Cetingrad

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Cetingrad
Municipality
Cetingrad is located in Croatia
Cetingrad
Cetingrad
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Country  Croatia
County Karlovac County
Government
 • Mayor Milan Gašparin
Area
 • Total 137 km2 (53 sq mi)
Population (2001)
 • Total 2,746
Time zone Central European Time (UTC+1)

Cetingrad is a municipality in Karlovac County, Croatia near Croatia's border with Bosnia. The population of the village itself is 351, while the total municipality population is 2,746 (2001). The municipality is part of Kordun.

Administrative division

Cetingrad is today a municipality and part of Karlovac County in Croatia.

According to Roman Catholic organization, the parish of Cetingrad is a part of Slunj deanery, together with Slunj, Blagaj, Cvitović, Lađevac, Rakovica, Drežnik, Vaganac, Zavalje, Korenica and Plitvice.[1]

History

Cetingrad was built in the vicinity of the ruins of the mediaeval fortress of Cetin. The time of foundation of Cetin is unfortunately still unknown. There are some indices that the settlement existed there in the times of Roman Empire.

The Middle Ages was the golden era of Cetin. Near the fortress there was Franciscan monastery and several churches. At that time Cetin was the property of Frankopan family and it played important role in History of Croatia.

After defeat in Battle of Mohács in 1526 Croatian nobility gathered at Parliament on Cetin (Cetinski Sabor). On January 1, 1527 they elected Habsburg Ferdinand, Archduke of Austria as the king of Croatia. The chart signed by Croatian nobles and representatives of Ferdinand of Habsburg is among most important documents of Croatian statehood and is preserved in Austrian State Archives in Vienna.

In next centuries Cetin was part of Military Frontier, the borderland between Habsburg Monarchy and Ottoman Empire. During this period Ottoman army took control over it several times. The fortress was several times damaged and repaired. In 1790 Austrian troops under the command of general Walisch finally returned Cetin to the Habsburg monarchy. In 1809 Ottoman forces once again occupied Cetin but in 1810 they withdrew under the threats of Marshal Marmont, governor-general of Illyrian provinces. When the Ottoman threat was gone the fortress was abandoned and used as quarry. Administrative control was transferred to village of Cetingrad which developed north to the Cetin.

In the 19th and 20th century the area was rarely populated and without any real opportunity for economic development. During World War II area once again experienced great suffering and destruction and after the war socialist Yugoslavia neglected this area. Due to poverty population was forced to migrate, first overseas and later to European countries.

During the Yugoslav wars, Cetingrad and the surrounding area was militarily conquered. During the period of occupation, it was under control of Republic of Serb Krajina until 1995. During the occupation, rebel Serbs destroyed the biggest Roman Catholic church in Slunj deanery (church of Assumption of Mary, crkva Marijina Uznesenja).[1] By 1999 the church was mostly rebuilt.[2]

Cetingrad was the site of a helicopter crash, caused by a missile fired by Serbs, in which the foreign minister of Bosnia and Herzegovina Irfan Ljubijankić and six others were killed. Most of Cetingrad's population spent four years in exile. In August 1995 during the Operation Storm Croatian army liberated Cetingrad. After 1995, Cetingrad was successfully rebuilt and large number of people returned to their homes.

File:(105) Cetingrad Municipality.PNG
Image of Cetingrad municipality within Karlovac County

Demographics

According to the 2001 census, Municipality of Cetingrad has the following ethnic breakdown:

Ethnic group Number Percentage
Croats 2,105 76.6%
Bosniaks 421 15.3%
Serbs 145 5.3%

Towns and villages in municipality

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Culture

Cetingrad is home to a monument to Croatian soldiers from the Croatian War of Independence.[3] The town celebrates August 7 as its municipal day to commemorate its liberation from the rebel Republic of Serb Krajina on that day in 1995.[4]

Notes

Sources

  • Radoslav Lopašić: Oko Kupe i Korane, Matica Hrvatska, 1895, Zagreb
  • Milan Kruhek: Cetin, grad izbornog sabora Kraljevine Hrvatske 1527, Karlovačka Županija, 1997, Karlovac
  • Iz memoara maršala Marmonta: ilirske uspomene 1806-1811, Čakavski Sabor, 1977, Split

External links