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Jorpati is a village and former Village Development Committee that is now part of Gokarneshwar Municipality in Kathmandu District in Province No. 3 of central Nepal. At the 2011 census it had a population of 84,567 [ 1 ] making it one of the largest villages in the world.
Gokarneshwor is a municipality in Kathmandu District in the Bagmati Province of Nepal that was established on 2 December 2014 by merging the former Village development committees Sundarijal, Nayapati, Baluwa, Jorpati and Gokarna. [1] [2] The office of the municipality is that of the former Jorpati village development committee. The river ...
24sata (est. 2005, based in Zagreb; number one tabloid in the country in terms of circulation) 24sata.hr; Jutarnji list (est. 1998, based in Zagreb) jutarnji.hr; Novi list (est. 1900, based in Rijeka; the oldest Croatian newspaper still in existence) novilist.hr; Slobodna Dalmacija (est. 1943, based in Split) slobodnadalmacija.hr
Chhathar Jorpati (Nepali: छथर जोरपाटी गाउँपालिका) is a rural municipality out of four rural municipality located in Dhankuta District of Koshi Province of Nepal. There are a total of 7 municipalities in Dhankuta in which 3 are urban and 4 are rural.
Pages in category "Articles with Croatian-language sources (hr)" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 3,370 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Kornelija Petak was the youngest person to ever chart on the HR Top 100 chart, at the time when "Ja sam takva kava sam" debuted she was only 16 years old. [14] Igor Delač holds the record for most consecutive number one singles; from Budan in 2018 to his latest single "Ne zaboravi" in 2022, a total of eight singles reached the top spot.
In contemporary geography, the terms Central Croatia (Croatian: Središnja Hrvatska) and Mountainous Croatia (Gorska Hrvatska) are used to describe most of the area sometimes historically known as Croatia or Croatia proper (Uža Hrvatska), one of the four historical regions [1] of the Republic of Croatia, together with Dalmatia, Istria, and Slavonia.
The free-access online edition of the Croatian Encyclopedia has been available since 2013. Paper volumes are no longer published. [2] [3]Since 2021, the Encyclopedia, available at enciklopedija.hr, is managed by new, fourth editor-in-chief, Bruno Kragić, with the team of 14 editors, and updated on the weekly basis.