Administrative divisions of Croatia
The subdivisions of Croatia on the first level are the 20 counties (županija, pl. županije) and one city-county (grad, "city"). On the second level these are municipalities (općina, pl. općine) and cities (grad, pl. gradovi). Both of these type of subdivisions encompass one or multiple settlements (naselje, pl. naselja).
Modern (1992–present)
Counties of Croatia: Bjelovar-Bilogora Brod-Posavina Dubrovnik-Neretva Istria Karlovac Koprivnica-Križevci Krapina-Zagorje Lika-Senj Međimurje Osijek-Baranja Požega-Slavonia Primorje-Gorski Kotar Šibenik-Knin Sisak-Moslavina Split-Dalmatia Varaždin Virovitica-Podravina Vukovar-Syrmia Zadar City of Zagreb Zagreb County
1975–1990
Unions of municipalities (1986-1990)
1949–1951
- Oblasts
- Bjelovar
- Karlovac
- Osijek
- Rijeka
- Split
- Zagreb
1941–1945
Independent State of Croatia, counties:
1941-1943 (1st)
1943-1944 (2nd)
- Counties (22)
- Baranja
- Bilogora
- Bribir and Sidraga
- Cetina
- Dubrava
- Gora
- Hum
- Krbava - Psat
- Lašva and Glaž
- Lika and Gacka
- Livac and Zapolje
- Modruš
- Pliva and Rama
- Pokupje
- Posavje
- Prigorje
- Sana and Luka
- Usora and Soli
- Vinodol and Podgorje
- Vrhbosna
- Vuka
- Zagorje
- Zagreb
- Districts
- Municipalities
Sava and Littoral Banovina (red and blue)
1929–1941
1922–1929
Dubrovnik-grey, Karlovac-green, Osijek-purple, Split and Vukovar-brown, Zagreb-red
- Oblasts
- Oblast of Dubrovnik
- Oblast of Karlovac
- Oblast of Osijek
- Oblast of Split
- Oblast of Vukovar (partially)
- Oblast of Zagreb
Counties in the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia
Medieval Croatian Kingdom
Approximate positions of the first counties of 10th century Croatia, overlaid on a map of modern Croatia and
Bosnia-Herzegovina
- Counties[1]
- Livno
- Cetina
- Imotski
- Pliva
- Pesenta
- Klis
- Bribir
- Nin
- Knin
- Sidraga
- Luka
See also
References