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Topic: Subotica Municipality


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In the News (Tue 2 Dec 08)

  
  The Dispatch - Serving the Lexington, NC - News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Subotica (Serbian: Суботица or Subotica,, Hungarian: Szabadka, Croatian: Subotica, Bunjevac: Subotica) is a city and municipality in northern Serbia, in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina.
The population of the Subotica municipality is composed of (according to 2002 census):
Subotica is the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Bačka region belonging to Serbia.
www.the-dispatch.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=NEWS&template=wiki&text=Subotica   (2689 words)

  
  YourArt.com >> Encyclopedia >> Subotica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Subotica (Serbian: Суботица or Subotica, Hungarian: Szabadka, Croatian: Subotica, German: Maria-Theresiopel or Theresiopel, Slovak: Subotica, Rusyn: Суботица, Romanian: Subotica or Subotiţa) is a city and municipality in northern Serbia, in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina.
The population of the Subotica municipality is composed of (according to 2002 census):
Subotica is the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Bačka region belonging to Serbia.
www.yourart.com /research/encyclopedia.cgi?subject=/Subotica   (3003 words)

  
 Subotica - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Subotica (Serbian: Суботица; or Subotica, Hungarian: Szabadka, Croatian: Subotica, German: Mariatheresiopel) is a city and municipality in northern Serbia and Montenegro, in the North Backa District of Vojvodina, Serbia.
When Subotica became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in 1920, the largest city of the new-made country was not Belgrade or Zagreb, but Subotica.
Subotica is also the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Backa region belonging to Serbia.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Subotica   (750 words)

  
 Subotica Encyclopedia Article @ 216.92.11.26 ()   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Subotica belonged to the Austria-Hungary until the aftermath of World War I in 1918, when the city became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.
Subotica did not, for a time, experience again the dynamic prosperity it enjoyed in the years preceding World War I. However, at that time, Subotica was the third largest city in Yugoslavia by population, following Belgrade and Zagreb.
The Subotica municipality comprises the Subotica city, the town of Palić (Hungarian: Palicsfürdő) and 17 villages.
216.92.11.26 /encyclopedia/Subotica   (3130 words)

  
 Where can I find Subotica information?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Subotica (Serbian: Суботица or Subotica, Hungarian: Szabadka, Croatian: Subotica, German: Maria-Theresiopel or Theresiopel, Slovak: Subotica, Rusyn: Суботица, Romanian: Subotica or Subotiţa) is a urban and municipality in northern Serbia, in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina.
The population of the Subotica urban is composed of (according to 2002 census):
Subotica is the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Bačka division belonging to Serbia.
en.89of100e.info /Subotica   (3568 words)

  
 Subotica
Subotica (Serbian: Суботица or Subotica, Hungarian: Szabadka, Croatian: Subotica, German: Maria-Theresiopel or Theresiopel, Slovak: Subotica, Rusyn: Суботица, Romanian: Subotica or Subotiţa) is a city and municipality in northern Serbia, in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina.
Subotica did not, for a time, experience again the dynamic prosperity it enjoyed in the years preceding World War I. In 1941, Yugoslavia was invaded and partitioned by the Axis Powers, and its northern parts, including Subotica, were annexed to Hungary.
When Subotica became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in 1920, Subotica was the third-largest city of the newly-formed country, after Belgrade and Zagreb.
www.dejavu.org /cgi-bin/get.cgi?ver=93&url=http%3A%2F%2Farticles.gourt.com%2F%3Farticle%3DSubotica%26type%3Den   (2952 words)

  
 Subotica, Serbia and Montenegro
Subotica (Serbian: Суботица or Subotica, Hungarian: Szabadka, Croatian: Subotica, German: Mariatheresiopel) is a city and municipality in northern Serbia and Montenegro, in the North Backa District of Vojvodina, Serbia.
It is remarkable that despite the diversity of their ethnic origins, the citizens of Subotica (mainly Bunjevci and Hungarians) united in defending Subotica in the battle at Kaponya, 5th of March 1849.
Subotica is also the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Backa region belonging to Serbia.
creekin.net /c6458-n163-subotica-serbia-and-montenegro.html   (1814 words)

  
 Invest in Serbia - Subotica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
The municipality of Subotica lies on the very north part of Serbia.
The north part of the region is a fertile land for orchards and vineyards while the south regions are ideal for agriculture.
By the number of inhabitants Subotica is the second town of the Vojvodina Province.
www.invest-in-serbia.com /English/regional/vojvodina/subotica.htm   (58 words)

  
 Life’s returning to Serbia’s Lake Palic   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Fixing the lake, or rather the wastewater and sludge running into the lake from the neighbouring city of Subotica, is the aim of a complex EBRD and donor-funded project to bring Lake Palic water quality up to European Union standards.
However, the EBRD cannot invest in such vital municipal projects unless tariffs are at a level to sustain services long after the Bank has left the scene.
Subotica is an example of the many municipalities working with the EBRD to improve their finances as the starting point for improving services.
www.aquamedia.at /templates/index.cfm/id/15667   (917 words)

  
 FeNS
Municipality Subotica is consisted of 18 municipalities of Subotica with 50 thousand inhabitants, and the city itself with 100 thousand inhabitants.
One of the biggest problems Subotica is facing today is unemployment- around 20 thousand inhabitants is without permanent employment, which is the consequence of rough period in last 15 years (big factories are in the process of privatization or are in tough economical situation).
Subotica is our stopping point today, since it has long tradition of cooperation with nongovernmental sector, and because Subotica has been free town in last ten years.
www.fens.org.yu /eng/vesti/004.htm   (1837 words)

  
 Short Term Election Observation
Team 302 was deployed to the Municipality of Subotica, north on the border to Hungary.
The municipality arranged transport of the ballots from the villages.
The municipality of Gornji Milanovac is described by its inhabitants as the heart of Serbia.
www.humanrights.uio.no /forskning/publ/wp/wp_2001_06.html   (9162 words)

  
 East European Constitutional Review
1-6 and 45 of the statute of Subotica municipality, adopted by the Subotica city hall in 1993, are unconstitutional.
(Subotica is one the larger towns in Vojvodina, a northern province of Serbia with a population of two million.
Hungarian and Croatian political parties from the Subotica municipality strongly criticized the recent decision, claiming that judicial practice in Serbia still resembles the practice of the previous regime.
www.law.nyu.edu /eecr/vol10num2_3/constitutionwatch/yugoslavia.html   (4930 words)

  
 June 20, 1995 Vreme News Digest Agency No 194
As a coalition partner with by far the strongest Democratic Union of Vojvodina Hungarians (DZVM), Tonkovic's party is in power in Subotica, the municipality with the largest concentration of the Croat population in Serbia.
Kopilovic is the chairman of the Subotica Committee of the Democratic Reform Party of Vojvodina (DRSV), Vice-President of the Party and Federal Assembly deputy.
According the the statistics of the Catholic Church, in the municipality of Subotica 32 percent of the population are Croats, says Bela Tonkovic but, he adds, only 13 percent "dare say it".
www.scc.rutgers.edu /serbian_digest/194/t194-7.htm   (1531 words)

  
 EBRD lends to fifth municipality in Serbia [EBRD - Press Release]
The EBRD is lending the city of Subotica, in north Serbia, €9 million to help rehabilitate its waste-water treatment plant to meet European Union standards.
Municipalities in many towns and cities across Serbia are beginning to address the backlog of investments and introduce institutional reforms needed to provide improved municipal services and better environmental conditions.
Subotica is the first city to receive grant investment under this framework.
www.ebrd.org /new/pressrel/2004/209dec17.htm   (480 words)

  
 EFG Eurobank A.D., Beograd   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Subotica, August, 22nd 2006 – Subotica municipality, Housing Loans Pro-Birthrate Fund and Eurobank EFG have signed the Agreement today, in Subotica, about mutual financing of young couples with children in their attempts to have “roof over head”.
The municipal Housing Loans Pro-Birthrate Fund has been established by the Decision of a City Government and is offering an unique financing model so that young, educated married couples with children can provide themselves with an apartment or a house.
One third of a loan is provided by municipality, interest free, and the amount that will be returned to it depends on a number of children in a family.
www.efgeurobank.co.yu /Page/default.aspx?xml_id=/en-US/News/7993_6400   (160 words)

  
 Subotica Synagogue   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
The former Synagogue in Subotica, Yugoslavia, located in the Vojvodina, a formerly autonomous region of Serbia, near the Hungarian border, continues to deteriorate despite extensive efforts at repair undertaken by the municipality in the 1980s, and more recent international recognition of the building's importance as an architectural and cultural landmark.
The plan was rushed into construction be the Jewish community of nearby Subotica, and the synagogue was dedicated in 1902.
ISJM president Samuel Gruber and Subotica Mayor Jozef Kasza have, at WMF's invitation, nominated the building for re-listing for the year 2000 in the hope of qualifying the site for grants.
www.isjm.org /jhr/IInos3-4/subotica.htm   (1125 words)

  
 Kanjiza - About - Hungarian version   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
Kanjiza, the center of the Kanjiza Municipality is located on the north part of Yugoslavia (Serbia, Vojvodina) on the right bank of the river Tisa defined by north latitude 46 4' and east longitude 20 4'.
The borders of the municipality are formed by the river Tisa and the Novi Knezevac Municipality on the east, the Municipality of Senta on the south, the Municipality of Subotica on the west and the Yugoslav-Hungarian border on the north.
The present Municipality of Kanjiza was established on January 1, 1960 by merging the municipalities of Kanjiza, Horgos and Martonos and consists of 13 settlements: Adorjan, Horgos, Kanjiza, Mali Pesak, Mala Pijaca, Martonos, Orom, Tresnjevac, Totovo selo, Novo selo, Velebit, Vojvodia Zimonjic and Doline.
www.kanjiza.co.yu /us/about.htm   (139 words)

  
 Subotica / Szabadka (Municipality, Serbia)
Subotica is the birthplace of the Hungarian writer, poet and journalist Dezsö Kosztolányi (1885-1936).
The flag of Subotica is horizontally divided white-light blue with the municipal coat of arms in the middle.
Subotica uses the historical coat of arms which was granted when the city was given rights of a Free and Royal City on 1 September 1779 then renamed Maria Teresienstadt.
www.atlasgeo.net /fotw/flags/cs-subot.html   (815 words)

  
 DIA - Foundation For Democratic Youth
The municipality of Subotica lies in the northernmost part of Yugoslavia.
According to the number of inhabitants, Subotica is the second largest town of the Vojvodina Province.
Owing to its favorable geographical location and hard-working citizens, Subotica is one of the most important administrative, industrial, trade, and cultural center of the northern Backa region.
www.i-dia.org /en_m317.htm   (228 words)

  
 Subotica Did You Mean subotica?
Subotica did not, for a time, experience again the dynamic prosperity it enjoyed in the years preceding World War I. During World War II, the so-called Miklós Horthy era from 1941a href="1944.html" title="1944">1944, had catastrophic consequences for Subotica - the city lost 7,000 of its citizens.
When Subotica became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes in 1920, Subotica was the third largest city of the newly-formed country, right after Belgrade and Zagreb.
Subotica is also the centre of the Roman Catholic diocese of the Ba?ka region belonging to Serbia.
www.did-you-mean.com /Subotica.html   (2090 words)

  
 Life’s returning to Serbia’s Lake Palic [EBRD - Story]
Fixing the lake, or rather the wastewater and sludge running into the lake from the neighbouring city of Subotica, is the aim of a complex EBRD and donor-funded project to bring Lake Palic water quality up to European Union standards.
However, the EBRD cannot invest in such vital municipal projects unless tariffs are at a level to sustain services long after the Bank has left the scene.
Subotica is an example of the many municipalities working with the EBRD to improve their finances as the starting point for improving services.
www.myebrdnet.com /new/stories/2005/050126.htm   (953 words)

  
 Bunjevci - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Subotica municipality had 60,699 Serbo-Croats or 66.73% of the total Subotica population.
A 1996 survey by the local government in Subotica found that in the community, there are many people who declare as Croats and consider themselves Bunjevci, but also some people who declare as Bunjevci but consider themselves part of the wider Croatian nation.
The largest concentration of Bunjevci in Serbia (10,870) is in the ethnically mixed city of Subotica, which is their cultural and political centre.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Bunjevci   (2078 words)

  
 Subotica   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-19)
SUBOTICA -- The modernized border crossing between Serbian and Hungary on the European Corridor 10 has been opened.
Subotica EntertainmentSubotica Entertainment Ltd is one of Ireland's leading film and...
Subotica produced a highly successful second series of Proof, which aired in April 2005.
www.demandtwinother.info /Subotica   (3824 words)

  
 Subotica - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This led eventually to a considerable demographic change.
During the war, Axis occupation troops killed numerous civilians.
Subotica • Temerin • Titel • Vrbas • Vršac • Žabalj • Žitište • Zrenjanin
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Subotica   (3098 words)

  
 Hungarian Regional Autonomy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The municipalities of Subotica and Bečej are ethnically mixed.
The population of Subotica municipality is composed of 38.47% Hungarians, 24.14% Serbs, 11.24% Croats, 10.95% Bunjevci, 5.76% Yugoslavs, 1.25% Montenegrins, etc. The population of Bečej municipality is composed of 48.83% Hungarians, 41.06% Serbs, 2.61% Yugoslavs, 1.16% Roma, 1.06% Croats, etc.
For example, in the municipality of Subotica, a proposed administrative centre of the new region, only 38.47% of the population are ethnic Hungarians, while 53.36% of the population are various South Slavic ethnic groups, which speak Serbian or Croatian language.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Hungarian_Regional_Autonomy   (705 words)

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