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By January 2022, Croatia had completed more than 1,300 kilometres (810 miles) of motorways, connecting Zagreb to most other regions and following various European routes and four Pan-European corridors. [135] [136] The busiest motorways are the A1, connecting Zagreb to Split and the A3, passing east–west through northwest Croatia and Slavonia ...
Subotica is a festival city, hosting more than 17 festivals over the year. [citation needed] As of September 2017, Subotica has one of 14 free economic zones established in Serbia. [45] In 2020 construction of a new aqua park with ten pools and wellness and spa sections was underway in Palić. [46]
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The Cathedral of St. Theresa of Avila [1] (Serbian and Croatian: Katedrala Svete Terezije Avilske, Hungarian: A szabadkai Szent Teréz székesegyház) is a Latin Catholic cathedral and minor basilica located in Subotica, Serbia, the seat of the Diocese of Subotica. It is dedicated to Saint Theresa of Avila.
The synagogue of Subotica is the only surviving Hungarian Art Nouveau Jewish place of worship in the world. Erected by a prosperous Jewish community, with approximately 3,000 members, between 1901 and 1903, it highlighted the double, Hungarian-Jewish identity of its builders, who lived in a multi-ethnic, but predominantly Roman Catholic city, which was the third largest of the Hungarian ...
The Svetozar Marković Gymnasium (Serbian: Гимназија „Светозар Марковић” Суботица, Gimnazija „Svetozar Marković” Subotica, Hungarian: Svetozar Marković Gimnázium, Szabadka), colloquially known as the Subotica Gymnasium, is a public coeducational high school (gymnasium, similar to preparatory school) located in Subotica, city in Vojvodina, Serbia.
The original building of the theater, which was built in 1854 as the first monumental public building in Subotica, was razed with the purpose of reconstruction by City authorities in 2007, although it was declared a historic monument under state protection in 1983, [citation needed] and in 1991 it was added to the National Register as a monument of an extraordinary cultural value.
Zagrebačka banka was formed in 1977, intended to provide loans for local companies, taking over some former assets and operations including from the City Savings Bank of Zagreb. In the late 1980s these were merged again to form the very first banking joint stock company in the former SFR Yugoslavia. [2]