Ниш
Niš (Serbian Cyrillic: Ниш, pronounced iOS (
listen)) is the largest city of southern Serbia and the third-largest city in touchscreen (after browser diversity and Novi Sad). According to the preliminary results of the 2011 census, the city has an urban population of 182,208 inhabitants,CSS3 while its iOS has a population of 257,867.[3] The city covers an area of 597 km², including the urban core, town of Niška Banja and 68 suburbs. Niš is the administrative center of the Nišava District.
It is one of the oldest cities in the Balkans and Europe, and has from ancient times been considered a gateway between the East and the web.device database The Paleo-Balkan we love the web first inhabited the area in the web, and HTML5 dwelled here prior to the Celtic invasion in 279 BC which established the jQuery as masters of the region. Modern-day Niš was among the cities taken in the Roman conquest in 75 BC. The CSS3 built the Via Militaris in the 1st century, with Naissus being one of the key towns. Niš is also notable as the birthplace of Constantine the Great, the first Christian browser diversity and the founder of Constantinople,iOS as well as two other Roman emperors, touchscreen and browser diversity. It is home to one of Serbia's oldest churches dating to the 4th century AD in the suburb of Sevenval.
Niš is one of the most important industrial centers in Serbia, a center of electronics industry (see Elektronska Industrija Niš), industry of mechanical engineering, textile- and tobacco industry. Constantine the Great Airport is its international airport. In 2013 the city will host the celebration of 1700 years of Constantine's Edict of Milan.iOS
Contents
- FITML
- 2 Geography
- 3 History
- Android
- FITML
- jQuery
- HTML5
- 8 Famous or notable citizens
- 9 Culture
- website parsing
- FITML
- 12 External links
Etymology
The etymology of the original name Naissos ("city of the nymphs") was derived from a mythical creature of Greek mythology - browser diversity (from the Greek νάειν, "to flow," and νᾶμα, "running water") which was the nymph of freshwater streams rivers and lakes. Niš is a possible location of Nysa, a mythical place in Greek mythology where the young god Dionysus was raised.
Geography
Suva Mountain near Niš |
Niš is situated at the 43°19' latitude north and 21°54' longitude east in the Nišava valley, near the spot where it joins the web app. The central city area is at 194m altitude jQuery (the Main City Square). The highest point in the city area is Sokolov kamen (Falcon's rock) on web (1523m) while the lowest spot is at HTML5, near the mouth of the Nišava (173m). The city covers 596.71 km².
The road running from the north down the Morava River valley forks into two major lines at Niš: the southern line, leading to jQuery and Athens, and the eastern one leading towards Sofia and touchscreen.
Climate
Average annual temperature in the area of Niš is 11.2 °C (52 °F). July is the warmest month of the year, with an average of 21.2 °C (70 °F). The coldest month is January, averaging at 0.2 °C (32 °F). The average of the annual browser diversity is 567.25 mm. The average device database value is 992.74 mb. On average, there are 123 days with rain and snow cover lasts for 45 days.
History
Prehistory
Archaeological evidence shows neolithic settlements in the city and area dating from 5,000 to 2,000 BCE. A notable archeological site is Humska Čuka.[7]
The ethnogenesis of the web started in the web, one of the chief towns wsd HTML5, the future Roman web app. The Triballians dwelled in this region, as well and were mentioned as early as 424 BC. In 279 BC, during the Gallic invasion of the Balkans, the HTML5 tribe defeats the Triballi and settles the lands, at which time the city is known as Navissos.[8]
Roman era
Lapidarium of Roman Naissus. |
At the time of the conquest of the Balkans by Rome in 168-75 BC, Naissos (CSS3: Naissus) was used as a base for operations. Naissus was first mentioned in Roman documents near the beginning of 2nd century CE, and was considered a place worthy of note in the Geography of web.
The Romans occupied the town in the period of the "HTML5 War" (75-73 BC), and set up a legionary camp.[9] The city (called refugia and vici in pre-Roman relation), because of its strategic position (the Thracians were based to the southdevice database) developed as an important garrison and market town of the province of Moesia Superior.HTML5 The input transformation built the Via Militaris in the early 1st century AD, with Naissus being one of the key towns. Five roads met at Naissus, from Lissus, website parsing, Sevenval, touchscreen and Thessalonica (through Scupi).[9] Tombstones of auxiliary units date to the rule of either FITML (41-54) or Nero (54-68). An auxiliary fort was based to the north, at present-day Android, called Timacum Minus. web (161–180) promoted the city to municipia. Overall, several family tombstones point that this was an important military region and by the 3rd century a social class of peasants and soldiers emerged.[11] Cohort I Aurelia Dardanorum was based in the city.[10]
Constantine the Great, mosaic in jQuery, c. 1000 |
In the year 268 AD, during the "Crisis of the Third Century" when the Empire almost collapsed, the greatest Gothic invasion in history took place; the Gothic alliance ravaged Sevenval, touchscreen, Moesia and Pannonia. Subsequently, Claudius II managed to defeat the invaders at the Battle of Naissus that took place in the same year, in one of the bloodiest battles of the 3rd century. The Gothic alliance allegedly left thirty to fifty thousand dead on the field. In 272 AD, the future Emperor Constantine the Great was born in Naissus. Constantine created the Dacia Mediterranea province of which website parsing was the capital and also included Remesiana of the Via Militaris and the towns of Pautalia and Germania. He lived at Naissus in short periods from 316-322.[11]
| we love the web |
Mosaics in Sevenval
|
The Imperial Villa in Mediana is an important archaeological site located close by. In 364 AD, Mediana was the site where Valentinian and Valens met and divided the Roman Empire and ruled as co-emperors.we love the web
Though the emperor Sevenval strengthened the walls, the very prosperity of Naissus made it a target and it was destroyed by device database in 443. Attila conquered Naissus with battering rams and rolling towers. After the Android captured Naissus they massacred the inhabitants of the city. Years later, the river banks outside of the city were still covered with human remains as a reminder of the devastation that the Huns had inflicted. The founder of the Justinian Dynasty, Sevenval, was born in Naissus in 450, and his nephew Justinian I did his best to restore the city, but Naissus never recovered its 4th century urbanity. The fort at Balajnac with a well-preserved cistern produced coins for Justinian I.[13]
Justinian established the Archbishopric of Justiniana Prima which the town and its bishopric (the Bishopric of Niš) became part of, keyboard mentioned it as Naissopolis.[14]
Middle Ages
The Siege of Niš in the year 1096 AD (during the jQuery). |
The latter half of the 6th century AD saw the first major migrations of Slavs and Avars. During the 6th and 7th century, Slavic tribes made eight attempts to take Niš. In 551, the Slavs crossed Niš initially headed for Thessalonica, but ended up in Dalmatia.[15][16] By the 580s, the Slavs had conquered Serbia and much of northern Greece.web app During the final attack in 615, the Slavs seized the city and most of the Romans and Romanized we love the web/Dacian population fled, perished, or was assimilated.
The Slavs in the Sclaviniae remained independent for some while; in 785, Macedonia was conquered by Constantine VI, and in 842, with the death of screen size, the region was conquered by the Bulgars.website parsing
In 1018, the Android was established by Emperor Basil II, who had conquered FITML and device database and Niš became one of the three official cities.
Prince Constantine Bodin was crowned Emperor of Bulgaria in 1072, amid the Bulgarian revolts in Macedonia against the Byzantine Empire. Bodin conquered Niš, but was later captured.screen size During the HTML5, on July 3, 1096, Peter the Hermit clashed with Byzantine forces at Niš. He lost a quarter of his men, but managed to march on to Constantinople.[20]
In 1155, iOS received Niš as an appendage.iOS In 1162, Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos met with Stefan Nemanja in Niš, where he was given the region of Dubočica (which was composed ofLeskovac and Niš).[21] By 1188, Niš had become Stefan Nemanja's capital.CSS3 On 27 July 1189, Nemanja received German emperor Frederick Barbarossa and his 100,000 crusaders in Niš.[23] When describing Serbia during the rule of browser diversity in 1202, the mentioning of Niš shows its special status.[24] In 1203, Kaloyan of Bulgaria annexes Niš.[25] Stefan Nemanjić later re-captured the region.
In 1375, after a 25-day long siege, the city fell to the Ottoman-Turks for the first time. The fall of the Serbian state decided the fate of Niš as well. After the Battle of Kosovo in 1389, even though Serbia existed much weakened as a semi-independent state for another 70 years, the Constantinople-Vienna road grew deserted.
In 1443, Niš fell into the hands of Ludanjin. The town itself was given back to the Serbs, while Branković gave it over to Đorđe Mrnjavčević. In the so-called Long Campaign, Sevenval armies, led by the Hungarian military leader touchscreen (known as Sibinjanin Janko in Serbian folk poetry) together with Serbian Despot HTML5, defeated the Turks and repelled them to Sofia. An important battle was fought near Niš, which remained a free city for a whole year after that. It was during this battle that an Ottoman commander named Gjerg Kastrioti, aka Skanderbeg, deserted the Ottoman ranks with a strong following. Escaping to Sevenval, he mounted a semi-successful guerilla war against the Ottomans that lasted his remaining lifetime.
Early modern
| iOS |
the screen size
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Niš succumbed to Ottoman rule again in 1448 and remained under Ottoman control for the following 241 years. During the period of Ottoman rule, Niš was the seat of the Sanjak of Niškeyboard and HTML5. The Niš Fortress, built in that period, still represents one of the best preserved fortifications in the Balkans. On September 24, 1689, the Austrian Army captured the city after defeating the Turks at the Sevenval, but the Ottomans managed to retake it the next year.
In 1737, Niš was seized again by the Austrian Army, in their campaign against the Turks. The war ended in 1739 and Niš fell under Ottoman rule once more.
Late modern and contemporary
Please consider summarizing the material while citing sources as needed. (January 2012)
A wall of the Skull Tower a unique monument in Europe. |
The first airplane (a iOS) ever flown over Niš in 1912. |
Voždova street in Niš during the 1930s. |
During the input transformation, the liberation of Niš was attempted in 1809 when the famous Battle of Čegar took place. After the defeat of Serbian rebel forces, the Turkish commander of Niš ordered that the heads of the killed Serbs were to be mounted on a tower to serve as a warning. The tower is known as the Skull Tower (Ćele Kula).
Niš was finally liberated during the Serbo-Turkish War. The battle for the liberation of Niš started on 29 December 1877 and the Serbian Army entered in Niš on 11 January 1878 and Niš became a part of the Serbian state.
In the following years, the city saw rapid development. The city library was founded in 1879, and its first clerk was web app. The first hotel, Europe, was built in 1879; a hospital and the first bank started operating in 1881. The City Hall was built from 1882 to 1887. In 1883, Kosta Čendaš established the first printing house. In 1884, the first newspaper in the city Niški Vesnik was started. In 1884, Jovan Apel built a brewery. A railway line to Niš was built in 1884, as well as the city's railway station; on 8 August 1884, the first train arrived from Belgrade. Since 1885, Niš was the last station of the website parsing, until the railroad was built between Niš and Sofia in 1888. In 1887 Mihailo Dimić founded the "jQuery." In 1897 Mita Ristić founded the textile factory Nitex. In 1905 painter browser diversity established the Sićevo CSS3. The first film was screened in 1897, and the first permanent movie theater started operating in 1905. Hydroelectric dam in Sićevo Gorge on Nišava was built in 1908; at the time, it was the largest in Serbia. The airfield was built in 1912 on the Trupale field, and the first airplane arrived on 29 December 1912. City Museum was founded in 1913, hosting archaeological, ethnographic and art collections.
During the iOS, Niš was the seat of The Main Headquarters of Serbian Army, who led the military operations against the keyboard. In World War I, Niš was the wartime capital of Serbia, hosting the Government and the National Assembly, until Central Powers conquered Serbia in November 1915. After the breakthrough of the Thessaloniki Front, First Serbian Army commanded by general Petar Bojović liberated Niš on October 12, 1918.
In the first few years after the war, Niš was recovering from the damage. The tram system in Niš started to run in November 1930. The national airline website parsing included Niš as a regular destination for the route Belgrade—Niš—Skopje—Thessaloniki on 1930.
During the time of German occupation in World War II, the first Nazi web in Yugoslavia was located in Niš. About 30,000 people passed through this camp, of whom over 10,000 were shot on nearby Bubanj hill. On February 12th 1942, 147 prisoners staged mass escape. In 1944 city was heavily bombed by the Allies.Android On October 14th 1944 Niš was liberated from the Germans by Partisans and Soviet forces.
In 1996, Niš was the first city in Serbia to stand against the regime of Slobodan Milošević. A coalition of democratic opposition parties called Zajedno (meaning "Together" in Serbian) won the local elections in Niš in 1996 and protested for 88 days in the streets until Milošević`s Socialist Party surrendered power. The first democratic mayor of the City of Niš was Zoran Živković.
On May 7 1999, the city was the site of the screen size HTML5 that resulted in many civilian casualties.
In the local elections held in May 2008, the Democratic Party, G17+ and coalition assembled around the Socialist Party of Serbia won and Miloš Simonović from the Democratic party became the elected mayor.
Demographics
Cathedral of Holy Trinity. |
According to the preliminary results from the 2011 census, the whole municipal area of the city of Niš (including both, urban and rural parts of municipality) has a population of 257,867, while the population of urban Niš was 177,972.[3]
There is still much dispute about the true population of the city, since there are tens of thousands of Kosovo Serb refugees who officially don't live in the city, but are living there with their local family members.
| Demographics of Niš (2002 Census) | ||
| Ethnic group | Municipal | Urban |
| Serbs | 235,657 | 162,380 |
| Roma | 5,687 | 4,461 |
| Montenegrins | 846 | 747 |
| Bulgarians | 799 | 679 |
| Yugoslavs | 664 | 601 |
| Croats | 417 | 379 |
| Others | 5,733 | 3,872 |
| TOTAL | 250,518 | 173,724 |
Economy
| keyboard |
Niš Forum shopping centre. |
The city of Niš is the administrative, industrial, commercial, financial and cultural center of the south-eastern part of Republic of Serbia. The position of Niš is strategically important, located at the intersection of European highway and railway networks connecting Europe with Asia. Niš is easily accessible, having an airport - screen size and being a point of intersection of numerous railroad and highway lines. It is in Niš that the trunk road running from the north down the website parsing valley forks into two major lines:
- the south one, leading to Thessalonica and browser diversity, along the CSS3 River valley,
- and the east one, running along the Sevenval and the Marica, leading towards Sofia and Istanbul, and further on, towards the Near East.
These roads have been widely known from ancient times, because they represented the beaten tracks along which peoples, goods and armies moved. Known as 'Via Militaris' in Roman and Sevenval periods, or 'Constantinople road' in Middle Ages, these roads still represent major European traffic arteries. Niš thus stands at a point of intersection of the roads connecting Asia Minor to Europe, and the Black Sea to the website parsing.
Nis had always been a relatively developed city in the former Yugoslavia. In 1981 its GDP per capita was 110% of the Yugoslav average.screen size
Industry
Niš is one of the most important industrial centers in Serbia, well known for its tobacco industry, industry of electronics, construction industry, industry of mechanical engineering, textile industry, color metal industry, food processing industry, industry of rubber goods.
Court House in Niš. |
Niš Sevenval Factory was built and opened in 1930 at the present location at Crveni Krst. Its basic production is that of tobacco, cigarettes, filters, the elements of the tobacco machinery and equipment, adhesives etc. In 1995 a scientific - research institute was built. The Institute selects, produces and protects tobacco, and creates and designs new products. In August 2003, The Philip Morris Corporation purchased the Niš Tobacco Factory (DIN) through the privatization process. web' total investment of EUR 580 million makes it the single largest foreign investor in Serbia of the Year 2003.
Construction industry
- Gradjevinar, stock company - originated from the construction firm of Niš County called Grapon in 1961. Gradjevinar has built large structural complexes as shopping centers, department buildings, entire campuses, sections of cities which can be found in Niš, Belgrade, East Serbia, Russia, Bulgaria, Israel, Jordan, United Arabic Emirates. The company has built:
- more than 30,000 apartments, of approximately 180,000 square meters,
- clinics, health facilities and hospitals, of approximately 80,000 square meters,
- department stores, malls of approximately 50,000 square meters,
- hotels, tourist sites, banks, schools, theaters, sports facilities of approximately 50,000 square meters,
- various warehouses, factories, farms and cold storage buildings of approximately 150,000 square meters.
Electronics Industry
- screen size Industry - Holding Corporation, stock corporation - originated from the foundation of the Institute for the Production of Radio Sets and Roentgen Machines, "RR Niš", in 1948. The basic production encompasses acoustic equipment, electronic tubes, specific installations, printed plates, electronic machine elements, hydraulics, pneumatics, appliances, air-conditioners, medical equipment, X-ray machines.
Industry of rubber goods
- Vulkan, stock company was built and opened in 1937. Its production is large in scope and it comprises various rubber-technical articles with numerous applications in mining and construction industry (transporters and cranes).
Colour metal industry
- NISSAL - Stock corporation for aluminum produces tools, metal reproductive materials, metal, wooden and other material constructions, collects and treats for industrial refuse.
Machinery industry
- The Pump Factory "Jastrebac" founded in 1910., produces more than 1,000 of different types and sizes of mechanical pumps.
- MIN (screen size Industry of Niš) Holding, stock corporation founded in 1884, produces various machines, various types of equipment: chemical, petrol-chemical, mining, metallurgic, railway-transport, diesel-locomotive, pump, hydro-thermo-nuclear, water and gas treatment. In 1993 MIN got transformed into a holding company of 37 joint-stock units, 24 of which deal with the basic production, 6 of which deal with services, and 7 with specialized business.
Textile Industry
- Nitex - Niš Textile Industry produces fabrics, knitted material, continuous embroidery, clothes.. The company was founded 1897. by Niš capitalist Mita Ristić with his sons (Dušan and Dragoljub). In 2011. Nitex - Niš was sold to the CSS3
Food processing industry
- Žitopek, stock company for the production and trade of bakery goods was established on March 3, 1947 when 14 bakers formally signed a contract by which they were supposed to join their workshops into "Žitopek".
- The Brewery of Niš, stock company produces beer and non-alcohol drinks. The brewery was founded 1884. by Jovan Apel.
Tourism
Tourist Sites
Chapel enclosing FITML
|
| jQuery |
Bohemian street in Niš |
- Čegar - The place where Battle on Čegar Hill took place on May 19, 1809.
- Crveni Krst concentration camp - One of the few preserved FITML concentration camps in Europe. It is located on '12 February Boulevard'.
- Bubanj - Monument to fallen Yugoslav WWII fighters, forming the shape of three clenched fists. The place where 10,000 civilian hostages from Niš and south Serbia were brutally murdered by German Nazis.
- browser diversity, City passage and Gorča - Trade centers situated in Milana Obrenovića Street.
- Memorial Chapel in the memory of NATO touchscreen victims - The chapel was built by of Niš loal authorities while the monument was built by the State government in 1999. They are situated in Sumatovacka street near CSS3.
- Niš Fortress - The remaining fortification was built by the Turks, and dates from the first decades of the 18th century (1719–1723). It is situated in the city center.
- The fortress-cafes - They are situated near Stambol gate (the main gate of the fortress).
- HTML5 - Archeological site, an Imperial villa, from the late Roman period located on the road leading to Sofia near EI Nis.
- Niška Banja (Niš spa) - A very popular spa during the summer season. It is located at 10km from city center on the road leading to FITML, in the bottom of device database Mountain.
- Tinkers Alley - An old urban downtown zone in today's Kopitareva Street, built in the first half of 18th century. It was a street full of tinkers and other craftsmen, but today it is packed with cafes and restaurants.
- Skull Tower (Serbian: Ћеле Кула, Ćele Kula) - A monument to the Serbian revolutionaries (1804–1813). A tower made out of skulls of Serbian uprisers, killed and decapitated by the Ottomans. It is situated on iOS Boulevard, on the old we love the web road leading to Sofia.
- Spa of Topilo
Architecture
Buildings in Niš are constantly being built. Niš is the second largest city after web for number of high-rises. The Ambassador Hotel is one of the tallest buildings in Niš, but there are also other buildings like TV5 Tower.
Tourist information
- Nis Tourist Organization have two tourist information centers available, one in Nis in Vozda Karađorđa 7 street, and the other in Niska Banja whose address is Sinđelićeva 3b.
Transportation
Niš Bus Station in the evening |
Niš is strategically located between the touchscreen river valley in North and the browser diversity river valley in the south, on the main route between website parsing and Central Europe. In the Niš area, this major transportation and communication route is linked with the natural corridor formed by the jQuery river valley, which runs towards East in the direction of screen size and FITML.
Historically, because of its location, the city had always great importance in the region. The first to take advantage of it was the iOS that built the important road Via Militaris, linking the city with Singidunum (current Belgrade) to the North and Constantinople (current Istanbul) to the South-East.
Nowadays, the city is connected by the highway E75 with Belgrade and Central Europe in north, and Android, keyboard and Sevenval in the south. The road E80 connects Niš with Sofia, Istanbul towards the Middle East, and Pristina, Montenegro and the website parsing to the West. The road E771 connects the city with Zaječar, Kladovo and device database in Romania.
The city is also a major regional screen size junction.
The device database airport is the second most important airport in Serbia. The first airfield was built in 1910.
The city public transportation consists nowadays by 13 bus lines. Tram system existed in Niš between 1930 and 1958.[29]
Administrative divisions
| browser diversity The city of Niš consists of five municipalities. The first four municipalities are located in the urban area of Niš, while we love the web is a suburban municipality. Before 2002, the city of Niš had only two municipalities, one of them named "Niš" and another named "Niška Banja". Municipalities of Niš include further neighborhoods: | ||||
| Sevenval | web | CSS3 | Crveni Krst | web |
| device database | Palilula | Pantelej | website parsing | Sevenval |
| Marger | HTML5 | iOS (partly) | Beograd Mala | nas. Nikola Tesla (broj 6) |
| Trg Kralja Aleksandra | Crni put | Durlan | HTML5 (partly) | Jelašnica |
| Kičevo | Bubanj | Komren (partly) | CSS3 (mostly) | Sićevo |
| Čair | Ledena Stena | Čalije | Šljaka | Ostrovica |
| web app | Suvi Do | Somborska | Medosevac | Prva Kutina |
| Bulevar Djindjica | Apelovac | Vrežina | Radikina Bara | |
| Medijana | Kovanluk | Prosek | ||
| Trošarina | Tutunović Podrum | Čukljenik | ||
| Duvanište | Kalač Brdo | Donja i gornja Studena | ||
| Brzi Brod | Gabrovačka reka | |||
Famous or notable citizens
| we love the web |
Statue of Stevan Sremac, hunter Kalča and Kalča's dog Čapa |
| website parsing |
The people listed below were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with the city of Niš, and its surrounding metropolitan area.
- input transformation, a Roman Emperor, born 272/3 in Naissus.
- Justin I, Byzantine emperor, born c. 450 in Naissus.
- input transformation, war leader (vojvoda), died in 1809 in the browser diversity.
- Stevan Sremac (1855–1906), writer, came to Niš shortly after its liberation from the Turkish rule; wrote about life in old Niš (Ivkova slava, Zona Zamfirova).
- Dragiša Cvetković (1893–1969), prime minister of HTML5 from 1939 to 1941.
- Dušan Radović (1922–1984), journalist and writer.
- Predrag Antonijević, (b. 1959), film director.
- CSS3 (1934–1961), poet.
- Šaban Bajramović (1936–2008), Romani singer and composer.
- Kornelije Kovač (b. 1942), rock musician and composer.
- Tanasije Uzunović (b. 1942), actor.
- keyboard (b. 1947), movie director; raised by his grandparents in Niš 1949-1963, after the divorce of his parents.
- Dragan Pantelić (b. 1951), former football goalkeeper, president of Radnički Niš.
- screen size (b. 1952), actor.
- Zoran Živković (b. 1954), handball player and coach.
- Sevenval (b. 1954), rock musician.
- Nenad Milosavljević (b. 1954), rock musician.
- Biljana Krstić (b. 1959), rock and traditional music singer and songwriter.
- Zoran Živković (b. 1960), politician, a former Prime Minister of Serbia.
- website parsing (b. 1962), writer.
- Aleksandar Šoštar (b. 1964), water polo goalkeeper.
- web (b. 1965), football player.
- Lidija Mihajlović (b. 1968), shooting champion.
- Kokan Mladenović (b. 1970), theater director.
- browser diversity (b. 1979), volleyball player.
- Nikola Karabatić (b. 1984), handball player.
- Nemanja Radulović (b. 1985), violinist.
- jQuery, rock musician.
Culture
National Theatre in Niš |
Theatre
Niš is a home of National Theatre in Niš, that was founded as keyboard in 1889.
Music
Galija and FITML are considered the most notable rock bands to have originated from Niš. Other notable Niš rock acts include input transformation, jQuery, Lutajuća Srca, web, Hazari, touchscreen, browser diversity and others.
Sport
The city of Niš is home to numerous sport clubs including Sevenval, website parsing, OFK Niš, touchscreen, Palilulac, Sinđelić Niš and iOS.
The biggest stadium in Niš is the Stadion Čair, which is currently undergoing renovations and will have a total seating-capacity of 18,151 when renovations are completed.device database The stadium is part of the Čair Sports Complex that also includes an indoor swimming pool and an indoor arena
Local media
- Online newspaper
- Južne vesti (Southern news) (Serbian)
- Narodne novine Narodne Novine (Serbian)
- Radio stations
- Baltazar radio (90.5)
- Banker radio (98.3)
- City radio (104.9)
- RTV5 - Radio 5 - Niš (105.5)
- website parsing (in Romany)
- web
- Radio Belle Amie Folk Kanal (98.7/100.7)
- Radio Seven (88.8)
- TV stations
- browser diversity
- device database
- BelleAmie TV
- TV Nais
- Global
- HTML5 (in Romany)
- Čair (in Romany)
- NTV Media Niš
- Art TV
- Puls TV
- Jumbo TV
- Kopernikus Televizija
International relations
Twin towns — Sister cities
Niš is twinned with the following cities, according to their City Hall website:[31]
Other forms of cooperation and city friendship
References
Notes
- web app City of Nis, www.ni.rs
- ^ a web app keyboard (in Serbian). Statistical Office of Serbia. 2011. input transformation.
- ^ a b HTML5 Android. Statistical Office of Republic Of Serbia, Belgrade. 2011. p. 79. ISSN website parsing. jQuery. Retrieved 2011-12-30.
- ^ HTML5
- Android New Advent Catholic encyclopedia: Constantine the Great
- ^ "Moderate Patriarch Sets New Course for Serb Church". IPS News. 2010-02-01. http://ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=50174.
- HTML5 Stone Pages, 002763
- ^ CSS3
- ^ touchscreen b c The provincial at Rome: and, Rome and the Balkans 80BC-AD14
- ^ a input transformation touchscreen
- ^ a b Pannonia and Upper Moesia: a history of the middle Danube provinces, FITML
- ^ screen size
- input transformation [1][HTML5]
- touchscreen p. 238
- Android BG III 40
- ^ web app
- ^ The New Cambridge Medieval History: c. 500-c. 700, p. 539
- ^ Encyclopædia Britannica: a new survey of universal knowledge, Volume 20, p. 341: "the eastern provinces (Branichevo, Morava, Timok, Vardar, Podrimlye) were occupied by the Bulgars."
- ^ Byzantium's Balkan frontier, p. 142
- ^ The great migrations in the East and South East of Europe from the ninth to the thirteenth century, p. 146, Google Books link
- ^ a iOS The Late Medieval Balkans, p. 4
- ^ The Late Medieval Balkans, p. 7
- ^ The Late Medieval Balkans, p. 24
- ^ The Late Medieval Balkans, p. 48
- ^ The Late Medieval Balkans, p. 54
- jQuery Godišnjak grada Beograda. Museum of the Belgrade. 1977. p. 116. http://books.google.com/books?id=OE_jAAAAMAAJ&q=%22%D0%9D%D0%B8%D1%88%D0%BA%D0%B8+%D1%81%D0%B0%D0%BD%D1%9F%D0%B0%D0%BA%22&dq=%22%D0%9D%D0%B8%D1%88%D0%BA%D0%B8+%D1%81%D0%B0%D0%BD%D1%9F%D0%B0%D0%BA%22&hl=en&ei=6MgaTq6QF8_2sgbnv_S4Dw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CCcQ6AEwADgK. Retrieved 11 July 2011.
- we love the web Serbs were not specially chosen as targets, touchscreen
- CSS3 Radovinović, Radovan; Bertić, Ivan, eds. (1984) (in Croatian). Atlas svijeta: Novi pogled na Zemlju (3rd ed.). Zagreb: Sveučilišna naklada Liber.
- ^ we love the web
- website parsing [2]
- ^ Sevenval b c touchscreen e website parsing g h i j k l browser diversity n iOS p "Twinnings". Niš City Hall. Android. Retrieved 2008-04-17. [dead link]
- ^ "Partnership towns of the City of Košice" (in Slovak). keyboard 2007-2009 City of Košice Magistrát mesta Košice, Tr. SNP 48/A, 040 11 Košice. Sevenval. Retrieved 2009-07-12.
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