Šiprage


Šiprage is a settlement municipality in the Bosnia and Herzegovina, Republika Srpska entity, Kotor Varoš Municipality.
The administrative status of this populated place was changed – from the local community has grown a municipality in the County of Kotor Varoš – in order to ensure in the 1954th back to the level of local community.

Name

The modern name is derived from noble–bey family Šipraga. It is unclear whether their ancestors represent autochthonous population or they migrated into the area and acquired spacious property in the valley of the river Vrbanja and its tributaries. According to the oral traditions and cadastre records, their expansion started from Pougarje in the valley of River Ugar.

Geography

Šiprage is on the Vrbanja river, on its south-eastern upstream line of the Banja Luka and the Kotor Varoš and the Center is part of the local community. Located in the long valley between several mountain ranges: north-east Šipraško Brdo with Glavić top, 950 m, south: Jasik, to the southeast of the complex Šahinovina–Stražbenica, west: Radohova and the north-west: Borčići with Hrastik.
The settlement, along with Vrbanja and its tributaries, is about three long and two kilometers wide. It is rich in sources of drinking water, one of which is used to supply the local aqueduct network. In the place, in Vrbanja confluence there are flowing: Musić potok, Crkvenica and Bakin potok, on the right side, but Ćorkovac, Zagradinski potok and Demićka on the left riverside.

Climate

In the Šiprage local and around area there is moderate continental climate, with the expressed four seasons: spring, summer, autumn and winter. On the hills around the mountain and subalpine, annual fluctuations in temperature and rainfall are relatively high, but with the long-term stability.
;Long-term climate parametres for Šiprage
MonthAverage temperature
Minimal temperature
Maximal temperature
Precipitation / Rainfall
January–1.7–4.81.459
February0.3–3.64.263
March4.6–0.19.359
April9.13.914.374
May13.68.119.290
June17.211.522.999
July18.912.625.381
August18.411.924.976
September14.78.620.971
October9.54.714.479
November4.417.8100
December0.1–2.7388

In the Šiprage's Valley and on the surrounding slopes, along with the Vrbanja river and its tributaries, there stretches the surface of arable land, with belts of mixed deciduous and coniferous forests and mixed woods of beech and hornbeam. In these ecosystems and mountain meadows there are big and small game, including Bosnian endemic quarry mammals.
Pastures, cutters and a catchment area covering the life of the natural community of the associated vegetation zones. But upstream from the Obodnik village and all the way to Tomina Luka in its upper flow, the Vrbanja confluence belongs to the salmonid waters. However, at first the grayling, after huchen too, and now brown trout will gradually fade away. Grayling is completely missing in the 1970s, and the survival of trout endanger numerous natural and anthropogenic factors. It is especially extreme flooding during 2000th. There are the irrational fishing and pollution with sludge and secondary by-products of exploitation of forest resources. Picking a fish stock is trying to compensate for the regular stocking of, which in turn leads to the question of local populations gene pool, because of the autochthonous specificities, even in the source area of the flows of the Vrbanja river and its tributaries.

History

According to sources, the first settlement in the Vrbanja river valley dates to the Neolithic. This area was then inhabited by the Illyrian tribe of Maezaeis, and in the 4th century BC Celts.
From the Roman period there are several sites in Šiprage at the mouth Crkvenica – in Vrbanja river, discovered the remains of an early Christian basilica.
Archaeological records confirm the existence of a Roman settlement at this location, while the stećci dates to the 12th century. The original location of stećci was confluence of rivulet Crkvenica and River Vrbanja. They were cut out and built in the walls of the surrounding buildings. One of the best preserved stećak is submerged in River Vrbanja, in the immediate proximity of its primary location.
In the Middle Ages, Šiprage belonged to the state of Bosnia, part of the province of Donji Kraji, and was later occupied by the Ottomans. In 1878 the region became part of the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, and in 1918, Yugoslavia.
During World War II, Šiprage was a Partisan stronghold, and site of the 12th Division Hospital, serving its 5th Corpus. In the area of Šiprage, at the very beginning of the war, there were several local partisan unit forces that were later included in larger formations.
On 6 January 1944, the Germans broke through the partisan defence lines on the Raskršće locality between the villages of Stopan and Kerle, and the next day entered the centre of Šiprage, where they stayed until 15 January 1944.
The town was bombed and attacked by Germans and Chetniks, including the units of Draža Mihailović. During the „6th Enemy Offensive" in Bosnia, the 12th Division's Mobil Hospital was established for their 5th Corpus. As a precaution, the Hospital was relocated to the surrounding villages and further to Korićani. Then it was about 600 injured and patients moved into the village of Stopan and Lozići, then in Palivuk, Čudnić and Kruševo Brdo. After the passage of the Offensive against, for ten days, it was returning again in Šiprage. Later it turned out that even enemy forces did not have precise information about its location. After the War, in 1960, skeletal remains from a grave in the woods were moved to a common Partisan Memorial Cemetery in Šiprage.

Bosnian War

During the Bosnian War, Bosnian Serb Police and Army forces destroyed the surrounding Bosniak villages, especially those upstream along the Vrbanja to Kruševo Brdo, as well as Bosniak and Croat villages downstream to Banja Luka, and in the whole of central Bosnia.
One of the 18 camps for detained Bosniaks from the Kotor Varoš Municipality was at the Police station in Šiprage.
After 1996, most of the Bosniak villages were partly restored thanks to the Luxembourgish government and soldiers of the BELUGA battalion within the SFOR-EUFOR Mission. Only mosque in wide area is renewed. During the war, an Orthodox church was built in the centre of the village, on the site of the former "Forestry House" and former seat of the local administration.

Gallery

Population

Overview by census