Posavina Canton

Posavina Canton
Posavski kanton
Flag
{{{coat_alt}}}
Coat of arms
Status Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Capital Orašje
Largest city Odžak
Official languages Croatian and Bosnian
Ethnic groups (2013[1]) 77.32% Croats
19.00% Bosniaks
1.91% Serbs
1.77% others
Demonym Posavinian
Government Parliamentary system
 Prime Minister
Marijan Klaić
Legislature Assembly of the Posavina Canton
Canton of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Establishment
12 June 1996
Area
 Total
325 km2 (125 sq mi)
Population
 2013 census
43,453
 Density
147.97/km2 (383.2/sq mi)
GDP (nominal) 2013 estimate
 Total
BAM 218.404 million
 Per capita
BAM 4541.7
Currency BAM
Time zone UTC+1 (CET)
 Summer (DST)
UTC+2 (CEST)
Date format dd-mm-yyy
Driving side right

The Posavina Canton (Bosnian and Serbian: Posavski kanton/Посавски кантон, Croatian: Županija Posavska) is one of ten cantons of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is the smallest canton with an area of only 325 km². Its capital is Orašje.

Municipalities

The canton is split into the municipalities of Domaljevac, Odžak, and Orašje.

Politics

The cantonal assembly is composed of:

Geography

The canton lies near the border with Croatia and near the river Sava which forms a natural border between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia. Odžak and Orašje-Domaljevac form two exclaves of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Posavina is a region which includes other parts of Bosnia and Herzegovina and parts of Croatia. Because of that, this canton is sometimes called Bosanska Posavina (Bosnian Posavina) and is the only part of northern Bosnia near the border with Croatia that lies in the Federation. The rest of northern Bosnia near the river Sava and near the border is the Brčko District and the Republika Srpska. The Brčko district divides Republika Srpska into 2 parts.

The Posavina canton's position near the Sava river makes it a good place for agriculture because it is a flat lowland and there are no mountains in the area. It is like this in the entire northern border with Croatia, with a great deal of farming and agriculture. The river Sava is a river that flows through Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia. In Bosnia and Herzegovina it flows through the northern border and makes a natural border between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia.

Posavina means literally along Sava in the local language. The river Sava is the largest navigable river in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Much of the food in both Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia comes from this region, not only Bosnian Posavina but the rest of the fertile fields along the river Sava.

Demographics

2013 Census

Municipality Nationality
Total
Bosniaks
%
Croats
%
Serbs
%
Odžak 6,22033.04 11,62161.74 5823.09 18,821
Orašje 2,01510.14 17,34587.33 1570.79 19,861
Domaljevac-Šamac 170.35 4,63497.12 921.92 4,771
Canton 8,25218.99 33,60077.32 8311.91 43,453

Page text.[2]


Municipality Nationality
Total
Croats
%
Serbs
%
Bosniaks
%
Other
%
Odžak 16,33854.36 5,66718.85 6,22020.69 1,8316.09 30,056
Orašje 21,30875.12 4,23514.93 1,8936.67 9313.28 28,367
Domaljevac-Šamac 4,59898.02 260.55 70.15 601.28 4,691
Canton 42,22466.90 9,92815.73 8,11312.85 2,8224.47 63,114
1991 census

Sport

HNK Orašje, the local football club from Orašje won the Football Cup of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

See also

References

  1. Sarajevo, juni 2016. CENZUS OF POPULATION, HOUSEHOLDS AND DWELLINGS IN BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA, 2013 FINAL RESULTS (PDF). BHAS. Retrieved 30 June 2016.
  2. Link text, additional text.
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