Šakota
Origin | |
---|---|
Language(s) | Serbian, Croatian |
Meaning | šaka, meaning "hand". |
Šakota (Serbian Cyrillic: Шакота) is a Serbian and Croatian surname, derived from a nickname[1] itself from the word šaka, meaning "hand".
This section may contain material unrelated or insufficiently related to the topic of the article. (November 2017) |
On June 2, 1941, Franjo Sudar's Ustaše attacked the Udrežnje village and killed 27 people of the Vujadinović, , , , , and Šakota families.[2] On June 3/4, 1941, Ustaše massacred 130 to 180 ethnic Serbs in Korita, Bileća; the local Šakota were one of the victim families.[3] On June 26/27, 1941, Ustaše drove away 130 Serbs of the families of Šakota, Šotra, Ćorluka and Krulj from the villages of Trijebanj and Kozice.[4] 110 of these were killed, at , , and near , and those who escaped death were those listed in a proclamation of general Lakse.[4] 70 more locals were killed by the Ustaše on June 29/30.[4] At least 64 individuals with the surname died at the Jasenovac concentration camp.[5] Several Šakota from Herzegovina fought at the Yugoslav Front (Dušan, Ilija, Jovo, Radovan, Slobodan, Sava, Vlado, and others).[6]
It may refer to:
- Dušan Šakota (born 1986), Serbian-born Greek professional basketball player, son of Dragan
- Dragan Šakota (born 1952), Serbian professional basketball coach
- ,
- , Croatian runner (2013 European Athletics Junior Championships – Men's 100 metres)
- , Serbian writer
- ,
- , Yugoslav Partisan
- , butcher in South Africa[7]
References[]
- ^ Zavičaj: Kalendar. 1960. p. 103.
Бркии, ЪосиЬ, Десница, .7Ьевак‚ Главаш, ПрстОЁевиЬ, Шестийъ, Шакота, Штака, Слщепчевин, 'БоровиЬ, ДугоъьиЬ, Ногиё, Ножица, 'Бопиъ, Грбиъ, Госо, Шантип, Жузьевиъ, 'БаловиЬ, ЧоловиЬ, ВиЬен, Балвановин, УзуновиЬ
- ^ Vasić, Milan (1995). Bosna i Hercegovina od srednjeg veka do novijeg vremena: Međunarodni naučni skup 13-15. Decembar 1994. p. 248.
Сутрадан, 2. јуна, Судареве усташе су упале у село Удрежње и побиле, углавном на кућном прагу, 27 лица из породица Вујадиновића, Вукосава, Драганића, Гамбе- лића, Кљакића, Шиповаца и Шакота
- ^ Радио телевизија Републике Српске: Корићка јама - Опростити али не и заборавити (in Serbian). 6 April 2011.
- ^ a b c Muzej žrtava genocida i Srpska književna zadruga (1995). Genocid nad Srbima u II svetskom ratu. pp. 330–335.
Од 26 — 27. јуна, из Тријебња и Козица из породица Шакота, Шотра, Ћорлука и Круљ отерано је 130 Срба. [...]
- ^ Jasenovac Research Institute. "Victim Search: Šakota".
- ^ Đurović, Milinko (1961). Hercegovina u NOB. p. 984.
- ^ Lopušina, Marko (1998). Svi Srbi sveta: Vodič kroz dijasporu.
- Surnames
- Serbian surnames
- Croatian surnames