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Borovnica, Borovnica

Borovnica
Borovnica, Slovenia.jpg
Borovnica is located in Slovenia
Borovnica
Borovnica
Location in Slovenia
Coordinates: 45°55′4.72″N 14°21′51.02″E / 45.9179778°N 14.3641722°E / 45.9179778; 14.3641722Coordinates: 45°55′4.72″N 14°21′51.02″E / 45.9179778°N 14.3641722°E / 45.9179778; 14.3641722
Country Flag of Slovenia.svg Slovenia
Traditional region Inner Carniola
Statistical region Central Slovenia
Municipality Borovnica
Area
 • Total 0.96 km2 (0.37 sq mi)
Elevation 298.6 m (979.7 ft)
Population (2002)
 • Total 2,116

Borovnica (pronounced [bɔɾɔu̯ˈniːtsa]; German: Franzdorf) is a settlement in the Municipality of Borovnica in the Inner Carniola region of Slovenia. It is about 20 kilometres (12 mi) southwest of the national capital Ljubljana.

Borovnica was attested in written sources in 1260 as Vronitz (and as Vreuncz in 1300, apud Vraniciam in 1313, and Vraunitz in 1366). In the local dialect, the settlement is known as Barounica. The name is a univerbation of *Borovna (vas/voda), literally 'pine village' or 'pine creek'. The name therefore originally refers to a place or stream where pines grow. The early German name Vronitz (which was later transformed into Franzdorf) is adapted from the Slovene name by shifting the stress to the first syllable and loss of the syllable -ov-.

A 48 m high railroad viaduct for the Austrian Southern Railway was built across the Borovnica Valley in 1856. On the night of 28 June 1942, Partisan forces attacked an Italian train carrying arrestees being sent to concentration camps in Italy, freeing about 300 prisoners. Those that refused to join the Partisans were executed and disposed of in the Krim Cave Mass Grave. The railroad viaduct was destroyed in August 1944 in an operation that also killed 30 villagers.

At the end of the Second World War, a concentration camp for Italian prisoners of war was established in Borovnica. The prisoners, who were kept in squalid conditions without water and toilet facilities, were abused and Italian sources referred to the camp as the "new Dachau." Approximately 200 prisoners died at the camp. Many of the prisoners were transferred to other camps by the fall of 1945, and a November 1945 Red Cross report concluded that conditions had become acceptable. The camp was closed in mid-August 1946.


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