Leskovac Explained

Leskovac
Official Name:City of Leskovac
Native Name Lang:sr.
Coordinates:43°N 78°W
Parts Type:Settlements
Parts Style:para
P1:144
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Goran Cvetanović (SNS)
Area Blank1 Title:Urban
Area Blank1 Km2:31.27
Area Blank2 Title:Administrative
Area Blank2 Km2:1025
Elevation M:228
Population As Of:2022 census
Population Blank1 Title:Urban
Population Density Blank1 Km2:auto
Population Blank2 Title:Administrative
Population Density Blank2 Km2:auto
Postal Code:16000
Area Code:+381(0)16
Utc Offset:+1
Utc Offset Dst:+2
Blank Info:LE

Leskovac (Serbian: Лесковац, pronounced as /lěskoʋats/) is a city and the administrative center of the Jablanica District in southern Serbia. According to the 2022 census, the city of Leskovac has 123,950 inhabitants.

Etymology

Leskovac was historically called Glubočica, later evolving into Dubočica. These interchangeable variants derived from the Serbian word's, "glib", meaning mud and "duboko", meaning deep. Untamed rivers would often flood the area leaving swamps that once dried would spout hazelnut trees, or "leska" in Serbian, whilst "-ovac" is a common Slavic suffix, hence Leskovac. During Ottoman rule the town was referred to in Turkish as Leskovçe or Hisar (Turkish translation; fortress).[1] [2]

History

Early period

Archeological findings on Hisar Hill, located at the rim of Leskovac valley between the Jablanica and Veternica rivers, have established continual habitation between the Bronze Age until the 19th century. Hisar served as a fortification for many centuries and its surrounding plateau are abundant in Iron Age pottery largely associated with the Brnjica culture.[3] Other archeological findings associated with the Illyrians, Thracians, Dacians, Greeks, Romans and Celts lay within Leskovac's surrounds.[4] [5] [6] The Roman Empire conquered the area in the 1st century BC and would remain the dominant power until Slavic invasion and settlement in the late 6th and early 7th centuries, with the Serbs solidifying their presence.

The area Glubočica, later Dubočica and a synonym for Leskovac was first mentioned in the 12th century as lands bestowed upon the Nemanjić dynasty by Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos. The settlement of Leskovac per se was first mentioned by name in 1348 as an endowment by Serbian Emperor Dušan the Mighty to the Hilendar Monastery.[7] [8] [9] [10] [1] The vicinity of modern-day Leskovac was contested territory during a series of conflicts fought between the Bulgarian Empire and medieval Serbian states between the 9th and 14th centuries.[11] [12] [13] [14]

The Battle of Dubočica took place on September 24, 1454, between the Serbian Despotate and the invading Ottoman Empire, and ended in a Serbian victory. Brankovic's Serbia was a vassal state of the Ottoman Empire during the 1st half of the 15th century and was repeatedly invaded, eventually becoming part of the Ottoman state.

Ottoman rule

Leskovac was annexed by the Ottomans in 1454 and allotted to the Rumelia Eyalet. The Nahija of Dubocica (later Leskovac) became part of Kruševac Sanjak with Leskovac possessing one of six kadiluks. During Ottoman rule, Leskovac was known in Turkish as Leskovçe, or more commonly Hisar (Turkish translation; fortress). The conquest in time brought Ottoman culture to Leskovac, influencing architecture, cuisine, customs, dress and language. Endowments by the ruling Ottoman aristocracy which financed the construction of mosques, tekije, madrasa, meter and Turkish baths marked the area. During this period, Leskovac was regarded for its quality horse tack, tanning, smithing and weaving. The townsfolk worked as craftsman, merchants and peri-urban farmers, residing in separate Serbian Orthodox and Muslim mahallah's whilst affluent Muslim families held prominent real estate and owned farmland. This cosmopolitan milieu was supplemented by officials, clergy, sipahi, and soldiers interlaced with Jewish, Greek, Vlach, Albanian and Ragusan traders. Leskovac was known in the wider region for its annual 15-day long fair.[15] [16] [17]

Leskovac was severely damaged by fire in 1595 and again in 1690. In the Ottoman-Austrian War the towns Serbs overwhelmingly sided with Habsburg forces on arrival in 1689. Following the failed uprising many Serbs migrated north after the Ottomans recaptured Leskovac, razing the Serbian quarters as reprisals for collaboration. In 1790 Sultan Selim III administrative reforms granted Leskovac the seat of its own Eyalet governed by Şehsuvar Abdi Pasha, who was succeeded by his son Ismail Pasha in 1830, until the Leskovac Eyalet was annexed to the Niš Eyalet in 1839. The Serbian population of Leskovac (along with other south Serbian towns and villages) took part in the failed rebellion of 1841.

Before the Serbian–Turkish Wars (1876–1878), the county of Leskovac had a significant Muslim population, mostly Turkish and Albanian, which comprised one-third of its overall population. In 1873, the town had 2,500 Serbian houses and 1,000 Muslim houses. The Muslims in the town were Albanian- and Turkish-speaking. Albanians formed almost the entire Muslim population in the villages. Historian Miloš Jagodić has estimated that of ~17,033 Muslims who lived in the Leskovac county before the war, about 16,976 were Albanians who were expelled after the war.[18] These estimates are corroborated in contemporary sources like the records of Austrian diplomat Johann Georg von Hahn.[19] In the war almost the entire Muslim civilian population of Leskovac was expelled and the advancing Serbian Army and chetas entered the town on December 24, 1877. There were 2,122 Albanian abandoned household. Of the about 5,000 Muslims who had previously lived in the town, 120 were still living there in 1879 in the first post-war population count. The rest had left as refugees and most settled in cities like Mitrovica, Prizren and Kumanovo in Kosovo Vilayet.

From Turkish kasaba to Serbia's Little Manchester

Leskovac became part of Serbia which received full international recognition following the Treaty of Berlin in 1878. Before the war Leskovac was part of a network of textile industry hubs from the Black Sea to the central Balkans and collaborated closely with Bulgarian textile industry. Products from Leskovac were exported duty-free to Bulgaria which exported machinery to Serbia.[20] Independence initially had a negative impact though trade barriers, tariffs and open hostilities between Serbia and Bulgaria necessitated the acquisition and development of technology for rope and industrial hemp processing. By the mid-1880s business development, particularly the textile sector enabled Leskovac to become the third largest urban area after Belgrade and Niš at the time.[21] [22] The establishment of a railway line linking Leskovac with Belgrade, Skopje and Thessaloniki in 1886 also significantly contributed to the development of the town. A vocational textile school opened 1890 and in 1903 the second hydroelectric power plant in Serbia was built on the nearby Vučjanka River.[23]

Due to the towns burgeoning industriousness in the late 19th c. Leskovac became popularity nicknamed Serbia's Little Manchester (Serbian Cyrillic: Мали Манчестер) in honor of Manchester, England, a powerhouse of textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution. The growing customs dispute with Austria-Hungary following the May Coup precipitated protectionism throughout the 1900s which served to nourish the local economy.[24] [25]

World War I and Bulgarian Occupation

Following the Serbian campaign of 1915 Leskovac fell within the Bulgarian occupational zone. This period was marked by harsh repression with attempts at Bulgarisation of the local inhabitants. Numerous crimes were committed on the Leskovac citizenry with 2,000-4,000 victims being executed and a great many more massacred in the surrounding region.[26] [27] [28] [29] During the occupation Leskovac was also adversely affected by a typhus epidemic and widespread malnutrition.[30] Bulgaria capitulation to the Entente on 30 September 1918, and Leskovac was liberated on 7 October 1918 in an offensive led by Field Marshal Petar Bojović's 1st Serbian Corps, which repelled the Austro-Hungarian 9th and German 11th Divisions. Cheering crowds gathered to welcome the Serbian Army's Dinarska and Dunavska divisions as they entered the city accompanied by French cavalry units.[31] [32]

The "Golden Age" of Leskovac

Following the war Leskovac continued its fast economic and social transformation. The townsfolk practised a cultural medley of both Oriental and European habits, whilst the social fabric was dominated by affluent, often competing industrialists families and greater social disparity within the community.[33] Industrial development facilitated trade union agitation amongst an emerging urban working-class. In August 1920 Leskovac became one of the first municipalities to elect the Communist Party. Despite its victory the party was quickly suppressed by the authorities.[34] [35]

Despite the rise of Leskovac as a regional manufacturing centre the town still lacked basic infrastructure during the interwar period such as a running water supply, sewerage system, paved streets (with only three asphalted in 1938) and a permanent marketplace. Leskovac experienced a significant influx of largely peasant workers leading to poor housing conditions with many affected by squalor, alcoholism, a high mortality rate and labour exploitation.[36] [37] From 1929 to 1941, Leskovac was part of the Vardar Banovina of the renamed Kingdom of Yugoslavia.

World War II and Allied bombing

See main article: World War II in Yugoslavia. During the capitulation of Yugoslavia in the April War Leskovac was occupied by the Germans on April 12, 1941. Despite several attempts at assassination and sabotage the town remained relatively docile throughout the Nedić administration, with the exception of the Arapova Dolina massacre of 310 mostly Romani civilians. Pockets of Partisan insurgency remain limited to the surrounding countryside which began experiencing noteworthy military engagements during the Battle of Serbia with the July–August 1944 Toplica-Jablanica Operation.[38] [39] [40] [41]

On September 6, 1944, Leskovac was targeted in a catastrophic Allied bombing campaign which left much of the town heavily damaged with approximately 2,500-4,000 casualties and a total of 1,840 demolished or damaged residential buildings and factories. The bombing also caused significant damage to infrastructure and historical landmarks.[42] [43] [44] [45] Leskovac fell to the 47th Serbian Division of the National Liberation Army (Partisans) on October 11, 1944, following a German withdrawal during the Niš Operation. The new Communist authorities proceeded to purge the town of political and ideological opponents, summarily executing 707 people.[46] [47] [48]

Socialist era

The city continued to be a major textile center until the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe, but due to the economic isolation of Serbia resulting from ethnic wars, its remote location, and failure to privatize the mills, the industry collapsed resulting in depression of the economy in the area.[49] On 12 April 1999, during the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia a bridge near Leskovac (Grdelička klisura) was destroyed by a NATO aircraft as a passenger train was crossing. The act was highly condemned with the bridge being struck twice (the train itself having been bombed from the first attack).

21st Century

Contemporary Leskovac has become synonymous with Serbian culinary culture, particularly the national dishes of pljeskavica and ćevapi. The annual Roštiljijada grilled meat barbecue festival held since 1989 is the cities biggest tourist attraction drawing in thousands of visitors from both Serbia and abroad.[50] [51] [52] [53]

The once thriving textile industry of Leskovac has all but collapsed with only a small number of businesses still in operation. The effects of globalisation coupled with political sanctions have led to significant economic decline. Local businesses were sluggish in transitioning from a predominantly state capitalist economy towards greater deregulation and privatisation during the 2000s. Despite a modest increase in mostly foreign capital enterprise with some government support issues of corruption, high unemployment, ageing workforce and community, unreported employment, and population decline still persist.[54] [55] [56]

Geography

Leskovac is situated in the heart of the vast and fertile valley of Leskovac (50km (30miles) long and 45km (28miles) wide), the small Veternica river, at the foot of Hisar, in the central part of the Leskovac valley. Leskovac lies at an altitude of 228 meters, in a basin that covers 2250km². Around the valley are mountains Radan and Pasjača the west, Kukavica and Čemernik in the south and Babička Gora, Seličevica and Suva Planina to the east.

Climate

Leskovac has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa) with continental influences, with long, hot summers and short but cold, cloudy winters.

Rivers

The largest river in the region of Leskovac is the South Morava River, which flows south to north. Tributaries of the South Morava are: the Vlasina river, which collects water from Lake Vlasina and flows through Crna Trava and Vlasotince; the Veternica river, which flows through Leskovac; the Jablanica river, which springs from the foot of Goljak and flows through Medveđa and Lebane; the Pusta (Deserted) river, which starts on Radan mountain, fills Lake Brestovačko and flows through Bojnik. The river Vučjanka, which springs from the Kukavica mountain, flows through Vučje and is a tributary of the Veternica river. Also known in the Leskovac region are Kozaračka, Predejanska, Kopašnička and Sušica rivers.

Demographics

According to the 2011 census results, there are 144,206 inhabitants in the city of Leskovac.

Ethnic groups

In 2011 the city's population was 95,784 of whom majority are Serbs. Other significant ethnic groups include Roma, Macedonians and Yugoslavs. In January 2007, there were an estimated 500 persons of Chinese origin living in Leskovac.[57] Apart from the city proper, there are 143 populated places in the city, of which the largest are Vučje and Grdelica, classified as "urban" (town) in census, with about 3000 residents each.

The ethnic composition of the city administrative area:[58]

Ethnic groupPopulation%
Serbs133,62392.66%
Roma7,7005.34%
Macedonians2910.20%
Montenegrins1920.13%
Bulgarians910.06%
Yugoslavs880.06%
Croats550.04%
Albanians200.02%
Slovenians190.01%
Muslims190.01%
Germans190.01%
Hungarians160.01%
Greeks160.01%
Others2,0611.43%
Total144,206

Vast majority of the people are Orthodox Christians (96%). There are also 3% Muslims. The rest are atheists or follow other religions.At one time the second largest city in Serbia, today Leskovac is blighted by economic problems with many working age people migrating out of the area.[49]

Subdivisions

There are 144 villages located within the municipality:

Culture

Events

Roštiljijada

Roštiljijada (Barbecue week) is a grilled meat festival that has been organized in Leskovac for many years and takes place annually at the beginning of September. During the event, the main boulevard is closed for traffic for five days, and food stands are put up along the streets. The event brings visitors from all over Serbia as well as tourists. According to the TOL (Tourism Organization of Leskovac) in 2013, over 700,000 people visited the event.[59] The organisers hold competitions, such as making the biggest burger, the Pljeskavica. The festival is the highlight of the season in Leskovac.

International Carnival

In 2009 Leskovac officially became an International Carnival city, admitted by The Association of European Carnival cities, which has over 50 members from Europe and America. The Leskovac Carnival is held at a time of Roštiljijada festival. Around 1200 people take part in the carnival, of which one-third part from abroad.The City Government considered separating this event in 2010. as a special tourist event which will be introduced as a special offer of the city.

Theater Marathon

Theater Marathon takes place every year in November and lasts 9 days. It runs performances of National Theaters from all over Serbia. This event takes place in the National Theater in Leskovac.

Leskovac International Film Festival

The first Leskovac International film festival was held in 2008.The idea of the film in the city is not that new. In 1996, a group of enthusiasts, with chairman Rade Jovic, organized the Festival which were shown films of domestic production.Today, many years later, Leskovac host an International Film Festival.The Festival presents awards in 3 categories:

Cultural heritage

Sports

Leskovac has a proud sporting history and is home to several teams, including football club's GFK Dubočica, FK Sloga Leskovac, basketball team KK Zdravlje, and handball team RK Dubočica 54.

Economy and infrastructure

Economy of Leskovac is diverse, but it is still somewhat stagnating as a city in whole. Overall, industry has a minor growth, but its growth is safe and in the future, industry will certainly face another growth that will increase its status among Serbia's largest cities. Its main industry is light industry such as textile, household commodities and medical industries. Leskovac has mine of lead and zinc called "Leskovac Lece".

The first boom occurred after WW1 and lasted until 1941. It was "succeeded" in the late 1940s. During so called "Yugoslav economic miracle" (1950s – c.1980) Leskovac has developed into not just regional, but textile center in entire Southeast Europe. It became known as "Serbian Manchester". Leskovac Lece was constructed during that era. During the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Leskovac was severely damaged like no other city in Europe at the time.

The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2018):[60]

ActivityTotal
Agriculture, forestry and fishing249
Mining and quarrying18
Manufacturing10,709
Electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply306
Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities627
Construction1,142
Wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles5,002
Transportation and storage1,211
Accommodation and food services1,007
Information and communication311
Financial and insurance activities339
Real estate activities139
Professional, scientific and technical activities896
Administrative and support service activities466
Public administration and defense; compulsory social security1,513
Education2,402
Human health and social work activities2,671
Arts, entertainment and recreation403
Other service activities544
Individual agricultural workers1,459
Total31,415

Transportation

Leskovac is a traffic junction. International trains traveling from Europe to Skopje, Thessalonica and Athens pass through this city. Nineteen trains stop in Leskovac every day. The railway came to Leskovac in 1886. Leskovac today has one of the newest and most modern railway stations in Serbia.

Bus traffic is also very well developed, bearing in mind that Leskovac has been criss-crossed with roads. The most important is the E75 road which connects the borders of Hungary and Macedonia. Regional roads lead from Leskovac to Priština, Pirot and Bosilegrad. The distance from Leskovac to Niš is 45, to Belgrade 280, and to Sofia 155km (96miles).

Leskovac has a regional airport, which is commonly used for sporting and agricultural flights. Also in summer the airport is used for air taxi. The nearest international airport is Niš Constantine the Great Airport located 45km (28miles) north of the city.

Environment

Leskovac was the first city in Serbia which had a sanitary landfill. Željkovac depot spreads over 80 hectares and is made by all European standards. In the landfill there is a center for atmospheric water purification, center for the selection and disposal systems for the detection of all types of pollution. Company Por Werner and Weber for Serbia, began construction of the center for collecting and recycling waste, and is the first city in the Balkans, where starting this job.

Notable residents

International relations

See also: List of twin towns and sister cities in Serbia.

Twin towns — sister cities

Leskovac is twinned with:[61] [62]

See also

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2019-10-15. Kad je Leskovac bio deo unije, veće od današnje Evropske. 2021-03-14. juGmedia. sr-RS.
  2. Web site: 2020-08-22. LESKOVAC JE BIO 423 GODINE MUSLIMANSKI GRAD. 2021-03-14. ARHIV STAV. bs-BA.
  3. Web site: New contributions for the early iron age stratigraphy at the site of Hisar in Leskovac (Sector I). 2021-03-11. ResearchGate. en.
  4. Stojic 1986, 61–62. YU
  5. Web site: Archived copy. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20100705100953/http://scindeks-clanci.nb.rs/data/pdf/0350-0241/2004/0350-02410454193S.pdf. 2010-07-05. 2010-07-05.
  6. Web site: Praistorijska kopča : Leskovac  - Arheološki lokalitet brdo Hisar, iznad Leskovca, ne prestaje da iznenađuje istraživače. B92.net. 29 December 2017.
  7. Web site: Историја Лесковца. 2021-03-13. www.gradleskovac.org. 2019-12-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20191221122134/https://www.gradleskovac.org/index.php/o-leskovcu/osnovno-o-leskovcu/istorija-leskovca. dead.
  8. Book: Trajković, Dragoljub. Glubočica u novijim istoriografskim i drugim podacima: kritički osvrti, prikazi i beleške (1946-1966). 1968. Narodni muzej. 10.
  9. Book: Recueil de travaux de l'Institut des études byzantines. 1996. Naučno delo. 9788683883103.
  10. Book: Trajković, Dragoljub M.. Nemanjina Dubočica. 1961.
  11. Web site: Euratlas Periodis Web - Map of Europe in Year 900 .
  12. Book: The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century. John V. A.. Fine. John Van Antwerp. Fine. 29 December 1991. University of Michigan Press. 29 December 2017. Google Books. 978-0472081493.
  13. The Late Medieval Balkans, p. 48
  14. The Late Medieval Balkans, p. 54
  15. Web site: 2019-10-15. Kad je Leskovac bio deo unije, veće od današnje Evropske. 2021-03-16. juGmedia. sr-RS.
  16. Web site: 2020-08-22. LESKOVAC JE BIO 423 GODINE MUSLIMANSKI GRAD. 2021-03-16. ARHIV STAV. bs-BA.
  17. Web site: 2017-03-13. NIŠTA SE NE MENJA Turci i Srbi u svili i kadifi, sirotinja u straćare. 2021-09-11. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  18. Jagodić . Miloš . The Emigration of Muslims from the New Serbian Regions 1877/1878 . Balkanologie . 1 December 1998 . 2 . 2 . 10.4000/balkanologie.265 . 140637086 .
  19. Book: Hahn . J. G. von . Rober Elsie . The discovery of Albania : travel writing and anthropology in the nineteenth-century Balkans . 2015 . Bloomsbury Publishing . London . 9781350154681 .
  20. Book: Lampe . John . Jackson . Marvin . Balkan Economic History, 1550-1950: From Imperial Borderlands to Developing Nations . 1982 . 247 . Indiana University Press . 0253303680 .
  21. Web site: Kako je lukavstvom industrijalaca Leskovac postao "Mali Mančester". 2021-09-11. Južne vesti. sr.
  22. Web site: 2019-10-15. Kad je Leskovac bio deo unije, veće od današnje Evropske. 2021-09-11. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  23. Web site: Istorija Leskovca. 2021-09-11. Turistička organizacija Leskovac. sr-RS.
  24. Web site: Svetozar. Initiator of Golden Era – The Economy of Leskovac. 2021-09-11. LeFilm. en-gb.
  25. Web site: 2017-08-14. Leskovac daleko od vremena kad je znan kao Mali Mančester. 2021-09-11. N1. sr-RS.
  26. Web site: Serbia. RTS, Radio televizija Srbije, Radio Television of. Велики рат, живот под бугарском окупацијом. 2021-08-29. www.rts.rs.
  27. Web site: Историја Лесковца. 2021-08-29. www.gradleskovac.org. 2019-12-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20191221122134/https://www.gradleskovac.org/index.php/o-leskovcu/osnovno-o-leskovcu/istorija-leskovca. dead.
  28. Web site: 2015-10-27. Prikrivana istorija: Pokolj Bugara nad srpskim narodom u Prvom svetskom ratu. 2021-08-29. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  29. Web site: STAV. 2020-11-11. LESKOVAC U VELIKOM RATU. 2021-08-29. STAV.life. sr-RS.
  30. Web site: 2018-05-09. Kako je tifus pokosio Leskovac u Prvom svetskom ratu NOVA ISTRAŽIVANJA ISTORIČARA U rezervnoj vojnoj bolnici u Poljoprivrednoj školi se dnevno lečilo preko 600 vojnika. 2021-08-29. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  31. Web site: 2013-10-07. Kako je oslobođen Leskovac 1918. godine. 2021-08-29. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  32. Web site: 2016-10-03. Spomenik Oslobodiocima. 2021-08-29. Turistička organizacija Leskovac. sr-RS.
  33. Web site: Историја Лесковца. 2021-09-10. www.gradleskovac.org. 2019-12-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20191221122134/https://www.gradleskovac.org/index.php/o-leskovcu/osnovno-o-leskovcu/istorija-leskovca. dead.
  34. Web site: Jugpress. Postavio. 2020-08-22. Na današnji dan pre sto godina u Leskovcu prvi put pobedili komunisti. 2021-09-10. JUGPRESS. bs-BA.
  35. Web site: Svetozar. Political Life in Leskovac in the Period of 1918–1941. 2021-09-11. LeFilm. en-gb.
  36. Web site: 2015-10-15. Istoričari i komunisti zaratili zbog "Naličja zlatnog doba Leskovca". 2021-09-10. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  37. Web site: Jugpress. Postavio. 2019-05-04. Leskovac između dva svetska rata: Sjaj i beda Srpskog Mančestera. 2021-09-10. JUGPRESS. bs-BA.
  38. Web site: Spomenik Database Monument to the Revolution in Leskovac. 2021-10-10. spomenikdatabase. en.
  39. Web site: Jugpress. Postavio. 2018-09-06. Mitrović: Na Leskovac palo mnogo više bombi nego što je zvanični podatak. 2021-10-10. JUGPRESS. bs-BA.
  40. Web site: Leskovac – Killing Sites. 2021-10-10. en-US.
  41. Web site: Leskovac se seća 310 nevinih žrtava iz Drugog svetskog rata: Sumnja se da je mrtvih daleko više. 2021-10-10. Telegraf.rs. sr.
  42. Web site: Jugpress. Postavio. 2020-09-15. Američko bombardovanje Leskovca 1944. – Nije se ćutalo!. 2021-10-10. JUGPRESS. bs-BA.
  43. Web site: 2014-09-06. Na današnji dan Amerikanci, Englezi i partizani bombardovali Leskovac. 2021-10-10. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  44. Book: Maclean, Fitzroy. Eastern Approaches (pp486-7). Jonathan Cape, London. 1949. Sir Fitzroy Maclean, 1st Baronet.
  45. Web site: 2018-04-14. Od 900 turskih kuća u Leskovcu je ostala samo jedna POGODITE KOJA. 2021-10-10. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  46. Web site: Историја Лесковца. 2021-10-10. www.gradleskovac.org. 2019-12-21. https://web.archive.org/web/20191221122134/https://www.gradleskovac.org/index.php/o-leskovcu/osnovno-o-leskovcu/istorija-leskovca. dead.
  47. Web site: "Knjiga streljanih" po podacima BIA. 2021-10-10. Južne vesti. sr.
  48. Web site: 2014-10-11. Na današnji dan Leskovac oslobođen od fašista!?. 2021-10-10. JuGmedia. sr-RS.
  49. "A Serbian Region Unravels With Its Textile Industry", article by Nicholas Wood in The New York Times, January 29, 2007
  50. Web site: Rostiljijada Leskovac najveća gurmanska manifestacija na svetu. 2021-08-30. Rostiljijada. sr-RS.
  51. Web site: "Roštiljijada je jedna od najvećih privredno-turističkih manifestacija u Evropi". 2021-08-30. B92.net. sr-Latn-RS.
  52. Web site: Leskovačka pljeskavica - recept. 2021-08-30. Opusteno.rs. sr.
  53. Web site: You are being redirected.... 2021-09-04. www.serbia.com.
  54. News: Wood. Nicholas. 2007-01-29. As Leskovac goes, so goes Serbia - Europe - International Herald Tribune. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-08-30. 0362-4331.
  55. Web site: Jugpress. Postavio. 2020-01-31. U Jablaničkom okrugu nezaposleno oko 24.770 osoba. 2021-08-30. JUGPRESS. bs-BA.
  56. Web site: Jugpress. Postavio. 2019-02-06. Nezaposlenost u Leskovcu 17,92 %. 2021-08-30. JUGPRESS. bs-BA.
  57. Web site: European Stability Initiative - ESI. 29 December 2017. Esiweb.org. 29 December 2017.
  58. Web site: 2011 Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in the Republic of Serbia. stat.gov.rs. 1 February 2018.
  59. Web site: Traductor de Google. translate.google.com.
  60. Web site: MUNICIPALITIES AND REGIONS OF THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA, 2019.. stat.gov.rs. Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. 25 December 2019. 27 December 2019.
  61. Web site: Menu О Лесковцу => Основно => Градови побратими. gradleskovac.rs. Leskovac. sr. 2020-01-07.
  62. Web site: Лесковац (Србија). gradbijeljina.org. Bijeljina. sr. 2020-01-07.