Banja Koviljača

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Koviljaca Spa
also known as Royal Spa

Information about Koviljaca
Country Flag of Serbia Serbia
Subdivision Mačva District, Loznica municipality
Population 6.340
Postal code 15316
Area code 015
License plates LO
Height above sea level 128m
Location
N  44°49'14"
W 20°27'44"
Initials BK, RS
Homepage www.banjakoviljaca.co.yu
E-Mail info@banjakoviljaca.net
Politics
Mayor Miloš Stojanović

Banja Koviljača (Бања Ковиљача) is a town and a spa situated in the Loznica municipality, Serbia. It is the oldest spa in Serbia. Banja Koviljača is located on the west border of Serbia by the Drina river, 137 kilometres from Belgrade. The population of the town is 6,340 people (2002 census).

Contents

[edit] Name

Banja Koviljača means the "Koviljača Spa" in English. It is also known as Kraljevska Banja ("The Royal Spa").

[edit] Features

Banja Koviljača has a number of sulphuric and iron-bearing thermal mineral springs, ranging in temperature from 21 to 38 degrees Celsius. Patients drink and bathe in these waters, which are also used for the preparation of mud packs.

The location of the Koviljača spa was chosen for the useful natural elements around it: the Drina river, which could be forded; the wooded mountain Gucevo, which served as shelter from enemies; the plain, which supplied food; and the water, which was (and still is) considered to have medicinal properties.

[edit] History

Archaeologists have found the site of a Roman settlement, "Genzis" in the area of Banja Koviljača. The first document mentioning the spa was written in 1533.

In the 18th century, Turks from Macva and Podrinje came to visit this region. Some documents state that in 1720 Turks from the city of Zvornik built a medical bathroom for women named the "Stinking Spa", due to the sulphuric water from the springs. A legend states that a caravan had been passing in the area and had to leave its horse behind, collapsed from exhaustion, rolling in the mud. It is said that when the caravan returned, the horse had been cured.

Vuk Stefanović Karadžić, describing this region in 1827, wrote about the sulfuric puddle and cold mineral springs. According to Karadzic, its real name, Spa, was derived from the old town, fortress, which had been built on the hill above the current Spa. According to Kanic, Spa received its name from a very popular plant "Kovilja" (Stipa pennata lin.) which grows on nearby slopes and hills.

The first chemical analysis of the water was performed by the chemist Pavle Ilić in the year 1855. The first guest house was built in 1858 with ten rooms. In 1867, under the order of the duchy Mihailo Obrenovic, the spa won state protection.

[edit] Modern development

Development of Spa Koviljača began on August 1, 1898, when a law was passed opening it to the people of the Podrinje district for exploration. Intensive development occured until 1930, when Koviljača's jurisdiction was changed to Drinska Banovina, the capital in Sarajevo.

Until 1970 this sanatorium operated under the name “Natural Sanatorium Spa Koviljača”. From 1970 to 1998, it was known as the “Institute for dissipated and post-traumatic conditions”.

In 1980, a facility for therapy and amenities was added. Since 1998 it has been called the “Special hospital for rehabilitation Spa Koviljača”. Medical services are provided by physicians of the Institute of Discopathy.

[edit] Geographical setting

Gucevo is a wooded mountain which rises above the Banja Koviljača Spa to the south. The mountain extends from northwest to southeast and from Koviljača to the mountain Boranja. It is 15 kilometers long. The peak of the Gucevo Mountain is Crni Vrh, and its altitude is 779 m above sea level. Mount Gucevo is composed mainly of limestone and sand.

In the past, there was a terrain fissure on the mountain, which was significant to the occurrence of thermo-mineral waters. The mountain of Gucevo has many clear water springs which grow into smaller brooks overhung by high beech forests. The river Drina dominates the area and meanders between Macva and Semberija.

[edit] Manifestations

[edit] External links

[edit] References


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