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Geoportal Archived 2017-04-17 at the Wayback Machine: Costa Rica: Instituto Geográfico Nacional: registronacional.go.cr: Croatia: Državna geodetska uprava (DGU) dgu.hr: Geoportal DGU: Cuba: Instituto de Geografía Tropical: geotech.cu: Cyprus: Tmima Ktimatologiou Kai Chorometrias Department of Lands and Surveys: moi.gov.cy: Czech Republic
A geoportal is a type of web portal used to find and access geographic information (geospatial information) and associated geographic services (display, editing, analysis, etc.) via the Internet. Geoportals are important for effective use of geographic information systems (GIS) and a key element of a spatial data infrastructure (SDI).
Map of the municipalities of Bosnia and Herzegovina, showing the FBiH in blue, the RS in red, and Brčko District in yellow.. In Bosnia and Herzegovina, the smallest administrative unit is the municipality ("opština/општина" or "općina/опћина" in the official languages and scripts of the country).
The Croatian Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia (Croatian: Hrvatska Republika Herceg-Bosna) was an unrecognized geopolitical entity and quasi-state in Bosnia and Herzegovina.It was proclaimed on 18 November 1991 under the name Croatian Community of Herzeg-Bosnia (Croatian: Hrvatska Zajednica Herceg-Bosna) as a "political, cultural, economic and territorial whole" in the territory of Bosnia and ...
Croatia (HR) is included in the Nomenclature of Territorial Units for Statistics (NUTS) of the European Union. The NUTS of Croatia were defined during the Accession of Croatia to the European Union, codified by the Croatian Bureau of Statistics in early 2007. [1] The regions were revised twice, first in 2012, and then in 2021. [2]
Konjic (Serbian Cyrillic: Коњиц) is a city located in the Herzegovina-Neretva Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, one of two entities that make up Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Herzegovina (/ ˌ h ɛər t s ɪ ˈ ɡ oʊ v ɪ n ə / HAIRT-sih-GOH-vih-nə or / ˌ h ɜːr t s ə ɡ oʊ ˈ v iː n ə / HURT-sə-goh-VEE-nə; Serbo-Croatian: Hercegovina / Херцеговина, pronounced [xɛ̌rt͡se̞ɡoʋina]) is the southern and smaller of two main geographical regions of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the other being Bosnia.
In a geopolitical sense the Humska zemlja is not synonymous to Zahumlje, and it differs geographically from both Zahumlje and today's Herzegovina. [3] Geographically, roughly outlined, it included in the west-east direction, the area along the Adriatic coast, from Vrulja near Omiš and the big bend of the river Cetina to the hinterland of Dubrovnik, and in the south-north direction, from the ...