Brod (Dragash)
Brod / Brodi 1 (Sharr / Sharri) Brod / Брод 2 |
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Basic data | ||||
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State : | Kosovo 3 | |||
District : | Prizren | |||
Municipality : | Dragash | |||
Coordinates : | 42 ° 0 ′ N , 20 ° 42 ′ E | |||
Height : | 1,695 m above sea level A. | |||
Residents : | 1,544 (2011) | |||
Telephone code : | +383 (0) 38 | |||
License plate : | 04 | |||
1 Albanian (indefinite / definite form) , 2 Serbian (Latin / Cyrillic spelling) 3 Kosovo's independence is controversial. Serbia continues to regard the country as a Serbian province. |
Brod ( Albanian also Brodi or Sharr / i , Serbian - Cyrillic Брод ) is a village in the south of Kosovo in the Dragash municipality . The place name Brod is derived from the Slavic brod for " ford ".
geography
The village consists of four quarters:
- Gorno Maalo (Ober Brod)
- Douno Maalo (Under Brod)
- Ljokan Maalo
- Čučulj Maal
history
After the conquest of Kosovo by the Kingdom of Serbia during the First Balkan War in 1912, the Serbian government set up a military administration on site, whereby Brod became an independent municipality within the Srez Gora , which was subordinate to the Okrug Prizren . This administrative division existed until January 6, 1929, when the area became part of the newly created Vardarska banovina within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia .
population
According to the last census carried out in 2011, Brod has 1544 inhabitants.
ethnicities
The Gorans form a relative majority with 747 people (48.38%), followed by the Bosniaks with 620 people (40.16%). In addition, 103 (6.67%) described themselves as Turks , 20 (1.30%) as Albanians , 5 as Roma and Ashkali and 1 as Serbs . A further 34 people considered themselves to be of another ethnic group, and 13 did not provide any information in this regard.
language
School education is in Bosnian . The Gorans speak their Gorani language, Našinski , which belongs to the South Slavic dialect continuum and is assigned to the Torlak dialect group by many linguists .
religion
In 2011, 1541 of the 1544 inhabitants professed Islam , 1 joined the Orthodox Church , 1 person belongs to another religion and 1 person gave no answer regarding his or her beliefs. There are two mosques in the village, one for the Slavic Muslims and one for the Albanians.
development
census | 1919 | 1948 | 1953 | 1961 | 1971 | 1981 | 1991 | 2011 |
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Residents | 1260 | 2248 | 2229 | 1604 | 1485 | 1685 | 1741 | 1544 |
Web links
Individual evidence
- ↑ Skënder Gashi: Kërkime onomastike-historike për minoritete të shuara e Aktuell të Kosovës . Ed .: Academy of Sciences and Arts of Kosovo. Focus Print, Pristina 2015, ISBN 978-9951-615-48-8 , p. 653 (Albanian, ashak.org [PDF]).
- ↑ a b Sheradin Berisha: Ndarja administrative në Qarkun e Prizrenit - në vitin 1919. Archived from the original on July 24, 2008 ; Retrieved June 23, 2018 (Albanian).
- ↑ Ethnic composition of Kosovo 2011. In: pop-stat.mashke.org. Retrieved June 23, 2018 .
- ↑ Thomas Schmidinger: Gora - Slavic-speaking Muslims between Kosovo, Albania, Macedonia and the diaspora. Wiener Verlag für Sozialforschung 2013, page 23/24
- ↑ Tim Bespyatov: Religious composition of Kosovo 2011 . Retrieved June 4, 2017.
- ↑ Theodora Dragostinova and Yana Hashamova: Beyond Mosque, Church, and State: Alternative Narratives of the Nation in the Balkans. Central European University Press, Budapest - New York 2016, page 192
- ↑ Kosovo censuses. In: pop-stat.mashke.org. Retrieved January 3, 2018 .