Uroševac
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Location in Kosovo | |
---|---|
General Information | |
Mayor | Faik Grainca |
Land area | 720 |
Altitude | ? |
Population (2005) | 163,842 [1] |
Population density (2005) | 201.3 |
Coordinates | |
Postal code: | 70000 |
Area code | +381 290 |
Time zone | UTC+1 |
Website | Municipality of Ferizaj |
Uroševac (Serbian Урошевац or Uroševac ; Albanian Ferizaj ; Turkish: Ferizoviç ) is a town in southern Kosovo, a Serbian province under UN administration. Is is located some 40 km south of the regional capital Priština, and it is the administrative centre of the Uroševac District.
Contents |
[edit] History
Uroševac was little more than a village until 1873, when the Belgrade-Thessaloniki railway was opened, passing through the town. It derives its Serbian name from the medieval Saint Uroš, who is commemorated by a cathedral in the town.[citation needed] Its Albanian name derives from a pre-1873 hotel owned by a local Kosovo Albanian named Feriz Shashivari; thus Serbs called the community Ferizovići ("Feriz's village") while Albanians called it Ferizaj.[citation needed] The Turkish name of the town still contains the family name Ferizoviç in Serbian version.
In 2003 the town had a total population of 139,800. In 1998, prior to the 1999 Kosovo War, the population was recorded as 57,421, of whom 82.1% were Albanian, 9.4% Serb, and the remainder from various other national communities.
The town suffered some damage during the conflict, with some of its Albanian-populated neighborhoods being shelled and burned by the Yugoslav Army. Following the war, the town has seen serious intercommunal unrest which resulted in almost all of the non-Albanian inhabitants being expelled or fleeing.
Camp Bondsteel, the main base of the United States Army detachment to the KFOR peacekeeping force in Kosovo, is located nearby.
[edit] Demographics
Ethnic Composition, Including IDPs | |||||||||||||
Year/Population | Albanian | % | Serb | % | Ashkali/Roma | % | Gorani/Bosniaks | % | Total | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1991 census * | 81,737 | 85.9 | 8,191 | 8.6 | 2,081 | 2.2 | 95,156 | ||||||
October 1999 | 92,267 | 95.1 | 26 | 0.0 | 4,700 | 4.8 | 96,967 | ||||||
Current est. | 160,000 | 98.4 | 147 | 0.1 | 3,594 | 1.3 | 248 | 0.2 | 163,842 | ||||
It is noted that the 1991 census was highly politicised and is thus regarded as unreliable. Ref: OSCE [2] |
[edit] See also
- Uroševac District.
- Kosovo Serb enclaves.
- uroŝevac airport.
[edit] References
[edit] External links
Dečani/Deçan · Dragaš/Dragash · Đakovica/Gjakova · Glogovac/Gllogovc · Gnjilane/Gjilan · Istok/Istog · Kačanik/Kaçanik · Klina/Klinë · Kosovo Polje/Fushë Kosovë · Kosovska Kamenica/Kamenicë · Kosovska Mitrovica/Mitrovicë · Leposavić/Leposaviq · Lipljan/Lipjan · Mališevo/Malishevë · Novo Brdo/Novobërda · Obilić/Obiliq · Orahovac/Rahovec · Peć/Pejë · Podujevo/Podujevë · Priština/Prishtinë · Prizren · Srbica/Skenderaj · Štrpce/Shtërpcë · Štimlje/Shtime · Suva Reka/Suharekë · Uroševac/Ferizaj · Vitina/Viti · Vučitrn/Vushtrri · Zubin Potok · Zvečan/Zveqan