Drina Banovina

The Drina Banovina or Drina Banate (Serbo-Croatian: Drinska banovina / Дринска бановина), was a province (banovina) of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia between 1929 and 1941. Its capital was Sarajevo and it included portions of present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia. It was named after the Drina River and, like all Yugoslav banovinas, was intentionally not based on ethnic boundaries. As a result of the creation of the Banovina of Croatia in 1939, its territory was reduced considerably.

The administrative building of Banovina. Today houses the Presidency of BiH
Drina Banovina
Drinska banovina
Дринска бановина
Banovina of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia
1929–1941

Drina Banovina in 1931
CapitalSarajevo
History 
 Established
1929
 Disestablished
1941
Succeeded by
Banovina of Croatia
Socialist Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina
Socialist Republic of Serbia
Today part of Bosnia and Herzegovina
 Serbia
Drina Banovina in 1931
Map of Yugoslav banovinas in 1929 (The Drina Banovina is #5)

Borders

According to the 1931 Constitution of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia,

The Drina Banovina is bounded on the west, as far as the Sava, by the boundaries ... of the Littoral and Vrbas Banovinas, then on the north by the river Sava to where it is joined by the Kolubara. From this confluence and up to the eastern boundary of the Maritime Banovina (eastern boundary of the district of Konjic, hill 2058 in the Treskavica mountains) the boundary of the Drina Banovina follows the eastern boundaries of the districts of Posava (capital, Obrenovac), Tamnava, Kolubara (capital, Mionica) and Požega, including the district of Ljubić. It then follows the eastern boundaries of the districts of Trnava and Dragačevo, then the southern and western boundaries of the district of Moravica, continuing along the southern boundaries of the districts of Arilje, Zlatibor, Višegrad, Čajniče, Rogatica, and Sarajevo.

History

In 1941, the World War II Axis Powers occupied the Drina Banovina and the province was abolished and divided between the Independent State of Croatia and German-occupied Serbia. Following World War II, the region was divided between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia within a federal Socialist Yugoslavia.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.