Ćorluka
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Ćorluka
Ćorluka () is a Croatian and Serbian family name. In the 17th century, a Ćorluka family fled Vid when the Ottomans destroyed it, and this family dispersed to Klobuk, Grude and Mamići. On June 26/27, 1941, Ustaše drove away 130 Croats of the families of Šakota, Šotra, Ćorluka and Krulj from the villages of Trijebanj and Kozice. Ethnic Serbs of the family were killed in the Prebilovci massacre. It may refer to: * Josip Ćorluka (born 1995), Bosnian footballer * Slavko Ćorluka, army commander *Vedran Ćorluka Vedran Ćorluka (; born 5 February 1986) is a Croatian football coach and former player who played as a centre-back. He is an assistant to Zlatko Dalić in the Croatia national team. Ćorluka graduated from the Dinamo Zagreb Youth Academy, ... (born 1986), Croatian footballer * Verica Ćorluka, writer * Ćorluke, a village References {{DEFAULTSORT:Corluka Surnames of Croatian origin Surnames of Serbian origin ...
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Vedran Ćorluka
Vedran Ćorluka (; born 5 February 1986) is a Croatian football coach and former player who played as a centre-back. He is an assistant to Zlatko Dalić in the Croatia national team. Ćorluka graduated from the Dinamo Zagreb Youth Academy, before making his professional debut for the senior team in 2003. In 2007, he made a £8 million move to Premier League club Manchester City, and after a season moved on to Tottenham Hotspur. He spent four seasons there before joining Lokomotiv Moscow, where he eventually retired in 2021. As a Croatia international, Ćorluka has earned 103 caps for the country, making him one of the nation's most capped players. He represented Croatia at various youth levels before making his senior debut in August 2006, in a friendly match against Italy. He was part of the country's squad at the UEFA European Championships in 2008, 2012, 2016 and at the FIFA World Cups in 2014 and 2018. In August 2018, Ćorluka confirmed his retirement from interna ...
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Josip Ćorluka
Josip Ćorluka (born 3 March 1995) is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian professional footballer who plays as a right-back for Bosnian Premier League club Zrinjski Mostar. International career In October 2020, Ćorluka was called up to represent the Bosnia and Herzegovina national team, for a friendly game against Iran and for the 2020–21 UEFA Nations League games against Netherlands and Italy. He debuted in a home loss against Iran on 12 November 2020. Career statistics International Honours Široki Brijeg *Bosnian Cup: 2016–17 Zrinjski Mostar *Bosnian Premier League: 2021–22, 2022–23 *Bosnian Cup: 2022–23 The dash is a punctuation mark consisting of a long horizontal line. It is similar in appearance to the hyphen but is longer and sometimes higher from the baseline. The most common versions are the endash , generally longer than the hyphen b ..., 2023–24 Notes References External links * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Corluka, Josip 1995 births Living people Spo ...
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Šakota
Šakota ( sr-cyr, Шакота) is a Serbian and Croatian surname, derived from a nickname itself from the word ''šaka'', meaning "hand". On June 2, 1941, Franjo Sudar's Ustaše attacked the Udrežnje village and killed 27 people of the Vujadinović, Vukosav, Draganić (surname), Draganić, Gambelić, Kljakić, Šipovac and Šakota families. On June 3/4, 1941, Ustaše massacred 130 to 180 ethnic Serbs in Korita, Bileća; the local Šakota were one of the victim families. On June 26/27, 1941, Ustaše drove away 130 Serbs of the families of Šakota, Šotra, Ćorluka and Krulj from the villages of Trijebanj and Kozice, Stolac, Kozice. 110 of these were killed, at Domanoviće, Bivolja Brda, Pileti and near Kukauš, and those who escaped death were those listed in a proclamation of general Lakse. 70 more locals were killed by the Ustaše on June 29/30. At least 64 individuals with the surname died at the Jasenovac concentration camp. Several Šakota from Herzegovina fought at the Yugosl ...
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Šotra
Šotra ( sr-Cyrl, Шотра) is a Serbian surname. On June 26/27, 1941, Ustaše drove away 130 Serbs of the families of Šakota, Šotra, Ćorluka and Krulj from the villages of Trijebanj and Kozice. It may refer to: * Zdravko Šotra (born 1933), Serbian film and television director and screenwriter *Tamara Savić-Šotra Tamara Savić-Šotra ( sr-Cyrl, Тамара Савић-Шотра; born 24 July 1971) is a Serbian fencing, fencer. She competed as an Independent Olympic Participants at the 1992 Summer Olympics, Independent Olympic Participant at the Fencing a ... (born 1971), Serbian fencer References {{DEFAULTSORT:Sotra Surnames of Serbian origin ...
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Krulj
Krulj ( sr-cyr, Круљ) is a Serbian surname. On June 26/27, 1941, Ustaše drove away 130 Serbs of the families of Šakota, Šotra, Ćorluka and Krulj from the villages of Trijebanj and Kozice. At least 45 individuals with the surname died at the Jasenovac concentration camp Jasenovac () was a concentration camp, concentration and extermination camps, extermination camp established in the Jasenovac, Sisak-Moslavina County, village of the same name by the authorities of the Independent State of Croatia (NDH) in I .... It may refer to: * Igor Krulj, Swedish footballer * Uroš Krulj, Ban of Zeta (1931–1932) * Bojan Krulj, Serbian footballer * Nikola Krulj, Serbian Orthodox Metropolitan of Dabar-Bosna References {{surname Surnames of Serbian origin ...
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Kozice, Stolac
Kozice ( sr-Cyrl, Козице) is a village in the Municipalities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, municipality of Stolac in Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 1991 census the village had a population of 126 people. History On June 26/27, 1941, Ustaše drove away 130 Serbs of the families of Šakota, Šotra, Ćorluka and Krulj from the villages of Trijebanj and Kozice. 110 of these were killed, at Domanoviće, Bivolja Brda, Pileti and near Kukauš, and those who escaped death were those listed in a proclamation of general Lakse. 70 more locals were killed by the Ustaše on June 29/30. Demographics 1991 According to the 1991 census the village had a population of 126 people. *120 Serbs (95.24%) *5 Croats (3.97%) *1 others (0.79%) According to the 2013 census, its population was 145. People *Zdravko Šotra (born 1933), Serbian and former Yugoslav film and television director References External linksKozice – selo na dubravskoj visoravni
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Vid, Croatia
Vid is a village in Dubrovnik-Neretva County, Croatia, administered as a part of the city of Metković, population 796 (census 2011). It is famous for the ruins of the Roman city of Narona Narona ( grc, Ναρῶνα) was an Ancient Greek trading post on the Illyrian coast and later Roman city and bishopric, located in the Neretva valley in present-day Croatia, which remains a Latin Catholic titular see. History It was founded a ....Infosite
, klek.info; accessed 29 November 2015. It has a museum of Roman history in the region, called ''Archeological Museum of Narona''.


References


External links


The official portal of Vid in Croatia


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Verica Ćorluka
Verica (early 1st century AD) was a British client king of the Roman Empire in the years preceding the Claudian invasion of 43 AD. From his coinage, he appears to have been king of the, probably Belgic, Atrebates tribe and a son of Commius. The distribution of his coins also shows that Verica's kingdom was centred on modern Sussex and east Hampshire, and its capital would have been in or close to what became the Roman Noviomagus Reginorum (modern Chichester). He succeeded his elder brother Eppillus as king in about 15 AD, and may also have reigned over the northern Atrebatic kingdom at Calleva Atrebatum, today called Silchester. He was recognised as '' rex'' by Rome and appears to have had friendly trade and diplomatic links with the empire. His territory was pressed from the east by the Catuvellauni, led by Epaticcus, brother of Cunobelinus Cunobeline (or Cunobelin, from Latin , derived from Common Brittonic ''*Cunobelinos'' "Strong as a Dog", "Strong Dog") was a king i ...
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Slavko Ćorluka
Slavko () is a Slavic masculine given name. Notable holders of the name include: Arts * Slavko Avsenik, Slovenian musician * Slavko Avsenik, Jr., Slovenian musician * Slavko Brankov, Croatian actor * Slavko Brill, Croatian Jewish sculptor * Slavko Kalezić, Montenegran singer * Slavko Labović, Serbian-Danish actor * Slavko Osterc, Slovenian composer * Slavko Pengov, Slovene painter * Slavko Sobin, Croatian actor * Slavko Stolnik, Croatian painter * Slavko Štimac, Serbian actor * Slavko Vorkapić, Serbian-American film director Politics and Military * Slavko Cuvaj, Croatian politician * Slavko Dokmanović, Croatian Serb politician * Slavko Kvaternik, Croatian fascist leader * Slavko Linić, Croatian politician * Slavko Perović, Montenegrin politician * Slavko Šlander, Slovenian war hero * Slavko Štancer, Croatian general * Slavko Vukšić, Croatian politician Sports * Slavko Beda, Croatian football player * Slavko Cicak, Montenegrin-Swedish chess player * Slavko Goluža ...
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Trijebanj
Trijebanj is a village in the municipality of Stolac, Bosnia and Herzegovina Bosnia and Herzegovina ( sh, / , ), abbreviated BiH () or B&H, sometimes called Bosnia–Herzegovina and often known informally as Bosnia, is a country at the crossroads of south and southeast Europe, located in the Balkans. Bosnia and H .... Demographics According to the 2013 census, its population was 278. References {{Stolac municipality Populated places in Stolac Villages in the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina ...
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Prebilovci Massacre
The Prebilovci massacre () was an atrocity and war crime perpetrated by the Croatian Ustaše in the Independent State of Croatia during the World War II genocide of Serbs. On 6 August 1941, the Ustaše killed around 600 women and children from the village of Prebilovci, Herzegovina, by throwing them into the Golubinka pit, near Šurmanci. During the summer of 1941, the Ustaša continued with mass murders of Serbs – of 1,000 inhabitants of Prebilovci, 820 of them were killed, while in the neighbouring places of the lower basin of the Neretva river, including Šurmanci, around 4000 Serbs were killed. The Golubinka pit was covered with concrete in 1961. Persecution During the Second World War the Serb inhabitants of Prebilovci, a small village near Čapljina, fell victim to genocide. At the beginning of 1941, the village had a population of 1,000. Earlier, it had given volunteers to join the Bosnian-Herzegovinian uprising against the Turks in 1875-78, and contributed 20 voluntee ...
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