Grebenac

Coordinates: 44°52′21″N 21°15′11″E / 44.87250°N 21.25306°E / 44.87250; 21.25306
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grebenac
Гребенац (Serbian)
Grebenaț (Romanian)
The Romanian Orthodox Church
The Romanian Orthodox Church
Grebenac is located in Vojvodina
Grebenac
Grebenac
Location of Grebenac within Serbia
Grebenac is located in Serbia
Grebenac
Grebenac
Grebenac (Serbia)
Grebenac is located in Europe
Grebenac
Grebenac
Grebenac (Europe)
Coordinates: 44°52′21″N 21°15′11″E / 44.87250°N 21.25306°E / 44.87250; 21.25306
CountrySerbia
ProvinceVojvodina
DistrictSouth Banat
Elevation
60 m (200 ft)
Population
 (2002)
 • Grebenac1,017
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
26347
Area code+381(0)13
Car plates

Grebenac (Serbian Cyrillic: Гребенац, Romanian: Grebenaț) is a village in Vojvodina, Serbia. It is situated in the Bela Crkva municipality, in the South Banat District, Vojvodina province. The village has a Romanian ethnic majority (82.3%) and a population of 1,017 (2002 census).

It was the site of an ancient Roman fort.

Name[edit]

In Serbian, the village is known as Grebenac (Гребенац), in Romanian as Grebenaț, in Hungarian as Gerebenc, and in German as Grebenatz.

Historical population[edit]

Romanian presence is attested by a stone cross in the local graveyard, from 1297 and by a document in Wiena about a trial between Luca family and another local family. In 1970s some 490 residents of Grebenac went abroad as gastarbeiters, mostly to Salzburg where there was some 300 of them.[1]

  • 1961: 2,129
  • 1971: 2,040
  • 1981: 1,893
  • 1991: 1,608

Personalities[edit]

  • Vasko Popa, poet; studies at the University of Bucharest and in Vienna. During World War II, he fought as a partisan and was imprisoned in a German concentration camp.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ William Zimmerman (1987). Open Borders, Nonalignment, and the Political Evolution of Yugoslavia. Princeton University Press. p. 97. ISBN 0-691-07730-4.
  • Slobodan Ćurčić, Broj stanovnika Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 1996.

External links[edit]