Official name | Vračar |
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Native name | Врачар |
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Nickname | |
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Settlement type | Urban Municipality |
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Image seal | |
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Image shield | Vracar coa.jpg |
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Map caption | Location within the City of Belgrade |
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Image map1 | Administrativna mapa srbije-beograd.png |
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Mapsize1 | 100px |
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Map caption1 | Location within Serbia |
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Dot x | |dot_y = |
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Pushpin map | |
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Pushpin label position | |
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Subdivision type | Country |
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Subdivision name | Serbia |
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Subdivision type1 | City |
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Subdivision name1 | Belgrade |
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Subdivision type2 | Status |
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Subdivision name2 | Municipality |
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Subdivision type3 | Settlements |
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Subdivision name3 | 1 |
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Subdivision type4 | |
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Government type | Municipality of Belgrade |
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Leader title | Mun. president |
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Leader name | Branimir Kuzmanović (DS) |
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Leader title1 | |
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Established title | |
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Established date | |
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Established title2 | |
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Established date2 | |
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Established title3 | |
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Area magnitude | |
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Unit pref | |
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Area total km2 | 2.97 |
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Area land km2 | |
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Population as of | 2002 |
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Population total | 58386 |
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Population density km2 | auto |
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Population density blank1 km2 | |
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Timezone | CET |
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Utc offset | +1 |
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Timezone dst | CEST |
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Utc offset dst | +2 |
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Elevation footnotes | tags--> |
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Elevation m | |
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Postal code type | Postal code |
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Postal code | 11000 |
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Area code | +381 11 |
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Blank name | Car plates |
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Blank info | BG |
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Website | www.vracar.rs |
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Footnotes | |
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Vračar (Serbian Cyrillic: Врачар) is an urban neighborhood and one of 17 municipalities which constitute the City of Belgrade, the capital of Serbia. With an area of only , it is the smallest of all Belgrade's (and Serbian) municipalities, but also the most densely populated.
Neighborhood
Location
The neighborhood of Vračar is located on the top of the Vračar plateau, partially in the easternmost section of the municipality of
Savski Venac as a result of a series of administrative changes of municipal boundaries after the
World War II. Despite its small area, being located less than a kilometer away from downtown (
Terazije) it borders many other Belgrade neighborhoods: the square and neighborhood of
Slavija to the north,
Palilula to the northeast,
Čubura and
Gradić Pejton to the east,
Neimar to the south and the park and neighborhood of
Karađorđev Park to the southwest. Vračar plateau is one of the highest points in downtown Belgrade
History
Name Vračar (derived from Serbian word
vrač meaning the '
medicine man', 'healer') was mentioned for the first time in 1495 in
Turkish documents. In 1560 it is mentioned as the Christian village outside the fortress of
Kalemegdan with 17 houses. It is believed this village is the place where in 1595 the Turkish
grand vizier Sinan Pasha burned at the stake the remains of
Saint Sava, a major Serbian saint, to pacify and punish a rebellious population.
At the beginning of the 19th century Vračar, as a geographical term, referred to a much wider area, from the village of Savamala (present Mostar) on the west to the village of Paliula (present neighborhood of Karaburma), which means it used to cover at least three times larger territory than the municipality covers today. By order of prince Miloš Obrenović, an alternative city centre with western characteristics was designed and built here while city of Belgrade was still under Turkish rule and for three quarters an oriental town with all the characteristics of Islamic architecture. On the other hand, Vračar was built with broad streets and boulevards, first parks and monuments. It was housing all Serbian public buildings and state institutions in Belgrade, known as a place where the remains of the Serbian Saint Archbishop Sava Nemanjic were burned by Turks. The Masonic Temple on this site was destroyed during the German bombing of Belgrade on 6 April 1941. Today, it is the site of the biggest Christian Orthodox Cathedral in the world.
The Times on October 17, 1843 published a text full of exultations. 'Four years have passed since the time when I was last here, and how Belgrade has changed! I have hardly recognised it. The high belfry on the church (Cathedral) now screens by its shadow the Turkish mosques; many shops are now provided with new doors and glass windows, oriental clothing is more rare and houses with several storeys, in European manner, are being built everywhere'.
Many architects-baumeisters (builders) Germans, Czechs, Italians and the Serbians who appeared only at the end of the 1860s built new Serbian Belgrade in Vračar. After 1867, when Turkish military garrisons left the Belgrade fortress Kalemegdan they extended their architectural activities on the ruins of the Turkish houses (Stambol gate, Dorćol, Palilula) and on the ruins of the Serbian huts in the Sava river port, Savamala.
Since 1880s, the neighborhood was roughly divided into Zapadni Vračar (West Vračar) and Istočni Vračar (East Vračar), divided by the road of Šumadijski put (present Boulevard of Liberation). Since 1955 when municipality was officially split into these two, Zapadni Vračar later became core of the new municipality of Savski Venac while the term Vračar became synonym for Istočni Vračar only.
Characteristics
The most dominant feature of modern Vračar is the massive
Temple of Saint Sava. Its decades long, troubled construction shaped not just the present appearance of the plateau, but also the skyline of the entire Belgrade. Plateau has been reshaped in the early 2000s, with fountains, marble access roads to the temple with pillars and children playgrounds added, while the already existing monument to the leader of the
First Serbian Uprising,
Karađorđe, was erected on a low, artificial hillock. The plateau is also the location of the National Library of Serbia and Karađorđev Park also begins here, while the craftsmen settlement of Gradić Pejton and the bohemian quarter of Čubura nearby.
Municipality
Location
and
Temple of Saint Sava, on the Vračar plateau, where the Turks burned the remains of
Saint Sava]]
The small municipality of Vračar borders five other Belgrade municipalities:
Voždovac to the south,
Zvezdara to the east, Palilula to the northeast,
Stari Grad to the north and Savski Venac to the west. It is generally bounded by the three boulevards: Boulevard of Liberation, Southern Boulevard and the Boulevard of
King Aleksandar.
Geography
The
Vračar plateau is on of the highest point in downtown Belgrade, which is generally built on a hilly terrain (32 hills altogether). Almost no geographical features survive today as the area is completely urbanized, except for the small section of
Karađorđev Park on the southern slopes of the plateau. Some much larger parks, like major portion of
Karađorđev Park or parks
Manjež and
Tašmajdan are left just outside the Vračar's administrative borders.
, one of the symbols of Belgrade is located in the western corner of the Vračar municipality]]
Administration
The municipality of Vračar was officially formed in 1952 after Belgrade was administratively reorganized from districts (
rejon) to municipalities. Already on September 1, 1955 Vračar was divided into Zapadni Vračar (West Vračar) and Istočni Vračar (East Vračar). Year and a half later, on January 1, 1957, parts of Istočni Vračar merged with the municipality of
Neimar and the western part of the municipality of
Terazije to create new, albeit the smallest municipality in Belgrade, Vračar. Zapadni Vračar became municipality of
Savski Venac, while the easternmost section of Istočni Vračar became part of the municipality of
Zvezdara (
local community of
Vračarsko Polje; Zvezdara hill itself was styled
Veliki Vračar - Big Vračar).
Recent presidents of the municipal assembly:
* January 1993 - December 1996: Dragan Maršićanin (b. 1950)
December 1996 - June 13, 2006: Milena Marković (b. 1950)
June 13, 2006–present: Branimir Kuzmanović (b. 1968)
Mrs Dunja Vlahović (b. 1912), who was municipal president from January 1957 when Vračar was restored as one municipality, was one of the first female municipal presidents in Serbia.
District (Serbian: srez) which comprised the suburban area of Belgrade after 1945 was called Vračar District (Vračarski srez) though the name Belgrade District was also used. In 1955 the Vračar District merged with the City of Belgrade and parts of some bordering districts to create new, enlarged Belgrade District.
Population
As the other two central Belgrade municipalities,
Stari Grad and Savski Venac, Vračar has been depopulating for the last five decades. Despite that, Vračar is by far, thanks to its small area, the most densely populated municipality of Belgrade, with 19.659 inhabitants per square kilometer (2002 census; 29,772 back in 1971). Population of Vračar:
* 1961 census - 88,422
1971 census - 84,291
1981 census - 78,862
1991 census - 67,438
2002 census - 58,386
2005 estim. - 69,528
If the pre-1955 administrative division remained, population of the municipality would be 91,539 in 2002.
Neighborhoods
As Vračar has a very small area by itself, its sub-neighborhoods are also small, some of them encompassing only a street or so:
{|
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Crveni Krst
Cvetni Trg
Čubura
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Englezovac
Istočni Vračar
Gradić Pejton
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Grantovac
Kalenić
Krunski Venac
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Neimar
Savinac
Slavija
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Vračar
|}
Characteristics
Vračar is a residential and very important commercial part of Belgrade. The tall
skyscraper in downtown Belgrade, the
Beograđanka, Cvetni Trg (famous for its flower shops) and the square of Slavija occupy the western section of the municipality. Other important features are the
Temple of Saint Sava and the
National Library of Serbia on the Vračar plateau, northern section of the big
interchange Autokomanda and the stadium of the
FK Obilić (
Miloš Obilić Stadium) and the Architecture high school in the extreme west of the municipality. Commercial center of the municipality is the area surrounding the Kalenić, largest open green market in Belgrade.
International cooperation
Vračar is twinned with following cities and municipalities:
Anavyssos,
Greece
See also
Istočni Vračar
Zapadni Vračar
Subdivisions of Belgrade
List of Belgrade neighborhoods and suburbs
Historical references
*Beograd - Izdanje opštine beogradske, 1911;
Zapisi starog Beograđanina 2000;
Iz starog Beograda, Živorad P. Jovanović 1964;
Siluete starog Beograda, Milan Jovanović - Stojimirović, 1971;
Uspon Beograda, Milivoje M.Kostić, 2000;
Beogradske gradske pijace, JKP Beogradske pijace, 1999;
Vračarski glasnik, 1997–2004
References
External links
Municipality of Vračar
Vračar info at the official Belgrade site
Category:Municipalities of Belgrade
Category:Neighborhoods of Belgrade