Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
1515 – Sarajevo Taxi (Sarajevo) 1516 – Samir-Emir Taxi (Sarajevo) 1521 – Holand company Taxi (Sarajevo) 1522 – Paja Taxi (Sarajevo) 1533 (Banja Luka), 1552 (Bijeljina) – Patrol Taxi; 1545 – Ideal Taxi (Banja Luka) 1551 – Maxi Taxi (Banja Luka) 1555 – Euro Taxi (Banja Luka) 1526 – Alo Taxi (Trebinje) 1553 – HALO Taxi (Široki ...
According to the 1991 census, the municipality of Novi Grad had 136,746 citizens. Four years of the Bosnian War brought that number down tremendously, as the Serb minority left the city. Of the municipality's 33,517 residential buildings, 92% were damaged during the Siege of Sarajevo. Novi Grad has since made a fantastic recovery.
Novi Grad is located on the right bank of the Una and both banks of the Sana, between two geographic zones: the slopes of the mountains of Grmeč and Kozara, and the alluvial land surrounding the town's two rivers. The town itself is located 122 m (400 feet) above sea level, at nearly 45°N; the climate is temperate-continental.
Bojnik is a village in the municipality of Novi Grad, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. According to the 2013 census, the village has a population of 399. [1]
Ahatovići is a town located in Sarajevo, the municipality of Novi Grad Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The town is located in the historical region of Crnotina [ 1 ] near Saraj Polje at the harbors of the Bosna river , on the north of the town two hills are located named Strahoč (782m) and Krstac (861m).
Overall, during the Siege of Sarajevo (1992–95), Dobrinja was the most bombed neighbourhood of Sarajevo. In 1993 a mortar attack was conducted from Serb-held positions on a football game. 13 people died and over 130 were wounded. Most of Dobrinja lies west of the inter-entity boundary line, in the territory of Sarajevo Canton.
Five of the cantons (Una-Sana, Tuzla, Zenica-Doboj, Bosnian-Podrinje, and Sarajevo) have a Bosniak majority, three (Posavina, West Herzegovina and Canton 10) have a Bosnian Croat majority, while two of them (Central Bosnia and Herzegovina-Neretva) are "ethnically mixed", meaning neither ethnic group has a majority and there are special ...
Novi Grad ('New Town') may refer to the following places: Bosnia and Herzegovina. ... Novi Grad, Sarajevo, a municipality in the city of Sarajevo; Croatia