Kisač
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kisač (Serbian: Kisač or Кисач, Slovak: Kysáč, Croatian: Kisač, Hungarian: Kiszács) is a village located in the Novi Sad municipality, in the South Bačka District of Serbia. It is situated in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina.
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[edit] Population
The village has a Slovak ethnic majority and its population is 5,466 people. According to the 1971 census, ethnic Slovaks comprised 90.60% of population of the village.
[edit] History
The settlement named Kis-Alcs was mentioned at this location in 1457. During the Ottoman rule, Kisač was populated by ethnic Serbs. The modern settlement of Kisač was first mentioned in the second half of the 18th century (about 1770), when ethnic Slovaks settled in the village. It soon became one of the largest ethnic Slovak settlements in Bačka. The village got its present form when it was joined with Tankosićevo, which was a separate settlement in the past.
[edit] Culture
There is a Slovak Evangelist Church (from 1795) and a Serbian Orthodox Church (from 1773) in the village.
[edit] See also
Seat of the district: City of Novi Sad
Novi Sad municipality1: Begeč • Budisava • Čenej • Futog • Kać • Kisač • Kovilj • Rumenka • Stepanovićevo • Veternik
Petrovaradin1: Bukovac • Ledinci • Sremska Kamenica • Stari Ledinci
Bač: Bačko Novo Selo • Bođani • Plavna • Selenča • Vajska
Bačka Palanka: Čelarevo • Despotovo • Gajdobra • Karađorđevo • Mladenovo • Neštin • Nova Gajdobra • Obrovac • Parage • Pivnice • Silbaš • Tovariševo • Vizić
Bački Petrovac: Gložan • Kulpin • Maglić
Bečej: Bačko Gradište • Bačko Petrovo Selo • Mileševo • Radičević
Beočin: Banoštor • Čerević • Grabovo • Lug • Rakovac • Susek • Sviloš
Srbobran: Nadalj • Turija
Sremski Karlovci
Temerin: Bački Jarak • Sirig
Titel: Gardinovci • Lok • Mošorin • Šajkaš • Vilovo
Vrbas: Bačko Dobro Polje • Kosančić • Kucura • Ravno Selo • Savino Selo • Zmajevo
Žabalj: Čurug • Đurđevo • Gospođinci
(*) bold are municipalities, 1 - Novi Sad`s urban municipalities, which aren`t fully formed