Bakovići (Montenegrin Cyrillic : Баковићи) is a village in the municipality of Kolašin, Montenegro. Points of Interest for the tourism industry include the Partisan Memorial Cemetery, the Ski Center Kolasin 1450, the Saint Demetrius Church, as well as the Dulovina Botanical Garden. The climate of Bakovići, Kolašin is snowy during the winter months and sunny during the summer seasons. The local cuisine consists of traditional dollma, veal corba, cicvara, and schnitzel.
According to the 2011 census, its population was 130. [1]
Ethnicity | Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Montenegrins | 91 | 70.0% |
Serbs | 30 | 23.1% |
other/undeclared | 9 | 6.9% |
Total | 130 | 100% |
Kolašin is a town in northern Montenegro. It has a population of 2,989. Kolašin is the centre of Kolašin Municipality and an unofficial centre of Morača region, named after Morača River.
Biogradska Gora is a forest and a national park in Montenegro within the Kolašin municipality that is recognized as one of the UNESCO World Network of Biosphere Reserves. The landscape is one of mountain ridges, glacial lakes, and temperate forest.
The Armed Forces of Montenegro are the military forces of Montenegro. The Armed Forces consists of an army, navy and air force.
The State Anti-fascist Council for the National Liberation of Montenegro and Boka was formed as the highest governing institution of the anti-fascist resistance movement in Montenegro, in the former Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
Fudbalski klub Gorštak is a football club from Kolašin, Montenegro. Founded in 1927, they have competed in the Montenegrin Third League.
This is a list of coats of arms of Montenegro. Most municipalities of Montenegro have their own coat of arms. Many Montenegrin military units and other public agencies and some private families have coats of arms. There are also many historical Montenegrin coat of arms throughout history.
The Battle of Kolašin took place on July 28, 1858 between the Principality of Montenegro and the Ottoman Empire near Kolašin. The Montenegrin army was composed of 5,000 tribesmen from the Vasojevići, Morača, Rovca, Drobnjaci, Uskoci and Kuči. The Montenegrin army burnt all of the Turkish katuns on the Sinjajevina mountain, and razed the villages of Trebaljevo, Lipovo and Štitarica.
Lower Kolašin is a historical region in the present-day municipality of Bijelo Polje in northern Montenegro, towards Serbia. It is situated in the picturesque Vraneš valley formed around the river Ljuboviđa. The most important local populated centers are Tomaševo and Pavino Polje.
Tomaševo, previously known as Šahovići, is a village in the municipality of Bijelo Polje, Montenegro.
R-19 regional road is a Montenegrin roadway.
The Kolašin Affair was a rebellion in the Montenegrin military against the dictatorship of the Prince of Montenegro, Nikola I Petrović-Njegoš, that broke out in 1909. It followed the failed Bombaš Affair, a conspiracy organized in 1907 by a group of Montenegrin students connected to the Black Hand to break the Montenegrin government through terrorist attacks, and ultimately unite Montenegro with Serbia, that was detected and led to numerous arrests in 1908. In the same year, a secret organization of Montenegrin politicians and political emigrees in Belgrade in opposition to Nikola I was formed. The organization's statute said that Nikola I was to be killed. The organization planned to free the Bombaši and change Tomanović's reactionary regime. The organization had important subsidiaries in Vasojevići, Kuči and Bratonožići, and allegedly had 1,000 members. It was detected by the Montenegrin police and led to the imprisonment and death sentences of the conspirators. The two affairs led to deteriorating bilateral relations between Montenegro and Serbia.
R-2 regional road is a Montenegrin roadway.
R-9 regional road is a Montenegrin roadway.
R-13 regional road is a Montenegrin roadway.
R-24 regional road is a Montenegrin roadway.
Bare is a small settlement in Kolašin, Montenegro. According to the 2011 census, it had a population of 63 people.
Bare Kraljske is a village in the municipality of Kolašin, Montenegro.
Breza is a village in the municipality of Kolašin, Montenegro.
Bakovići may refer to: