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Yugoslavian postal codes were introduced on January 1, 1971 and consisted of five digits. The first two digits roughly corresponded to the routing zones, mostly matching each of the Yugoslav republics: 1, 2 and 3 for Serbia, 4 and 5 for Croatia, 6 for Slovenia, 7 for Bosnia and Herzegovina, 8 for Montenegro and 9 for Macedonia.
Postal code scheme in Croatia is based on the country's subdivision into counties. Zagreb City and Zagreb County share the 10xxx range. Postal codes in Croatia are 5 digit numeric.
Post office sign in Farrer, Australian Capital Territory, showing postcode 2607. A postal code (also known locally in various English-speaking countries throughout the world as a postcode, post code, PIN or ZIP Code) is a series of letters or digits or both, sometimes including spaces or punctuation, included in a postal address for the purpose of sorting mail.
The Main Post Office Palace (Serbian: Палата Главне поште, romanized: Palata Glavne pošte) is a historic office building, serving as the headquarters of Pošta Srbije, national postal service of Serbia.
Unique Master Citizen Number (Serbo-Croatian: Jedinstveni matični broj građana / Јединствени матични број грађана, JMBG / ЈМБГ, Macedonian: Единствен матичен број на граѓанинот, ЕМБГ, Slovene: Enotna matična številka občana, EMŠO) is an identification number that was assigned to every citizen of former Yugoslav ...
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The subdivisions of Croatia on the first level are the 20 counties (županija, pl. županije) and one city-county (grad, "city").. On the second level these are municipalities (općina, pl. općine) and cities (grad, pl. gradovi).
NOTE: Historically, the municipality was known as Vrginmost until 1996, when both the municipality and the settlement were renamed to Gvozd.The old municipality of Vrginmost was divided into three new municipalities: Topusko, Lasinja and Gvozd.