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The Millennium Centar (Serbian: Центар Миленијум, Centar Milenijum) is a multi-purpose indoor arena located in the city of Vršac.It is the home ground of basketball club KK Vršac and ŽKK Vršac and has a capacity of 4,400 seats. [1]
The uniqueness of Vršac is reflected in the fact that it has been inhabited since the dawn of the first cultures. Thus, the oldest traces of human presence in Banat originate precisely from Vršac, since individual finds of Paleolithic flint tools from the middle and younger Paleolithic, Mousterian and Aurignacian cultures were found on the slopes of the Vršac Mountains.
SK 2: Princess Ljubica's Residence: Belgrade Sime Markovića St. no. 8: 5 September 1946 7 April 1979 SK 3: Belgrade Fortress: Belgrade Kalemegdan gornji grad nn: 31 May 1965 7 April 1979 SK 5: Residence of Prince Miloš: Belgrade Rakovački put St. no. 2: 2 December 1946 7 April 1979 (cluster "Complex of the Residence of Prince Miloš") SK 6
Being officially classified as a single village, Vršački Ritovi is actually composed of two separate inhabited places: proper Vršački Ritovi, which is situated near the railroad that connects Vršac and Zrenjanin and is some 3 km far from regional road, and Novogradnja (Serbian: Новоградња).
Teodor (Serbian Cyrillic: Теодор; fl. 1594) was the Serbian Orthodox Bishop of Vršac (епископ вршачки), who in 1594 was the leader of the Banat Uprising against Ottoman occupation amidst the Long War (1593–1606).
At an official meeting held on 4 March 2009, Minister for Culture assistant Dušan Živković, provincial secretary for culture Milorad Djurić, Director of the Regional Institute for Protection of Cultural Heritage Zoran Vapa, and Vršac Mayor assistant Dragiša Vučinić agreed on the reconstruction of Vršac Tower, to return it to its former look.
The Vršac Mountains (Serbian: Vršačke planine, Serbian Cyrillic: Вршачке планине, Romanian: Munții Vârșeț), also known as Vršac Hill (Serbian: Vršački breg, Serbian Cyrillic: Вршачки брег, Romanian: Dealurile Vârșețului), are located in the Banat region near the city of Vršac, Serbia, and partially also in Romania.
Founded in April 2007 as OFK Vršac United, the club changed its name to OFK Vršac in December 2017. [1] They subsequently won the Vojvodina League East in the 2017–18 season and took promotion to the Serbian League Vojvodina.