Historic small town around a central park with old church. According to en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kovin the Dacian tribe of Albocenses dwelled in this area in the 2nd century AD. There are remains of the ancient Roman fortress called Contra Margum, opposite the Margum fortress on the Danube. In the 9th and 10th centuries, this area was populated by Slavs and Romanians ruled by Voivode Glad. Glad was defeated and the area was included into the medieval Kingdom of Hungary.
The earliest mention of the settlement was in 1071 as Keuee. Kovin is mentioned in the 12th century as a seat of the county, which included most of the western Banat. Since the 14th century, the city has had a large Serb population that escaped there from Serbia under threat by the Ottomans. The Serbian despot Lazar Branković took over in 1457, but in the next year it came again under control of the Kingdom of Hungary.
In the 16th century, the city became part of the Ottoman Province of Temeşvar. During the Ottoman rule (16th-17th c.), Kovin was mostly populated by ethnic Serbs. In 1716, it became part of the Habsburg Monarchy Banat of Temeswar until 1751 when it became part of the Habsburg Military Frontier (Banat Krajina).
In 1848/1849, Kovin was part of the Serbian Voivodship, but in 1849 back under administration of the Military Frontier until its abolishment in 1873, when it was incorporated into Temes county within the Kingdom of Hungary. In 1910 Kovin had 21,795 Serbian, 6,587 German, 5,705 Romanian, and 5,355 Hungarian speakers.
This town had a significant role in the outbreak of World War I. In July 1914, a purported military skirmish here was a proximate cause of the declaration of war against Serbia by Franz Joseph I of Austria, but the report of such skirmish was apparently false, or greatly exaggerated.
In 1918, Kovin became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (renamed Yugoslavia in 1929). 1918-1922 it was part of Banat county; 1922-1929 of Podunavska oblast; 1929-1941 Danube Banovina. 1941-1944, Kovin was in German-occupied Serbia. Heavily bombed by the Allies in 1944, in 1945 it became part of the Socialist Autonomous Province of Vojvodina within the Socialist Republic of Serbia and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. In 1992, Kovin became part of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, which was in 2003 transformed into the state union of Serbia and Montenegro. Since 2006 part of an independent Serbia.
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쿠키를 통해 귀하의 개인 데이터를 처리하는 방법에 대한 자세한 정보는 저희 개인정보 처리방침를 확인하세요.
저희는 귀하의 개인 정보를 소중히 여깁니다 ⛰️
앱과 웹사이트가 올바르게 작동하는 데 필수적인 쿠키를 사용하거나 집계된 통계를 생성하는 데 사용됩니다. 귀하의 동의에 따라, 저희와 저희의 제3자 파트너는 앱 내 및 내비게이션 경험을 개선하고 개인화된 서비스와 콘텐츠를 제공하기 위해 추적 기술을 사용할 것입니다. 동의를 주시려면 모든 쿠키 수락을 탭하세요.
대안으로, 개인 정보 설정을 사용자 정의하려면 사용자 정의 기본 설정을 탭하거나 언제든지 쿠키 기본 설정으로 이동할 수 있습니다. 비기술적 추적 기술을 사용하지 않기를 원하시면 거부를 탭하세요.
쿠키를 통해 귀하의 개인 데이터를 처리하는 방법에 대한 자세한 정보는 저희 개인정보 처리방침를 확인하세요.