Glogonj

Glogonj ( Serbian Cyrillic Глогоњ, German ( outdated ) Glogon, Hungarian Galagonyás, Romanian Glogoni ) is a belonging to Opština Pančevo village with 3000 inhabitants ( 2011 census ). The town is located in southern Banat, Vojvodina, Serbia, about 20 km northwest of Pancevo on the eastern shore of the Timis.

History

Archaeological findings ( three bronze bracelets, a medal, parts of a tank, a grenade made ​​of baked clay ) testify to the existence of a human settlement on the territory of today's Glogonj already during the Bronze Age.

From the Roman period a metal bracelet, pottery from clay, as well as a full kitchen shelf with earthenware were found. Two stone coffins witness the funerals of high Roman military leader.

Further excavations at two skeletons with jewelery and weapons from the Huns Age ( 11th-12th century ) found.

The first written record of the village dates from 1586, when Glogonj was on the map as an inhabited place, which belonged to the Sanjak of Pančevo noted. 1660 Glogonj was first entered in the register of Pécs. In 1716 it consisted of ten houses. 1723 Gloganski was listed by Count Claudius Mercy Flori mouth as desolate and deserted village.

From 1774 reached the first German -born immigrants Glogonj. The first school and a Catholic church opened in 1775. 1841 new Catholic church was built.

1781, the first Romanians were settled from Žitište. 1794 came from the city of Sibiu to Romanians Glogonj. Another 16 Romanian families from Klek and Jankahid 1800 were settled ( districts of Lazarsfeld ). 1806, the Romanian Orthodox parish was founded in 1840 and built the Romanian Orthodox Church. 1911, today's Romanian Orthodox church in Byzantine style.

Demography

At the beginning of the 19th century Glogonj had about 2,200 inhabitants. At the end of the Second World War, all ethnic Germans were expelled from Glogonj and settled in their place migrants from Macedonia. A total of 412 Macedonian families in the community Glogonj have been assigned. With 234 families came the vast majority of Kumanovo. From Skopje and around 49 families from Ohrid were 33 families. 39 families came from the environment to Struga. Another 57 families from Kriva Palanka were allocated from the neighboring Jabuka.

According to the 2002 census, the inhabitants of the village following ethnic groups belonging saw:

  • Serbs: 2400 people ( 75.51 %)
  • Ethnic Macedonians: 367 persons ( 11.54 %)
  • Romanians: 156 people (4.90 %)
  • Yugoslavs: 106 people (3.33 %)
  • Magyars: 26 people (0.81 %)
  • Sinti and Roma: 17 people (0.53 %)
  • Croats: 6 people (0.18 %)
  • Slovaks: 6 people (0.18 %)
  • Montenegrin: 2 people (0.06 %)
  • Other: 12 people (0.33 %)
  • Unspecified: 68 people ( 2.13% )
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