Counties Of Croatia

The counties are primary territorial subdivisions of the Republic of Croatia. In Croatian they are called županije in plural and županija in singular form. There is a total of 21 counties in the country.

History

The counties were introduced in the 1990 Constitution of Croatia, and only slightly changed up to present. Previously, in socialist Yugoslavia, the Croatian Republic was divided into općine (sing. općina) which were generally smaller than the present counties. The designation općina has been retained for municipalities which are one level smaller than the županije and much smaller than the old općine. The political representatives elected for county government used to form a Chamber of Counties (Županijski dom) in the Croatian Parliament, between 1993 and 2001.

Organization

Each county has an assembly (županijska skupština) which is composed of representatives elected by popular vote, using party-list proportional representation, for four-year terms. The county assembly elects the executive county leadership, decides on the yearly budget, the county properties etc. The leader of a county is a župan (sometimes translated as "prefect"), who has up to twelve deputies each called a dožupan. The župan presides over the county's executive government (županijsko poglavarstvo), and represents the county in external affairs.

List of counties

The list of counties, grouped into historic and geographic larger regions:
Num. Name Croate
colspan="3" | Central Croatia
. Zagreb Zagrebačka
. Krapina-Zagorje Krapinsko-zagorska
. Sisak-Moslavina Sisačko-moslavačka
. Karlovac Karlovačka
. Varazdin Varaždinska
. Koprivnica-Krizevci Koprivničko-križevačka
. Bjelovar-Bilogora Bjelovarsko-bilogorska
0. Medjimurje Međimurska
1. City of Zagreb Grad Zagreb
colspan="3" | Istria, Northern seacoast and Mountainous Croatia:
. Primorje-Gorski Kotar Primorsko-goranska
. Lika-Senj Ličko-senjska
8. Istria Istarska
colspan="3" | Slavonia
0. Virovitica-Podravina Virovitičko-podravska
1. Pozega-Slavonia Požeško-slavonska
2. Brod-Posavina Brodsko-posavska
4. Osijek-Baranja Osječko-baranjska
6. Vukovar-Srijem Vukovarsko-srijemska
colspan="3" |Dalmatia
3. Zadar Zadarska
5. Sibenik-Knin Šibensko-kninska
7. Split-Dalmatia Splitsko-dalmatinska
9. Dubrovnik-Neretva Dubrovačko-neretvanska

Naming

The suffixes -čka, -ska in the local names indicate genitive, and so the full local name of each of them is $name županija, so e.g. Karlovačka's full name is Karlovačka županija. Some counties also prefer to swap the order of those two words but they are in the minority (since February 7, 1997 when the order was officially changed). Zagreb itself is grad, a city, due to its importance it's separated from its county and given similar jurisdiction.

See also

Croatia, Counties of

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
dry stone wall
prohormone
137 (number)
anders sparrman
josiah child
john child
michel adanson
oberhof
scientific laws named after people
zagreb county
fundamental physical constant
krapina zagorje county
varazdin county
pi (movie)
karlovac county
sisak moslavina county
koprivnica krizevci county
bjelovar bilogora county
joe walsh (irish politician)
baron berkeley
surrey quays shopping centre
southern cross university
baron byron
w. ross thatcher
baron braye
london docklands development corporation
willie horton
rome and vienna airport attacks
ala
jackie joyner kersee
1735 in science
1734 in science
1732 in science
chlorine dioxide
1731 in science
brinell hardness test
1730 in science
nerja
iso 3166 2:hr
myctophiformes
allan r. bomhard
odal
e. d. e. n. southworth
liebig condenser