- Bačka (Serbian Cyrillic: Бачка,
pronounced [bâːtʃkaː]) or
Bácska (pronounced [ˈbaːtʃkɒ]) is a
geographical and
historical area
within the
Pannonian Plain...
- (1993).
Titoist Atrocities in Vojvodina, 1944–1945:
Serbian Vendetta in
Bácska.
Hunyadi Pub. ISBN 978-1-882785-01-8. Mike
Thomson (13
November 2012). "Could...
-
Pronunciation [xř̩ʋaːtskiː] Native to Croatia,
Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Hungary (
Bácska),
Montenegro (Bay of Kotor),
Romania (Caraș-Severin County),
Serbia (Vojvodina)...
- bishop. The
first Methodist mission in
Hungary was
established in 1898 in
Bácska, in a then
mostly German-speaking town of Verbász (since 1918 part of the...
-
Croats in Bačka
during the Austro-Hungarian period. Its
first name was
Bácska Szabadkai Athletikai Club,
since it was
registered by the Austro-Hungarian...
-
Hungary joined the
military operations and was
allowed to
annex the Bačka (
Bácska)
region in Vojvodina,
which had a
majority of Hungarians, as well as the...
-
brigades (nine on the
front and
three in reserve) for an
offensive in Bačka (
Bácska). The
Danube Flotilla was to
cover the flanks, and the air
force was to...
-
Plain region of
Hungary in
Bacska. It
covers an area of 123.5 km2 (48 sq mi) and had a po****tion of 4,763 in 2018. "Felso-
Bacska".
Startlap (in Hungarian)...
- Békéscsaba. – Serbian:
spoken by the
Serbian minority,
especially in and
around Bácska, but also in
other territories of
Southern Hungary. – Slovene:
spoken by...
- used for a
person stemming from the
historical region of Bačka (Hungarian:
Bácska),
which today is
divided between Serbia and Hungary. It may
refer to: Béla...