Aleksandrovo, Subotica

Aleksandrovo (Serbian Cyrillic: Александрово) is a neighborhood of Subotica, Serbia.

Neighborhoods in urban Subotica.
Aleksandrovo

Name

It is most commonly known as Aleksandrovo (Александрово) or Šandor (Шандор), but it is also known as Novo Naselje (Ново Насеље).

The Serbian name is Александрово (Cyrillic) or Aleksandrovo (Latin). Croats and Bunjevci call this part of Subotica Šandor, and the inhabitant of Šandor is called Šandorčanin.
In Hungarian, this part of Subotica is called Sándor.
In German sources this village was called Schandor.[1]

History

There are traces of older settlements at this location dating from Bronze Age, time of the Sarmatians and Middle Ages. Aleksandrovo was founded in the 18th century or more exactly in 1786 by Serbs from Subotica.[2] In 1804, Aleksandrovo was officially proclaimed a village. In this time, most of its inhabitants were Serbs, while some Croats (from the group of Bunjevci) lived there as well.[3] Aleksandrovo was a separate municipality for one century until it was joined to Subotica (in 1904).[2] The Serbian Orthodox church in Aleksandrovo was built in 1818.

Economy

Aleksandrovo is home of several big companies, including Bratstvo (steel manufacturing), Subotička Mlekara (milk products), Fidelinka (grain and bread) and 29. Novembar (meat production).

Sports

There is a wrestling club named "Aleksandrovo" in the neighborhood.[4]

gollark: I agree with heav.
gollark: A SPACE COURT ruling said so.
gollark: Capitalisation is mandatory for SPACE COURT.
gollark: However, we are to have SPACE COURT.
gollark: Please do not copy in the awful American system.

References

  1. Ante Sekulić: Hrvatski bački mjestopisi, Školska knjiga, Zagreb, 1994, p. 130
  2. (in Serbian) OŠ Sv. Sava - Istorijat
  3. (in Serbian) Subotičke Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine Tornjevi Subotice
  4. Aleksandrovo wrestling club website Archived 2011-10-05 at the Wayback Machine, subotica.rs; accessed 1 June 2016.(in Serbian)


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.