Last modified: 2008-02-23 by ivan sache
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Flag of Pančevo - Image by Ivan Sarajčić, 18 November 2006 - coat of arms after the municipal website
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Pančevo (Hungarian, Pancsova ; German, Pantschowa ;
Romanian, Panciova) is a town (72,717 inhabitants in 1990) and municipality (127,100 inh. in 1994; 757 sq. km) located in southern Banat, on the left bank of the river Tamiš,
close to its confluency with the Danube. The municipality is made of
the towns of Pančevo and Kacarevo and of the villages Banatski
Brestovac, Banatsko Novo Selo, Glogonj, Dolovo, Ivanovo, Jabuka and
Omoljica.
Pančevo is an industrial town with an oil refinery, chemical plants,
breweries, the Lola-Utva (lit., Wild Duck) aircraft factory etc. The
Petrohemija complex was bombed by the NATO Air Force in 1999, causing a strong pollution of the town; in November 2006, the complex released
a reddish cloud loaded with benzene and sulphur, causing an emergency
situation. According to local activists, pollution by the obsolete
factories of Pančevo is constant. No solution seems to be found (that
is nobody want to pay 300 millions € for the revamping of the
factories) until the privatization of the factories.
The site of Pančevo was settled very early, as shown by archeological
findings from the Neolithic, Dacian and Slavic (IX-Xth century)
periods. The town appeared in the IX th century as Panuka, then ruled
by the Arpadović lineage. The Talovac's Charter, dated 1430, lists the
town as Panchal. The famous Turkish traveler Evliya Chelebi described in 1660 the fortified town of Panzova, under Ottoman rule but mostly inhabited by Christians. From 1522 to 1716, Pancevo belonged to the sanjak (district) of Timişoara. The town
was conquered by the Austro-Hungarians in 1716 and allocated to the
bicephalous monarchy in 1718, by the Treaty of Požarevac. In 1720-1722,
Serbs moved from the region of Timişoara to Pančevo, where they built
the Upper Town; Germans from the upper valley of Rhine came to Pančevo,
where they formed the Lower Town. Romanians arrived in 1767 and lived
in both towns. The Upper and Lower Towns were merged in 1974.
The economic development of Pančevo started in the beginning of the
XVIIIth century, with the building of grain warehouses (1724),
saltworks (1718), a brewery (1722), a general hospital (1833), a town
hall (1833-1838), army barracks and headquarters, banks, lighthouses at
the river, schools etc... When joining the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and
Slovenes in 1918, Pancevo was much more developed than most of Serbia.
Pančevo was liberated from the German occupation on 6 October 1944. The
town was rebuilt and new boroughs were set up; there are plans to
develop the town on the right bank of the Tamiš.
Source: Unofficial Pančevo website
Ivan Sache, 24 November 2006
Residents of Pančevo blocked the town industrial zone today to protest
against excessive air pollution. The municipal flag
of Pancevo was seen in the streets. It is a white
flag with the coat of arms in the middle. Unlike most Serbian municipal flags, it is not a banner of arms.
The municipal coat of arms clearly recalls the strategic location of
the fortress of Pančevo on the river Tamiš.
Ivan Sarajčić & Ivan Sache, 18 November 2006
Former flag of Pančevo - Image by István Molnár, 24 September 2002
Source: Sándor Széll. Városaink neve, címere és lobogója [szs41].
István Molnár, 24 September 2002
Széll's book shows the flags of several cities formerly held by Hungary. The book is our only source of these flags, but it is not clear as to what period these flags were used as claimed by the book. I doubt very much that they were used during the time of Austria-Hungary. It seems very much more like they were designed in 1941 - but it is not even clear weather the designs shown in the Szell's book are just proposals or if they were ever prescribed in any formal way and after all whether they were used. At least for the moment, I believe that the former flag was in use at most in years 1941-1944.
Željko Heimer, 9 October 2005
Flag of Starčevo - Image by Ivan Sarajčić, 22 August 2007
Starčevo (7,615 inhabitants in 2002) is a local community (mesna zajednica, the smallest territorial unit in Serbia) in the municipality of Pančevo.
The name of the town means "the place of the old man" in Serbian.
The Starčevo Culture, an ancient civilization on the Danube river
which dates back to 6000 BC, is named after this town because of
archaeological excavations carried out there. The Starčevo
culture ceased to exist around 4200 BC with the invasions of the
Pelasgians.
The Starčevo culture was a widespread early Neolithic
archaeological culture from Eastern Europe and South to the Balkans.
It dates to the between the seventh and fifth millennia BC.
Starčevo is a site located on the north bank of the Danube, opposite
Belgrade in Serbia. It represents the earliest settled farming
society in the area, although hunting and gathering still provided a
significant portion of the inhabitants' diet.
The pottery is usually coarse but finer fluted and painted vessels
later emerged. A type of bone spatula, perhaps for scooping flour, is
a distinctive artefact. The Körös is a similar culture in Hungary
named after the River Körös with a closely related culture which also
used footed vessels but fewer painted ones. Both have given their
names to the wider culture of the region in that period.
Parallel and closely related cultures also include the Maritza in
Bulgaria, Criş in Romania and the pre-Sesklo in Greece.
It was superseded by the Vinča culture in Serbia.
Milan Jovanović, 23 August 2007