Novo Miloševo

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Novo Miloševo
Ново Милошево (Serbian)
Beodra  (Hungarian)
Village (Selo)
Dvorac Karačonji u Novom Miloševu, frontalni izgled.jpg
Katolička crkva svete Magdalene u Beodri - Novo Miloševo 04.JPG
Žitni magacin u Novom Miloševu - ulazna metalna vrata.jpg
Srpska pravoslavna crkva u Beodri - Novo Miloševo 01.JPG
Kotarka u Novom Miloševu - zadnji deo.jpg
Kotarka u Novom Miloševu.jpg
Žitni magacin u Novom Miloševu - dvorište.jpg
Žitni magacin u Novom Miloševu - enterijer prizemlja, postavka.jpg
Photos of Novo Miloševo
Novo Miloševo is located in Serbia
Novo Miloševo
Novo Miloševo
Location of Novo Miloševo within Serbia
Coordinates: 45°43′11″N 20°18′07″E / 45.71972°N 20.30194°E / 45.71972; 20.30194Coordinates: 45°43′11″N 20°18′07″E / 45.71972°N 20.30194°E / 45.71972; 20.30194
CountrySerbia
ProvinceVojvodina
DistrictCentral Banat
Elevation
77 m (253 ft)
Population
 (2002)
 • Novo Miloševo6,763
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
23273
Area code(s)+381(0)23
Car platesZR

Novo Miloševo (Serbian Cyrillic: Ново Милошево) is a village located in the Novi Bečej municipality, in the Central Banat District of Serbia. It is situated in the Province of Vojvodina. The village has a Serb majority (76.09%) with an ethnic Hungarian minority (14.57%). Its population is 6,763 people as of the 2002 census.

Name[]

The village was formed after the Second World War when former villages of Beodra and Dragutinovo were joined into one single village known as Novo Miloševo. Before 1918, Dragutinovo was known as Karlovo.

History[]

The former village of Beodra was first mentioned in 1331. It was established at present-day location from 1742–53, and was settled by Serbs from Potisje and Pomorišje. The village of Karlovo was established in 1751 by former Serb frontiersmen. In 1918, the name of the village was changed from Karlovo to Dragutinovo, after Dragutin Ristić, a colonel in the Serbian army, whose unit occupied the village. In 1946, Dragutinovo and Beodra were joined into one single village known as Novo Miloševo, after Miloš Popov Klima, a noted Partisan who was born in Dragutinovo.

Historical population[]

  • 1961: 9,276
  • 1971: 8,548
  • 1981: 7,805
  • 1991: 7,308
  • 2002: 6,763

People[]

See also[]

References[]

  • Slobodan Ćurčić, Broj stanovnika Vojvodine, Novi Sad, 1996.

External links[]

Gallery[]

Retrieved from ""