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Subotica

Subotica (Serbian Cyrillic: Суботица, pronounced [sǔbotitsa] (listen); Hungarian: Szabadka) is a city and the administrative center of the North Bačka District in the autonomous province of Vojvodina, Serbia. Formerly the largest city of Vojvodina region, contemporary Subotica is now the second largest city in the province, following the city of Novi Sad. According to the 2011 census, the city itself has a population of 97,910, while the urban area of Subotica (with adjacent urban settlement of Palić included) has 105,681 inhabitants, and the population of metro area (the administrative area of the city) stands at 141,554 people.[1]

Subotica
Суботица (Serbian)
Szabadka (Hungarian)
From top: Panorama of Subotica, City center, Reichel Palace, Subotica Synagogue, City hall, St. Theresa of Avila Cathedral, Monument to the Victims of Fascism
Subotica
Location of the city of Subotica in Serbia
Subotica
Subotica (Serbia)
Subotica
Subotica (Europe)
Coordinates: 46°06′01″N 19°39′56″E / 46.10028°N 19.66556°E / 46.10028; 19.66556Coordinates: 46°06′01″N 19°39′56″E / 46.10028°N 19.66556°E / 46.10028; 19.66556
Country Serbia
Province Vojvodina
DistrictNorth Bačka
Settlements19
Government
 • MayorStevan Bakić (SNS)
Area
 • Rank13th in Serbia
 • Urban164.33 km2 (63.45 sq mi)
 • Administrative1,007.47 km2 (388.99 sq mi)
Elevation
109 m (358 ft)
Population
 (2011 census)[1]
 • City97,910
 • Rank6th in Serbia
 • Urban
105,681
 • Urban density640/km2 (1,700/sq mi)
 • Administrative
141,554
 • Administrative density140/km2 (360/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
24000
Area code(+381) 24
Vehicle registrationSU
WebsiteOfficial website

Name

The name of the city has changed frequently over time.[2] The earliest known written name of the city was Zabotka[3] or Zabatka,[4] which dates from 1391. It is the origin of the current Hungarian name for the city "Szabadka".[4] Other sources claim, that the name "Szabadka" comes from the adjective szabad, which derived from the Slavic word for "free" – svobod, referring to the status of the colonists settled in this zone by the Habsburg after the Battle of Zenta.[5]

The town was named in the 1740s after Maria Theresa of Austria, Archduchess of Austria. It was officially called Sent-Maria in 1743, but was renamed in 1779 as Maria-Theresiapolis. These two official names were also spelled in several different ways (most commonly the German Maria-Theresiopel or Theresiopel), and were used in different languages.[2]

Geography

It is located in the Pannonian Basin at 46.07° North, 19.68° East, about 10 kilometres (6 miles) from the border with Hungary, and is the northernmost city in Serbia. It is located in the vicinity of lake Palić.[6]

Climate

Subotica has a warm-summer humid continental climate (Dfb) that is uncommon in Serbia except at higher elevations,

Climate data for Subotica (Elevation: 109 m (358 ft))
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 1.7
(35.1)
5.1
(41.2)
11.2
(52.2)
17.1
(62.8)
22.3
(72.1)
25.3
(77.5)
27.4
(81.3)
27.0
(80.6)
23.4
(74.1)
17.6
(63.7)
9.5
(49.1)
3.8
(38.8)
16.0
(60.7)
Average low °C (°F) −4.8
(23.4)
−2.5
(27.5)
0.9
(33.6)
5.5
(41.9)
10.3
(50.5)
13.4
(56.1)
14.4
(57.9)
13.9
(57.0)
10.4
(50.7)
5.6
(42.1)
1.7
(35.1)
−2.1
(28.2)
5.6
(42.0)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 28
(1.10)
25
(1.00)
28
(1.10)
41
(1.60)
51
(2.00)
71
(2.80)
51
(2.00)
56
(2.20)
33
(1.30)
25
(1.00)
41
(1.60)
41
(1.60)
491
(19.3)
Source: Weather Channel[7]

History

Prehistory and antiquity

In the Neolithic and Eneolithic periods, several important archaeological cultures flourished in this area, including the Starčevo culture,[8] the Vinča culture,[9] and the Tiszapolgár culture.[10] Early Indo-European peoples settled in the territory of present-day Subotica in 3200 BC.[11] During the Eneolithic period, the Bronze Age and the Iron Age, several Indo-European archaeological cultures included areas around Subotica - the Baden culture, the Vučedol culture,[12] the Urnfield culture[13] and some others. Before the Iazyge conquest in the 1st century BC, Indo-European peoples of Illyrian, Celtic and Dacian descent inhabited this area. In the 3rd century BC, this area was controlled by the Celtic Boii and Eravisci, while in the 1st century BC, it became part of the Dacian kingdom. From the 1st century BC, the area came under the control of the Sarmatian Iazyges, who were sometimes allies and sometimes enemies of the Romans. Iazyge rule lasted until the 4th century AD, after which the region came into the possession of various other peoples and states.[14]

Early Middle Ages and Slavic settlement

In the Early Middle Ages various Indo-European and Turkic peoples and states ruled in the area of Subotica. These peoples included Huns, Gepids, Avars, Slavs and Bulgarians. Slavs settled today's Subotica in the 6th and 7th centuries, before some of them crossed the rivers Sava and Danube and settled in the Balkans.

The Slavic tribe living in the territory of present-day Subotica were the Obotrites, a subgroup of the Serbs. In the 9th century, after the fall of the Avar state, the first forms of Slavic statehood emerged in this area. The first Slavic states that ruled over this region included the Principality of Lower Pannonia (846-875), Great Moravia (833–c. 907) and the Bulgarian Empire.[15]

Late-Middle Ages

 
Emperor Jovan Nenad monument in the downtown

Subotica probably first became a settlement of note when people poured into it from nearby villages destroyed during the Tatar invasions of 1241–42. When Zabadka/Zabatka was first recorded in 1391, it was a tiny town in the medieval Kingdom of Hungary. Later, the city belonged to the Hunyadis, one of the most influential aristocratic families in the whole of Central Europe.

King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary gave the town to one of his relatives, János Pongrác Dengelegi, who, fearing an invasion by the Ottoman Empire, fortified the castle of Subotica, erecting a fortress in 1470. Some decades later, after the Battle of Mohács in 1526, Subotica became part of the Ottoman Empire. The majority of the Hungarian population fled northward to Royal Hungary.[16] Bálint Török, a local noble who had ruled over Subotica, also escaped from the city. During the military and political havoc following the defeat at Mohács, Subotica came under the control of Serbian mercenaries recruited in Banat. These soldiers were in the service of the Transylvanian general John I Zápolya, a later Hungarian king.[17]

The leader of these mercenaries, Jovan Nenad, established in 1526–27 his rule in Bačka, northern Banat and a small part of Syrmia and created an independent entity, with Subotica as its administrative centre. At the peak of his power, Jovan Nenad proclaimed himself as Serbian tsar in Subotica. He named Radoslav Čelnik as the general commander of his army, while his treasurer and palatine was Subota Vrlić, a Serbian noble from Jagodina. When Bálint Török returned and recaptured Subotica from the Serbs, Jovan Nenad moved the administrative centre to Szeged.[18]

Some months later, in the summer of 1527, Jovan Nenad was assassinated and his entity collapsed. However, after Jovan Nenad's death, Radoslav Čelnik led a part of the army to Ottoman Syrmia, where he briefly ruled as an Ottoman vassal.[citation needed]

Ottoman administration

Historical affiliations

  Kingdom of Hungary c. 1301–1526
  Ottoman Empire 1542–1686
  Habsburg monarchy 1686–1804
  Austrian Empire 1804–1867
  Austro-Hungarian Empire 1867–1918
  Kingdom of Serbia 1918
  Kingdom of Yugoslavia[19] 1918–1941
  Hungarian occupation of Yugoslavia 1941–1944
  SFR Yugoslavia[20] 1944–1992
  Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1992−2003
  Serbia and Montenegro 2003–2006
  Republic of Serbia 2006–present

The Ottoman Empire ruled the city from 1542 to 1686. At the end of this almost 150-year-long period, not much remained of the old town of Zabadka/Zabatka. As much of the population had fled, the Ottomans encouraged the settlement of the area by different colonists from the Balkans. The settlers were mostly Orthodox Serbs. They cultivated the extremely fertile land around Subotica. In 1570, the population of Subotica numbered 49 houses, and in 1590, 63 houses. In 1687, the region was settled by Catholic Dalmatas (called Bunjevci today). It was called Sobotka under Ottoman rule and was a kaza centre in Segedin sanjak at first in Budin Eyaleti until 1596, and after that in Eğri Eyaleti between 1596 and 1686.[21]

Habsburg administration

 
Serbian postcard of Subotica with a picture of National Theatre (early 20th century)

In 1687, about 5,000 Bunjevci settled in Bačka (including Subotica). After the decisive battle against the Ottomans at Senta led by Prince Eugene of Savoy on 11 September 1697, Subotica became part of the military border zone Theiss-Mieresch established by the Habsburg monarchy. In the meantime the uprising of Francis II Rákóczi broke out, which is also known as the Kuruc War.

In the region of Subotica, Rákóczi joined battle against the Rac National Militia. Rác was a designation for the South Slavic people (mostly Serbs and Bunjevci) and they often were referred to as rácok in the Kingdom of Hungary. In a later period rácok came to mean, above all, Serbs of Orthodox religion.[22]

The Serbian military families enjoyed several privileges thanks to their service for the Habsburg Monarchy. Subotica gradually, however, developed from being a mere garrison town to becoming a market town with its own civil charter in 1743. When this happened, many Serbs complained about the loss of their privileges. The majority left the town in protest and some of them founded a new settlement just outside 18th century Subotica in Aleksandrovo, while others emigrated to Russia. In New Serbia, a new Russian province established for them, those Serbs founded a new settlement and also named it Subotica. In 1775, a Jewish community in Subotica was established.

It was perhaps to emphasise the new civic serenity of Subotica that the pious name Saint Mary came to be used for it at this time. Some decades later, in 1779, Empress Maria Theresa of Austria advanced the town's status further by proclaiming it a Free Royal Town. The enthusiastic inhabitants of the city renamed Subotica once more as Maria-Theresiopolis.[23]

This Free Royal Town status gave a great impetus to the development of the city. During the 19th century, its population doubled twice, attracting many people from all over the Habsburg monarchy. This led eventually to a considerable demographic change. In the first half of the 19th century, the Bunjevci had still been in the majority, but there was an increasing number of Hungarians and Jews settling in Subotica. This process was not stopped even by the outbreak of the Revolutions in the Habsburg monarchy (1848–49).

1848/1849 Revolutions

 
Subotica (Szabadka) in 1914 Hungarian postcard

During the 1848-49 revolution, the proclaimed borders of autonomous Serbian Vojvodina included Subotica, but Serb troops could not establish control in the region. On 5 March 1849, at the locality named Kaponja (between Tavankut and Bajmok), there was a battle between the Serb and Hungarian armies, which was won by the Hungarians.

The first newspaper in the town was also published during the 1848/49 revolution—it was called Honunk állapota ("State of Our Homeland") and was published in Hungarian by Károly Bitterman's local printing company. Unlike most Serbs and Croats who confronted the Hungarians, part of the local Bunjevci people supported the Hungarian revolution.

In 1849, after the Hungarian revolution of 1848 was defeated by the Russian and Habsburg armies, the town was separated from the Kingdom of Hungary together with most of the Bačka region, and became part of a separate Habsburg province, called Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar. The administrative centre of this new province was Timișoara. The province existed until 1860. During the existence of the voivodeship, in 1853, Subotica acquired its impressive theatre.[24]

Hungarian administration

After the establishment of the Dual-Monarchy in 1867, there followed what is often called the "golden age" of city development of Subotica. Many schools were opened after 1867 and in 1869 the railway connected the city to the world. In 1896 an electrical power plant was built, further enhancing the development of the city and the whole region. Subotica now adorned itself with its remarkable Central European, fin de siècle architecture. In 1902 a Jewish synagogue was built in the Art Nouveau style.

Between 1849 and 1860 it was part of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar.[25]

Yugoslavia and Serbia

 
Hungarian occupation troops massacred Serbian and Jewish civilians during the occupation (1941–1944)

Subotica had been part of Austria-Hungary until the end of World War I. In 1918, the city became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. As a result, Subotica became a border-town in Yugoslavia and did not, for a time, experience again the same dynamic prosperity it had enjoyed prior to World War I. However, during that time, Subotica was the third-largest city in Yugoslavia by population, following Belgrade and Zagreb.

In 1941, Yugoslavia was invaded and partitioned by the Axis Powers, and its northern parts, including Subotica, were annexed by Hungary. The annexation was not considered legitimate by the international community and the city was de jure still part of Yugoslavia. The Yugoslav government in exile received formal recognition of legitimacy as the representative of the country. On 11 April 1941, the Hungarian troops arrived in Subotica on the grounds that the majority of the people living in the city were ethnic Hungarians, which had been part of the Kingdom of Hungary for over 600 years. During World War II, the city lost approximately 7,000 of its citizens, mostly Serbs, Hungarians and Jews. Before the war about 6,000 Jews had lived in Subotica; many of these were deported from the city during the Holocaust, mostly to Auschwitz. In April 1944, under German administration, a ghetto was set up.[26] In addition, many communists were executed during Axis rule. In 1944, the Axis forces left the city, and Subotica became part of the new Yugoslavia. During the 1944–45 period, about 8,000 citizens[failed verification] (mainly Hungarians) were killed by Partisans while re-taking the city as a retribution for supporting Axis Hungary.[27][28][failed verification]

In the post-war period, Subotica has gradually been modernised. During the Yugoslav and Kosovo wars of the 1990s, a considerable number of Serb refugees came to the city from Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Kosovo, while many ethnic Hungarians and Croats, as well as some local Serbs, left the region.

Cityscape

Unique in Serbia, Subotica and adjacent Palić have the most buildings built in the Hungarian Secession style, a distinct variant of Art Nouveau.[29] The Hungarian Secession style was operational between the 1890s and World War I. Its designs combined art nouveau vegetal ornaments and symbolic figures with traditional Hungarian motifs. It found its architectural expression in Subotica in the works of Marcell Komor, Dezső Jakab and Ferenc Raichle.[30]

The City Hall (built in 1908–1910) and the Synagogue (1902) are of especially outstanding beauty. These were built by the same architects, Marcell Komor and Dezső Jakab. Another exceptional example of art nouveau architecture is the actual Raichle Palace, which was built in 1904 by Ferenc J. Raichle.

Church buildings include the Cathedral of St. Theresa of Avila dating from 1797, the Franciscan friary dating from 1723, the Eastern Orthodox churches also from the 18th century, and the Hungarian Art Nouveau Subotica Synagogue from the early 20th century and its renovation was completed in the summer of 2019.

The historic National Theatre in Subotica, which was built in 1854 as the first monumental public building in Subotica, was demolished in 2007, although it was declared a historic monument under state protection in 1983, and in 1991 it was added to the National Register as a monument of an extraordinary cultural value. It is currently in the midst of renovation and is scheduled to open in 2017.[31]

Hungarian Secession buildings
         
Raichle Palace Municipal Library City Hall Ceiling of the City Hall Vojnića palace

Neighborhoods

The following are the neighborhoods of Subotica:

  • Aleksandrovo (Hungarian: Sándor)
  • Bajnat (Bajnát)
  • Centar (Központ)
  • Dudova Šuma (Radijalac) (Sétaerdő)
  • Gat (Gát)
  • Graničar (Határőr)
  • Ker (Kér)
  • Kertvaroš (Kertváros)
  • Makova Sedmica (Makkhetes)
  • Mali Bajmok (Kisbajmok)
  • Mali Radanovac (Kisradanovác)
  • Novi Grad (Újváros)
  • Novo Naselje (Újtelep)
  • Prozivka (Prozivka)
  • Srpski Šor (Szerb sor)
  • Teslino Naselje
  • Veliki Radanovac (Nagyradanovác)
  • Zorka (Zorka)
  • Željezničko Naselje (Vasutastelep)

Suburbs and villages

The administrative area of Subotica comprises Subotica proper, the town of Palić (Hungarian: Palics) and 17 villages. The villages are:

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1948123,668—    
1953126,559+0.46%
1961136,782+0.98%
1971146,770+0.71%
1981154,611+0.52%
1991150,534−0.27%
2002148,401−0.13%
2011141,554−0.52%
Source: [32]
 
Ethnic map of the Subotica proper
 
Ethnic map of the Subotica administrative area

According to the 2011 census results, the city administrative area of Subotica had 141,554 inhabitants.

Ethnic composition

Places with either an absolute or relative Hungarian ethnic majority are: Subotica (Hungarian: Szabadka), Palić (Hungarian: Palicsfürdő), Hajdukovo (Hungarian: Hajdújárás), Bački Vinogradi (Hungarian: Bácsszőlős), Šupljak (Hungarian: Alsóludas), Čantavir (Hungarian: Csantavér), Bačko Dušanovo (Hungarian: Zentaörs), and Kelebija (Hungarian: Alsókelebia). Places with an absolute or relative Serb ethnic majority are: Bajmok, Višnjevac, Novi Žednik, and Mišićevo. Places with a relative ethnic majority Croat are: Mala Bosna, Đurđin, Donji Tavankut, Gornji Tavankut, Bikovo, Stari Žednik. Ljutovo has a relative Bunjevac ethnic majority.

The ethnic composition of the municipality:[33]

Ethnic group Population Proportion
Hungarians 50,469 35.65%
Serbs 38,254 27.02%
Croats 14,151 10.00%
Bunjevci 13,553 9.57%
Yugoslavs 3,202 2.26%
Roma 2,959 2.09%
Montenegrins 1,349 0.95%
Macedonians 482 0.34%
Albanians 383 0.27%
Muslims 334 0.24%
Germans 260 0.18%
Bosniaks 216 0.15%
Rusyns 172 0.12%
Slovenians 169 0.12%
Slovaks 158 0.11%
Gorani 151 0.11%
Others 15,292 10.80%
Total 141,554

Languages

Languages spoken in Subotica administrative area:[34]

Serbian is the most employed language in daily life, but Hungarian is also used by over one third of the population in their daily conversations. Both languages are also widely employed in commercial and official signage [35]

Religion

Religion in the Subotica administrative area as of the 2011 census:[34]

Subotica is the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Bačka region. The Subotica area has the highest concentration of Catholics in Serbia. 57% of the city's population are Catholic. There are eight Catholic parish churches, a Franciscan spiritual centre (the city has communities of both Franciscan friars and Franciscan nuns), a female Dominican community, and two congregations of Augustinian religious sisters. The diocese of Subotica has the only Catholic secondary school in Serbia (Paulinum).[citation needed]

When the nuns' orphanage and children's home in Blato, Korčula (present-day Croatia) had exhausted the food and funds needed for helping poor and hungry children, Marija Petković (later known as Blessed Mary of Jesus Crucified Petković), went to Bačka, whose apostolic seat is Subotica, to solicit help for orphans and widows. Bishop Ljudevit Lajčo Budanović asked Petković to found monasteries of her Order in Subotica and neighbourhood, so the locals could benefit spiritually from the instruction of the nuns of her Order.[36] She learned that Bačka had many poor and abandoned children. In 1923, she opened Kolijevka, a children's home in Subotica. The home still exists but is no longer run by nuns.[citation needed]

Among other Christian communities, the members of the Serbian Orthodox Church are the most numerous. There are two Orthodox church buildings in the city. Orthodox Christians in Subotica belong to the Eparchy of Bačka of the Serbian Orthodox Church. Subotica has two Protestant churches as well, Lutheran and Calvinist. The Jewish community of Subotica is the third largest in Serbia, after those in Belgrade and Novi Sad. About 1000 (of the 6,000 pre-WWII Jews of Subotica) survived the Holocaust. According to the 2011 census, fewer than 90 Jews remained in Subotica as of 2011.[34]

Politics

 
City hall with Blue Fountain

Results of 2020 local elections in Subotica municipality:[37]

Coat of arms

The original coat of arms and current medium coat of arms have an outlining Latin inscription of Civitatis Maria Theresiopolis, Sigillum Liberæque Et Regiæ, translated as Seal of the Free and Royal City of Maria Theresiopolis.

Economy

 
Svetozar Marković Gymnasium

The area around Subotica is mainly farmland but the city itself is an important industrial and transportation centre in Serbia. Due to the surrounding farmlands Subotica has famous food producer industries in the country, including such brands as the confectionery factory "Pionir", "Fidelinka" the cereal manufacturer, "Mlekara Subotica" a milk producer and "Simex" producer of strong alcohol drinks.

There are a number of old socialistic industries that survived the transition period in Serbia. The biggest one is the chemical fertilizer factory "Azotara" and the rail wagon factory "Bratstvo". Currently the biggest export industry in town is the "Siemens Subotica" wind generators factory and it is the biggest brownfield investment so far. The other big companies in Subotica are: Fornetti, ATB Sever and Masterplast. More recent companies to come to Subotica include Dunkermotoren and NORMA Group. Tourism is important. In the past few years, Palić has been famous for the Palić Film Festival. Subotica is a festival city, hosting more than 17 festivals over the year.[citation needed]

As of September 2017, Subotica has one of 14 free economic zones established in Serbia.[38]

In 2020 construction of a new aqua park with ten pools and wellness and spa sections was underway in Palić.[39]

The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2018):[40]

Activity Total
Agriculture, forestry and fishing 632
Mining and quarrying 5
Manufacturing 14,481
Electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply 360
Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities 570
Construction 1,829
Wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles 7,337
Transportation and storage 3,136
Accommodation and food services 1,802
Information and communication 1,056
Financial and insurance activities 621
Real estate activities 127
Professional, scientific and technical activities 1,503
Administrative and support service activities 1,088
Public administration and defense; compulsory social security 1,997
Education 2,596
Human health and social work activities 3,416
Arts, entertainment and recreation 653
Other service activities 984
Individual agricultural workers 1,438
Total 45,631

Education

Universities

Tutoring of teachers in Subotica dates back to the late 18th century. After the establishment of Austria-Hungary, the second state-financed teacher training faculty of Hungary was founded in Subotica, second to Buda only. Modern history of teacher training in Subotica started in 2006, when the Sombor Teacher Training Faculty's curriculums in the Hungarian language seceded from the faculty and became independent as the 14th faculty of the University of Novi Sad.[41] As of 2022, the faculty offers bachelor's degrees in kindergarten teaching, elementary school teaching, disciplinatory teaching and communications, and master's degrees in kindergarten teaching and elementary school teaching.

Secondary schools

  • Polytechnic school, Surveying and Construction, Typography, Forestry and Wood Processing
  • Teachers' College, founded in 1689, the oldest college in the country and region
  • "Svetozar Marković" grammar school
  • "Dezső Kosztolányi" Philological grammar school
  • "MEŠC" Electro-mechanical school, recently renamed to "Tehnička Škola - Subotica" (en. "Technical School")
  • "Bosa Milićević" School of Economics
  • "Lazar Nešić" School of Chemistry
  • "Medicinska Škola" Medical School

4 953 students studied in the city in the year 2020/21 in the secondary education. 1 626 students chose Hungarian speaking classes (32.8%), 209 students chose Croatian classes while 3 118 students studied in Serbian language.[42]

Historical schools (1920 to 1941)

Sport

Subotica has one major football stadium, the Subotica City Stadium, indoor arena and indoor swimming pool. The local football team is Spartak and plays in the Serbian SuperLiga, the country's primary football competition.

Media

Newspapers and magazines published in Subotica:

  • Magyar Szó, daily newspaper in Hungarian, founded 1944, published in Subotica since 2006.
  • Subotičke novine, main weekly newspaper in Serbian.
  • Bunjevačke novine, in Bunjevac.
  • Hrvatska riječ, in Croatian.
  • Zvonik, in Croatian

Infrastructure

A1 motorway connects the city with Novi Sad and Belgrade to the south and, across the border with Hungary, with Szeged to the north. It runs alongside the Budapest–Belgrade railway, which connects it to major European cities. As of November 2022, the line is out of order without replacement as both the Serbian and the Hungarian part of the line is currently being reconstructed. Subotica also has branch line railway connections to Sombor, Senta (with passenger service), and Szeged through Horgoš (under reconstruction with limited freight service, passenger service planned to commence in late 2023), while the former branch line to Baja through Csikéria was dismantled in the 1960s but parts of the derelict tracks are still visible in the city's northwestern outskirts.

 
Subotica Central Railway Station

The city used to have a tram system, the Subotica tram system, but it was discontinued in 1974. The Subotica tram, put into operation in 1897, ran on electricity from the start. While neighbouring cities' trams at this date were often still horse-drawn, this gave the Subotica system an advantage over other municipalities including Belgrade, Novi Sad, Zagreb, and Szeged. Its existence was important for the citizens of Subotica, as well as tourists who came to visit. Subotica has since developed a bus system, operated by JP Subotica Trans, who operates eleven city lines, eight suburban lines, and thirteen interurban lines, as well as a single international line to Szeged. Per year the buses travel some 4.7 million kilometres, and carry about ten million people.

The city is served by Subotica Airport; its runway is too short for airliners, limiting usage to mostly recreational aviation. Southwest of the city there is a 218.5 metres tall guyed mast for FM-/TV-broadcasting. It is the tallest of its kind in Serbia and one of the tallest in the region.

Famous citizens

International cooperation

Twin towns - Sister cities

Subotica is twinned with the following cities:

  Szeged, Hungary
  Dunajská Streda, Slovakia
  Olomouc, Czech Republic
  Osijek, Croatia
  Odorheiu Secuiesc, Romania
  Treptow-Köpenick (Berlin), Germany

Partner Cities

Subotica is a partner city with the following:

  Baja, Hungary
  Budapest, Hungary
  Izola, Slovenia
  Kecskemét, Hungary
  Kiskunhalas, Hungary
  Munich, Germany
  Namur, Belgium
  Tilburg, Netherlands
  Turku, Finland
  Ulm, Germany
  Wolverhampton, United Kingdom
  Zagreb, Croatia
  Zirc, Hungary

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "2011 Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia: Comparative Overview of the Number of Population in 1948, 1953, 1961, 1971, 1981, 1991, 2002 and 2011, Data by settlements" (PDF). Statistical Office of Republic Of Serbia, Belgrade. 2014. ISBN 978-86-6161-109-4. Retrieved 2014-06-27.
  2. ^ a b History of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  3. ^ "Borovszky - Magyarország vármegyéi és városai". mek.oszk.hu.
  4. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2012-03-11. Retrieved 2011-03-30.
  5. ^ Colonists settling the military buffer zone between the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  6. ^ Geographical position of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  7. ^ "Subotica, North Bačka, Serbia Monthly Weather Forecast - weather.com". Weather Channel. Retrieved 3 October 2020.
  8. ^ Starčevo culture
  9. ^ "Map". catyline.com.
  10. ^ "[Projekat Rastko] Nikola Tasic: Eneolitske kulture centralnog i zapadnog Balkana". www.rastko.rs.
  11. ^ The first Indo-Europeans in the Balkans Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2011-02-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link),
  13. ^ eliznik. . www.eliznik.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2013-03-25. Retrieved 2013-01-14.
  14. ^ Bârcă 2013, p. 104.
  15. ^ Barford 2001.
  16. ^ Subotica after the Battle of Mohács Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  17. ^ Balint Török, in: Géza Gárdonyi, Eger Stars, 2019, ISBN 978-1794777330.
  18. ^ Borovszky Samu: Magyarország vármegyéi és városai, Bács-Bodrog vármegye I-II. kötet, Apolló Irodalmi és Nyomdai Részvénytársaság, 1909.
  19. ^ Officially known as the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes until 1929
  20. ^ Known as Democratic Federal Yugoslavia until 1945
  21. ^ Sanjak of Segedin
  22. ^ Varga 2013, p. 264.
  23. ^ History of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  24. ^ Vladan Gavrilović, The Serbian Vojvodina and Montenegro 1848-1849, University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Philosophy, 2021.
  25. ^ "Subotica | Hrvatska enciklopedija". www.enciklopedija.hr. Retrieved 2019-05-04.
  26. ^ Subotica in WWII Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  27. ^ Mészáros Sándor: Holttá nyilvánítva - Délvidéki magyar fátum 1944–45, I-II, Hatodik Síp Alapítvány, Budapest 1995.
  28. ^ Cseres Tibor: Vérbosszú Bácskában, Magvető kiadó, Budapest 1991.
  29. ^ Buildings of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  30. ^ About the Hungarian Art Nouveau architecture Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  31. ^ "Radovi na rekonstrukciji Narodnog pozorišta u Subotici". Gradjevinarstvo.
  32. ^ "2011 Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia" (PDF). stat.gov.rs. Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. Retrieved 19 March 2017.
  33. ^ "Попис становништва, домаћинстава и станова 2011. у Републици Србији" (PDF). stat.gov.rs. Republički zavod za statistiku. Retrieved 10 April 2019.
  34. ^ a b c (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 July 2014. Retrieved 17 December 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  35. ^ "The Use of Hungarian and Serbian in the City of Szabadka/Subotica: An Empirical Study". Retrieved 8 September 2017.
  36. ^ M. Stantić. Blessed Marija Petković 19 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine M. Stantić: Zauzimanje za siromahe - karizma danas, marijapropetog.hr; accessed 5 February 2016. (in Croatian)
  37. ^ "SNS osvojio najviše glasova u Subotici - Srbija izbori 2018". www.srbijaizbori.com.
  38. ^ Mikavica, A. (3 September 2017). "Slobodne zone mamac za investitore". politika.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 17 March 2019.
  39. ^ symbolic. "Do kraja godine biće završen akva-park na Paliću" (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-11-21.
  40. ^ "MUNICIPALITIES AND REGIONS OF THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA, 2019" (PDF). stat.gov.rs. Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. 25 December 2019. Retrieved 28 December 2019.
  41. ^ "A Kar története MTTK".
  42. ^ "Отворени подаци".
  43. ^ Klinika Highlights (19 July 2021). "Ajs Nigrutin o životu u Subotici". YouTube. Archived from the original on 2021-11-18.
  44. ^ "Intercultural Cities - Home". Intercultural cities programme.

Books

  • Bârcă, Vitalie (2013). Nomads of the Steppes on the Danube Frontier of the Roman Empire in the 1st Century CE. Historical Sketch and Chronological Remarks. Dacia. OCLC 1023761641.
  • Barford, Paul M (2001). The Early Slavs: Culture and Society in Early Medieval Eastern Europe. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-3977-3.
  • Varga, Szabolcs (2013). "Croatia and Slavonia in the Early Modern Age" (PDF). Hungarian Studies. 27 (2): 263–276. doi:10.1556/HStud.27.2013.2.5.

Sources

  • Recent (2002) statistical information comes from the Serbian statistical office.
    • Ethnic statistics: (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-02-25. (477 KB), САОПШTЕЊЕ СН31, брoј 295 • год. LII, 24.12.2002, YU ISSN 0353-9555. Accessed 17 January 2006. On page 6–7, Становништво према националној или етничкој припадности по попису 2002. Statistics can be found on the lines for "Суботица" (Subotica).
    • Language and religion statistics: , ISBN 86-84433-02-5. Accessed 17 January 2006. On page 11–12: СТАНОВНИШТВО ПРЕМА ВЕРОИСПОВЕСТИ, СТАНОВНИШТВО ПРЕМА МАТЕРЊЕМ ЈЕЗИКУ. Statistics can be found on the lines for "Суботица" (Subotica).
    • Ferdinand, S. and F. Komlosi. 2017. The Use of Hungarian and Serbian in the City of Szabadka/Subotica: An Empirical Study, Hungarian Cultural Studies, Volume 10. Accessed 8 September 2017.

External links

  • JP Subotica Trans - Public Transport Official Site
  • Subotica's official website for tourism and travel information
  • History of Subotica 2016-01-07 at the Wayback Machine
  • Subotica International Festival of Children's Theatres

subotica, this, article, about, city, serbia, other, uses, disambiguation, serbian, cyrillic, Суботица, pronounced, sǔbotitsa, listen, hungarian, szabadka, city, administrative, center, north, bačka, district, autonomous, province, vojvodina, serbia, formerly,. This article is about the city in Serbia For other uses see Subotica disambiguation Subotica Serbian Cyrillic Subotica pronounced sǔbotitsa listen Hungarian Szabadka is a city and the administrative center of the North Backa District in the autonomous province of Vojvodina Serbia Formerly the largest city of Vojvodina region contemporary Subotica is now the second largest city in the province following the city of Novi Sad According to the 2011 census the city itself has a population of 97 910 while the urban area of Subotica with adjacent urban settlement of Palic included has 105 681 inhabitants and the population of metro area the administrative area of the city stands at 141 554 people 1 Subotica Subotica Serbian Szabadka Hungarian CityFrom top Panorama of Subotica City center Reichel Palace Subotica Synagogue City hall St Theresa of Avila Cathedral Monument to the Victims of FascismFlagCoat of armsSuboticaLocation of the city of Subotica in SerbiaShow map of VojvodinaSuboticaSubotica Serbia Show map of SerbiaSuboticaSubotica Europe Show map of EuropeCoordinates 46 06 01 N 19 39 56 E 46 10028 N 19 66556 E 46 10028 19 66556 Coordinates 46 06 01 N 19 39 56 E 46 10028 N 19 66556 E 46 10028 19 66556Country SerbiaProvince VojvodinaDistrictNorth BackaSettlements19Government MayorStevan Bakic SNS Area Rank13th in Serbia Urban164 33 km2 63 45 sq mi Administrative1 007 47 km2 388 99 sq mi Elevation109 m 358 ft Population 2011 census 1 City97 910 Rank6th in Serbia Urban105 681 Urban density640 km2 1 700 sq mi Administrative141 554 Administrative density140 km2 360 sq mi Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code24000Area code 381 24Vehicle registrationSUWebsiteOfficial website Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 History 3 1 Prehistory and antiquity 3 2 Early Middle Ages and Slavic settlement 3 3 Late Middle Ages 3 4 Ottoman administration 3 5 Habsburg administration 3 6 1848 1849 Revolutions 3 7 Hungarian administration 3 8 Yugoslavia and Serbia 4 Cityscape 4 1 Neighborhoods 4 2 Suburbs and villages 5 Demographics 5 1 Ethnic composition 5 2 Languages 5 3 Religion 6 Politics 7 Economy 8 Education 8 1 Universities 8 2 Secondary schools 8 3 Historical schools 1920 to 1941 9 Sport 10 Media 11 Infrastructure 12 Famous citizens 13 International cooperation 13 1 Twin towns Sister cities 13 2 Partner Cities 14 See also 15 References 16 Books 17 Sources 18 External linksName EditThe name of the city has changed frequently over time 2 The earliest known written name of the city was Zabotka 3 or Zabatka 4 which dates from 1391 It is the origin of the current Hungarian name for the city Szabadka 4 Other sources claim that the name Szabadka comes from the adjective szabad which derived from the Slavic word for free svobod referring to the status of the colonists settled in this zone by the Habsburg after the Battle of Zenta 5 The town was named in the 1740s after Maria Theresa of Austria Archduchess of Austria It was officially called Sent Maria in 1743 but was renamed in 1779 as Maria Theresiapolis These two official names were also spelled in several different ways most commonly the German Maria Theresiopel or Theresiopel and were used in different languages 2 Geography EditIt is located in the Pannonian Basin at 46 07 North 19 68 East about 10 kilometres 6 miles from the border with Hungary and is the northernmost city in Serbia It is located in the vicinity of lake Palic 6 Climate Edit Subotica has a warm summer humid continental climate Dfb that is uncommon in Serbia except at higher elevations Climate data for Subotica Elevation 109 m 358 ft Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 1 7 35 1 5 1 41 2 11 2 52 2 17 1 62 8 22 3 72 1 25 3 77 5 27 4 81 3 27 0 80 6 23 4 74 1 17 6 63 7 9 5 49 1 3 8 38 8 16 0 60 7 Average low C F 4 8 23 4 2 5 27 5 0 9 33 6 5 5 41 9 10 3 50 5 13 4 56 1 14 4 57 9 13 9 57 0 10 4 50 7 5 6 42 1 1 7 35 1 2 1 28 2 5 6 42 0 Average precipitation mm inches 28 1 10 25 1 00 28 1 10 41 1 60 51 2 00 71 2 80 51 2 00 56 2 20 33 1 30 25 1 00 41 1 60 41 1 60 491 19 3 Source Weather Channel 7 History EditPrehistory and antiquity Edit In the Neolithic and Eneolithic periods several important archaeological cultures flourished in this area including the Starcevo culture 8 the Vinca culture 9 and the Tiszapolgar culture 10 Early Indo European peoples settled in the territory of present day Subotica in 3200 BC 11 During the Eneolithic period the Bronze Age and the Iron Age several Indo European archaeological cultures included areas around Subotica the Baden culture the Vucedol culture 12 the Urnfield culture 13 and some others Before the Iazyge conquest in the 1st century BC Indo European peoples of Illyrian Celtic and Dacian descent inhabited this area In the 3rd century BC this area was controlled by the Celtic Boii and Eravisci while in the 1st century BC it became part of the Dacian kingdom From the 1st century BC the area came under the control of the Sarmatian Iazyges who were sometimes allies and sometimes enemies of the Romans Iazyge rule lasted until the 4th century AD after which the region came into the possession of various other peoples and states 14 Early Middle Ages and Slavic settlement Edit In the Early Middle Ages various Indo European and Turkic peoples and states ruled in the area of Subotica These peoples included Huns Gepids Avars Slavs and Bulgarians Slavs settled today s Subotica in the 6th and 7th centuries before some of them crossed the rivers Sava and Danube and settled in the Balkans The Slavic tribe living in the territory of present day Subotica were the Obotrites a subgroup of the Serbs In the 9th century after the fall of the Avar state the first forms of Slavic statehood emerged in this area The first Slavic states that ruled over this region included the Principality of Lower Pannonia 846 875 Great Moravia 833 c 907 and the Bulgarian Empire 15 Late Middle Ages Edit Emperor Jovan Nenad monument in the downtown Subotica probably first became a settlement of note when people poured into it from nearby villages destroyed during the Tatar invasions of 1241 42 When Zabadka Zabatka was first recorded in 1391 it was a tiny town in the medieval Kingdom of Hungary Later the city belonged to the Hunyadis one of the most influential aristocratic families in the whole of Central Europe King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary gave the town to one of his relatives Janos Pongrac Dengelegi who fearing an invasion by the Ottoman Empire fortified the castle of Subotica erecting a fortress in 1470 Some decades later after the Battle of Mohacs in 1526 Subotica became part of the Ottoman Empire The majority of the Hungarian population fled northward to Royal Hungary 16 Balint Torok a local noble who had ruled over Subotica also escaped from the city During the military and political havoc following the defeat at Mohacs Subotica came under the control of Serbian mercenaries recruited in Banat These soldiers were in the service of the Transylvanian general John I Zapolya a later Hungarian king 17 The leader of these mercenaries Jovan Nenad established in 1526 27 his rule in Backa northern Banat and a small part of Syrmia and created an independent entity with Subotica as its administrative centre At the peak of his power Jovan Nenad proclaimed himself as Serbian tsar in Subotica He named Radoslav Celnik as the general commander of his army while his treasurer and palatine was Subota Vrlic a Serbian noble from Jagodina When Balint Torok returned and recaptured Subotica from the Serbs Jovan Nenad moved the administrative centre to Szeged 18 Some months later in the summer of 1527 Jovan Nenad was assassinated and his entity collapsed However after Jovan Nenad s death Radoslav Celnik led a part of the army to Ottoman Syrmia where he briefly ruled as an Ottoman vassal citation needed Ottoman administration Edit Historical affiliations Kingdom of Hungary c 1301 1526 Ottoman Empire 1542 1686 Habsburg monarchy 1686 1804 Austrian Empire 1804 1867 Austro Hungarian Empire 1867 1918 Kingdom of Serbia 1918 Kingdom of Yugoslavia 19 1918 1941 Hungarian occupation of Yugoslavia 1941 1944 SFR Yugoslavia 20 1944 1992 Federal Republic of Yugoslavia 1992 2003 Serbia and Montenegro 2003 2006 Republic of Serbia 2006 present The Ottoman Empire ruled the city from 1542 to 1686 At the end of this almost 150 year long period not much remained of the old town of Zabadka Zabatka As much of the population had fled the Ottomans encouraged the settlement of the area by different colonists from the Balkans The settlers were mostly Orthodox Serbs They cultivated the extremely fertile land around Subotica In 1570 the population of Subotica numbered 49 houses and in 1590 63 houses In 1687 the region was settled by Catholic Dalmatas called Bunjevci today It was called Sobotka under Ottoman rule and was a kaza centre in Segedin sanjak at first in Budin Eyaleti until 1596 and after that in Egri Eyaleti between 1596 and 1686 21 Habsburg administration Edit Serbian postcard of Subotica with a picture of National Theatre early 20th century In 1687 about 5 000 Bunjevci settled in Backa including Subotica After the decisive battle against the Ottomans at Senta led by Prince Eugene of Savoy on 11 September 1697 Subotica became part of the military border zone Theiss Mieresch established by the Habsburg monarchy In the meantime the uprising of Francis II Rakoczi broke out which is also known as the Kuruc War In the region of Subotica Rakoczi joined battle against the Rac National Militia Rac was a designation for the South Slavic people mostly Serbs and Bunjevci and they often were referred to as racok in the Kingdom of Hungary In a later period racok came to mean above all Serbs of Orthodox religion 22 The Serbian military families enjoyed several privileges thanks to their service for the Habsburg Monarchy Subotica gradually however developed from being a mere garrison town to becoming a market town with its own civil charter in 1743 When this happened many Serbs complained about the loss of their privileges The majority left the town in protest and some of them founded a new settlement just outside 18th century Subotica in Aleksandrovo while others emigrated to Russia In New Serbia a new Russian province established for them those Serbs founded a new settlement and also named it Subotica In 1775 a Jewish community in Subotica was established It was perhaps to emphasise the new civic serenity of Subotica that the pious name Saint Mary came to be used for it at this time Some decades later in 1779 Empress Maria Theresa of Austria advanced the town s status further by proclaiming it a Free Royal Town The enthusiastic inhabitants of the city renamed Subotica once more as Maria Theresiopolis 23 This Free Royal Town status gave a great impetus to the development of the city During the 19th century its population doubled twice attracting many people from all over the Habsburg monarchy This led eventually to a considerable demographic change In the first half of the 19th century the Bunjevci had still been in the majority but there was an increasing number of Hungarians and Jews settling in Subotica This process was not stopped even by the outbreak of the Revolutions in the Habsburg monarchy 1848 49 1848 1849 Revolutions Edit Subotica Szabadka in 1914 Hungarian postcard During the 1848 49 revolution the proclaimed borders of autonomous Serbian Vojvodina included Subotica but Serb troops could not establish control in the region On 5 March 1849 at the locality named Kaponja between Tavankut and Bajmok there was a battle between the Serb and Hungarian armies which was won by the Hungarians The first newspaper in the town was also published during the 1848 49 revolution it was called Honunk allapota State of Our Homeland and was published in Hungarian by Karoly Bitterman s local printing company Unlike most Serbs and Croats who confronted the Hungarians part of the local Bunjevci people supported the Hungarian revolution In 1849 after the Hungarian revolution of 1848 was defeated by the Russian and Habsburg armies the town was separated from the Kingdom of Hungary together with most of the Backa region and became part of a separate Habsburg province called Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar The administrative centre of this new province was Timișoara The province existed until 1860 During the existence of the voivodeship in 1853 Subotica acquired its impressive theatre 24 Hungarian administration Edit After the establishment of the Dual Monarchy in 1867 there followed what is often called the golden age of city development of Subotica Many schools were opened after 1867 and in 1869 the railway connected the city to the world In 1896 an electrical power plant was built further enhancing the development of the city and the whole region Subotica now adorned itself with its remarkable Central European fin de siecle architecture In 1902 a Jewish synagogue was built in the Art Nouveau style Between 1849 and 1860 it was part of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar 25 Yugoslavia and Serbia Edit Hungarian occupation troops massacred Serbian and Jewish civilians during the occupation 1941 1944 Subotica had been part of Austria Hungary until the end of World War I In 1918 the city became part of the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes As a result Subotica became a border town in Yugoslavia and did not for a time experience again the same dynamic prosperity it had enjoyed prior to World War I However during that time Subotica was the third largest city in Yugoslavia by population following Belgrade and Zagreb In 1941 Yugoslavia was invaded and partitioned by the Axis Powers and its northern parts including Subotica were annexed by Hungary The annexation was not considered legitimate by the international community and the city was de jure still part of Yugoslavia The Yugoslav government in exile received formal recognition of legitimacy as the representative of the country On 11 April 1941 the Hungarian troops arrived in Subotica on the grounds that the majority of the people living in the city were ethnic Hungarians which had been part of the Kingdom of Hungary for over 600 years During World War II the city lost approximately 7 000 of its citizens mostly Serbs Hungarians and Jews Before the war about 6 000 Jews had lived in Subotica many of these were deported from the city during the Holocaust mostly to Auschwitz In April 1944 under German administration a ghetto was set up 26 In addition many communists were executed during Axis rule In 1944 the Axis forces left the city and Subotica became part of the new Yugoslavia During the 1944 45 period about 8 000 citizens failed verification mainly Hungarians were killed by Partisans while re taking the city as a retribution for supporting Axis Hungary 27 28 failed verification In the post war period Subotica has gradually been modernised During the Yugoslav and Kosovo wars of the 1990s a considerable number of Serb refugees came to the city from Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina and Kosovo while many ethnic Hungarians and Croats as well as some local Serbs left the region Cityscape Edit National Theatre in Subotica Unique in Serbia Subotica and adjacent Palic have the most buildings built in the Hungarian Secession style a distinct variant of Art Nouveau 29 The Hungarian Secession style was operational between the 1890s and World War I Its designs combined art nouveau vegetal ornaments and symbolic figures with traditional Hungarian motifs It found its architectural expression in Subotica in the works of Marcell Komor Dezso Jakab and Ferenc Raichle 30 The City Hall built in 1908 1910 and the Synagogue 1902 are of especially outstanding beauty These were built by the same architects Marcell Komor and Dezso Jakab Another exceptional example of art nouveau architecture is the actual Raichle Palace which was built in 1904 by Ferenc J Raichle Church buildings include the Cathedral of St Theresa of Avila dating from 1797 the Franciscan friary dating from 1723 the Eastern Orthodox churches also from the 18th century and the Hungarian Art Nouveau Subotica Synagogue from the early 20th century and its renovation was completed in the summer of 2019 The historic National Theatre in Subotica which was built in 1854 as the first monumental public building in Subotica was demolished in 2007 although it was declared a historic monument under state protection in 1983 and in 1991 it was added to the National Register as a monument of an extraordinary cultural value It is currently in the midst of renovation and is scheduled to open in 2017 31 Hungarian Secession buildings Raichle Palace Municipal Library City Hall Ceiling of the City Hall Vojnica palaceNeighborhoods Edit See also Hungarian toponyms in Vojvodina The following are the neighborhoods of Subotica Aleksandrovo Hungarian Sandor Bajnat Bajnat Centar Kozpont Dudova Suma Radijalac Setaerdo Gat Gat Granicar Hataror Ker Ker Kertvaros Kertvaros Makova Sedmica Makkhetes Mali Bajmok Kisbajmok Mali Radanovac Kisradanovac Novi Grad Ujvaros Novo Naselje Ujtelep Prozivka Prozivka Srpski Sor Szerb sor Teslino Naselje Veliki Radanovac Nagyradanovac Zorka Zorka Zeljeznicko Naselje Vasutastelep Suburbs and villages Edit Subotica Kelebija Palic Mala Bosna Ljutovo Hajdukovo Backi Vinogradi Supljak Bikovo Donji Tavankut Gornji Tavankut Misicevo Bajmok Đurđin Stari Zednik Novi Zednik Visnjevac Cantavir Backo Dusanovo Municipality ofSubotica The administrative area of Subotica comprises Subotica proper the town of Palic Hungarian Palics and 17 villages The villages are Backi Vinogradi Bacsszolos Backo Dusanovo Zentaors Bajmok Bajmok Bikovo Bekova Cantavir Csantaver Donji Tavankut Alsotavankut Đurđin Gyorgyen Gornji Tavankut Felsotavankut Hajdukovo Hajdujaras Kelebija Alsokelebia Ljutovo Merges Mala Bosna Kisbosznia Misicevo Hadikors Novi Zednik Ujnagyfeny Stari Zednik Nagyfeny Supljak Ludas Visnjevac Meggyes Demographics EditMain article Demographic history of Subotica Historical populationYearPop p a 1948123 668 1953126 559 0 46 1961136 782 0 98 1971146 770 0 71 1981154 611 0 52 1991150 534 0 27 2002148 401 0 13 2011141 554 0 52 Source 32 Ethnic map of the Subotica proper Ethnic map of the Subotica administrative area According to the 2011 census results the city administrative area of Subotica had 141 554 inhabitants Ethnic composition Edit Places with either an absolute or relative Hungarian ethnic majority are Subotica Hungarian Szabadka Palic Hungarian Palicsfurdo Hajdukovo Hungarian Hajdujaras Backi Vinogradi Hungarian Bacsszolos Supljak Hungarian Alsoludas Cantavir Hungarian Csantaver Backo Dusanovo Hungarian Zentaors and Kelebija Hungarian Alsokelebia Places with an absolute or relative Serb ethnic majority are Bajmok Visnjevac Novi Zednik and Misicevo Places with a relative ethnic majority Croat are Mala Bosna Đurđin Donji Tavankut Gornji Tavankut Bikovo Stari Zednik Ljutovo has a relative Bunjevac ethnic majority The ethnic composition of the municipality 33 Ethnic group Population ProportionHungarians 50 469 35 65 Serbs 38 254 27 02 Croats 14 151 10 00 Bunjevci 13 553 9 57 Yugoslavs 3 202 2 26 Roma 2 959 2 09 Montenegrins 1 349 0 95 Macedonians 482 0 34 Albanians 383 0 27 Muslims 334 0 24 Germans 260 0 18 Bosniaks 216 0 15 Rusyns 172 0 12 Slovenians 169 0 12 Slovaks 158 0 11 Gorani 151 0 11 Others 15 292 10 80 Total 141 554Languages Edit Languages spoken in Subotica administrative area 34 Serbian 63 412 44 80 Hungarian 50 621 35 76 Bunjevac 6 313 4 46 Croatian 5 758 4 07 OthersSerbian is the most employed language in daily life but Hungarian is also used by over one third of the population in their daily conversations Both languages are also widely employed in commercial and official signage 35 Religion Edit Subotica Synagogue Cathedral of Saint Teresa of Avila Religion in the Subotica administrative area as of the 2011 census 34 Roman Catholic 81 532 57 60 Orthodox 39 333 27 79 Muslim 2 756 1 95 Protestant 2 372 1 68 Judaism 89 0 001 Subotica is the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Backa region The Subotica area has the highest concentration of Catholics in Serbia 57 of the city s population are Catholic There are eight Catholic parish churches a Franciscan spiritual centre the city has communities of both Franciscan friars and Franciscan nuns a female Dominican community and two congregations of Augustinian religious sisters The diocese of Subotica has the only Catholic secondary school in Serbia Paulinum citation needed When the nuns orphanage and children s home in Blato Korcula present day Croatia had exhausted the food and funds needed for helping poor and hungry children Marija Petkovic later known as Blessed Mary of Jesus Crucified Petkovic went to Backa whose apostolic seat is Subotica to solicit help for orphans and widows Bishop Ljudevit Lajco Budanovic asked Petkovic to found monasteries of her Order in Subotica and neighbourhood so the locals could benefit spiritually from the instruction of the nuns of her Order 36 She learned that Backa had many poor and abandoned children In 1923 she opened Kolijevka a children s home in Subotica The home still exists but is no longer run by nuns citation needed Among other Christian communities the members of the Serbian Orthodox Church are the most numerous There are two Orthodox church buildings in the city Orthodox Christians in Subotica belong to the Eparchy of Backa of the Serbian Orthodox Church Subotica has two Protestant churches as well Lutheran and Calvinist The Jewish community of Subotica is the third largest in Serbia after those in Belgrade and Novi Sad About 1000 of the 6 000 pre WWII Jews of Subotica survived the Holocaust According to the 2011 census fewer than 90 Jews remained in Subotica as of 2011 34 Politics Edit City hall with Blue Fountain Main articles List of mayors of Subotica and Resulus of the election for the City Assembly of Subotica 2020 Results of 2020 local elections in Subotica municipality 37 For Our Children 43 4 Alliance of Vojvodina Hungarians 30 6 Subotica Citizens Movement 6 4 Socialist Party of Serbia 5 5 United for a Democratic Subotica 5 36 Bunjevci Citizens of Serbia 3 2 Coat of armsThe original coat of arms and current medium coat of arms have an outlining Latin inscription of Civitatis Maria Theresiopolis Sigillum Liberaeque Et Regiae translated as Seal of the Free and Royal City of Maria Theresiopolis Economy Edit Svetozar Markovic Gymnasium The area around Subotica is mainly farmland but the city itself is an important industrial and transportation centre in Serbia Due to the surrounding farmlands Subotica has famous food producer industries in the country including such brands as the confectionery factory Pionir Fidelinka the cereal manufacturer Mlekara Subotica a milk producer and Simex producer of strong alcohol drinks There are a number of old socialistic industries that survived the transition period in Serbia The biggest one is the chemical fertilizer factory Azotara and the rail wagon factory Bratstvo Currently the biggest export industry in town is the Siemens Subotica wind generators factory and it is the biggest brownfield investment so far The other big companies in Subotica are Fornetti ATB Sever and Masterplast More recent companies to come to Subotica include Dunkermotoren and NORMA Group Tourism is important In the past few years Palic has been famous for the Palic Film Festival Subotica is a festival city hosting more than 17 festivals over the year citation needed As of September 2017 Subotica has one of 14 free economic zones established in Serbia 38 In 2020 construction of a new aqua park with ten pools and wellness and spa sections was underway in Palic 39 The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity as of 2018 40 Activity TotalAgriculture forestry and fishing 632Mining and quarrying 5Manufacturing 14 481Electricity gas steam and air conditioning supply 360Water supply sewerage waste management and remediation activities 570Construction 1 829Wholesale and retail trade repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles 7 337Transportation and storage 3 136Accommodation and food services 1 802Information and communication 1 056Financial and insurance activities 621Real estate activities 127Professional scientific and technical activities 1 503Administrative and support service activities 1 088Public administration and defense compulsory social security 1 997Education 2 596Human health and social work activities 3 416Arts entertainment and recreation 653Other service activities 984Individual agricultural workers 1 438Total 45 631Education EditUniversities Edit Teacher Training Faculty in the Hungarian Language of the University of Novi SadTutoring of teachers in Subotica dates back to the late 18th century After the establishment of Austria Hungary the second state financed teacher training faculty of Hungary was founded in Subotica second to Buda only Modern history of teacher training in Subotica started in 2006 when the Sombor Teacher Training Faculty s curriculums in the Hungarian language seceded from the faculty and became independent as the 14th faculty of the University of Novi Sad 41 As of 2022 the faculty offers bachelor s degrees in kindergarten teaching elementary school teaching disciplinatory teaching and communications and master s degrees in kindergarten teaching and elementary school teaching Secondary schools Edit Polytechnic school Surveying and Construction Typography Forestry and Wood Processing Teachers College founded in 1689 the oldest college in the country and region Svetozar Markovic grammar school Dezso Kosztolanyi Philological grammar school MESC Electro mechanical school recently renamed to Tehnicka Skola Subotica en Technical School Bosa Milicevic School of Economics Lazar Nesic School of Chemistry Medicinska Skola Medical School4 953 students studied in the city in the year 2020 21 in the secondary education 1 626 students chose Hungarian speaking classes 32 8 209 students chose Croatian classes while 3 118 students studied in Serbian language 42 Historical schools 1920 to 1941 Edit Subotica Law SchoolSport EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Subotica has one major football stadium the Subotica City Stadium indoor arena and indoor swimming pool The local football team is Spartak and plays in the Serbian SuperLiga the country s primary football competition Media EditNewspapers and magazines published in Subotica Magyar Szo daily newspaper in Hungarian founded 1944 published in Subotica since 2006 Suboticke novine main weekly newspaper in Serbian Bunjevacke novine in Bunjevac Hrvatska rijec in Croatian Zvonik in CroatianInfrastructure EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message A1 motorway connects the city with Novi Sad and Belgrade to the south and across the border with Hungary with Szeged to the north It runs alongside the Budapest Belgrade railway which connects it to major European cities As of November 2022 the line is out of order without replacement as both the Serbian and the Hungarian part of the line is currently being reconstructed Subotica also has branch line railway connections to Sombor Senta with passenger service and Szeged through Horgos under reconstruction with limited freight service passenger service planned to commence in late 2023 while the former branch line to Baja through Csikeria was dismantled in the 1960s but parts of the derelict tracks are still visible in the city s northwestern outskirts Subotica Central Railway Station The city used to have a tram system the Subotica tram system but it was discontinued in 1974 The Subotica tram put into operation in 1897 ran on electricity from the start While neighbouring cities trams at this date were often still horse drawn this gave the Subotica system an advantage over other municipalities including Belgrade Novi Sad Zagreb and Szeged Its existence was important for the citizens of Subotica as well as tourists who came to visit Subotica has since developed a bus system operated by JP Subotica Trans who operates eleven city lines eight suburban lines and thirteen interurban lines as well as a single international line to Szeged Per year the buses travel some 4 7 million kilometres and carry about ten million people The city is served by Subotica Airport its runway is too short for airliners limiting usage to mostly recreational aviation Southwest of the city there is a 218 5 metres tall guyed mast for FM TV broadcasting It is the tallest of its kind in Serbia and one of the tallest in the region Famous citizens EditBranimir Aleksic born 1990 football player and member of the Serbia national football team Sava Babic 1934 2012 writer translator and university professor Geza Csath 1887 1919 Hungarian writer musician music critic psychiatrist and physician Gyula Cseszneky born 1914 Hungarian poet voivode Sreten Damjanovic born 1946 wrestler Marko Dmitrovic born 1992 goalkeeper for the Serbia national football team and Spanish football club Eibar Oliver Dulic born 1975 politician Vlatko Dulic 1943 2015 actor Yehuda Elkana born 1934 Israeli philosopher of science Nikola Kalinic born 1991 Serbian basketball player silver medalist at the Olympics and the FIBA World Cup Zoran Kalinic born 1958 table tennis champion Danilo Kis 1935 1989 writer Juci Komlos 1919 2011 Hungarian actress Dezso Kosztolanyi 1885 1936 Hungarian poet and prose writer Zoran Kuntic born 1967 Serbian retired professional footballer Felix Lajko born 1974 world music violinist and composer Peter Leko born 1979 Hungary s number one chess player Szilveszter Levai born 1945 Hungarian composer Aleksandar Lifka 1880 1952 central European cinematographer Bela Lugosi 1882 1956 actor Boris Malagurski born 1988 Serbian Canadian film director producer and TV host Refik Memisevic 1956 2004 wrestling champion Đula Mester born 1972 volleyball player and Olympic champion Jovan Mikic 1914 1944 leader of the Partisans in Subotica and a national hero who was killed in 1944 Tihomir Ognjanov 1927 2006 Serbian footballer for the Yugoslavia national football team Momir Petkovic born 1953 wrestling champion Bojana Radulovic born 1973 handball player Mirna Radulovic born 1992 Serbian singer who represented Serbia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2013 as part of Moje 3 Eva Ras born 1941 actress painter and writer Magdolna Ruzsa born 1985 Hungarian pop singer Ivan Saric 1876 1966 aviation pioneer and cyclist Tibor Sekelj Tibor Szekely 1912 1988 explorer esperantist writer John Simon 1925 2019 American theatre critic Davor Stefanek born 1985 Serbian wrestler and Olympic champion Gyorgy Sztantics 1878 1918 racewalking champion at the Intercalated Games Itzchak Tarkay 1935 2012 Israeli artist Đorđe Tutoric born 1983 Serbian professional football player Ajs Nigrutin born 1977 Serbian rapper 43 International cooperation EditSubotica is a pilot city of the Council of Europe and the EU Intercultural cities programme 44 Twin towns Sister cities Edit Subotica is twinned with the following cities Szeged Hungary Dunajska Streda Slovakia Olomouc Czech Republic Osijek Croatia Odorheiu Secuiesc Romania Treptow Kopenick Berlin GermanyPartner Cities Edit Subotica is a partner city with the following Baja Hungary Budapest Hungary Izola Slovenia Kecskemet Hungary Kiskunhalas Hungary Munich Germany Namur Belgium Tilburg Netherlands Turku Finland Ulm Germany Wolverhampton United Kingdom Zagreb Croatia Zirc HungarySee also EditList of mayors of Subotica Municipalities of Serbia List of cities in Serbia List of cities towns and villages in Vojvodina North Backa DistrictReferences Edit a b 2011 Census of Population Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia Comparative Overview of the Number of Population in 1948 1953 1961 1971 1981 1991 2002 and 2011 Data by settlements PDF Statistical Office of Republic Of Serbia Belgrade 2014 ISBN 978 86 6161 109 4 Retrieved 2014 06 27 a b History of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022 Borovszky Magyarorszag varmegyei es varosai mek oszk hu a b Serbian Cities Subotica Archived from the original on 2012 03 11 Retrieved 2011 03 30 Colonists settling the military buffer zone between the Habsburg and Ottoman Empires Retrieved 8 September 2022 Geographical position of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022 Subotica North Backa Serbia Monthly Weather Forecast weather com Weather Channel Retrieved 3 October 2020 Starcevo culture Map catyline com Projekat Rastko Nikola Tasic Eneolitske kulture centralnog i zapadnog Balkana www rastko rs The first Indo Europeans in the Balkans Retrieved 8 September 2022 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2011 07 14 Retrieved 2011 02 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link eliznik South East Europe history 1 800 BC map www eliznik org uk Archived from the original on 2013 03 25 Retrieved 2013 01 14 Barcă 2013 p 104 Barford 2001 Subotica after the Battle of Mohacs Retrieved 8 September 2022 Balint Torok in Geza Gardonyi Eger Stars 2019 ISBN 978 1794777330 Borovszky Samu Magyarorszag varmegyei es varosai Bacs Bodrog varmegye I II kotet Apollo Irodalmi es Nyomdai Reszvenytarsasag 1909 Officially known as the Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes until 1929 Known as Democratic Federal Yugoslavia until 1945 Sanjak of Segedin Varga 2013 p 264 History of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022 Vladan Gavrilovic The Serbian Vojvodina and Montenegro 1848 1849 University of Novi Sad Faculty of Philosophy 2021 Subotica Hrvatska enciklopedija www enciklopedija hr Retrieved 2019 05 04 Subotica in WWII Retrieved 8 September 2022 Meszaros Sandor Holtta nyilvanitva Delvideki magyar fatum 1944 45 I II Hatodik Sip Alapitvany Budapest 1995 Cseres Tibor Verbosszu Bacskaban Magveto kiado Budapest 1991 Buildings of Subotica Retrieved 8 September 2022 About the Hungarian Art Nouveau architecture Retrieved 8 September 2022 Radovi na rekonstrukciji Narodnog pozorista u Subotici Gradjevinarstvo 2011 Census of Population Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia PDF stat gov rs Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia Retrieved 19 March 2017 Popis stanovnishtva domaћinstava i stanova 2011 u Republici Srbiјi PDF stat gov rs Republicki zavod za statistiku Retrieved 10 April 2019 a b c Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 15 July 2014 Retrieved 17 December 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The Use of Hungarian and Serbian in the City of Szabadka Subotica An Empirical Study Retrieved 8 September 2017 M Stantic Blessed Marija Petkovic Archived 19 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine M Stantic Zauzimanje za siromahe karizma danas marijapropetog hr accessed 5 February 2016 in Croatian SNS osvojio najvise glasova u Subotici Srbija izbori 2018 www srbijaizbori com Mikavica A 3 September 2017 Slobodne zone mamac za investitore politika rs in Serbian Retrieved 17 March 2019 symbolic Do kraja godine bice zavrsen akva park na Palicu in Serbian Retrieved 2020 11 21 MUNICIPALITIES AND REGIONS OF THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA 2019 PDF stat gov rs Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia 25 December 2019 Retrieved 28 December 2019 A Kar tortenete MTTK Otvoreni podaci Klinika Highlights 19 July 2021 Ajs Nigrutin o zivotu u Subotici YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 11 18 Intercultural Cities Home Intercultural cities programme Books EditBarcă Vitalie 2013 Nomads of the Steppes on the Danube Frontier of the Roman Empire in the 1st Century CE Historical Sketch and Chronological Remarks Dacia OCLC 1023761641 Barford Paul M 2001 The Early Slavs Culture and Society in Early Medieval Eastern Europe Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 3977 3 Varga Szabolcs 2013 Croatia and Slavonia in the Early Modern Age PDF Hungarian Studies 27 2 263 276 doi 10 1556 HStud 27 2013 2 5 Sources EditRecent 2002 statistical information comes from the Serbian statistical office Ethnic statistics KONAChNI REZULTATI POPISA 2002 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 02 25 477 KB SAOPShTEЊE SN31 broј 295 god LII 24 12 2002 YU ISSN 0353 9555 Accessed 17 January 2006 On page 6 7 Stanovnishtvo prema nacionalnoј ili etnichkoј pripadnosti po popisu 2002 Statistics can be found on the lines for Subotica Subotica Language and religion statistics Popis stanovnistva domacinstava i stanova u 2002 ISBN 86 84433 02 5 Accessed 17 January 2006 On page 11 12 STANOVNIShTVO PREMA VEROISPOVESTI STANOVNIShTVO PREMA MATERЊEM ЈEZIKU Statistics can be found on the lines for Subotica Subotica Ferdinand S and F Komlosi 2017 The Use of Hungarian and Serbian in the City of Szabadka Subotica An Empirical Study Hungarian Cultural Studies Volume 10 Accessed 8 September 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Subotica Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Subotica The official website of Subotica JP Subotica Trans Public Transport Official Site Subotica s official website for tourism and travel information History of Subotica Archived 2016 01 07 at the Wayback Machine Panoramic pictures from Subotica Subotica International Festival of Children s Theatres Portal Serbia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Subotica amp oldid 1123457813, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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