Bela Crkva (Vojvodina)

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Also see: Bela Crkva (disambiguation)


Бела Црква
Bela Crkva
Location in Serbia
Location of Bela Crkva within Serbia
General Information
District South Banat
Land area 353 km²
Population
(2002 census)
10,675 (town)
20,367 (municipality)
Settlements 14
Coordinates 44°54′N 21°25′E
Area code +381 13
Car plates
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
CEST (UTC+2)
Website http://www.belacrkva.info
Politics
Mayor Boris Đurđev
The Orthodox church
The Orthodox church
The St. Ana Catholic Church
The St. Ana Catholic Church

Bela Crkva (Бела Црква) is a town and municipality in South Banat District of Vojvodina, Serbia. The town has a population of 10,638, while the Bela Crkva municipality has 20,275 inhabitants.

Contents

[edit] Name

The name of the town simply means "white church" in Serbian. In Romanian, the town is known as Biserica Albă, in German as Weißkirchen, and in Hungarian as Fehértemplom.

[edit] History

The town was founded in 1717 when this region was included into the Habsburg Monarchy. It was part of the Banatian Military Frontier of the Monarchy and, since 1774, was a seat of the Illyrian (Serbian) section of the Banatian Frontier.

According to the 1910 census, the town itself was mainly populated by Germans, but its surrounding municipal area was mainly populated by Serbs. Census recorded 11,524 citizens in the town, of whom 6,062 spoke German language, 1,994 Serbian, 1,806 Romanian, and 1,213 Hungarian. The municipal area numbered 36,831 inhabitants, of whom 20,987 spoke Serbian, 8,234 Romanian, and 4,791 German. The total population of the town and its municipal area counted together was 48,355, of whom 22,981 spoke Serbian, 10,853 German, 10,040 Romanian, and 2,122 Hungarian. [1]

Since 1918, Bela Crkva was part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and subsequent South Slavic states.

[edit] Inhabited places

Bela Crkva municipality includes the town of Bela Crkva and the following villages:

[edit] Ethnic groups (2002 census)

The population of the Bela Crkva municipality:

Settlements with Serb ethnic majority are: Bela Crkva, Banatska Palanka, Banatska Subotica, Vračev Gaj, Dupljaja, Jasenovo, Kajtasovo, Kaluđerovo, Kruščica, Kusić, and Crvena Crkva. The settlement with Romanian ethnic majority is Grebenac. The settlement with Hungarian ethnic majority is Dobričevo. The settlement with Czech ethnic majority is Češko Selo.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Municipalities and cities of Serbia