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Bosnia (region)

Bosnia (region)

FieldValue
nameBosnia
native_nameBosna
Босна
settlement_typeRegion
image_mapBosna regija update.jpg
map_captionApproximate borders between two modern-day regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina - Bosnia (marked dark brown) and Herzegovina (marked light brown)
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameBosnia and Herzegovina
seat_typeLargest cities
seatSarajevo, Banja Luka
unit_prefMetric
area_total_km239,021
population_est3 million
pop_est_as_of2013
population_density_km2auto
population_demonymBosnian
population_blank1_titleTotal % of Bosnia and Herzegovina
timezone1CET
utc_offset1+1
timezone1_DSTCEST
utc_offset1_DST+2

Босна

Bosnia (, ) is the northern region of Bosnia and Herzegovina, encompassing roughly 81% of the country; the other region, the southern part, is Herzegovina.

The two regions have formed a geopolitical entity since medieval times, and the name "Bosnia" commonly occurs in historical and geopolitical senses as generally referring to both regions (Bosnia and Herzegovina). The official use of the combined name started only in the late period of Ottoman rule.

Geography

Bosnia lies mainly in the Dinaric Alps, ranging to the southern borders of the Pannonian plain, with the rivers Sava and Drina marking its northern and eastern borders.

The area of Bosnia comprises approximately 39,021 km2,2-- and makes up about 80% of the territory of the present-day state of Bosnia and Herzegovina. There are no true borders between the region of Bosnia and the region of Herzegovina. Unofficially, Herzegovina is south of the mountain Ivan planina. According to another unofficial definition, Herzegovina encompasses the watersheds of the Neretva and Trebišnjica rivers.

History

Main article: Bosnia (early medieval)

The Central part of Bosnia was inhabited by Neolithic farmers that belonged to the Kakanj culture, and later replaced by another neolithic culture called the Butmir culture. The first Indo-Europeans are thought to be members of eneolithic Vučedol culture.

In the Bronze Age the area is thought to have been inhabited by Iron Age Central Bosnian cultural group and Glasinac culture. Later on the Illyrian tribe of the Daesitiates would become dominant in these area.

The historical records of the region are scarce until its first recorded standalone (domestic) ruler and viceroy of Bosnian state, Ban Borić, was appointed in 1154.

De Administrando Imperio describes a small Serbian župa of Bosona () that was located around the river Bosna in the modern-day fields of Sarajevo and of Visoko.

Expansion of the Bosnian Kingdom

At the end of the 14th century, under Tvrtko I of Bosnia, the Bosnian kingdom included most of the territory of today's Bosnia and of what would later become known as Herzegovina.

The kingdom lost its independence to the Ottoman Empire in 1463. The region of Bosnia's westernmost city at the time of the conquest was Jajce.

The Ottoman Empire initially expanded into Bosnia and Herzegovina through a territory called the Bosansko Krajište. It was transformed into the Sanjak of Bosnia and the Sanjak of Herzegovina after 1462/1463. The first Ottoman administration called Eyalet of Bosnia was finally formed in 1527, after long armed resistance to the north and to the west by Counts Franjo and Ivaniš Berislavić of the noble house of Berislavići Grabarski.

Eventually, following the Great Turkish War, in the 18th century the Eyalet came to encompass the area largely matching that of today's Bosnia and Herzegovina.

In 1833, the Eyalet of Herzegovina was temporarily split off under Ali-paša Rizvanbegović. The area acquired the name of "Bosnia and Herzegovina" in 1853 as a result of a twist in political events following his death. After the 1864 administrative reform, the province was named Vilayet of Bosnia. Austria-Hungary occupied the whole country in 1878. It remained formally part of the Ottoman Empire under the title of Condominium of Bosnia and Herzegovina until 1908, when Austria-Hungary provoked the Bosnian crisis by formally annexing the province.

Regional identity

Within Bosnia and Herzegovina, the region of Bosnia has a traditional regional identity, distinctive from the regional identity of the neighboring Herzegovina. Bosnian regional identity was attested as early as the 10th century, when Constantin VII Porphyrogenetos referred to Bosnia as a particular region. Development of Bosnia's regional identity continued throughout the Middle Ages, and it was also acknowledged in the 15th century by the Ottoman conquerors, who created the Sanjak of Bosnia in 1463, giving it a regional name, which was not always the case. By the end of the Ottoman rule (1878), regional Bosnianhood became a distinctive mark of local identity, that transcended traditional ethnic and religious distinctions within the general population of Bosnia, and the same notion of regional Bosniandom was preserved throughout the periods of Austro-Hungarian (1878–1918) and Yugoslav (1918–1992) rule.

Subregions

  • Podrinje, eastern
  • Bosanska Krajina, northwestern
  • Central Bosnia, central
  • Posavina, northernmost
  • Semberija, northeastern
  • Tropolje, western

References

Sources

References

  1. "Land area (sq. km) - Bosnia and Herzegovina {{!}} Data".
  2. Supporters of Gimbutas' "[[Kurgan hypothesis. kurgan model]]" of Indo-European expansion identify both the preceding [[Baden culture]] and Vučedol as Indo-European speakers, though no trace of a written language for either can be expected; see Mallory and Adams, eds., ''Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture'', 1997; "A succession of Kurgan 'waves' of expansion was set out, the fourth influencing the Vucedol culture of Yugoslavia. This was significant for the further 'Kurganization' of Europe by the Bell Beaker people." ([[Colin Renfrew]], ''Archaeology and Language: the puzzle of Indo-European origins'', 1990:39)
  3. Ivan Mužić. (December 2010). "Bijeli Hrvati u banskoj Hrvatskoj i županijska Hrvatska". Museum of Croatian Archaeological Monuments.
  4. Vladimir Ćorović, ''Teritorijalni razvoj bosanske države u srednjem vijeku'', Glas SKA 167, Belgrade, 1935, pp. 10–13
  5. Pinson, Mark. (1996). "The Muslims of Bosnia-Herzegovina, the Historic Development from Middle Ages to the Dissolution of Yugoslavia". President and Fellows of Harvard College.
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