a legal basis, local elections could not take place in Mostar in 2012 and 2016. The mandate of the City council also expired in 2012. Bešlić thus remained as acting mayor for eight additional years, during which he affirmed that he considered resigning multiple times,[72] also due to his deteriorating health.[73] During this time, he shared the administrative duties with Izet Šahović, head of the Mostar City's Finance Department, a bureaucrat and member of the Bosniak Party of Democratic Action (SDA). For two full mandates, Bešlić and Šahović have decided together how to disburse Mostar's yearly 30 million euro budget, without any legislative oversight or public transparency. The situation has been denounced by multiple NGOs, which have pointed at the SDA-HDZ power-sharing as the source of the mal-administration of Mostar and the recurrent problems with trash collection, water treatment, and continued ethnic duplication of the city services.[73]

During this period, several rounds of talks were held with international facilitation. Between October 2012 and May 2013 Deputy High Representative Roderick W. Moore launched an 8-months mediation effort that produced a compromise framework aimed at merging the city areas (and central zone) into multi-ethnic voting districts. This was endorsed by the Peace Implementation Council's Steering Board (PIC SB). Yet, the proposal found no political support when it was submitted by Moore's successor Tamir G. Waser in July 2014 to the BiH Parliament. A second mediation attempt led by US and UK ambassadors to BiH, Maureen Cormack and Edward Ferguson, and based on a model with a single city-wide electoral district, also failed [in 2017]. In 2018, the two main parties HDZ BiH and SDA autonomously negotiated a compromise solution, based only on a formula for the election of the councillors from each city area along the "one man, one vote" principle, which would be later taken up in the June 2020 agreement.[22]: 6 

In October 2019, the European Court of Human Rights ruled against Bosnia and Herzegovina in the case brought by Irma Baralija on the absence of electoral rights for the residents of Mostar.[74] In July 2020, the Parliament of Bosnia and Herzegovina amended the electoral law to allow for local elections in Mostar to be held in December 2020.[75][36][37]

2020 elections

Following the election on 20 December 2020, the 35 members of the new City Council include:[76]

Former mayors of the City of Mostar

[77]

# Portrait Name Term of Office Party
1 President Ismail and members Muhamed, Ahmed, Huršid, Javer, Jure, Ivan, Lazar 1871 1878
2 Muhamed-beg Alajbegović
(Deputy: Blaško Zelenika)
6 August 1878 May 1890
3 Ibrahim-beg Kapetanović January 1890 6 January 1897
4 Ahmet-beg Hadžiomerović June 1897 December 1907
5 Mustafa Mujaga Komadina 1909 2 November 1918
6 Smail-aga Ćemalović 1919 1929
7 Ibrahim Fejić
(Sub-mayors: Ljubo Krulj and Vlatko Tambić)
1929 1934
8 Muhamed Ridžanović 1935 1935
9 Husaga Ćišić 1935 1940
10 Husein Metiljević 1940 1941
11 Šefkija Balić 1941 1941
12 Muhamed Butum 1941 1942
13 Salih Efica "Crni" 1942 1945
14 Salko Fejić 1945 1946
15 Vilko Šnatinger 1946 1947
16 Manojlo Ćabak 1947 1949
17 Mustafa Sefo 1949 March 1958
18 Vaso Gačić August 1958 October 1961
19 Dušan Vukojević October 1961 February 1963
20 Muhamed Mirica November 1963 May 1967
21 Avdo Zvonić May 1967 May 1969
22 Radmilo – Braca Andrić May 1969 May 1974
23 Izet Brković May 1974 June 1976
24 Dževad Derviškadić June 1976 April 1982
25 Vlado Smoljan April 1982 July 1983
26 Nikola Gašić July 1983 July 1985
27 Damjan Rotim July 1985 April 1986
28 Nijaz Topuzović "Toza" April 1986 April 1988
29 Jovo Popara 14 December 1988 14 December 1990
30 Milivoj Gagro 14 December 1990 1992 HDZ BiH
31 Mijo Brajković
Safet Oručević
1992 1996 HDZ BiH
SDA
32 Ivan Prskalo
Deputy: Safet Oručević
1996 2000 HDZ BiH
SDA
33 Neven Tomić
Deputy: Hamdija Jahić
2000 December 2004 HDZ BiH
SDA
34 Ljubo Bešlić
Deputy: Hamdija Jahić
December 2004 18 December 2009 HDZ BiH
SDA
35 Ljubo Bešlić 18 December 2009 15 February 2021 HDZ BiH
36 Mario Kordić[78] 15 February 2021 Incumbent HDZ BiH

Education

 
Gymnasium Mostar (built 1898–1902) within United World College

Mostar has a number of various educational institutions. These include University of Mostar, University Džemal Bijedić of Mostar, United World College in Mostar, nineteen high-schools and twenty four elementary schools.[79] High-schools include sixteen vocational schools and three gymnasiums.[80]

All public schools in Mostar, both elementary and secondary education, are divided between Croat curriculum and Federal (unofficially Bosniak) curriculum schools. This ethnic division of schools was emplaced during the very first year of the Bosnian war and it continues, with some modifications, to this day. Today, the schools in Mostar and throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina are a site of struggle between ethno-national political elites[81] in ways that reveals the precarious position of youth in the volatile nation building processes[82] A partial exception to divided education is Gimnazija Mostar (also known as "Stara gimnazija") that implemented joint school administration and some joint student courses. However, Croat and Bosniak students in Gimnazija Mostar continue to have most courses according to the “national” curriculum, among them the so-called national subjects – history, literature, geography, and religion.[83]

The country's higher education reform and the signing of the Bologna Process have forced both universities to put aside their rivalry to some extent and try to make themselves more competitive on a regional level.[citation needed]

University of Mostar is the second largest university in the country and the only Croatian language university in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It was founded in 1977 as the University "Džemal Bijedić" of Mostar, but changed name in 1992. The origin of the university can be traced back to the Herzegovina Franciscan Theological School, which was founded in 1895 and closed in 1945, was the first higher education institution in Mostar.[84] Today's University seal shows the building of the Franciscan Monastery.

University Džemal Bijedić of Mostar was founded in 1993. It employs around 250 professors and staff members. According to the Federal Office of Statistics, Džemal Bijedić University had 2,522 students enrolled during the 2012/2013 academic year.[85]

As of 2015 school year, the University of Mostar had 10,712 students enrolled at eleven faculties making it the largest university in the city.[85] Cumulatively, it has been attended by more than 40,000 students since the start of the Bologna process of education.

Sports

One of the most popular sports in Mostar is football. The two most successful teams are HŠK Zrinjski and FK Velež. FK Velež won the Yugoslav Cup in 1981 and in 1986, which was one of the most significant accomplishments this club has achieved. Since the Bosnian War, each club has generally been supported by a particular ethnic group (Velež for the Bosniaks and Zrinjski for the Croats). The matches between the two clubs are some of the country's most intense matches. Since the start of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina, HŠK Zrinjski has won seven championships.

In basketball, HKK Zrinjski Mostar competes at the nation's highest level while the Zrinjski banner also represents the city in the top handball league. Vahid Halilhodžić, a former Bosnian football player and current manager of the Morocco national football team, started his professional career in FK Velež Mostar.[86]

In 2011, rugby union football club RK Herceg was founded. The club competes in national leagues within Bosnia & Herzegovina and in the regional league Adria Sevens.

Another popular sport in Mostar is swimming. There are three swimming teams in Mostar: PK Velež, KVS Orka and APK Zrinjski. The best Bosnian swimmer, Lana Pudar, is from Mostar. Mostar has plenty of talented swimmers despite having just one 25 meter pool and one 12.5 meter pool.

Tourism

Mostar is an important tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Mostar Airport serves the city as well as the railway and bus stations which connect it to a number of national and international destinations. Mostar's old town is an important tourist destination with the Stari Most being its most recognizable feature.

Some noteworthy sites include Bishop's Ordinariate building, the remains of an early Christian basilica at Cim, a hamam (Ottoman public bath), clock tower (sahat-kula), Synagogue (1889) and Jewish Memorial Cemetery, Nesuh-aga Vučjaković Mosque, Hadži-Kurt Mosque or Tabačica, Metropolitan's Palace (1908), Karagöz Bey Mosque (1557), Cathedral of the Holy Trinity (1873), Catholic Church and Franciscan Monastery,[87] Ottoman Residences (16th–19th century), Crooked Bridge, Tara and Halebija Towers.[88]

The World War II Partisan Memorial Cemetery in Mostar, designed by the architect Bogdan Bogdanović, is another important symbol of the city. Its sacrosanct quality is derived from the unity of nature (water and greenery) with the architectural expression of the designer; the monument was inscribed on the list of National Monuments in 2006.[89]

The Catholic pilgrimage site of Međugorje is also nearby as well as the Tekija Dervish Monastery in Blagaj, 13th-century town of Počitelj, Blagaj Fortress (Stjepan-grad), Kravica waterfall, seaside town of Neum, Roman villa rustica from the early fourth century Mogorjelo, Stolac with its stećak necropolis and the remains of an ancient Greek town of Daorson. Nearby sites also include the nature park called Hutovo Blato, archeological site Desilo, Lake Boračko as well as Vjetrenica cave, the largest and most important cave in Bosnia and Herzegovina.[90]

Notable people

Twin towns — sister cities

Mostar is twinned with:[91]

See also

References

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  • Toal, Gerard; Dahlman, Carl T. (2011). Bosnia Remade: Ethnic Cleansing and Its Reversal. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-973036-0.
  • Udovički, Jasminka; Štitkovac, Ejub (2000). "Bosnia and Hercegovina: The Second War". In Udovički, Jasminka; Ridgeway, James (eds.). Burn This House: The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia. Durham: Duke University Press. pp. 175–216. ISBN 978-0-8223-2590-1.
  • Yarwood, John R.; Seebacher, Andreas; Strufe, Niels; Wolfram, Hedwig (1999). Rebuilding Mostar: Urban Reconstruction in a War Zone. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press. ISBN 978-08-53239-03-1.

Further reading

External links

  • City of Mostar

mostar, this, article, about, city, bosnia, herzegovina, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑːr, ɑːr, ɔː, serbian, cyrillic, Мостар, pronounced, mǒstaːr, listen, city, administrative, center, herzegovina, neretva, canton, federation, bosnia, herzegovina, entity, bos. This article is about the city in Bosnia and Herzegovina For other uses see Mostar disambiguation Mostar UK m ɒ ˈ s t ɑːr 1 2 US ˈ m oʊ s t ɑːr ˈ m ɔː s 3 4 Serbian Cyrillic Mostar pronounced mǒstaːr listen is a city and the administrative center of Herzegovina Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina an entity of Bosnia and Herzegovina 5 and the historical capital of Herzegovina 6 Mostar MostarCityGrad MostarGrad MostarCity of MostarFrom top left to right A panoramic view of the heritage town site and the Neretva river from Lucki Bridge Koski Mehmed Pasha Mosque Mostar Clock Tower Sahat Kula Stari Most Museum Bazzar Kujundziluk in Mala Tepa heritage area and a night view of Stari Most and Neretva river FlagCoat of armsEtymology Serbo Croatian mostar lit bridge keeper Map of Bosnia and Herzegovina Mostar Coordinates 43 20 37 N 17 48 27 E 43 34361 N 17 80750 E 43 34361 17 80750 Coordinates 43 20 37 N 17 48 27 E 43 34361 N 17 80750 E 43 34361 17 80750Country Bosnia and HerzegovinaEntityFederation of Bosnia and HerzegovinaCanton Herzegovina NeretvaGeographical regionHerzegovinaFounded1452Government MayorMario Kordic HDZ BiH Area City1 165 63 km2 450 05 sq mi Elevation60 m 200 ft Population City113 169 Density97 km2 250 sq mi Urban60 195Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Area code 387 0 36Websitewww wbr mostar wbr baMostar is situated on the Neretva River and is the fifth largest city in the country 7 Mostar was named after the bridge keepers mostari who in the medieval times guarded the Stari Most Old Bridge over the Neretva 8 The Old Bridge a UNESCO World Heritage Site 9 built by the Ottomans in the 16th century is one of Bosnia and Herzegovina s most visited landmarks and is considered an exemplary piece of Islamic architecture in the Balkans 10 11 12 13 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient and medieval history 1 2 Ottoman period 1 3 Austrian and Yugoslav period 1 4 Bosnian War 1 5 Post war developments 2 Architecture 3 Culture 4 Economy 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnic groups 5 2 Settlements and neighborhoods 6 Climate 7 Governance 7 1 Interim Statute 1996 2004 7 2 2004 Statute 7 3 2008 elections 7 4 2010 Constitutional Court ruling 7 5 Interim administration 2012 2020 7 6 2020 elections 7 7 Former mayors of the City of Mostar 8 Education 9 Sports 10 Tourism 11 Notable people 12 Twin towns sister cities 13 See also 14 References 14 1 Citations 14 2 Literature 15 Further reading 16 External linksHistory EditAncient and medieval history Edit Human settlements on the river Neretva between Mount Hum and the Velez Mountain have existed since prehistory as witnessed by discoveries of fortified enceintes and cemeteries Evidence of Roman occupation was discovered beneath the present town 9 As far as medieval Mostar goes although the Christian basilicas of late antiquity remained in use few historical sources were preserved and not much is known about this period The name of Mostar was first mentioned in a document dating from 1474 taking its name from the bridge keepers mostari this refers to the existence of a wooden bridge from the market on the left bank of the river which was used by traders soldiers and other travelers During this time it was also the seat of a kadiluk district with a regional judge Since Mostar was on the trade route between the Adriatic and the mineral rich regions of central Bosnia the settlement began to spread to the right bank of the river 9 Prior to 1474 the names of two towns appear in medieval historical sources along with their later medieval territories and properties the towns of Nebojsa and Cimski grad In the early 15th century the county zupa of Vecenike covered the site of the present day Mostar along the right bank of the Neretva including the sites of Zahum Cim Ilici Rastani and Vojno It was at the center of this area which in 1408 belonged to Radivojevic who built Cim Fort prior to 1443 Mostar is indirectly referred to in a 1454 charter of King Alfonso V of Aragon as Pons bridge for a bridge had already been built there Prior to 1444 the Nebojsa Tower was built on the left bank of the Neretva which belonged to the late medieval county still known as Vecenike or Veceric 14 The earliest documentary reference to Mostar as a settlement dates from 3 April 1452 when Ragusans from Dubrovnik wrote to their fellow countrymen in the service of Serbian Despot Đorđe Brankovic to say that Vladislav Hercegovic had turned against his father Stjepan and occupied the town of Blagaj and other places including Duo Castelli al ponte de Neretua 15 Ottoman period Edit The Old Town Street Springtime in Mostar by Tivadar Kosztka Csontvary 1853 1919 In 1468 the region came under Ottoman rule 15 and the urbanization of the settlement began It was named Kopruhisar meaning fortress at the bridge at the centre of which was a cluster of 15 houses The town was organized into two distinct areas carsija the crafts and commercial centre of the settlement and mahala or a residential area 16 The town was fortified between the years 1520 and 1566 and the wooden bridge rebuilt in stone 9 The stone bridge the Old Bridge Stari most was erected in 1566 on the orders of Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent 17 and at 28 m 92 ft long and 20 m 66 ft high quickly became a wonder in its own time Later becoming the city s symbol the Old Bridge was designed by Mimar Hayruddin 12 a student and apprentice of Ottoman architect Mimar Sinan In the late 16th century Kopruhisar was one of the towns of the Sanjak of Herzegovina The traveler Evliya Celebi wrote in the 17th century that the bridge is like a rainbow arch soaring up to the skies extending from one cliff to the other I a poor and miserable slave of Allah have passed through 16 countries but I have never seen such a high bridge It is thrown from rock to rock as high as the sky 18 The first church in the city of Mostar a Serbian Orthodox Church was built in 1834 during Ottoman rule 19 Austrian and Yugoslav period Edit People of Mostar in 1890 1900 People gathered waiting for Stjepan Radic to arrive in Mostar in 1925 Austria Hungary took control over Bosnia and Herzegovina in 1878 and ruled the region until the aftermath of World War I in 1918 when it became part of the State of Slovenes Croats and Serbs and then Yugoslavia During this period Mostar was the main urban centre of Herzegovina 20 In 1881 the town became the seat of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Mostar Duvno and in 1939 it became a part of the Banovina of Croatia During World War II Mostar was also annexed city in the Nazi German fascist puppet state the Independent State of Croatia During the period of Austro Hungarian rule 1878 1918 Mostar s city council cooperated with the Austro Hungarian administration to implement sweeping reforms in city planning broad avenues and an urban grid were imposed on the western bank of the Neretva and significant investments were made in infrastructure communications and housing City administrators like Mustafa Mujaga Komadina were central players in these transformations which facilitated growth and linked the eastern and western banks of the city Noteworthy examples of Austro Hungarian architecture include the Municipality building which was designed by the architect Josip Vancas from Sarajevo residential districts around the Rondo and Gimnazija Mostar from 1902 designed by Frantisek Blazek 8th Yugoslav Partisans Corps in liberated Mostar February 1945 After World War II Mostar developed industries producing plastics tobacco bauxite wine aircraft and aluminium Several dams Grabovica Salakovac Mostar were built in the region to harness the hydroelectric power of the Neretva The city was a major industrial and tourist center and prospered economically during the time of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Between 1948 and 1974 the industrial base was expanded with construction of a metal working factory cotton textile mills and an aluminum plant Skilled workers both men and women entered the work force and the social and demographic profile of the city was broadened dramatically between 1945 and 1980 Mostar s population grew from 18 000 to 100 000 Because Mostar s eastern bank was burdened by inadequate infrastructure the city expanded on the western bank with the construction of large residential blocks Local architects favored an austere modernist aesthetic prefabrication and repetitive modules Commercial buildings in the functionalist style appeared on the historic eastern side of the city as well replacing more intimate timber constructions that had survived since Ottoman times In the 1970s and 1980s a healthy local economy fueled by foreign investment spurred recognition and conservation of the city s cultural heritage An economically sustainable plan to preserve the old town of Mostar was implemented by the municipality which drew thousands of tourists from the Adriatic coast and invigorated the economy of the city The results of this ten year project earned Mostar an Aga Khan Award for Architecture in 1986 21 According to the 1991 census Mostar had 127 000 inhabitants with roughly an equal number of Bosniaks 34 6 and Croats 34 18 8 Serbs and 13 6 of those who declared themselves Yugoslavs or Others 22 Bosnian War Edit War damage on the former Mostar frontline 2001 After Bosnia and Herzegovina declared independence from Yugoslavia in April 1992 the town was besieged by the Yugoslav People s Army JNA following clashes between the JNA and Croat forces The Croats were organized into the Croatian Defence Council HVO 23 and were joined by a sizable number of Bosniaks 24 The JNA artillery periodically shelled neighbourhoods outside of their control from early April 25 On 7 June the Croatian Army HV launched an offensive code named Operation Jackal the objective of which was to relieve Mostar and break the JNA siege of Dubrovnik The offensive was supported by the HVO which attacked the Army of Republika Srpska VRS positions around Mostar By 12 June the HVO secured the western part of the city and by 21 June the VRS was completely pushed out from the eastern part Numerous religious buildings and most of the city s bridges were destroyed or severely damaged during the fighting 25 Among them were the Catholic Cathedral of Mary Mother of the Church the Franciscan Church and Monastery the Bishop s Palace and 12 out of 14 mosques in the city After the VRS was pushed from the city the Serbian Orthodox Zitomislic Monastery and the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity were demolished 26 Throughout late 1992 tensions between Croats and Bosniaks increased in Mostar In early 1993 the Croat Bosniak War escalated and by mid April 1993 Mostar had become a divided city with the western part dominated by HVO forces and the eastern part controlled by the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina ARBiH 27 Fighting broke out in May when both sides of the city came under intense artillery fire 28 The city was divided along ethnic lines with a number of offensives taking place resulting in a series of stalemates 29 30 31 The Croat Bosniak conflict ended with the signing of the Washington Agreement in 1994 and the Bosnian War ended with the Dayton Agreement in 1995 Around 2 000 people died in Mostar during the war 32 Two wars Serb forces versus Bosniak and Croatian and Croat Bosniak war left Mostar physically devastated and ethno territorially divided between a Croat majority west bank with ca 55 000 residents and a Bosniak majority old City and east bank with ca 50 000 residents with the frontline running parallel to the Neretva River Most Serbs had fled the city 33 Post war developments Edit The Old Bridge undergoing reconstruction in June 2003 Since the end of the wider war in 1995 great progress has been made in the reconstruction of the city of Mostar Over 15 million dollars has been spent on restoration citation needed A monumental project to rebuild the Old Bridge which was destroyed during the Bosnian War to the original design and restore surrounding structures and historic neighbourhoods was initiated in 1999 and mostly completed by spring 2004 The money for this reconstruction was donated by Spain citation needed who had a sizable contingent of peacekeeping troops stationed in the surrounding area during the conflict the United States Turkey Italy the Netherlands and Croatia A grand opening was held on 23 July 2004 under heavy security In parallel the Aga Khan Trust for Culture and the World Monuments Fund with funding provided by the World Bank undertook a five year long restoration and rehabilitation effort to regenerate the most significant areas of historic Mostar and particularly the urban tissue around the Old Bridge Also in July 2004 the Stari Grad Agency was launched to operate and maintain the restored buildings including the Old Bridge complex and promote Mostar as a cultural and tourist destination 34 In July 2005 UNESCO inscribed the Old Bridge and its closest vicinity onto the World Heritage List International reconstruction efforts also aimed at the reunification of the divided city The February 1996 Mostar Agreement led to the adoption of the Interim Statute of the city the same month and to a 1 year period of EU Administration of Mostar EUAM headed by former Bremen mayor Hans Koschnick till early 1997 35 After six years of implementation in 2003 OHR Paddy Ashdown established an international commission for reforming Mostar whose final report noted how the HDZ SDA power sharing in Mostar had entrenched division and corruption with rampant parallelism in administrative structures and usurpation of power by the municipalities over the City 22 5 A new Statute was negotiated and finally imposed in February 2004 by OHR Paddy Ashdown 22 6 In November 2010 the Constitutional Court struck down as discriminatory the electoral framework for Mostar The Bosniak and Croat ruling parties were unable however to reach a new compromise Lacking a legal basis local elections could not take place in Mostar in 2012 and 2016 and outgoing mayor Ljubo Beslic HDZ BiH remained in office as the only person authorised to allocate the city budget on an emergency basis Almost a decade without administration led to a decline in service provision including trash collection In October 2019 Irma Baralija won a case against Bosnia and Herzegovina at the European Court of Human Rights for the lack of elections in Mostar Finally a political deal agreed under international mediation in June 2020 enabled legislative amendments in July 2020 and the conduct of the vote in Mostar on 20 December 2020 36 37 Architecture EditMain article Architecture of Mostar Old Town of Mostar Gimnazija Mostar designed by architect Frantisek Blazek Koski Mehmed Pasa Mosque Catholic church and Franciscan monastery of St Peter and Paul Cathedral of the Holy Trinity Mostar has architecturally noteworthy buildings in a wide range of styles Historicist architectural styles reflected cosmopolitan interest and exposure to foreign aesthetic trends and were artfully merged with indigenous styles Examples include the Italianate Franciscan church the Ottoman Muslibegovica house the Dalmatian Corovic House and an Orthodox church which was built as gift from the Sultan The Ottomans used monumental architecture to affirm extend and consolidate their colonial holdings Administrators and bureaucrats many of them indigenous people who converted from Christianity to Islam founded mosque complexes that generally included Koranic schools soup kitchens or markets 21 Old Bridge Area of the Old City of MostarUNESCO World Heritage Site Old Bridge in the heart of the Old City of Mostar viewed from the north CriteriaCultural viReference946Inscription2005 29th Session Area7 6 haBuffer zone47 6 haOut of the thirteen original mosques dating from the 16th and 17th centuries seven have been lost during the 20th century for ideological reasons or by bombardment One of the two 19th century Orthodox churches has also disappeared while the early 20th century synagogue after suffering severe damage in the World War II has been converted into a theatre Several Ottoman inns also survived along with other buildings from this period of Mostar s history such as fountains and schools 9 The majority of administrative buildings are from the Austro Hungarian period and have neoclassical and Secessionist characteristics A number of surviving late Ottoman houses demonstrate the component features of this form of domestic architecture upper storey for residential use hall paved courtyard and verandah on one or two storeys The later 19th century residential houses are predominantly in neoclassical style 9 A number of early trading and craft buildings still exist notably some low shops in wood or stone stone storehouses and a group of former tanneries round an open courtyard Once again the 19th century commercial buildings are predominantly neoclassical A number of elements of the early fortifications are visible Namely the Hercegusa Tower dating from the medieval period whereas the Ottoman defence edifices are represented by the Halebinovka and Tara Towers the watchtowers on the ends of the Old Bridge and a stretch of the ramparts 9 The oldest single arch stone bridge in Mostar the Kriva Cuprija Sloping Bridge was built in 1558 by the Ottoman architect Cejvan Kethoda It is said that this was to be a test before the major construction of the Stari Most began The Old Bridge was completed in 1566 and was hailed as one of the greatest architectural achievement in the Ottoman controlled Balkans This single arch stone bridge is an exact replica of the original bridge that stood for over 400 years and that was designed by Hajrudin a student of the great Ottoman architect Sinan It spans 28 7 m 94 ft of the Neretva river 21 m 69 ft above the summer water level The Halebija and Tara towers have always housed the guardians of the bridge and during Ottoman times were also used as storehouses for ammunition The arch is a perfect semicircle 8 56 m 28 1 ft in width and 4 15 m 13 6 ft in height The frontage and vault are made of regular stone cubes incorporated into the horizontal layers all along the vault The space between vault frontal walls and footpath is filled with cracked stone The bridge footpath and the approaching roads are paved with cobblestones as is the case with the main roads in the town Stone steps enable people to ascend to the bridge either side During the armed conflict between Bosniaks and Bosnian Croats in the Bosnian War in the 1990s the bridge was destroyed by the HVO Croatian Defence Council 38 The Cejvan Cehaj Mosque built in 1552 is the oldest mosque in Mostar Later a madrasa Islamic school was built on the same compound The Old Bazaar Kujundziluk is named after the goldsmiths who traditionally created and sold their wares on this street and still sells authentic paintings and copper or bronze carvings of the Stari Most pomegranates the natural symbol of Herzegovina or the stecaks medieval tombstones The Koski Mehmed Pasa Mosque built in 1617 is open to visitors Visitors may enter the mosque and take photos free of charge The minaret is also open to the public and is accessible from inside the mosque Just around the corner from the mosque is the Tepa Market This has been a busy marketplace since Ottoman times It now sells mostly fresh produce grown in Herzegovina and when in season the figs and pomegranates are extremely popular Local honey is also a prominent specialty being produced all around Herzegovina Culture Edit First Croatian printing office in Mostar 1920 Magazine Most along with Santic s Poetry Evenings was most important outlet for cultural and artistic production in the city and the region offering space for upstart poets and writers 39 40 Dani Matice Hrvatske is one of city s significant cultural events and it is commonly sponsored by the Croatian Government and the Government of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina Mostar Summer is another umbrella event which includes Santic Poetry Evenings Mostar Summer Festival and Festival of Bosnia and Herzegovina choirs ensembles The city is a home of music festival called Melodije Mostara Mostar Melodies which has been held annually since 1995 Theatre festivals include Mostarska Liska organized by the National Theatre Mostar and The Mostar Spring organized by the Matica hrvatska Mostar 41 42 Mostar Art institutions include Croatian Lodge Herceg Stjepan Kosaca Cultural Center Mostar OKC Abrasevic English Abrasevic Youth Center Pavarotti Music Centre Croatian National Theatre in Mostar National Theatre Mostar Museum of the Old Bridge Herzegovina Museum Mostar Youth Theatre Aluminij Gallery Birthplace of Svetozar Corovic Aleksa Santic House Muslibegovic House World Music Centre Puppet Theatre MostarMostar cuisine is balanced between Western and Eastern influences Traditional Mostar food is closely related to Turkish Middle Eastern and other Mediterranean cuisines However due to years of Austrian rule and influence there are also many culinary influences from Central Europe 43 44 Some of the dishes include cevapcici burek sarma japrak musaka dolma sujuk sac đuvec and sataras Local desserts include baklava hurmasice sutlijas tulumbe tufahije and sampita Economy Edit Aluminij factory Mostar s economy relies heavily on the aluminium and metal industry banking services and the telecommunication sector citation needed The city is home of some of the country s largest corporations Along with Sarajevo and Banja Luka it is the largest financial center in Bosnia and Herzegovina One of three largest banks in the country has its headquarters in Mostar 45 46 Bosnia and Herzegovina has three national electric postal and telecommunication service corporations the seat of one per each group is placed in Mostar electric utility provider Elektroprivreda HZHB postal service company Hrvatska posta Mostar and HT Eronet the third largest telecommunication company in the country These three companies along with banks and aluminium factory make a vast portion of overall economic activity in the city citation needed Prior to the 1992 1995 Bosnian War Mostar relied on other important companies which had been closed damaged or downsized They included SOKO military aircraft factory Fabrika duhana Mostar tobacco industry and Hepok food industry In 1981 Mostar s GDP per capita was 103 of the Yugoslav average 47 Aluminum manufacturing company Aluminij Industries is the sole remaining large company that was prominent during the former Yugoslavia It is one of the country s largest exporter companies and it has a number of international partners It is one of the most influential companies in the region as well The city of Mostar alone has direct income of 40 million annually from Aluminij citation needed Considering the fact that three dams are situated on the city of Mostar s territory the city has a solid base for further development of production There is also an ongoing project for the possible use of wind power and building of windmills The private sector has seen a notable increase in small and medium enterprises over the past couple of years contributing to the positive business climate citation needed Mostar also hosts the annual International Economic Fair Mostar Međunarodni sajam gospodarstva Mostar 48 which was first held in 1997 Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop p a 194845 419 195340 559 2 24 196172 453 7 52 197189 580 2 14 1981110 371 2 11 1991126 628 1 38 2013105 797 0 81 In 2013 the municipality had a total population of 105 797 according to the census results and the city itself had a population of 60 195 49 Ethnic groups Edit Its population consists of the following ethnic groups Croats 48 4 Bosniaks 44 1 and Serbs 4 1 The city of Mostar has the largest population of Croats in Bosnia and Herzegovina As in many other cities its demographic profile was significantly altered after the Bosnian War in case of Mostar most of the Serbs left or were forced out of the city According to the official data of the local elections of 2008 among 6 city election districts three western ones Croat majority had 53 917 registered voters and those three on the east Bosniak majority had 34 712 voters 50 The ethnic composition of the city of Mostar per indicated census years Ethnic group 1910 51 1931 52 1948 53 1961 54 1971 55 1981 56 1991 2013 57 Bosniaks Muslims 7 212 8 844 9 981 10 513 33 645 34 247 43 856 46 752Croats Catholics 4 307 5 764 6 062 27 265 32 782 36 927 43 037 51 216Serbs Orthodox 4 518 5 502 5 039 21 220 19 076 20 271 23 846 4 421Yugoslavs 12 181 2 329 17 143 12 768 Others 355 185 332 1 274 1 748 1 789 3 121 3 408Total 16 392 20 295 21 606 72 453 89 580 110 377 126 628 105 797Settlements and neighborhoods Edit The City of Mostar aside from city proper includes the following settlements Bacevici Banjdol Blagaj Bogodol Buna Cim Cule Dobrc Donja Dreznica Donji Jasenjani Dracevice Gnojnice Goranci Gornja Dreznica Gornje Gnojnice Gornji Jasenjani Gubavica Hodbina Humilisani Ilici Jasenica Kosor Kremenac Krivodol Kruzanj Kutilivac Laksevine Malo Polje Miljkovici Ortijes Pijesci Podgorani Podgorje Podvelez Polog Potoci Prigrađani Rabina Raska Gora Rastani Ravni Rodoc Seliste Slipcici Sovici Sretnice Strizevo Vihovici Vojno Vranjevici Vrapcici Vrdi Zeljusa Zitomislici Zulja After the Bosnian War following the Dayton Agreement the villages of Kamena Kokorina and Zijemlje were separated from Mostar to form the new municipality of Istocni Mostar East Mostar in the Republika Srpska Climate EditMostar and Herzegovina area in general experience a modified humid subtropical climate Cfa under the Koppen Climate Classification with cold humid winters and hot drier summers 58 In the summer months occasional temperatures above 40 C 104 F are not uncommon In 1901 a temperature of 46 2 C 115 2 F was measured in the city which is the highest temperature to have even been recorded in Bosnia and Herzegovina 59 60 The coldest month is January averaging about 5 C 41 F and the warmest month is July averaging about 26 C 78 F The sunniest months are between June and September The remainder of the year is wet and mild 61 Mostar is the sunniest city in the country with an average of 2291 solar hours a year 62 Snow is relatively rare and it usually melts within a few hours or days During the 2012 European cold wave Mostar experienced unusually cold weather with freezing temperatures lasting for days and a record snow depth of 82 5 cm 32 in 63 Climate data for Mostar 1981 2010 extremes 1949 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 20 0 68 0 25 0 77 0 27 6 81 7 31 5 88 7 35 6 96 1 41 2 106 2 42 5 108 5 43 1 109 6 38 8 101 8 32 5 90 5 27 4 81 3 19 4 66 9 43 1 109 6 Average high C F 9 1 48 4 11 1 52 0 15 2 59 4 19 5 67 1 25 1 77 2 28 9 84 0 32 5 90 5 32 7 90 9 27 0 80 6 21 3 70 3 14 4 57 9 9 8 49 6 20 6 69 0 Daily mean C F 5 6 42 1 6 6 43 9 10 1 50 2 13 8 56 8 19 0 66 2 22 7 72 9 25 8 78 4 25 6 78 1 20 5 68 9 15 7 60 3 10 2 50 4 6 5 43 7 15 2 59 3 Average low C F 2 4 36 3 2 9 37 2 5 7 42 3 8 8 47 8 13 2 55 8 16 7 62 1 19 5 67 1 19 6 67 3 15 4 59 7 11 5 52 7 6 8 44 2 3 6 38 5 10 5 50 9 Record low C F 10 9 12 4 9 6 14 7 6 5 20 3 1 2 29 8 3 3 37 9 8 0 46 4 8 4 47 1 9 6 49 3 6 4 43 5 0 1 31 8 4 8 23 4 7 8 18 0 10 9 12 4 Average precipitation mm inches 139 5 5 120 4 7 127 5 0 118 4 6 90 3 5 70 2 8 43 1 7 60 2 4 122 4 8 152 6 0 185 7 3 176 6 9 1 402 55 2 Average precipitation days 1 mm 9 2 8 4 9 0 10 3 8 2 7 0 4 2 4 8 6 7 8 7 10 5 10 7 97 7Average snowy days 1 0 cm 2 9 1 5 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 6 3Average relative humidity 65 9 63 3 61 0 61 8 62 7 61 2 52 7 53 7 60 1 65 2 69 3 67 4 62 0Mean monthly sunshine hours 125 129 164 180 240 271 328 306 226 174 120 111 2 374Source 1 World Meteorological Organization 64 Source 2 Meteorological Institute of Bosnia and Herzegovina 65 altervista org 66 better source needed Governance Edit Panoramic view of Mostar The City of Mostar has the status of a municipality The city government is led by the mayor since 15 February 2021 Mario Kordic HDZ BiH Interim Statute 1996 2004 Edit International reconstruction efforts aimed at the reunification of the divided city The February 1996 Mostar Agreement led to the adoption of the Interim Statute of the city the same month and to a 1 year period of EU Administration of Mostar EUAM headed by former Bremen mayor Hans Koschnick till early 1997 35 The Interim Statute introduced a Yugoslav style two level of administration with a City level with its own council and mayor with two deputies and six municipalities each with its own administration and council reflecting the wartime division three in the Croat majority West Mostar and three in the Bosniak majority East Mostar A tiny Central Zone strip not a municipality was to host the rebuilt institutions of the city and according to the original plans also of the Federation entity Mostar citizens would cast three votes the first two for the City council s 48 members half from a city wide lift and half from candidates in each municipality 4 each and the third to elect the members of the councils of the six municipalities Ethnic quotas and veto rights were to prevent any domination 22 4 2004 Statute Edit After six years of implementation in 2003 OHR Paddy Ashdown established an international commission for reforming Mostar whose final report noted how the HDZ SDA power sharing in Mostar had entrenched division and corruption with rampant parallelism in administrative structures and usurpation of power by the municipalities over the City 22 5 The Mostar Commission headed by another former German mayor Norbert Winterstein gathered members of all Mostar parties with the overarching aim of reuniting the city A new Statute was negotiated although few points of contention remained Finally in February 2004 OHR Paddy Ashdown imposed via its Bonn Powers the new City Statute and related amendments to the BiH Election Law and cantonal and Federation Constitutions The 2004 Statute abolished the six municipalities and created a unified City administration with a single budget and one Mayor of Mostar with no deputies Ethnic quotas in the City council were replaced by minimum maximum thresholds 17 councillors would now be elected from a city wide list and 18 from the territories of the six former municipalities now city areas which retained a single residual competence on the distribution of revenues deriving from allocated construction land managed by city area commissions formed by the 3 city councillors elected in each one The central zone remained outside any city area and its residents were only entitled to vote for the city wide list 22 6 According to the City Statute imposed by High Representative Paddy Ashdown on 28 January 2004 after local politicians failed to reach an agreement the mayor of Mostar has to be elected by the city council with a two thirds majority 67 68 Ashdown abolished the six municipalities that were divided equally among Bosniaks and Croats and replaced them with six electoral units 69 ridding Mostar of duplicate institutions and costs 70 In the process Ashdown also reduced the number of elected officials from 194 to 35 69 According to the City Statute the constituent peoples of Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosniaks Croats and Serbs are guaranteed a minimum of four seats and a maximum of 15 seats 69 18 councillors are elected by election units 3 councillors from each of the 6 districts and 15 councillors from a city wide list 68 This move was opposed by the Party of Democratic Action SDA and the Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina HDZ BiH 69 2008 elections Edit On the basis of the 2008 election the City Council was composed by 35 councillors from the following parties Party of Democratic Action SDA 12 People s Party Work for Prosperity NSRzB 7 Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina HDZ BiH 7 Social Democratic Party of Bosnia and Herzegovina SDP BiH 3 Croatian Democratic Union 1990 HDZ 1990 3 Party for Bosnia and Herzegovina SBiH 2 Croatian Party of Rights of Bosnia and Herzegovina HSP BiH 1Relative winners were SDA with the greatest number of votes However neither party had enough votes to ensure election of the mayor from their party The City Council met 16 times without success Eventually OHR was involved and High Representative made some minor changes to the City Statute After that Ljubo Beslic HDZ BiH was reelected as a mayor 2010 Constitutional Court ruling Edit Following an appeal by HDZ BiH in November 2010 the Constitutional Court found the electoral framework for Mostar 2004 Statute to be discriminatory and unconstitutional 71 Among other things the Constitutional Court noted that the votes of Mostar residents did not count the same as the six electoral zones all elected 3 councillors despite their different population with the smallest having 4 times fewer residents than the largest and that the voters from the central zone counted less as they only elected representatives from the city wide list and not from any of the electoral zones The Court annulled the relevant provisions of the Election Law of BiH and of the 2004 Statute and ordered the Parliamentary Assembly of BiH and the Mostar city assembly to revise them within six months 22 6 Yet the Bosniak and Croat ruling parties did not get to a compromise Interim administration 2012 2020 Edit In the absence of a legal basis local elections could not take place in Mostar in 2012 and 2016 The mandate of the City council also expired in 2012 Beslic thus remained as acting mayor for eight additional years during which he affirmed that he considered resigning multiple times 72 also due to his deteriorating health 73 During this time he shared the administrative duties with Izet Sahovic head of the Mostar City s Finance Department a bureaucrat and member of the Bosniak Party of Democratic Action SDA For two full mandates Beslic and Sahovic have decided together how to disburse Mostar s yearly 30 million euro budget without any legislative oversight or public transparency The situation has been denounced by multiple NGOs which have pointed at the SDA HDZ power sharing as the source of the mal administration of Mostar and the recurrent problems with trash collection water treatment and continued ethnic duplication of the city services 73 During this period several rounds of talks were held with international facilitation Between October 2012 and May 2013 Deputy High Representative Roderick W Moore launched an 8 months mediation effort that produced a compromise framework aimed at merging the city areas and central zone into multi ethnic voting districts This was endorsed by the Peace Implementation Council s Steering Board PIC SB Yet the proposal found no political support when it was submitted by Moore s successor Tamir G Waser in July 2014 to the BiH Parliament A second mediation attempt led by US and UK ambassadors to BiH Maureen Cormack and Edward Ferguson and based on a model with a single city wide electoral district also failed in 2017 In 2018 the two main parties HDZ BiH and SDA autonomously negotiated a compromise solution based only on a formula for the election of the councillors from each city area along the one man one vote principle which would be later taken up in the June 2020 agreement 22 6 In October 2019 the European Court of Human Rights ruled against Bosnia and Herzegovina in the case brought by Irma Baralija on the absence of electoral rights for the residents of Mostar 74 In July 2020 the Parliament of Bosnia and Herzegovina amended the electoral law to allow for local elections in Mostar to be held in December 2020 75 36 37 2020 elections Edit Following the election on 20 December 2020 the 35 members of the new City Council include 76 Croatian Democratic Union of Bosnia and Herzegovina HDZ BiH 13 6 Coalition for Mostar SDA SBB DF SBiH BPS 11 1 BH Bloc SDP BiH NS 5 2 Croatian Republican Party HRS 3 3 First Mostar Party PMP 2 2 Serb list Stay Here United for Our Mostar SNSD SDS 1 1 Former mayors of the City of Mostar Edit 77 Portrait Name Term of Office Party1 President Ismail and members Muhamed Ahmed Hursid Javer Jure Ivan Lazar 1871 18782 Muhamed beg Alajbegovic Deputy Blasko Zelenika 6 August 1878 May 18903 Ibrahim beg Kapetanovic January 1890 6 January 18974 Ahmet beg Hadziomerovic June 1897 December 19075 Mustafa Mujaga Komadina 1909 2 November 19186 Smail aga Cemalovic 1919 19297 Ibrahim Fejic Sub mayors Ljubo Krulj and Vlatko Tambic 1929 19348 Muhamed Ridzanovic 1935 19359 Husaga Cisic 1935 194010 Husein Metiljevic 1940 194111 Sefkija Balic 1941 194112 Muhamed Butum 1941 194213 Salih Efica Crni 1942 194514 Salko Fejic 1945 194615 Vilko Snatinger 1946 194716 Manojlo Cabak 1947 194917 Mustafa Sefo 1949 March 195818 Vaso Gacic August 1958 October 196119 Dusan Vukojevic October 1961 February 196320 Muhamed Mirica November 1963 May 196721 Avdo Zvonic May 1967 May 196922 Radmilo Braca Andric May 1969 May 197423 Izet Brkovic May 1974 June 197624 Dzevad Derviskadic June 1976 April 198225 Vlado Smoljan April 1982 July 198326 Nikola Gasic July 1983 July 198527 Damjan Rotim July 1985 April 198628 Nijaz Topuzovic Toza April 1986 April 198829 Jovo Popara 14 December 1988 14 December 199030 Milivoj Gagro 14 December 1990 1992 HDZ BiH31 Mijo Brajkovic Safet Orucevic 1992 1996 HDZ BiH SDA32 Ivan Prskalo Deputy Safet Orucevic 1996 2000 HDZ BiH SDA33 Neven Tomic Deputy Hamdija Jahic 2000 December 2004 HDZ BiH SDA34 Ljubo Beslic Deputy Hamdija Jahic December 2004 18 December 2009 HDZ BiH SDA35 Ljubo Beslic 18 December 2009 15 February 2021 HDZ BiH36 Mario Kordic 78 15 February 2021 Incumbent HDZ BiHEducation EditMain article Education in Bosnia and Herzegovina Gymnasium Mostar built 1898 1902 within United World College University of Mostar Seal Mostar has a number of various educational institutions These include University of Mostar University Dzemal Bijedic of Mostar United World College in Mostar nineteen high schools and twenty four elementary schools 79 High schools include sixteen vocational schools and three gymnasiums 80 All public schools in Mostar both elementary and secondary education are divided between Croat curriculum and Federal unofficially Bosniak curriculum schools This ethnic division of schools was emplaced during the very first year of the Bosnian war and it continues with some modifications to this day Today the schools in Mostar and throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina are a site of struggle between ethno national political elites 81 in ways that reveals the precarious position of youth in the volatile nation building processes 82 A partial exception to divided education is Gimnazija Mostar also known as Stara gimnazija that implemented joint school administration and some joint student courses However Croat and Bosniak students in Gimnazija Mostar continue to have most courses according to the national curriculum among them the so called national subjects history literature geography and religion 83 The country s higher education reform and the signing of the Bologna Process have forced both universities to put aside their rivalry to some extent and try to make themselves more competitive on a regional level citation needed University of Mostar is the second largest university in the country and the only Croatian language university in Bosnia and Herzegovina It was founded in 1977 as the University Dzemal Bijedic of Mostar but changed name in 1992 The origin of the university can be traced back to the Herzegovina Franciscan Theological School which was founded in 1895 and closed in 1945 was the first higher education institution in Mostar 84 Today s University seal shows the building of the Franciscan Monastery University Dzemal Bijedic of Mostar was founded in 1993 It employs around 250 professors and staff members According to the Federal Office of Statistics Dzemal Bijedic University had 2 522 students enrolled during the 2012 2013 academic year 85 As of 2015 update school year the University of Mostar had 10 712 students enrolled at eleven faculties making it the largest university in the city 85 Cumulatively it has been attended by more than 40 000 students since the start of the Bologna process of education Sports EditOne of the most popular sports in Mostar is football The two most successful teams are HSK Zrinjski and FK Velez FK Velez won the Yugoslav Cup in 1981 and in 1986 which was one of the most significant accomplishments this club has achieved Since the Bosnian War each club has generally been supported by a particular ethnic group Velez for the Bosniaks and Zrinjski for the Croats The matches between the two clubs are some of the country s most intense matches Since the start of the Premier League of Bosnia and Herzegovina HSK Zrinjski has won seven championships In basketball HKK Zrinjski Mostar competes at the nation s highest level while the Zrinjski banner also represents the city in the top handball league Vahid Halilhodzic a former Bosnian football player and current manager of the Morocco national football team started his professional career in FK Velez Mostar 86 In 2011 rugby union football club RK Herceg was founded The club competes in national leagues within Bosnia amp Herzegovina and in the regional league Adria Sevens Another popular sport in Mostar is swimming There are three swimming teams in Mostar PK Velez KVS Orka and APK Zrinjski The best Bosnian swimmer Lana Pudar is from Mostar Mostar has plenty of talented swimmers despite having just one 25 meter pool and one 12 5 meter pool Tourism Edit Mostar Airport Mostar is an important tourist destination in Bosnia and Herzegovina The Mostar Airport serves the city as well as the railway and bus stations which connect it to a number of national and international destinations Mostar s old town is an important tourist destination with the Stari Most being its most recognizable feature Some noteworthy sites include Bishop s Ordinariate building the remains of an early Christian basilica at Cim a hamam Ottoman public bath clock tower sahat kula Synagogue 1889 and Jewish Memorial Cemetery Nesuh aga Vucjakovic Mosque Hadzi Kurt Mosque or Tabacica Metropolitan s Palace 1908 Karagoz Bey Mosque 1557 Cathedral of the Holy Trinity 1873 Catholic Church and Franciscan Monastery 87 Ottoman Residences 16th 19th century Crooked Bridge Tara and Halebija Towers 88 The World War II Partisan Memorial Cemetery in Mostar designed by the architect Bogdan Bogdanovic is another important symbol of the city Its sacrosanct quality is derived from the unity of nature water and greenery with the architectural expression of the designer the monument was inscribed on the list of National Monuments in 2006 89 The Catholic pilgrimage site of Međugorje is also nearby as well as the Tekija Dervish Monastery in Blagaj 13th century town of Pocitelj Blagaj Fortress Stjepan grad Kravica waterfall seaside town of Neum Roman villa rustica from the early fourth century Mogorjelo Stolac with its stecak necropolis and the remains of an ancient Greek town of Daorson Nearby sites also include the nature park called Hutovo Blato archeological site Desilo Lake Boracko as well as Vjetrenica cave the largest and most important cave in Bosnia and Herzegovina 90 Notable people EditDusan Bajevic footballer Sergej Barbarez footballer Bojan Bogdanovic basketball player Svetozar Corovic writer Vladimir Corovic historian Ivan Curkovic footballer Drazen Dalipagic basketball player Olympic champion Dejan Damjanovic footballer Osman Đikic poet Franjo Dzidic footballer Amina Kajtaz swimmer Meho Kodro footballer Zoran Mandlbaum leader of the Jewish Community of Mostar Enver Maric footballer Marino Maric handball player Predrag Matvejevic writer Camila Micijevic handball player Florijan Mickovic sculptor Gordan Mihic playwright Vlado Mrkic writer and journalist Muhamed Mujic footballer Olympic medalist Sasa Papac footballer Boro Primorac footballer Lana Pudar swimmer Nino Raspudic philosopher Zeljko Samardzic singer Aleksa Santic writer Marin Sego handball player Blaz Sliskovic footballer Sergej Trifunovic actor Ornela Vistica actress Franjo Vladic footballerTwin towns sister cities EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Bosnia and Herzegovina Mostar is twinned with 91 Amman Jordan Antalya Turkey Arsoli Italy Izmir Turkey Kayseri Turkey Montegrotto Terme Italy Ohrid North Macedonia Osijek Croatia 92 Orkland Norway Split Croatia Tutin Serbia Vukovar CroatiaSee also EditRadiotelevizija Herceg Bosne Tourism in Bosnia and HerzegovinaReferences EditCitations Edit Mostar Collins English Dictionary HarperCollins Archived from the original on 2 July 2019 Retrieved 2 July 2019 Mostar Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 2020 03 22 Mostar The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 2 July 2019 Mostar Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 2 July 2019 Mostar ALDA 2021 05 12 Archived from the original on 2021 06 24 Retrieved 2021 06 17 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Mostar Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Altinel Esra Gizem 2021 05 07 Bosnia Herzegovina The green paradise of the Balkans Daily Sabah Archived from the original on 2021 06 22 Retrieved 2021 06 17 Centre UNESCO World Heritage 2017 10 11 Old Bridge Area of the Old City of Mostar UNESCO World Heritage Centre in Latin Archived from the original on 2021 06 20 Retrieved 2021 06 17 a b c d e f g UNESCO Old Bridge Area of the Old City of Mostar Archived from the original on 2020 01 09 Retrieved 2019 12 26 Balic Smail 1973 Kultura Bosnjaka Muslimanska Komponenta Vienna Ungargasse 9 20 Balic pp 32 34 Archived from the original on December 13 2014 Retrieved June 7 2013 Cisic Husein Razvitak i postanak grada Mostara Stamparija Mostar p 22 OCLC 470710758 a b Stratton Arthur 1972 Sinan New York Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 978 0 684 12582 4 Stover Eric Harvey M Weinstein 2004 My Neighbor My Enemy Justice and Community in the Aftermath of Mass Atrocity Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press p 151 The bridge built in 1566 was considered a masterpiece of Islamic architecture and a unique symbol of an undivided city Anđelic 1974 276 278 a b Mujezinovic 1998 p 144 Institute for Regional Planning Mostar 1982 p 21 Mostar reclaims Ottoman heritage the Guardian July 23 2004 Archived from the original on July 15 2022 Retrieved July 15 2022 Hearts and Stones Saudi Aramco World Archived from the original on 2012 10 04 Retrieved 2013 03 26 Mostar Villa Menalo 1992 04 03 Archived from the original on 2021 06 24 Retrieved 2021 06 17 Taking Vengeance on the Serbs The Independent July 13 1914 Retrieved August 12 2012 a b Pasic Amir Conservation and Revitalization of Historic Mostar Geneva The Aga Khan Trust for Culture 2004 a b c d e f g h Bodo Weber The West s Dirty Mostar Deal Deliverables in the Absence of a BiH Policy Archived 2020 12 18 at the Wayback Machine Democratisation Policy Council policy note 16 December 2020 Tanner 2001 p 286 Goldstein 1999 p 243 a b CIA 2002 p 156 157 Ruggles 2012 p 152 153 Mostar Encyclopedia Britannica Archived from the original on 2021 06 14 Retrieved 2021 06 17 Christia 2012 p 157 158 Tanner 2001 p 290 Christia 2012 p 159 CIA 2002 p 201 Yarwood et al 1999 p 4 Commission for Reforming the City of Mostar Recommendations of the Commission Report of the Chairman 15 December 2003 p 55 Resurgence of Mostar s Historic City Centre Archived from the original on 2006 12 06 Retrieved 2006 11 29 a b German diplomat who was EU administrator of Mostar dies Archived 2022 09 05 at the Wayback Machine AP April 21 2016 a b Bosnia s city of Mostar to hold election on December 20 after 12 years Reuters July 23 2020 Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved December 16 2020 via www reuters com a b GROSELJ Klemen Parliamentary question Local elections in Mostar E 002851 2020 European Parliament www europarl europa eu Archived from the original on 2022 09 14 Retrieved 2020 12 16 Sudetic Chuck 1993 11 10 Mostar s Old Bridge Battered to Death The New York Times Archived from the original on 2016 07 19 Retrieved 29 June 2016 Voloder Sanadin Mostaru nedostaje Alija Kebo balkans aljazeera net in Bosnian Retrieved 2022 11 03 Gradimir Gojer 9 April 2020 MOSTARU ITEKAKO NEDOSTAJE MOST Tacno net in Serbo Croatian Retrieved 3 November 2022 NARODNO MOSTAR INFO Mostar Liska in local language permanent dead link Retrieved on 16 May 2013 maticahrvatska mostar ba Mostarsko proljece in local language Archived 2015 02 14 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 16 May 2013 Tim Clancy 2004 Bosnia amp Herzegovina The Bradt Travel Guide pp 93 97 ISBN 978 1 84162 094 7 Archived from the original on 2015 02 14 Retrieved 2013 06 07 Darra J Goldstein Kathrin Merkle Council of Europe ed 2005 01 01 Culinary cultures of Europe identity diversity and dialogue pp 87 94 ISBN 978 92 871 5744 7 Retrieved 2013 06 07 UniCredit Bank in Croatian unicredit ba Archived from the original on 2016 12 23 Retrieved 2013 03 26 Addiko Bank seli u Sarajevo Gasi se 100 radnih mjesta u Mostaru 10 January 2017 Archived from the original on 23 September 2021 Retrieved 24 November 2019 Radovinovic Radovan Bertic Ivan eds 1984 Atlas svijeta Novi pogled na Zemlju in Croatian 3rd ed Zagreb Sveucilisna naklada Liber NASLOVNICAPocetna stranica Mostarski sajam com Archived from the original on 2016 01 11 Retrieved 2013 03 26 Naseljena Mjesta 1991 2013 in Bosnian Statistical Office of Bosnia and Herzegovina Archived from the original on September 27 2021 Retrieved October 9 2021 IZBORI 2008 Izbori ba Archived from the original on 2012 03 31 Retrieved 2013 03 26 Spezialortsrepertorium der osterreichischen Lander I XII Wien 1915 1919 Archived from the original on 2013 05 29 Retrieved 2020 04 20 Definitivni rezultati popisa stanovnistva od 31 marta 1931 godine Knj 1 Prisutno stanovnistvo broj kuca i domacinstava Resultats definitifs du recensement de la population du 31 mars 1931 Livre 1 Population de fait nombre de maisons et de menages www sistory si in Slovenian p 81 Archived from the original on 2022 09 14 Retrieved 2022 09 11 Popis 1948 stat gov rs Nacionalni Sastav Stanovnistva SFR Jugoslavije in Serbian Republicki zavod za statistiku Srbija Retrieved 24 December 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Check url value help Nacionalni Sastav Stanovnistva SFR Jugoslavije PDF in Serbian Republicki zavod za statistiku Srbija Archived PDF from the original on 20 December 2013 Retrieved 24 December 2016 Nacionalni Sastav Stanovnistva SFR Jugoslavije PDF stat gov rs in Serbian Republicki zavod za statistiku Srbija Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 24 December 2016 Nacionalni Sastav Stanovnistva SFR Jugoslavije PDF stat gov rs in Serbian Republicki zavod za statistiku Srbija Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 24 December 2016 POPIS STANOVNISTVA DOMACINSTAVA I STANOVA U BOSNI I HERCEGOVINI 2013 REZULTATI POPISA PDF popis2013 ba in Serbian Archived PDF from the original on 24 December 2017 Retrieved 24 December 2016 Climate Summary for Mostar permanent dead link Najtopliji Mostar 1901 S 46 2 stupnja Archived from the original on 2017 08 26 Retrieved 2017 07 23 Federal Hydrometeorological Institute Archived from the original on 9 October 2016 Retrieved 28 July 2016 Encyclopaedia Britannica Temperatures and Precipitations Archived from the original on 2015 09 24 Retrieved 2015 01 19 Historical Weather For 2012 in Mostar Bosnia and Herzegovina Cedar Lake Ventures Inc Archived from the original on 1 February 2014 Retrieved 30 April 2014 World Meteorological Organization Climate Normals for 1981 2010 World Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 11 November 2021 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Meteorlogical data for station Mostar in period 1961 1990 Meteorological Institute of Bosnia and Herzegovina Archived from the original on 7 May 2018 Retrieved 6 May 2018 Mostar Record mensili dal 1949 in Italian Meteorological Institute of Bosnia and Herzegovina Archived from the original on 1 April 2016 Retrieved 14 February 2016 Pise srijeda 28 1 2004 15 53 2004 01 28 Ashdown nametnuo novi ustroj Mostara Vijesti net Index hr Archived from the original on 2013 05 25 Retrieved 2013 03 26 a b Odluka kojom se proglasava Statut Grada Mostara Ohr int 2004 01 28 Archived from the original on 2013 04 01 Retrieved 2013 03 26 a b c d Hopeful rebirth for Bosnia s divided Mostar ISN Isn ethz ch 2004 02 03 Archived from the original on 2011 06 14 Retrieved 2013 06 07 High Representative s Letter to the Citizens of Mostar Ohr int 2004 01 28 Archived from the original on 2013 04 01 Retrieved 2013 03 26 CC BiH U 9 09 PDF permanent dead link Ljubo Beslic When Sarajevo keeps emphasising how Mostar is a divided city people start talking about dividing that city Heinrich Boll Stiftung Ured u Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina Heinrich Boll Stiftung Archived from the original on 2021 09 22 Retrieved 2020 12 09 a b With Mostar s Eternal Mayor Ailing Will Change Finally Come To Bosnia s Vacuum Of Democracy RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Archived from the original on 2020 12 21 Retrieved 2020 12 09 HUDOC European Court of Human Rights hudoc echr coe int Archived from the original on 2022 07 15 Retrieved 2022 07 15 Date Confirmed For Mostar s First Local Elections In 12 Years RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty Archived from the original on 2020 12 21 Retrieved 2020 12 09 Results as confirmed by the BiH Central Election Commission CEC on 3 January 2020 Mostar ba Archived from the original on 2013 01 23 Retrieved 2020 12 06 Mayor of the City of Mostar Archived from the original on 2021 04 21 Retrieved 2020 12 06 Pocela nastava za 15 000 ucenika na podrucju Mostara Classes begin for 15 000 students in Mostar www bljesak info Archived from the original on September 9 2009 asdf121 16 01 2012 2012 01 16 Srednje skole Opce informacije Mostar INFO in Croatian MOSTARinfo Archived from the original on 2013 07 28 Retrieved 2013 03 26 UNICEF Bosnia and Herzegovina Info centar Podijeljene skole u BiH www unicef org Archived from the original on 2016 03 08 Retrieved 2016 03 08 Laketa Suncana 2015 01 01 Youth as Geopolitical Subjects The Case of Mostar Bosnia and Herzegovina In Kallio Kirsi Mills Sarah Skelton Tracey eds Politics Citizenship and Rights Geographies of Children and Young People Springer Singapore pp 1 13 doi 10 1007 978 981 4585 94 1 6 1 ISBN 9789814585941 Citizens of an Empty Nation Azra Hromadzic www upenn edu Archived from the original on 2016 03 14 Retrieved 2016 03 08 Sreben Dizdar Bakarsic Kemal 1996 Leland C Barrows ed Report on higher education in Bosnia and Herzegovina historical development present state and needs assessment Bucharest UNESCO CEPES p 23 ISBN 978 9290691419 a b UPISANI STUDENTI NA VISOKOSKOLSKIM USTANOVAMA SKOLSKA 2014 2015 GODINA PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2015 01 20 Retrieved 2013 06 07 Buric Ahmed 24 May 2002 Vahid Halilhodzic Moja zivotna prica I in Bosnian BH Dani Retrieved 10 August 2011 Archived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Catholic Church and Franciscan Monastery www turizam mostar ba Archived from the original on 2017 03 18 Retrieved 2022 07 15 Biskupski ordinarijat www turizam mostar ba Archived from the original on 2017 03 18 Retrieved 2022 07 15 UNESCO Old Bridge Area of the Old City of Mostar Archived from the original on February 14 2015 Visit Mostar Archived 2011 08 17 at the Wayback Machine Gradovi prijatelji mostar ba in Bosnian Mostar Archived from the original on 2013 10 30 Retrieved 2021 03 28 Potpisan sporazum o bratimljenju Mostara i Osijeka mostar ba in Croatian Mostar 26 May 2022 Archived from the original on 2022 05 30 Retrieved 2022 05 30 Literature Edit Christia Fotini 2012 Alliance Formation in Civil Wars Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 13985 175 6 CIA 2002 Balkan battlegrounds a military history of the Yugoslav conflict 1990 1995 Vol 2 Office of Russian and European Analysis Goldstein Ivo 1999 Croatia A History London C Hurst amp Co ISBN 978 1 85065 525 1 Ramet Sabrina P 2010 Politics in Croatia since 1990 In Ramet Sabrina P ed Central and Southeast European Politics Since 1989 Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 258 285 ISBN 978 1 139 48750 4 Ruggles D Fairchild 2012 On Location Heritage Cities and Sites New York NY Springer ISBN 978 1 4614 1108 6 Sells Michael Anthony 1998 The Bridge Betrayed Religion and Genocide in Bosnia Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 92209 9 Tanner Marcus 2001 Croatia A Nation Forged in War New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 09125 0 Toal Gerard Dahlman Carl T 2011 Bosnia Remade Ethnic Cleansing and Its Reversal New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 973036 0 Udovicki Jasminka Stitkovac Ejub 2000 Bosnia and Hercegovina The Second War In Udovicki Jasminka Ridgeway James eds Burn This House The Making and Unmaking of Yugoslavia Durham Duke University Press pp 175 216 ISBN 978 0 8223 2590 1 Yarwood John R Seebacher Andreas Strufe Niels Wolfram Hedwig 1999 Rebuilding Mostar Urban Reconstruction in a War Zone Liverpool Liverpool University Press ISBN 978 08 53239 03 1 Further reading Edit Mostar Bradshaw s Hand Book to the Turkish Empire vol 1 Turkey in Europe London W J Adams c 1872 Mostar Austria Hungary Including Dalmatia and Bosnia Leipzig Karl Baedeker 1905 OCLC 344268 F K Hutchinson 1909 Mostar Motoring in the Balkans Chicago McClurg amp Co OCLC 8647011 OL 13515412M Mostar Encyclopaedia of Islam E J Brill 1934 p 608 ISBN 9004097961 External links EditMostar at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Travel information from Wikivoyage Resources from Wikiversity Visit Mostar City of Mostar Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mostar amp oldid 1127624520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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