Vojvodina
Vojvodina is an autonomous province of the Republic of Serbia and covers almost a quarter of the entire Balkans. The distance between the two end points on the north-south axis is 169 km, east-west 217.
Vojvodina is crossed by three rivers, the Danube, the Tisza and the Sava which divide the territory into three units: Banat, Backa and Srem. The relief of this region is rather flat, except in Srem where there is the mountain of Fruska Gora and in the south-east of Banat, with Vrsacki Breg.
The climate is temperate continental.
Vojvodina is crossed by three rivers, the Danube, the Tisza and the Sava which divide the territory into three units: Banat, Backa and Srem. The relief of this region is rather flat, except in Srem where there is the mountain of Fruska Gora and in the south-east of Banat, with Vrsacki Breg.
The climate is temperate continental.
There are about 2 million inhabitants in Vojvodina, more than 20% of the total population of Serbia. There are 26 minorities and ethnic groups, with the Serb majority, after which there are Hungarians, Croats, Slovaks, Montenegrins, Romanians, Roma, Ruthenian, Macedonians and minority groups such as Ukrainians, Albanians, Slovenes and others. Besides the official Serbian language, the languages of ethnic minorities are also used: Hungarian, Slovak, Romanian and Ruthenian.
Tourism in Vojvodina is specially developed on rivers, lakes, hot springs and Fruska Gora. There are many monasteries in the Serbian-Byzantine style, founded between the twelfth and seventeenth centuries. In the area there are many protected areas, some of them are of international importance, such are the Fruska Gora National Park, Palic and Ludosko lakes, marshes Carska and Obedska, Deliblat the sand desert and many others, and we have included them in our visits. The capital city is Novi Sad and the second largest city is Subotica.