Administrative divisions of Croatia
The subdivisions of Croatia on the first level are the 20 counties (županija, pl. županije) and one city-county (grad, "city"). On the second level these are municipalities (općina, pl. općine) and cities (grad, pl. gradovi). Both of these types of subdivisions encompass one or multiple settlements (naselje, pl. naselja).
Modern (1992–present)
- Counties (21)
- Municipalities (428)[1]
- Settlements (6,749)
1975–1990
- Unions of Municipalities (9)
- Municipalities
- Settlements
1949–1951
- Oblasts
- Bjelovar
- Karlovac
- Osijek
- Rijeka
- Split
- Zagreb
1941–1945
- Counties (22)
- Baranja
- Bilogora
- Bribir and Sidraga
- Cetina
- Dubrava
- Gora
- Hum
- Krbava - Psat
- Lašva and Glaž
- Lika and Gacka
- Livac and Zapolje
- Modruš
- Pliva and Rama
- Pokupje
- Posavje
- Prigorje
- Sana and Luka
- Usora and Soli
- Vinodol and Podgorje
- Vrhbosna
- Vuka
- Zagorje
- Zagreb
- Districts
- Municipalities
1929–1941
1922–1929
- Oblasts
- Oblast of Dubrovnik
- Oblast of Karlovac
- Oblast of Osijek
- Oblast of Split
- Oblast of Vukovar (partially)
- Oblast of Zagreb
Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia (1868–1922)
Medieval Croatian Kingdom
- Counties[2]
- Livno
- Cetina
- Imotski
- Pliva
- Pesenta
- Klis
- Bribir
- Nin
- Knin
- Sidraga
- Luka
See also
- Counties of Croatia
- Counties of the Independent State of Croatia
- Former counties of Croatia (in Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia)
- Municipalities of Croatia
- ISO 3166-2 codes of Croatia
- FIPS region codes of Croatia (standard withdrawn in 2008)
- NUTS of Croatia
References
- ↑ "Popis gradova i općina" (Microsoft Excel). uprava.hr (in Croatian). Ministry of Public Administration, Croatia. 10 June 2013. Retrieved 2 December 2015.
- ↑ Vrbošić, Josip. POVIJESNI PREGLED RAZVITKA ŽUPANIJSKE UPRAVE I SAMOUPRAVE U HRVATSKOJ, University of Osijek.
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