Gornji Bučumet Explained

Official Name:Gornji Bučumet
Other Name:Upper Bučumet
Native Name:Горњи Бучумет
Settlement Type:Settlement
Pushpin Map:Serbia
Pushpin Label Position:bottom
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Serbia
Subdivision Type1:District
Subdivision Name1:Jablanica District
Subdivision Type2:Municipality
Subdivision Name2:Medveđa
Unit Pref:Imperial
Population As Of:2002
Population Total:139
Timezone:CET
Utc Offset:+1
Timezone Dst:CEST
Utc Offset Dst:+2
Coordinates:42.9167°N 58°W
Postal Code:16240
Area Code:+381 16

Gornji Bučumet (Serbian: Горњи Бучумет, Upper Bučumet) is a settlement in the municipality of Medveđa, in southern Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village had a population of 139 people.

Name

The name bučumet is derived from Turkish bućumiš, which means thick, impassable forest.

According to B. Simeonov, the toponym is of Thraco-Roman origin.[1]

Geography

The village of Bučumet is composed out of three mahala (neighbourhoods): Upper, Lower (Доњи) and Middle (Средњи) Bučumet, which are all settlements registered separately in the census.[2] The three settlements lie in the South Morava basin, above the Jablanica river, and as such are located in the Upper Jablanica region. The highest mountain in Upper Bučumet is Paramid (853), with the mountain of Sv. Petar (1149) being located in Middle Bučumet. The three neighbourhoods of Bučumet are 470 to 853 metres above sea level.

History

There is a medieval church built on the ruins of an older church.[2]

During the Toplica-Jablanica Operation (Топличко-јабланичка операција 1944, German: Kehraus) in 1944, the Serbian Volunteer Corps and a German regimental group Dizner (Дизнер) were mobilized in the Statovac (Upper and Lower) - Bučumet (Upper and Lower) line, together with other Axis forces, surrounded the Yugoslav Partisans which were situated in the Vidojevica mountain and Rgač mountain. This was the third phase of the Operation, codenamed Halali. The Partisans managed to extract the surrounded forces.[3]

Infrastructure

The rural settlement of Gornji Bučumet is of the "broken type" (Села разбијеног типа), with scattered residential structure. The village has 42,9% inhabitants dependent on agriculture (livestock-crop and viticulture).[4]

There is a nearby gold mine, in Lece, located some kilometres west, where many inhabitants have worked in the past.

Demographics

According to the 2002 census, the village had a population of 139 people, all of whom were ethnic Serbs. There were 119 adults, and the average life span was 47,3 years (44,7 in males, and 50,3 in females). There were 52 households, with average number of family members at 2,67.

See also

References

Sources

Book: Balkansko ezikoznanie: Linguistique balkanique, Volumes 38-39. Българска академия на науките. Българската академия на науките. Sofia. 1996. French. Book: sr:БЕЛЕШКЕ УЗ РАТОВАЊЕ. Коча Поповић. БИГЗ. Београд. 1988. Serbian.

Further reading

42.9167°N 58°W

Notes and References

  1. Българска академия на науките 1996, p. 93: "B. Simeonov découvre une couche de toponymes d'origine thraco-romane (Bucumet, Pinet, Kovcel, Muskel, Cikura) et donne leurs étymologies. Boris Simeonov a écrit plus de 95 études onomatologiques plus courtes qui embrassent la toponymie ..."
  2. http://www.tomedvedja.org.rs/index.php/sq/turisticki-potencijali/kulturno-naslee/arheoloska-nalazista.html?start=1 Туристичка организација општине Медвеђа
  3. Поповић 1988
  4. Stamenković 2002, p. 18: "ГОРЊИ БУЧУМЕТ (203 ст.), сточарско-ратарско и воћарско (42,9% аграрног ст.) сеоско насеље разбије- ног типа"
  5. Popis stanovništva, domaćinstava i Stanova 2002. Knjiga 1: Nacionalna ili etnička pripadnost po naseljima. Republika Srbija, Republički zavod za statistiku Beograd 2003.
  6. http://pop-stat.mashke.org/serbia-census.htm Serbia censuses 1948–1991