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During the Ottoman rule, Petrovaradin had 200 (mostly Muslim) houses. There was also a Christian quarter with 35 houses populated by ethnic Serbs. [1] In the year 1590, population of all villages that existed in the territory of present-day Novi Sad (on the left bank of the Danube) numbered 105 houses inhabited exclusively by Serbs.
It became a UNESCO Creative City of Media Arts in 2023. [7] [8] ... the population of Novi Sad numbered 39,122 ... Today, Novi Sad is the second largest cultural ...
Data that follows has been derived from the Ministry of Demography and Population Policy of Serbia Official website [36] Median age of the population Total: 43.16 years (2018) Male: 41.73 years Female: 44.53 years Mother's mean age at first birth 28.4 years (2018) Number of marriages per 1000 inhabitants 5.2 marriages/1,000 population (2018)
Hungarians form 3.53% of Serbia's total population and 13% of Vojvodina, where most of them are living. [1] Hungarians are present in the region since the Middle Ages and today they are largest minority in Vojvodina. The Hungarian language is one of the six official languages of the region.
Vojvodina (/ ˌ v ɔɪ v ə ˈ d iː n ə / VOY-və-DEE-nə; Serbian Cyrillic: Војводина, IPA:), officially the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina, is an autonomous province that occupies the northernmost part of Serbia, located in Central Europe.
The City Municipality of Novi Sad was situated in the southern part of the Bačka region. The total area of City of Novi Sad was 699 km², and the area of the city municipality was 671.8 km². The municipality laid in one of the southern lowest parts of the Pannonian Plain.
Serbs in Vojvodina. Serbs – There were 1,289,635 Serbs in Vojvodina or 66.76% of the population in the province. Serbs make up an absolute majority in most of the municipalities and large cities of Vojvodina, except in Subotica (second largest city), which has a mixed population with no absolute majority of any nation (but the Serbian language is spoken by plurality in Subotica).
The population of Subotica, the second largest city in Vojvodina, is 63.02% Catholic. The Catholic population which lived in the region during the time of the Medieval Kingdom of Hungary mostly fled from the region following the Ottoman conquest in the 16th century, and was replaced by Orthodox and Muslim inhabitants. A new Catholic population ...