Gospođinci
Gospođinci is a village in the municipality of Žabalj, in the South Bačka District of Serbia. It is situated in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina. The village has a Serb ethnic majority and its population is 3,896.
Name
Its name derives from the Serbian word "gospođa". In Serbo-Croatian, the village is known as Госпођинци or Gospođinci, in Hungarian as Boldogasszonyfalva, in German as Frauendorf, and in Pannonian Rusyn as Ґосподїнци. The names of the settlement in Serbo-Croatian and Pannonian Rusyn are plural.Features
This is a typical Vojvodinian village, with its inhabitants mostly working in agriculture or in the capital of Vojvodina, Novi Sad. Most of the village streets are straight from one end to the other with houses built next to each other. As it is typical with most of the villages in Vojvodina, the houses, most of which were built before the 1980s, have only one floor and a big attic. The majority of properties are divided into "first" and "second" yards by small fences with gates, with gardens at the very back. First yards are, mostly, lawns, while second yards are used for barns, storage of agricultural machinery and equipment, and sometimes poultry farming. Gardens are used for growing potatoes, tomatoes and other vegetables. Apple and peach trees, among others, are very common.History
From the time of the Roman Empire just outside the village, in the west, lies a trench which the Romans had used for transport. During the Ottoman rule, the village of Gospođinci was populated by ethnic Serbs. During the Habsburg rule in the 18th and 19th century, the village belonged to the Military Frontier province.Since 1918, the village was part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and the subsequent South Slavic states. During the Hungarian Axis occupation, in a 1942 raid, 85 inhabitants of the village were murdered, of whom there were 47 men, 19 women, 15 children, and four elderly people. By nationality, the victims included 73 Serbs, 10 Jews, and two Rusyns.
Historical population
- 1948: 0
- 1953: 0
- 1961: 0
- 1971: 0
- 1981: 0
- 1991: 0
- 2002: 0
- 2011: 0
- 2013: 1