Last modified: 2007-08-12 by ivan sache
Keywords: tetovo | tetova | dzepciste | sipkovica | helmet (white) | skanderbeg | south-eastern europe university |
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Municipal flag of Tetovo
Left, after a photography of the flag - Image by Ivan Sache, 11 June 2006, coat of arms from the Heraldry in Macedonia's website
Right, as shown on the Macedonian Ministry of Local
Self-Government website (page no longer online) - Image by Mello Luchtenberg & António Martins, 9 April 2007
See also:
The blingual municipality of Tetovo (Macedonian name) / Tetova (Albanian name) (86,580 inhabitants; 261.89 sq. km), located in northwestern Macedonia, is made of the town of Tetovo and the 19 settlements of Bozovce, Brodec, Bejce, Belšala, Gajre, Golema Rečica, Đermo, Jedoarce, Lavce, Lisec, Mala Rečica, Otunje, Poroj, Sarakjino, Selce, Setole, Fališ, Džepčište and Šipkovica.
According to the 1981 census, 70% of the inhabitants of the municipality of
Tetovo (with a different territory) were Albanians.
Željko Heimer & Ivan Sache, 10 June 2006
The municipal flag of Tetovo, as shown on photographies available on the municipal website, is in proportion 1:2, horizontally divided red-black-yellow (3:2:1) with the municipal coat of arms placed in canton.
The flag is shown on the Macedonian Ministry of Local
Self-Government website (page no longer online) without the coat of arms.
Tetovo, located not far from Kosovo and Albania,
is one of the most important and revendicative Albanian-speaking
cities from Macedonia. Several incidents caused by hosting the (then
banned) Albanian flag on the city hall and the Albanian-speaking
University were reported.
I won't be surprised if the municipal flag were intended to
symbolize a compromise between the Albanian majority (red and black)
and the Macedonian minority (yellow). Stretching the red colour over
the half of the flag could also symbolize equality between both
communities, since red is dominant in both Albanian and Macedonian
flags.
Ivan Sache, 9 April 2007
Flag of Džepčište - Image by Mello Luchtenberg & António Martins, 2 October 2006
The town of Džepčište (7,919 inhabitants in 2002; 32 sq; km) is located just northeast of Tetovo, not to be confused with a much smaller
Džepčište in the central part of the western border with Albania.
Džepčište was incorporated into the municipality of Tetovo in 2004.
The museum has a fund of 1,150 items, which come from all parts of Macedonia, put at a space of 7.2 sq. m. Due to the limited space, the museum can host only one visitor. The largest part of the displayed materials date from the end of the XIXth and the beginning of the XXth century, but there are also fragments of ceramic items, which are 5,000-8,000 years old. The mini-museum content comes as a result of the collecting and studying of the ethno and paleo-items, to which Zlatev dedicated 30 years of his work.
The display is divided according to the type of material the items are made of. The visitor has a chance to see old books and writing sets that had been used in the past, coins and bank notes, as well as items for money collecting. The collection also includes applications, fibula, guns, tools, which had been found at some of the archaeological sites, and date from the early antique until the late Middle Ages. Glass and porcelain items are presented as a special entirety. Copper and brass items, with rich relief decorations, are largely displayed. The museum also has a manual stone mill, jewelry and religious relics, folk costumes, old photographic equipment, lambs etc. There are also numerous household items, as well as set for smoking and keeping tobacco.
The flag of Džepčište, as shown on the Macedonian Ministry of Local Self-Government website (page no longer online), is in proportion 1.2, red with the municipal emblem shifted to the hoist. On the emblem, the yellow device is Skanderbeg's helmet.
Željko Heimer & Ivan Sache, 2 October 2006
Flag of Šipkovica - Image by Image by Mello Luchtenberg & António Martins, 18 November 2006
The municipality of Šipkovica (7,820 inhabitants in 2002; 145 sq. km) is located c. 10 km northwest of Tetovo. Šipkovica was the
headquarters of the Albanian rebels during the 2001 conflict. Ali
Ahmeti's National Liberation Army controlled a significant part of
north-western Macedonia and threatened the town of Tetovo. After
the Ohrid agreement, Ahmeti announced in Šipkovica the disbanding of
the NLA and the handing over of their weapons to a NATO force
(operation "Essential Harvest").
Šipkovica was incorporated into the municipality of Tetovo in 2004.
The flag of Šipkovica, as shown on the Macedonian Ministry of Local
Self-Government website (page no longer online), is in proportion 1:2, red with a black device in the middle.
The device is made of one broad vertical stripe and three narrower horizontal stripes
equally spaced. The emblem might suggest the initial of the name of the city, the Cyrillic letter
Ш, looking like an E rotated 90 degrees, and is also a stylized representation of the Albanian double-headed eagle (whose explicit representation on the flag was not allowed).
Željko Heimer, Ivan Sache, Jorge Candeias & Valentin Popovski, 5 July 2006
Flag of the University of Tetovo - Image by Ivan Sache, 19 October 2005, after the University website
The flag of the State University of Tetovo is horizontally divided red-yellow with the emblem of the University in the middle. The Albanian-speaking University was the place of several incidents caused by the hosting of the Albanian flag. The situation seems to have calmed
down and the University has now a trilingual name, as shown on the
emblem placed in the middle of the flag:
UNIVERSITETI SHTETËROR TETOVËS (Albanian, top)
ДРЖАВЕН
УНИВЕРЗИТЕТ ВО
ТЕТОВО (Madedonian, left)
STATE UNIVERSITY OF TETOVO (English, right)
Ivan Sache & Valentin Poposki, 19 October 2005
Flag of the South-Eastern Europe University - Image by Valentin Poposki, 5 July 2006, after the University website