*** Welcome to piglix ***

Smiljan

Smiljan
Village
Statue of Nikola Tesla at the Nikola Tesla Memorial Center in Smiljan
Statue of Nikola Tesla at the Nikola Tesla Memorial Center in Smiljan
Smiljan is located in Croatia
Smiljan
Smiljan
Location of Smiljan within Croatia
Coordinates: 44°34′N 15°19′E / 44.567°N 15.317°E / 44.567; 15.317Coordinates: 44°34′N 15°19′E / 44.567°N 15.317°E / 44.567; 15.317
Country  Croatia
County Lika-Senj County
Municipality Gospić
Population (2011)
 • Total 418
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
 • Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 53211 Smiljan
Area code(s) +053

Smiljan (pronounced [smî̞ʎan]) is a village in the mountainous region of Western Lika in Croatia. It is located 6 km (3.7 mi) northwest of Gospić, and fifteen kilometers from the Zagreb-Split highway; its population is 418 (2011). Smiljan is famous as the birthplace of scientist Nikola Tesla.

It consists of eighteen scattered hamlets (Baćinac, Bogdanic, Covina, Colon Hill, Drazic, Kolakovic, Kovacevici, Ljutača, Milkovic Varos, Miljac, Miskulin Hill, Podkrčmar, Rasovača, Rosulje, Smiljan, Smiljansko Polje, Vaganac).

Smiljan resort is located in the central part of the Velebit-Lika plain, on the western edge of the field at the foot of the hill Licko Krcmar. It consists of twelve villages which makes the spatial and functional unit.

In the surroundings are Hill-forts Bogdanić, Smiljan and Krčmar, prehistoric tombs, the churches of St. Anastasia, St. Mark and St. Vitus. It got its name from the fort Smiljan which ruins are located at hill Vekavac.

The oldest traces of settlement on the ground of Smiljan are dating from the Middle and Late Bronze Age. On the hillfort Miljac once was situated necropolis, and were found numerous remains of Iapodian culture.

The area of Smiljan was controlled by the Ottoman Empire between 1527–1686, after which the Ottoman rule was expelled from those parts by counts Jerko Rukavina and Dujam Kovačević. Until that time the Ottoman aghas, Rizvan and Zenković, from Novi near Gospić had estates in Smiljan, Bužim and Trnovac.

After the defeat of the Ottomans in Lika, most of the Bunjevci (Roman Catholic Vlachs who spoke Western Herzegovinian subdialect of Neo-Shtokavian with Ikavian accent) migrated to Lika, including Smiljan between 1683–87. A 1700 church register listed 17 Serbian Orthodox families in the village, who had settled during the Great Turkish War. Villages and hamlets in Lika and Krbava were divided according to religious confession, which was aligned with ethnicity; in Smiljan the Orthodox, who were ethnic Serbs, lived in the hamlets of Selište, Ljutača and Bogdanić at that time.


...
Wikipedia

...