Bogojina was attested in written records in 1208 as Bogma, and as Bagonya in 1322 and Bagona in 1403. The name is derived from the hypocorismBogoj, meaning 'property/settlement belonging to Bogoj'.
History
Three burial mounds north of the village testify to ancient settlement in the area. During work in the 1930s, local people found iron artifacts and Roman coins in the mounds, but these objects have since disappeared. The area suffered greatly from Ottoman attacks, which completely destroyed the neighboring village of Obrančavci—the name of this settlement is preserved in the Obrančavci Woods northeast of Bogojina. The settlement was Lutheran during the Reformation, but returned to Catholic control in 1669. Schooling was started in the village by Lutheran ministers in the 17th century, but the first schoolhouse was not built until 1827. The village received market rights in 1688; at that time, potters, weavers, and coopers were organized into guilds in the village. During the Second World War, a Partisan checkpoint was located at the Šavel Mill. A civic center was built in the village in 1959, and a fire station in 1974.
Unmarked grave
Bogojina was the site of an unmarked grave from the Second World War. The Cemetery Grave was located in the village cemetery, next to the entrance. It contained the remains of a German soldier. The remains were exhumed in an undocumented manner.
Church
The parish church in Bogojina is dedicated to the Ascension. It was built between 1925 and 1927 and furnished in the 1950s according to plans by the Slovene architectJože Plečnik. It is a church that was extensively rebuilt in the past and the original plan was to totally rebuild it in 1924, but Plečnik included the older structure in his new building. He used local clay pottery on the decoration for the ceiling of the nave. There is also a small chapel in the settlement dedicated to Saint Urban. It was built in 1889.
Notable people
Notable people that were born or lived in Bogojina include:
Franc Bajlec, politician
Iván Bassa, writer and politician
Ivan Camplin, priest, poet, and journalist
József Kossics , writer, poet, and language reformer