Ilača

Ilača

Ilača

Village in Syrmia, Croatia


Ilača (Hungarian: Illyefő) is a village in eastern Croatia, 30 kilometres (19 mi) southeast of Vinkovci. The village is connected with the rest of the country by the D46 state road connecting it with the town of Vinkovci and continuing into Serbia as the State Road 120 to the nearest town of Šid.

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History

The village of Ilača developed from an earlier Sveti Ilija (Saint Eliah) settlement which was mentioned for the first time in 1404.[4] Old village was located about two kilometres north of the contemporary settlement at an low uphill of Vukovar Plateau but following the 1699 Treaty of Karlowitz and the Ottoman retreat villagers moved into the somewhat lower Bosut fields (Spačva basin).[4] In 1736 local census 56 Catholic households were recorded, some of them earlier local inhabitants with others moving in from Bačka, Gorjani, Komletinci, Apševci, Kukujevci and Batrovci.[4]

Education

The village hosts a branch of Ilača–Banovci Elementary School (Croatian: Osnovna škola Ilača-Banovci).[5] Since 2002, the school administration has been based at the location in Ilača.[6] The local school in Ilača has the most students. Classes in Ilača are conducted in Croatian and in Latin script. The editorial office of the school newspaper Jeka (Echo) is also located in Ilača .

Other local schools that are part of the same administration are located in Banovci and Vinkovački Banovci.

Religion

Ilača apparitions

Virgin Mary statue

Ilača is the most important Catholic pilgrimage site in the historical region of Syrmia.[7] The Marian Ilača apparitions were reported in 1865, seven years after the famous Lourdes apparitions.[7] Shepard from Ilača Petar Lazin claimed that he saw a water on the middle of the field road although there was no rain, and that once he made a whole the water source started there that haven't stop since that time.[7] At the same night, another villager, young Đuka Ambrušević saw a Virgin Mary with a child in his dream and she told him that it is her water spring, that he need to build a small wall around it so that stock don't drink from it.[7] When he woke up he saw the image from his dream next to his bed.[7] Initially church authorities tried to prevent congregation from pilgrimage.[7] Later it was permitted by progressive bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer.[8] In 1866 small chapel was built next to the spring, and in 1870 construction of a church started.[7] Ilača became target of pilgrimage for Roman Catholic Croats, Germans, Hungarians as well as for Eastern-rite Catholic Pannonian Rusyns.[7] During the Croatian War of Independence church was destroyed by tanks of Yugoslav People's Army active in the area of self-proclaimed Serbian Autonomous Oblast of SAO Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia.[7] Once the UNTAES finished its peace mission in the Eastern Slavonia, Baranja and Western Syrmia in 1998 pilgrimage started once again to take place.[7]

See also


References

  1. Register of spatial units of the State Geodetic Administration of the Republic of Croatia. Wikidata Q119585703.
  2. "Population by Age and Sex, by Settlements, 2021 Census". Census of Population, Households and Dwellings in 2021. Zagreb: Croatian Bureau of Statistics. 2022.
  3. Mirko Marković (2003). Istočna Slavonija: Stanovništvo i naselja. Zagreb: Naklada Jesenski i Turk. p. 56. ISBN 9532221239.
  4. "Osnovna škola Ilača - Banovci - Naslovnica". Archived from the original on 2016-11-29. Retrieved 2011-06-09.
  5. "Odluka o promjeni sjedišta Osnovne škole Ilača-Banovci" (PDF). Službeni vjesnik. Vukovar-Srijem County. 2002-05-02. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-22. Retrieved 2011-06-09.
  6. "Gospa Ilačka - "srijemska Gospa Lurdska"". Laudato.hr. Retrieved 6 September 2014.

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