Čuljak is a Croatian surname.
Notable people with the name include:
Pavić or Pavič is a South Slavic surname, common in Croatia and Serbia. It is derived from the personal name Pavao/Pavo, by means of patronymic-forming suffix -ić.
Kovač, meaning "blacksmith" in South Slavic languages, is a common surname in Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Slovenia and Serbia.
Kovačić, alternatively spelled Kovačič in Slovene and Slovak, Kovacsics in Hungarian, or transliterated as Kovacic/Kovacich/Kovachich in English, is one of the most common surnames in Croatia, Slovenia, as well as Hungary and Serbia. Etymologically it is a patronymic derivative of the surname Kovač, which is a Slavic cognate of the English surname Smith, and as such is closely related to the similar surname Kovačević.
Pavelić, is a Croatian family name. It is a patronymic surname based on the male given name Pavel, Pavle or Pavao, which is a local variant of Paul. It is closely related to a number of other Slavic surnames with the same etymology such as Pavlović (Pavlovich), Pavletić (Pavletich) or Pavličić (Pavlichich). Historically they come from the area around the Croatian towns of Gospić and Senj. It ranks as the 251st most common family name in Croatia and there is around 2,000 people living in Croatia today with the surname Pavelić, some 450 of them in the capital Zagreb.
Stepinac is a Croatian surname.
Kovačević, Kovačevič or Kovačovič, is a Slavic surname meaning "[black]smith's son". The surname is derived from Kovač, which means "[black]smith", and is the equivalent of English Smithson.
Vukčević is a Serbo-Croatian patronymic surname, derived from the male given name Vukac. Notable people with the surname include:
Pavlich is an anglicized version of the Croatian surname Pavlić. Notable people with the surname include:
Belić is a Serbo-Croatian surname, derived from the word belo, meaning "white". It may refer to:
Zlatarić is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Vukić is a Serbo-Croatian surname, a patronymic derived from given name Vuk. It is itself a diminutive, meaning "little Vuk". It may refer to:
Dijana Čuljak is a Croatian television host. She began to work as a reporter for Croatian Radiotelevision during the Croat–Bosniak War. She was also an editor of Otvoreno talk show. Today she is a news editor on Croatian Radiotelevision. Her role in Vranica Case is by many Bosniaks and Croats considered controversial. Vranica case was a massacre committed by Croatian forces during the HVO attack on Bosniak population in Mostar in May 1993.
Crnković is a Croatian surname.
Vučko is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Vukasović is a Serbo-Croatian surname, a patronymic derived from the Slavic name Vukas, a variant of Vuk. Notable people with the surname include:
Kovačec is a Croatian surname. The surname may refer to:
Bilić is a Croatian, Serbian and Bosnian surname.
The Vranica massacre was the killing of 13 Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (ARBiH) prisoners of war (POWs) on 10 May 1993 by the Croatian Defence Council (HVO), during the Bosnian War.
Vučetić is a Slavic Serbian and Croatian surname derived from the masculine given name Vučeta. It may refer to:
Vukičević is a surname found in Croatia, Bosnia and Serbia. It may refer to: