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In Serbian, the city is known as Sombor (Сомбор), in Hungarian as Zombor, in Rusyn as Zombor (Зомбор). The older Hungarian name for the city was Czoborszentmihály. The name originates from the Czobor family, who were the owners of this area in the 14th century. (The family name came from the Slavic name Cibor.)
Zombor (Зомбор), a Hungarian and Rusyn name for Sombor, a city in Serbia; Zombor, Veľký Krtíš District, a village in Slovakia. This page was last edited on ...
Zombor District (Serbian: Сомборски округ, Somborski okrug; German: Zambórer Distrikt, [1] Kreis Zombor [2] from 1853; Hungarian: Zombori körzet; Bunjevac: Somborski okrug) was one of five administrative districts (originally Districte, modern spelling Distrikte; Kreise, lit.
The Hungarian language is one of the six official languages of the region. ... Hungarian name Total population ... Sombor: Zombor 85,903: 9,874: 11.49 [18]
Below is a list of Hungarian geographical names in the Vojvodina region of Serbia (Hungarian names are in parentheses). A ... Sombor (Zombor) Sonta (Szond)
Sombor is the current name of the capital. Bács-Bodrog County ( Hungarian : Bács-Bodrog vármegye , German : Komitat Batsch-Bodrog , Serbian : Бачко-бодрошка жупанија , romanized : Bačko-bodroška županija ) was an administrative county ( comitatus ) of the Kingdom of Hungary from 1802 to 1920.
Sombor: Kikinda: Кикинда North Banat: 41,935 38,065 ... For the inhabited places with Croatian and Hungarian majority, the names are also given in these languages.
The Sombor City Museum (Serbian: Градски музеј Сомбор, Gradski muzej Sombor, Hungarian: Zombori Városi Múzeum) in Sombor, Vojvodina, Serbia, is the city institution focused on the research, preservation and presentation of historical objects and artifacts related to the west Bačka region.