Donji Lapac

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Donji Lapac
Municipality
Donji Lapac Municipality
Općina Donji Lapac
Donji Lapac
Location of Donji Lapac in Croatia
Coordinates: 44°33′N 15°58′E / 44.550°N 15.967°E / 44.550; 15.967Coordinates: 44°33′N 15°58′E / 44.550°N 15.967°E / 44.550; 15.967
Country  Croatia
County Lika-Senj
Government
  Mayor Dušan Šijan (SDP)
Area
  Total 353 km2 (136 sq mi)
Population (2011)[1]
  Total 2,113
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Website donjilapac.hr
the Donji Lapac municipality within the Lika-Senj County

Donji Lapac is a village and a municipality in Lika, Croatia.

Geography

Donji Lapac is located a region of eastern Lika called Ličko Pounje, by the river Una that flows near the town in the valley between mountain Plješevica and Una on the altitude of 582 m. It is connected with the road that connects Bihać with Gračac.

History

The area of Donji Lapac has been inhabited since the Iron age, which many material remains prove. During medieval times the area of Lapac was part of old-Croatian Lapac župa and in 1449 it became possession of Frankopans. Old city Lapac was located on a nearby Obljaj hill (666 m) south from Donji Lapac. When in 1528 Ottomans conquered Lika, Lapac was absorbed.

Donji Lapac was founded in 1791, in the year the Austro-Ottoman war ended and Eastern Lika was annexed by Habsburg empire as a frontier post. In 1941 Yugoslav partisans liberated the district center.

During the Croatian War of Independence, Donji Lapac was incorporated along with other towns into the unrecognized breakaway Republic of Serbian Krajina. In August 1995, it was returned to Croatian control following victories by the Croatian army. According to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, the Croatian conquest of the municipality was accompanied by widespread looting and ethnic cleansing by the Croatian forces, including the murder of four elderly civilians in the municipality of Donji Lapac, crimes which formed part of the indictment and conviction of the Croatian general Ante Gotovina and Mladen Markač.[2]

Demographics

According to the 2011 census, the town has population of 946 and a municipality of 2,113 people.[1] Before the war the area was almost entirely Serb-populated with only 0.5% Croats (according to the 1991 census).[citation needed] After the war the area of Donji Lapac municipality grew smaller because villages of Donji Srb and Gornji Srb were given to Municipality of Gračac in Zadar County. However, according to the 2011 census Serbs continue to constitute a majority of 80.6%, with 18.8% of Croat population.[3]

Year of census total Serbs Croats
1910 17,433 15,995 (91.75%) 1,435 (8.23%)
1961 6,456 6,148 (95.23%) 202 (3.13%)
1971 9,609 9,337 (97.17%) 94 (0.97%)
1981 8,337 7,691 (91.05%) 47 (0.56%)
1991 8,054 7,854 (97.51%) 44 (0.54%)
2001 1,880 1,383 (73.56%) 471 (25.05%)
2011 2,113 1,704 (80.64%) 397 (18.79%)

Some Croats or Serbs declared their ethnicity as Yugoslav.

Economy

Today Donji Lapac is one of the poorest municipalities in Croatia and is included in area of special state care. Before the war, Donji Lapac had a developed wood and textile industry. Many people worked in the transportation company Likatrans which employed more than 200 people. Today most of the inhabitants are unemployed and jobs are mostly restricted to public services or the renewed wood industry. Additionally many people work in basic agriculture, growing mostly potatoes and plums from which they make the alcohol Slivovitz.

Towns and Villages in Municipality

Notable natives and residents

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Population by Age and Sex, by Settlements, 2011 Census: Donji Lapac". Zagreb: Croatian Bureau of Statistics. December 2012. 
  2. Judgment of the International Tribunal for the Prosecution of Persons Responsible for Serious Violations of International Humanitarian Law Committed in the Territory of the Former Yugoslavia since 1991, 15 April 2011, retrieved 15 April 2011
  3. "Population by Ethnicity, by Towns/Municipalities, 2011 Census: County of Lika-Senj". Zagreb: Croatian Bureau of Statistics. December 2012. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.