Berlovine (en serbe cyrillique : Берловине) est un village de Serbie situé dans la municipalité de Ljubovija, district de Mačva. Au recensement de 2011, il comptait 226 habitants.
Location
1 explorer visited this place
389 m
Berlovine is a village in Serbia. It is situated in the Ljubovija municipality, in the Mačva District of Central Serbia. The village had a population of 276 in 2002, all of whom were ethnic Serbs.
1.5 km
Donja Ljuboviđa is a village in Serbia. It is situated in the Ljubovija municipality, in the Mačva District of Central Serbia. The village had a Serb ethnic majority and a population of 951. There were 143 Romani living in this village in 2002; it is the largest proportion of the minority in the Ljubovija municipality.
2.4 km
Dubuko is a village in Serbia. It is situated in the Ljubovija municipality, in the Mačva District of Central Serbia. The village had a Serb ethnic majority and a population of 484 in 2002.
2.7 km
Duboko is a village located in the Užice municipality of Serbia. In 2011, the village had a population of 848.
2.9 km
Drina was a medieval župa, and later zemlja, located in what is now Podrinje, the region in the Drina river valley, shared by Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia. Its location and spreading is unclear, although assumed to be located in middle and upper course of the river Drina, on its left bank in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Podrinje was part of the first Serbian principality, in the Early Middle Ages. John Kinnamos noted that the river Drina separated Bosnia from Serbia, while one Papal document from 1187 erroneously identified Bosnia as part of Serbia. Early medieval Bosnian state included regions on the left bank of the Drina, where the župa was located. Bosnian noble family of Pavlović ruled the region, along with other feudal possessions that extended from the middle and Upper Drina river to the south-southeastern regions of the Bosnian realm in Hum and Konavle at the Adriatic coast.
The family official residence and seat was at Borač and later Pavlovac, above the Prača river canyon, between present-day Prača, Rogatica and Goražde. Also, it was part of the dominion of the Kosača noble family, while another lesser Bosnian noble family had their possessions in the region, namely Dinjčić noble family's.
The Drina župa was mentioned in the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, as the site of a battle and the fief of Serbian nobleman Tihomir during Prince Časlav's reign. In 1359, veliki čelnik Dimitrije is mentioned as holding Gacko, Drina, Dabar, and Rudine.
Drina is further mentioned as an area with Soko fortress in 1444, as a dominium in 1448, as a lordship with Soko fortress in 1454.