Raška District
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Рашки округ Raški okrug |
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Location | |||
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Administration | |||
Capital | Kraljevo | ||
Commissioner | n/a | ||
Municipalities | 5 | ||
Settlements | 359 | ||
- Cities and towns | 9 | ||
- Villages | 350 | ||
Statistics | |||
Land area | 3,918 km² | ||
Population (census 2002) | 291,230 | ||
- density | 74.3/km² | ||
The Raška District (Raški okrug or Рашки округ) expands in the south-western part of Serbia. It has a population of 300,274. Its seat is in the city of Kraljevo.
Contents |
[edit] Municipalities
It encompasses the municipalities of:
[edit] Ethnic groups (2002 census)
- Serbs = 188,456
- Bosniaks = 93,921
- Muslims by nationality = 1,895
- Montenegrins = 1,389
- Roma = 1,279
[edit] Culture
At the outskirts of Kraljevo stands the Žiča monastery. This spiritual center of the Serbian medieval state was built around 1220, to become also the center of newly founded Serbian Arch-episcopacy.
The Studenica monastery was built in the late twelfth century, as the endowment of the Serb ruler Stefan Nemanja, who endowed it richly with the icons and books. After he had become a monk and left for Serbian Hilandar on the Mt. Athos, his older son Stefan, later named the "First-Crowned", took his place in taking care over the monastery. In the vicinity of Novi Pazar stands the Sopoćani monastery, built around 1260 as the endowment of King Stefan Uros I, the son of King Stephen the First-Crowned. The primary and major value of the Sopoćani monastery are its frescoes, by which it ranks among the best examples of the European medieval painting.
[edit] Economy
Economy of the Raški District is domineered by the "Magnohrom" non-metal and electronics industry, Kraljevo Railroad Car Factory, "Jasen" wood-processing industry, and the "Electro Serbia". Other well known factories and companies form Kraljevo are "Amiga Kraljevo" (street lights) and "Metalservis" pipes factory.
[edit] See also
Vojvodina: Central Banat • North Bačka • North Banat • South Bačka • South Banat • Srem • West Bačka
Central Serbia: Bor • City of Belgrade • Braničevo • Jablanica • Kolubara • Mačva • Moravica • Nišava • Pčinja • Pirot • Podunavlje • Pomoravlje • Rasina • Raška • Šumadija • Toplica • Zaječar • Zlatibor
UN administered Kosovo (1990-1999) : Kosovo • Kosovo-Pomoravlje • Kosovska Mitrovica • Peć • Prizren
Note: All official material made by Government of Serbia is public by law. Information was taken from official website.