Zlatibor District

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Zlatibor District
Златиборски округ
Zlatiborski okrug
District of Serbia
Location of Zlatibor District in Serbia
Country  Serbia
Administrative centre Užice
Government
  Commissioner n/a
Area
  Total 6,140 km2 (2,370 sq mi)
Population (2011 census)
  Total 286,549
  Density 46.7/km2 (121/sq mi)
Municipalities 9 and 1 city
Settlements 438
- Cities and towns 11
- Villages 427

The Zlatibor District (Serbian: Златиборски округ / Zlatiborski okrug) is a district in the western, mountainous part of Serbia. The district was named after the mountain region of Zlatibor. According to the 2011 Census Data,[1] the Zlatibor District has a population of 286,549 people. The administrative centre of the Zlatibor district is Užice.

Municipalities

The district encompasses the municipalities of:

Demographics

According to the last official census done in 2011, the Zlatibor District has 286,549 inhabitants. 51.2% of the population lives in the urban areas. Ethnic composition of the district:

Ethnic group Population
Serbs235,650
Bosniaks43,220
Roma785
Montenegrins561
Yugoslavs258
Croats175
Macedonians118
Others4,782
Total286,549

Tourism

The Zlatibor District is home to several popular tourist destinations. Visitors can seek refuge on the slopes of Zlatibor Mountain, explore the natural beauty of Tara National Park, float down the Drina River or cruise the vast expanse of Lake Perućac, ride the unique rail experience known as Šargan Eight, visit the traditional ethnic village of Mokra Gora, tour the massive World War II monument of Kadinjača Memorial Complex, immerse themselves in the history of Užice and its importance as an independent stronghold throughout its many centuries of life, visit Kremna, home of the world famous Prophecy from Kremna, and stop at various other points of interest in between these destinations.

Religious Monuments

In the vicinity of Bajina Bašta stands the Rača monastery, built in the 13th century. Over its long history, this monastery was destroyed several times and then reconstructed. Rača Monastery's final destruction (after the Turks and the Austro-Hungarian Army), came at the hands of the Bulgarian army in 1943. It was renovated and restored after the end of World War II. The church was an important center of transcription and illumination of Serbia's manuscripts, with its famed monks known as the Račani, during the 17th century.

The Mileševa Monastery, built in 1234 near Prijepolje, was the endowment of King Stefan Vladislav I of Serbia, the son of Stefan the First-Crowned. This monastery was the second most important in Serbia, after it received the bones of Serbia's most-revered partriarch, Saint Sava, in 1236. The monastery has been destroyed and rebuilt several times, though luckily, 100 compositions, frescoes of individual figures, and fragments of important religious icons have been preserved. The most famous icon of Mileševa is The White Angel fresco, a famous, widely used religious icon throughout Serbia.

Industry

The most prominent active economic organizations in the municipality of Užice are the copper and aluminum mill in Sevojno, the "Prvi partizan" metal combine, the "Froteks" textile industry, and "Kadinjača" garment industry.

In Priboj the FAP factory produces trucks and buses, which are then exported throughout the world, and the combined companies FAP-FAMOS produces passenger cars.

References

Note: All official material made by the Government of Serbia is public by law. Information was taken from the www.srbija.gov.rs.

External links

Coordinates: 43°51′N 19°51′E / 43.850°N 19.850°E / 43.850; 19.850

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