Doboj
Doboj (
Serbian Cyrillic
Добој) is a town in northern
Bosnia, situated on the river
Bosna.
The first mention of the town dates from year
1415, although there are signs that the area was inhabited ever since the early
stone age, and that the
Roman Empire had an army camp (
Castrum) and a settlement (
Canube) in the vicinity dating from the
1st century. Following the arrival of the
Slavs, during the
Middle Ages it was part of the regions Usora and Soli. The Doboj fort, first built in the early
13th century and expanded in the
15th century, fell to the
Ottoman Empire in
1476, only to be expanded yet again in
1490. As such, it was frequently attacked in the Austrian-Ottoman wars, and finally fell to the
Habsburgs in
1878.
During
World War I, Doboj was the site of the largest
Austro-Hungarian concentration camp for
Serbs. According to its official figures, it held, between
December 27,
1915 and
July 5,
1917:
- 16,673 men from Bosnia and Herzegovina (mostly of Serb ethnicity)\n* 16,996 women and children from Bosnia and Herzegovina (also Serbian)\n* 9,172 soldiers and civilians (men, women, children) from the Kingdom of Serbia\n* 2,950 soldiers and civilians from the Kingdom of Montenegro
In total, 45,791 persons.
By February
1916, the authorities began redirecting the prisoners to other camps. The Serbs from Bosnia were mostly sent to Gyor (Sopronyek, Šopronjek/Шопроњек).
Most of the interned from Bosnia were whole families from the border regions of eastern Bosnia and Herzegovina. It is said that 5,000 families alone were uprooted from the
Sarajevo district in eastern Bosnia along the border with the Kingdoms of Serbia & Montenegro.
Nobel-laureate
Ivo Andrić was also an inmate of the camp.
During
World War II, Doboj was an important site for the
partisan resistance movement. From their initial uprising in August
1941 up until the end of the war, the Ozren partisan squad carried out numerous diversions against the occupation forces, among the first successful operations in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The town was liberated on
April 17,
1945.
Prior to the
Yugoslav wars, the Doboj district was inhabited by
Bosniaks (40.2%), Serbs (39%), Croats (13%) and 7.8% others. Presently, a larger part of the city is part of the
Doboj Region of
Republika Srpska, while the southern suburbs are part of the
Zenica-Doboj Canton of
Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the eastern subursbs are part of the
Tuzla Canton. These parts are known as Doboj-South and Doboj-East respectively.