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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Former Yugoslavian Political Geography > Vojvodina
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Vojvodina, Former Yugoslavian Political Geography

Related Category: Former Yugoslavian Political Geography

Vojvodina or Voivodina[both: voi´´vOdE´nA] Pronunciation Key, province (1991 pop. 2,013,889), 8,301 sq mi (21,500 sq km), N Serbia, Serbia and Montenegro. Novi Sad is the chief city. A part of the Pannonian Plain, it is watered by the Danube, the Tisza, and the Sava rivers and is one of the most densely populated parts of Serbia. About 60% of the land is under cultivation. It is the breadbasket of Serbia; cereals, fruit (notably plums, used for brandy), grapes, and vegetables are extensively cultivated. Cattle raising is also important, and food processing is the most significant industry. Besides Novi Sad, the chief cities are Subotica, Zrenjanin, Sombor, and Pancevo. The region was part of Hungary and Croatia before its conquest by the Turks in the 16th cent., and it was restored to the Hungarian crown by the Treaty of Passarowitz (1699). Parts of the region were included in the military frontier of S Hungary in the 18th cent., and the whole region was settled with Serbian and Croatian fugitives from the Ottoman Empire, as well as by German colonists. The present population is still mixed and includes Serbs, Croats, Magyars, Romanians, and Slovaks. The region was ceded (1920) to Yugoslavia by the Treaty of Trianon, and it received autonomy in 1946. As constituted in 1946, the Vojvodina consists of three sections : the Srem, in the southwest, which was part of Croatia-Slavonia until 1918; the Backa, in the northwest, which was an integral part of Hungary; and the western part of the Banat of Temesvar. Under the Yugoslavian constitution of 1974, Vojvodina and Serbia's other province Kosovo were designated autonomous provinces within Serbia. The autonomy, however, was rescinded in the 1990 Serbian constitution.



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

Novi Sad
Pancevo
Serbia
Serbia and Montenegro
Subotica
Yugoslavia
Zrenjanin

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