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Priboj (Прибој, ) is a town and municipality located in the Zlatibor District of southwestern Serbia. The population of the town is 13,172, while the population of the municipality is 23,514.


Geography
The municipality of Priboj is located between municipality of Čajetina in the north, municipality of Nova Varoš in the east, municipality of in the south-east, the border with in the south-west, and the border with Bosnia and Herzegovina in the north-west. A Bosnian-Herzegovinian exclave (Međurječje village) is surrounded by the Priboj municipality.

The town of Priboj lies on the river Lim. It is 5 km away from the , a smaller river that is the border between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia.


Climate
Priboj has an (Köppen climate classification: Cfb).


History
The hamlet of Jarmovac south of Priboj is the site of a prehistoric copper mine shaft which is one of the first evidences of human , first identified in 1937, now dated to the 4th millennium BCE in the late Vinča culture.

During the medieval times, the region around modern city of Priboj in the lower valley of the Lim river was called "Dabar" and it belonged to the medieval until the invasion in the middle of 15th century. Between 1459 and 1463, the town of Priboj was first mentioned in written documents of the .


Settlements
Aside from the town of Priboj, the municipality includes the following settlements:

  • Banja
  • Batkovići
  • Brezna
  • Bučje
  • Dobrilovići
  • Živinice
  • Zabrđe
  • Jelača
  • Kaluđerovići
  • Kratovo
  • Krnjača
  • Kukurovići
  • Mažići
  • Miliješ
  • Plašće
  • Požegrmac
  • Pribojska Goleša
  • Pribojske Čelice
  • Rača
  • Ritošići
  • Sočice
  • Strmac
  • Hercegovačka Goleša
  • Crnugovići
  • Čitluk
  • Akmačići


Demographics
According to 2022 census, the municipality of Priboj has 23,514 inhabitants.


Ethnic groups
In 1991, the population of the Priboj municipality numbered 35,951 people, and was composed of (67.26%), Muslims (30.39%) and others. Most of those who in 1991 census declared themselves as ethnic Muslims, in the next census in 2002 declared themselves as Bosniaks, while the smaller number of them still declare themselves as Muslims by ethnicity.

In 2022, the population of the town was 13,172, and was composed of Serbs (9,155), Bosniaks (2,153), ethnic Muslims (687) and others. As of 2022, most of Priboj's population is of Serbian ethnicity (71.9%), with nearly 21.5% being Bosniaks and Muslims.

The ethnic composition of the municipality:

23,42120,58275.916,90971.9
Bosniaks10,9273,81114.14,14417.6
1,9447.19143.9
Yugoslavs534360.1460.2
Hungarians16110.040.0
Macedonians3390.040.0
Others1,0207402.71,4936.3
Total35,95127,133 23,514


Economy
Today, most of Priboj's economy is based on agriculture, services and partly industry. Priboj is home to the FAP Corporation, which pushed Priboj's development during the 1970s and 1980s, when it was one of the biggest producers of trucks and buses in the former Yugoslavia. Since the 1990s, FAP has been working in limited capacity and since the 2010s its only remaining production is military-oriented.

As of September 2017, Priboj has one of 14 free economic zones established in Serbia.

The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2022):

59
2
1,661
88
84
299
478
351
188
45
44
26
161
81
337
394
475
105
69
5
4,952


Gallery
File:Belgrad Bar Railway.JPG|Belgrade–Bar railway in Priboj File:ŽS 441 in Priboj.jpg|Belgrade–Bar railway train passing through Priboj File:Priboj, Serbia.jpg|Train station Priboj File:Priboj Kalafati IMG 0333 Potpeckoe Jezero Potpec HP Lim.JPG|Potpeć HPP


Notable people
  • Mustafa Hasanagić (b. 1941), footballer
  • Slavenko Kuzeljević (b. 1958), football manager and former player
  • (b. 1959), folk singer
  • Alem Toskić (b. 1982), handball player
  • Mirsad Terzić (b. 1983), handball player
  • Ahmet Delić (b. 1986), footballer
  • Aleksandar Prijović (b. 1990), footballer
  • Željka Nikolić (b. 1991), handball player
  • Amela Terzić (b. 1993), middle-distance runner
  • Marko Gudurić (b. 1995), Professional basketball player, playing for Fenerbahçe S.K. (basketball) in the Turkish Basketbol Süper Ligi


See also
  • List of places in Serbia
  • Bosniaks of Serbia
  • Sandžak


External links

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