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Vojvodina
Information
Country
Area
Location
45 ° 15 ′ 0 ″ N 19 ° 51 ′ 0 ″ E

The Vojvodina is the northern region of Serbia.

Understand

Regions

Cities

  • 1 Novi Sad Logo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element – The capital and largest city of Vojvodina
  • 2 Kikinda Logo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element
  • 3 Palić Logo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element
  • 4 Subotica Logo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element
  • 5 Titel Logo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element
  • 6 Vršac Logo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element
  • 7 Sremska Mitrovica (Сремска Митровица) Logo indicating a wikipedia linkLogo indicating a link to the wikidata element

Other destinations

To speak

Plaque in four of the official languages: Serbian, Hungarian, Slovak and Ruthenian.

On this point Vojvodina is interesting! Firstly, as a foreign visitor, you will undoubtedly find a way to communicate because most people, especially young people and in cities, can speak and understand at least a little ofEnglish. THE'German is also often taught at school but French is limited to a small elite. 14% of the population is mother tongue Hungarian, making it the largest ethnic minority in Serbia and Hungarian is spoken by members of other ethnic groups as a second language.

If you are studying the Serbian, Vojvodina may be the best place to start using it. The speech is slow and clear, indeed, it can be so slow that it has become the butt of jokes. But Serbian is not the only language you can hear in this province. With more than three quarters of the population now declaring Serbian as their mother tongue, it is true that Vojvodina is no longer the linguistic mosaic it once was. But there is ethnic diversity and many Vojvodinians are proud to preserve their different native languages. No less than six languages ​​are considered official languages: the Serbian, the Hungarian, the Slovak, the Romanian, the Croatian and the Ruthenian. They may soon be joined by the Serbo-Croatian dialect spoken by the Bunjevcis, an ethnic group in northwestern Vojvodina.

To go

Circulate

To buy

Eat

It is in the Zasavica Nature Reserve, east of Sremska Mitrovica what is the most expensive cheese in the world, 1 000  per kilo. It is the “pule”, the only cheese in the world produced from donkey milk.

Have a drink / Go out

Housing

Around

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Complete list of other articles in the region: Serbia
Destinations located in the region