Bosanska Krajina
Bosanska Krajina
Bosanska Krajina
tween the Una and Vrbas rivers was referred by the name
Turkish Croatia.[1][2][3] The name was rst used consistently by Austian military topographers who worked in
the Austro-Ottoman border commission after the Treaty
of Karlowitz of 1699.[1] In the mid 19th century the name
Turkish Croatia was replaced by cartographers in favor of
Bosanska Krajina.[1]
The name Turkish Croatia was given to the area by the
Ottoman Turks and accepted by Austrian, Italian, and
German cartographers. In 1860, the Serb population of
the area wanted that name abolished in favor of Bosanska Krajina (Bosnian Frontier). Bosanska Krajina rst
appears on maps in 1869.
Map of Vrbas Banovina in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, which
included entire Bosanska Krajina, 1929-1941.
2 History
By the 14th century, the Ottoman Empire had significantly expanded into the western Balkans in a series
of wars, and the Turkish westward incursions eventually made this region an Ottoman borderland. Jajce had
fallen to the Ottomans in 1463, marking the downfall of
the Kingdom of Bosnia. The Battle of Krbava Field in
1493 eectively ended the Kingdom of Croatia's persistent hold over the entire region, restricting them to fortied cities.
Naming
Between the 16th and 19th centuries the territory be- In the late 15th century, a local Croatian lord (knez) Juraj
1
2 HISTORY
Mikulii erected a fort in the village of Buim near Biha, fearing the advancing Ottoman army. Mikulii died
in 1495, but the Buim fort would not pass to Ottoman
control until 1576.[4]
2.2
Ottoman period
The Bosnian Frontier, like the rest of Bosnia and HerzeIn January 1528, the Ottomans under Gazi Husrev-beg govina, participated in the 1875 - 1878 Herzegovina Uptook command of Jajce, Banja Luka and Klju, followed rising.
by Krbava and Lika in the spring of that year.
Turkish incursions expanded further to the north, and
Charles of Styria erected a new fortied city of Karlovac
in 1579. In 1580 the Turks responded by declaring the
Pashaluk of Bosnia which unied all the Sanjaks, including territory in modern-day Croatia. As a result of the
wars and border changes, the Catholic Croat population
moved north, and was replaced with Orthodox Serbs and
Vlachs.[5]
The Buim fort, under Ottoman control since 1576, was
successfully held by the Ottomans in numerous battles
(1685, 1686, 1688, 1737) and it was also upgraded
(1626, 1834) until their eventual surrender in the 19th
century. The building remains to this day as a monument
to the Ottoman conquest.[4]
Biha held out longer than Buim, and even at one point During WWII the Ustasha Jasenovac concentration camp
served as the capital of Croatia. But, in 1592 the Turkish was established just across the river Sava from Bosanarmy of about 20,000 under Hasan-pasa Predojevi, an ska Krajina, and many of the regions inhabitants (mainly
3
Serbs, Gypsies and Jews but also some communist Bosni- a signicant ore industry developed around the Kozara
ans and Croats) were killed there. The number of Serbs Mountain.
killed by the Ustaa is between 500,000 and 900,000.
2.5
Yugoslavia
Demographics
The population of the region numbered almost one million before the war in Bosnia. The ethnic composition
of Bosanska Krajina was in 1991 (per census data) 44%
Serbs, 40% Bosniaks, 7% Croats, 5% Yugoslavs and 3%
others (Romas, Ukrainians, Hungarians and Valachians).
The composition of the current population of Bosanska Krajina has dramatically changed since, because of
expulsions, forced relocation and emigration during the
Bosnian war in 1992-95. Various parts have become less
ethnically diverse, mainly Bosniak in the Northwest and
Serb in Republika Srpska and a few other municipalities
that border Croatia.
Economics
10
REFERENCES
9 See also
History of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Biha
Bosanska Krupa
Culture
Gallery
Banski dvor in Banja Luka
Prijedor
Biha
Jajce
Sanski Most
Klju
Bosanska Krupa
Bosanska Dubica
Bosanska Gradika
Ostroac Castle
Velika Kladua Castle
Drvar
Kulen Vakuf
Historical gallery
Banja Luka at the turn of 20th century
Biha fortied place in 1590
Bosanska Krupa from Middle Age
An old drawing of Bosanska Dubica
Cazin
Prijedor
Velika Kladua
Banja Luka
Klju
SAO Bosanska Krajina
10 References
[1] Maga, Branka; ani, Ivo (2001). The War in Croatia
and Bosnia-Herzegovina 1991-1995. Taylor & Francis.
p. 11. ISBN 0-7146-8201-2.
[2] Bosnia and Herzegovina. 1911 Encyclopdia Britannica. LoveToKnow. Retrieved 2010-06-18. Donji Kraj,
the later Krajina, Kraina or Turkish Croatia, in the northwest
[3] Borna Fuerst-Bjeli, Ivan Zupanc (2007). Images of the
Croatian Borderlands: Selected Examples of Early Modern Cartography. Hrvatski geografski glasnik (69/1): 16.
Retrieved 2010-06-25. Schimeks Map of the Turkish Croatia, 1788. (Facsimile from Markovi 1998).
Turkisch Croatien""
[4] Commission to Preserve National Monuments, Sarajevo
(2007-11-28). Old Fort - Buzim - Bosnia and Herzegovina. Council of Europe. Retrieved 2010-06-24.
[5] Noel Malcolm (1994). The Vlachs in Bosnia. Bosnia:
A Short History. New York University Press. Archived
from the original on 2007-10-13. Retrieved 2010-06-18.
[6] Ramet, Sabrina P. (2006). The Three Yugoslavias: StateBuilding and Legitimation, 19182004. Indiana University Press. p. 430. ISBN 0-271-01629-9.
[7] ""Ethnic Cleansing Continues in Northern Bosnia. Human Rights Watch. November 1994.
11
11.1
11.2
Images
File:BH_Airlines_-_Banja_Luka_airport_-_Aug-10_v1.jpg Source:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cf/BH_
Airlines_-_Banja_Luka_airport_-_Aug-10_v1.jpg License: CC-BY-SA-3.0 Contributors: Vladimir Ivanic Original artist: Vladimir Ivanic
File:Flag_of_Bosnia_and_Herzegovina.svg Source:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/bf/Flag_of_Bosnia_and_
Herzegovina.svg License: Public domain Contributors: Own work Original artist: Kseferovic
File:Vrbaska_banovina1929_1941.png Source: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0b/Vrbaska_banovina1929_1941.
png License: Public domain Contributors: Own work Original artist: PANONIAN
11.3
Content license