Đeletovci

Đeletovci (Hungarian: Gyelétfalva) is a village in the municipality of Nijemci within the Vukovar-Srijem County, Croatia. It had a population of 511 people in the 2011 census.[1] The village is located on the Zagreb-Belgrade Railway.[2]

Đeletovci
Đeletovci train station
Đeletovci
Coordinates: 45.183°N 19.013°E / 45.183; 19.013
Country Croatia
RegionSyrmia (Podunavlje)
County Vukovar-Syrmia
MunicipalityNijemci
Population
 (2011)
  Total511
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)

The village is best known for oil fields located in the vicinity owned by INA. The village is inhabited mostly Catholic Croats.

Name

The name of the village in Croatian is in the plural, and therefore it is grammatically correct to refer to it as "Đeletovci are" instead of "Đeletovci is". A hypothetical singular version of the name would be Đeletovac.

History

Đeletovci was occupied by Yugoslavian army and by Republic of Serb Krajina forces on October 1, 1991.[3] The village was integrated into the rebel Republic of Serb Krajina during the Yugoslav Wars. The Scorpions paramilitary controlled the village during the war and remained there until 1996 when the United Nations Transitional Administration for Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Sirmium took control of the area.[3] In 1998, the area was reintegrated into the Republic of Croatia. During the war, Serb forces evicted 900 inhabitants of the village.[4] By 2011 there were 511 people in the village.

Culture

The village has a cultural association KUD Grančica.[5] The association was founded in 1965.[6]

gollark: Indeed.
gollark: Yes, most programming languages lack first-class environments.
gollark: It also seems dubious that having a few tens of thousands of barely trained teenagers around is actually going to be *helpful* in a war.
gollark: It seems like you're bizarrely attached to the country you're in because of being born there or something.
gollark: Rotating GTech™ septagon array at 3.2 radians/s.

See also

References

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