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Plemenitaš
Plemenitaš, sometimes called Plemenitaši, is a village in Croatia, under the Vrbovsko township, in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County. It is the seat of a parish encompassing Blaževci, Croatia, Blaževci, Štefanci, Zapeć and Zaumol. History On 28 June 1774, lord Mihal Mikulić of Severin on behalf of count Krsto II Oršić drew up in Severin a list of duties of freedmen and serfs in Razdrto, Croatia, Razdrto, Štefanci, Blaževci, Croatia, Blaževci, Zapeć, Plemenitaš and Košac. It was signed by judge Mihalj Medved and Mate Marković of Plemenitaš. The villagers of Plemenitaš were serfs. The original survives in the Croatian State Archives, HDA in Zagreb, survives in the HDA, and was published by . The parish of Plemenitaš was founded in 1805, before which it was under Lukovdol, although its parish registers were in Stari Trg ob Kolpi until the construction of the present church in Plemenitaš in 1790. The church itself, ''Sv. Antuna opata'', dedicated to saint Anthony the Gr ...
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Blaževci, Croatia
Blaževci is a village in Croatia, under the Vrbovsko township, in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County. Geographically, it is in the Kupa canyon, in a series of arable land, arable fields running from Dol, Črnomelj, Dol to Dolenji Radenci biscted by the river Kupa. Ecclesiastically, it belongs to the Plemenitaš parish. It is regionally important for its border crossing with Slovenia, and for one of the last functional sawmills on the river. Tourism mostly focuses on rafting and kayaking, although a smaller percentage of visitors come for the nearby scenic viewpoints of Orlova stijena and Sodevska stena, or to climb one of the nearby mountains. Geography Blaževci was built on the alluvial plain, alluvial field ''Blaževačko polje'', with a long bank (geography), riverbank. It is the largest field by area on the right bank of the Kupa between ''Čedanj, Čedanjsko polje'' upstream and ''Damalj, Damaljsko polje'' downstream. ''Blaževačko polje'' is part of a connected series of fi ...
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Zapeć
Zapeć is a village in Croatia, under the Vrbovsko township, in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County. Ecclesiastically, it is under the Plemenitaš parish. Etymology The village is named after a cave, "Peć", which has in turn taken on the name of the village as " Zapeć". Architecture There is a mill () just south of Zapeć, opposite Dečina. History On 28 June 1774, lord Mihal Mikulić of Severin on behalf of count Krsto II Oršić drew up in Severin a list of duties of freedmen and serfs in Razdrto, Štefanci, Blaževci, Zapeć, Plemenitaš and Košac. It was signed by Marko Barić of Zapeć. The villagers of Zapeć were serfs. The original survives in the HDA in Zagreb, survives in the HDA, and was published by . Ecclesiastically, Zapeć has belonged to the parish of Plemenitaš since its foundation in 1805, before which it was under Lukovdol, although its parish registers were in Stari Trg ob Kolpi until the construction of the present church in Plemenitaš in 1790. Zapeć ha ...
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Štefanci
Štefanci is a village in Croatia, under the Vrbovsko township, in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County. As of its foundation on 3 March 2008, it belongs to the of Plemenitaš. Ecclesiastically, it is under the Plemenitaš parish. History On 28 June 1774, lord Mihal Mikulić of Severin on behalf of count Krsto II Oršić drew up in Severin a list of duties of freedmen and serfs in Razdrto, Štefanci, Blaževci, Zapeć, Plemenitaš and Košac. It was signed by Petar Štefanec of Štefanci. The villagers of Štefanci were freemen, although they could not prove it in writing. The original survives in the HDA in Zagreb, survives in the HDA, and was published by . Intermarriages across the Kupa were not uncommon historically, with such marriages taking place on the territory of Plemenitaš in 1884 (with Daljnje Njive), 1885 (Toplica in Carniola), 1886 ( Stari Trg), 1919 (Predgrad), 1926 (Sodevci), and possibly some cases after 1945. In all such cases but 1886, the man was from Štefanci ...
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Zaumol
Zaumol is a village in Croatia, under the Vrbovsko township, in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County. History The Lukovdol-Plemenitaš road, which passes through Zaumol, was asphalted in 1981. In September 2012, an Italian national became lost while mushroom hunting between Gorenci and Zaumol and had to be rescued by the HGSS. Zaumol was hit by the 2014 Dinaric ice storm. Demographics In 1828/1830, there were 50 residents in 6 families, all Catholic. Tirage: 200. In 1870, Zaumol, in Plemenitaš's ''porezna općina'', had 13 houses and 67 people. In 1890, Zaumol had 17 houses and 80 people. The villagers of Zaumol were under Plemenitaš parish. They attended the school in and were taxed by Plemenitaš but were administered by Severin. Further reading * * Page 33. Politics As of its foundation on 3 March 2008, it belongs to the of Plemenitaš. Ecclesiastically, it is under the Plemenitaš parish. Sports Beginning in 2013, the 7 stage long Cycling Trail of Gorski Kotar () pas ...
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Lukovdol
Lukovdol is a small village located in the Gorski Kotar region of Croatia, about one mile south of the Slovenian border. Lukovdol is part of Vrbovsko municipality. Local industries include cattle raising, lumber processing, and textile products. Lukovdol is the birthplace of Ivan Goran Kovačić, one of Croatia's most notable poets of the 20th century, and the site of a memorial museum dedicated to him, opened in 1975. History Lukovdol was first mentioned on 22 February 1481 in a document freeing the citizens of Grič from tariffs in Lukovdol and elsewhere. According to a manuscript by priest Belić, the parish of Lukovdol was founded in 1604. In 1769, the Lukovdol parish had a population of 2267. The volunteer fire department DVD Lukovdol was founded on 28 October 1894, and is today part of the ''VZ grada Vrbovsko''. Its current commander is Dorijan Mihelić. Many Slovene residents of Kočevsko, and even Serbs of Marindol, used to go to Lukovdol for confession. WWII At 13 ...
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Vrbovsko
Vrbovsko ( sr-Cyrl, Врбовско) is a town in western Croatia, situated at the far east of the mountainous region of Gorski Kotar in the Primorje-Gorski Kotar County; on its 280 square kilometers area, Vrbovsko features 60 settlements and a total of 3876 inhabitants. The town of Vrbovsko itself has a population of 1257. The Kamačnik canyon is its main source of tourism. Geography In the north, river Kupa separates Vrbovsko from adjoining Slovenia, while the eastern border follows the line of Zdihovo, Liplje and Bosiljevo settlements and cuts through the river Dobra valley near Ljubošina. The western border starts at the Kupa gorge at Radočaj, goes around Razdrto and passes over the railway tracks between Koritnik Veliki and Palež, continues to Lužac and ends in Sušica-Jablan area. The southern border is the highest in its relief characteristics – it runs along mountain peaks at an altitude of 1000 meters or higher. Debela Kosa (1169 m), Bukovica (1253 m), Bijela ...
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Razdrto, Croatia
Razdrto is a village in Croatia. History On 28 June 1774, lord Mihal Mikulić of Severin on behalf of count Krsto II Oršić drew up in Severin a list of duties of freedmen and serfs in Razdrto, Štefanci, Blaževci, Zapeć, Plemenitaš and Košac. It was signed by Mihalj Panian of Razdrto. The original survives in the HDA in Zagreb, and was published by . The villagers of Razdrto, Štefanci and Košac were freedmen, although they lacked written confirmation. On 11 November 1854, Razdrto resident Ivan Kuretić, a used wares peddler, died without leaving a will, prompting the court in Vrbovsko to issue a notice that if no claimants showed up by 16 May the next year, all his assets would be transferred to his son Mihalj Kuretić. Demographics In 1870, Razdrto's ''porezna općina'' included Štefanci and Radočaj. Razdrto itself had 20 houses and 178 people. Razdrto was in Brod-Moravice parish but Štefanci and Radočaj were in Plemenitaš parish. In 1890, Razdrto itself had ...
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Zdihovo, Primorje-Gorski Kotar County
Zdihovo or Zdihovo Bosiljsko is a village in Croatia, under the Vrbovsko township, in Primorje-Gorski Kotar County. History In 1860–1879, Matija Mažuranić wrote a 62 folio manuscript today titled Writings on the Building of Roads in Gorski Kotar and Lika (), today with signature HR- Za NSK R 6424. A 21 folio manuscript dated 1872 titled Darstellung der Entstehung des Baues ... der Luisenstrasse togethr with a translation by I. Mikloušić is kept as HR- Za NSK R 4572. After the Lujzijana was built, the ''Družtvo lujzinske ceste'' constructed an inn in Zdihovo. In 1874, the society would sell all its assets along the road, including those in Zdihovo. In 1864, a rinderpest outbreak in Bosanci and Kasuni caused the Lujzijana to be closed to horned traffic for 21 days in December. On the day of the 1867 Croatian parliamentary election in Lukovdol općina, 8 December, SP partisan Marko Domitrović of Zdihovo arrived claiming to have been sent by Ban Levin Rauch and Gra ...
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Croatian-Hungarian Party
Croatian-Hungarian Party () was the name of a 19th-century political party in the Habsburg Kingdom of Croatia and the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia which advocated closer ties between Croatia and Hungary. It was officially named in 1841 when it participated in the council of Varaždin County. It was one of the two parties in the 1843 session of the Croatian Parliament. It temporarily ceased to function in 1849, following the Revolutions of 1848; when it was reconstituted in 1860, it was named the Unionist Party (), and entered the Parliament in 1861. It was also known as the National Constitutional Party (). Because they advocated Magyarization policies, their political adversaries gave them a well-known nickname of . Several 19th-century Ministers of Croatian Affairs of Hungary and Bans of Croatia were members of the party. Their main rivals were the Party of Rights and the People's Party. See also * July victims References Sources * (Wikisource Wikisource is an onlin ...
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Mirko Bogović
Mirko Bogović (2 February 1816 – 4 May 1893) was a Croatian poet and politician. He graduated in philosophy in Szombathely in 1830, cadet school in Petrovaradin (1833–1837) and law in Pest in 1844. He wrote satirical poems incorporating romance, politics and patriotism as subjects. During the autocracy of von Bach in the 1850s, Bogović was the central person of Croatian literature in the Austrian Empire; as one of the founders of the Croatian novella ("''Pripovijesti''"). In 1867 he was the Grand Perfect of the Zagreb County while in period between 1871 and 1875 he served as the ministerial adviser in Budapest Budapest is the Capital city, capital and List of cities and towns of Hungary, most populous city of Hungary. It is the List of cities in the European Union by population within city limits, tenth-largest city in the European Union by popul .... While his work was voluminous and prominent during his lifetime, it was subsequently often regarded as mediocre by ...
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Radoslav Lopašić
Radoslav Lopašić (1830–1893) was a Croatian historian and member of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts. Lopašić was born on 20 May 1830 in Karlovac, Austrian Empire (modern-day Croatia Croatia, officially the Republic of Croatia, is a country in Central Europe, Central and Southeast Europe, on the coast of the Adriatic Sea. It borders Slovenia to the northwest, Hungary to the northeast, Serbia to the east, Bosnia and Herze ...). His father was Mirko Lopašić, at that time a mayor and a city judge, while his mother was Magdalena nee Dobrilović. After being educated in Karlovac and Zagreb, Lopašić began his career in city administration.: "....nakon školovanja u rodnom gradu i u Zagrebu posvetio se isprva pravnoj i upravnoj službi ..."nakon školovanja u rodnom gradu i u Zagrebu posvetio se isprva pravnoj i upravnoj službi ... References Sources * * {{DEFAULTSORT:Lopasic, Radoslav 1835 births 1893 deaths Historians from Austria-Hungar ...
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1867 Croatian Parliamentary Election
There were only 354 days this year in the newly purchased territory of Alaska. When the territory transferred from the Russian Empire to the United States, the calendric transition from the Julian to the Gregorian Calendar was made with only 11 days instead of 12 during the 19th century. This change was made due to the territorial and geopolitical shift from the Asian to the American side of the International Date Line. Friday, 6 October 1867 ''(Julian Calendar)'' was followed by Friday again on 18 October 1867 (instead of Saturday, 19 October 1867 in the Gregorian Calendar). Events January * January 1 – The Covington–Cincinnati Suspension Bridge opens between Cincinnati, Ohio, and Covington, Kentucky, in the United States, becoming the longest single-span bridge in the world. It was renamed after its designer, John A. Roebling, in 1983. * January 8 – African-American men are granted the right to vote in the District of Columbia. * January 11 – Benito Juárez be ...
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