Pačetin | |
Native Name: | [1] [2] |
Settlement Type: | Village (Selo) |
Pushpin Map: | Croatia Vukovar-Srijem County#Croatia#Europe |
Pushpin Label: | Pačetin |
Coordinates: | 45.376°N 18.851°W |
Subdivision Type: | Country |
Subdivision Name: | Croatia |
Subdivision Type1: | Region |
Subdivision Name1: | Slavonia (Podunavlje) |
Subdivision Type2: | County |
Subdivision Type3: | Municipality |
Subdivision Name3: | Trpinja |
Governing Body: | Local Committee |
Area Footnotes: | [3] |
Area Total Km2: | 18.1 |
Population As Of: | 2021 |
Population Total: | 381 |
Population Density Km2: | auto |
Population Demonym: | Pačetinac (♂) Pačetinka (♀) (per grammatical gender) |
Postal Code Type: | Postal code |
Postal Code: | 32222 Bršadin |
Area Code: | +385 32 |
Registration Plate: | VU |
Blank Name Sec1: | Official languages |
Blank Info Sec1: | Croatian, Serbian |
Pačetin (Serbian: Пачетин,[4] hu|Pacsinta) is a village in the municipality of Trpinja, Vukovar-Syrmia County in the easternmost part of Croatia. At the time of the 2011 Census the population of the village was 541. Village lies north of the Vuka River and west of the M601 railway. Its major landmark is the Church of St. Nicholas from the 18th century. County road Ž4111 passing through the villages of Pačetin, Bobota and Vera connect all three villages with D2 road and D55 road. Pačetin is 28.6 km southeast of Osijek, the economic and cultural centre of Slavonia and 17.2 km from the Osijek Airport. County seat Vukovar is 17.3 km east of Pačetin.
Absolute altitudes of the village is 87 meters above the sea level.[5] Pačetin is located two kilometers away from the Vuka River.[6]
First information about Pačetin come from the 1275.[7] At the place of present day village during the Middle Ages there were three villages with three churches.[7] Louis I of Hungary permitted weekly trade fairs in Pačetin.[7] In 1498 Pačetin gained town status and the medieval Vukovar County Assembly were held in it.[7] After the Ottoman–Hungarian wars and Ottoman conquest of Hungary Pačetin population decreased.[7] After the withdrawal of the Ottoman Empire after the Treaty of Karlowitz of 1666, Pačetin was settled by Serbs mainly from Mačva, eastern Bosnia and Montenegro, and at the beginning of the 18th century, there were over 40 Serbian houses.[7] A century later there were twice as many houses and inhabitants, and at the peak in 1905 there were 1109 inhabitants in Pačetin, of which 1066 were Serbs.[7] From 27 December 1920 (when they arrived in Vukovar) soldiers and families of the White Russian émigrés who were followers of Pyotr Wrangel settled in Bobota, Pačetin, Bršadin, Trpinja and Vera.
On December 20, 1993, the village was blocked by protest of the 40th brigade of the 11th corpus of the Army of the Republic of Serbian Krajina.[8] They requested a pay rise and improved status for soldiers.[8]
The first records that prove the existence of the school in Pačetin were made on 18 July 1788 which stated that 38 children attended the classes, 19 in the first and second grade, and 76 children at all.[9] This report is today kept in the National Archives of Hungary.[9] Between 1788 until the 1922 there is no records about the school in Pačetin.[9] In 1957 the school was an independent six-year primary school, after that a branch of the elementary school in Nuštar, then branch of the "Braća Đurđević" Elementary School in Vukovar and since 1992 and establishment of SAO Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia until today it became branch school of the Bobota Elementary School.[9] Branch school of Elementary school Bobota is located in Pačetin, 4,4 kilometers away from mother school in Bobota.[10] Education at local school is carried out in Serbian.[11] The school building have two classrooms, a kitchen, bathroom and central heating on electrical energy. In 2010 local branch of Prosvjeta published monograph 220 godina školstva u Pačetinu (en|220 years of schooling in Pačetin).[9]
According to the 1991 census, the village was inhabited by a majority of Serbs (88.48%), and minority of Yugoslavs (6.93%) and Croats (3.17%).[12]
See also: Minority languages of Croatia.
See also: Serbian language in Croatia. Serbian Language and Serbian Cyrillic alphabet is the second official language in most of the villages of the Municipality of Trpinja (except Ćelije) alongside the Croatian language which is official at the national level.[1] Both Serbian and Croatian language are standardized varieties of the pluricentric Serbo-Croatian language. According to the Municipal Statute, individuals who are members of the Serbian national minority are ensured the freedom of expression of national belonging and freedom to use their language and script in public and private use on the whole territory of the Municipality including the village of Pačetin. The statute guarantees that the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet will be used in the same font size as the Latin alphabet in the text of the local seals and stamps, on official plates of public representatives, executive and administrative bodies, as well as on those of legal persons with public authorities.
According to the municipal Statute, bilingual signs of the same font are used for written traffic signs and other written traffic markings, street and squares names and names of settlement and geographical localities on the entire territory of the Municipality. Equal public use of Serbian language is required on the basis of the Constitutional Act on the Rights of National Minorities in the Republic of Croatia and relevant national laws and the country is a party to the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages.[2]
St. Nicholas's Church in Pačetin is a Serbian Orthodox church known for its iconostasis from 1910. Construction of St. Nicholas's Church in Pačetin started in 1752 and the work was finished in three years, so that it was blessed in 1755.
Cultural and Artistic Association Branko Radičević is active in village since 1999.[13] Local drama group, children drama group and reciting section are active as a part of Association. They are organizers of MESDI-International Meetings of Drama Amateurs and Saint Sava Oration.