Drava Banovina

Drava Banovina
Dravska banovina
Drava Banovina
banovina of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia

1929–1941
Map of Yugoslav banovinas in 1929 (The Drava Banovina is #1)
Capital Ljubljana
History
 - Established 1929
 - Disestablished 1941
Area
 - 1921 15,036 km2 (5,805 sq mi)
Population
 - 1921 1,054,919 
     Density 70.2 /km2  (181.7 /sq mi)
Today part of Slovenia

The Drava Banovina or Drava Banate (Slovene: Dravska banovina) was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941. This province consisted of most of present-day Slovenia and was named for the Drava River. The capital city of the Drava Banovina was Ljubljana.

Contents

Borders

History of Slovenia

This article is part of a series
Noricum/Pannonia
Slavic settlement of the Eastern Alps
Samo's Realm
Carantania
Carniola
Holy Roman Empire
March of Carniola
Windic March
Illyrian Provinces
Kingdom of Illyria
Duchy of Carniola
Drava Banovina
Province of Ljubljana
Socialist Republic of Slovenia
Republic of Slovenia

Slovenia Portal

According to the 1931 Constitution of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia,

The Drava Banovina is bounded by a line passing from the point where the northern boundary of the district of Čabar cuts the State frontier, then following the State frontier with Italy, Austria and Hungary to a point where the State frontier with Hungary reaches the river Mura (north-east of Čakovec). From the river Mura, the boundary of the Banovina follows the eastern and then the southern boundaries; of the districts of Lendava, Ljutomer, Ptuj, Šmarje, Brežice, Krško, Novo Mesto, Metlika, Črnomelj, Kočevje and Logatec, including all the districts mentioned.

[1]

History

In 1941 the World War II Axis powers occupied Drava Banovina, and it was divided between Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, Hungary and the Independent State of Croatia. Following World War II the region was reconstituted with additional pre-World War II Italian territory (Julian March) as Slovenia, within a federal Communist Yugoslavia.

References

See also