Vršački Ritovi
Name
In Serbian, the village is known as Вршачки Ритови or Vršački Ritovi, in Hungarian as Verseci Rétek, and in Croatian as Vršački Ritovi.
The name of village means "Marshes Of Vršac", because village is situated on the place of former marshes.
History
Village is pretty new, and was built around former large agricultural corporation "Vršački Ritovi", once driving economical force of the region. Place was populated before that, yet with just few houses. Beginning from 1950s, village started to grow, and reached its peak in mid-1970s and 1980s, with its small but pretty rich population. Break-up of Yugoslavia brought decline of village. Leaned mostly on agricultural corporation in which majority of inhabitants were employed, village started its rapid decline. Imposed UN embargo on Yugoslavia brought halt to export of agricultural products, while breakup of USSR, its major market, brought total collapse. Corporation was state-owned, and started to break up itself into small companies, out of whom only fish farm remained in work.
Geography
Being officially classified as a single village, Vršački Ritovi is actually composed of two separate inhabited places: proper Vršački Ritovi, which is situated near the railroad that connects Vršac and Zrenjanin and is some 3 km far from regional road, and Novogradnja (Serbian: Новоградња).
Proper Vršački Ritovi is commonly named by inhabitants as Pumpa (Serbian: Пумпа) - "The Pump", because on that place in the past was water pump.
Novogradnja got its name for Serbian word for newly built place, and is situated on the regional Vršac-Zrenjanin road, near the administrative building of former corporation and wheat silo. Smaller than Pumpa, Novogradnja is actually main part of Vršački Ritovi and is still activelly inhabited place.
Demography
The village has a Serb ethnic majority (65.93%) with a seizable Hungarian (15.38%) and Rroma people (7.69%). Its total population numbering 37 inhabitants (2011 census).
Historical population
- 1961: 636
- 1971: 424
- 1981: 224
- 1991: 156
- 2002: 91
- 2011: 37
- 2022: 19
References
- ^ "Age and sex - Data by settlements" (PDF). Belgrade: Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia. 2022.
See also
- Ćurčić, Slobodan (1996). Broj stanovnika Vojvodine (in Serbian). Novi Sad: Matica srpska, Odeljenje za društvene nauke.
- List of places in Serbia
- List of cities, towns and villages in Vojvodina