| |||||||||
Tuzla is a city in Bosnia, in the northeastern part of the country. At the time of the 1991 census, it had 131,000 inhabitants.
First mentioned in 950 as a county under Hungarian rule, the town was later referred to by historians as Soli. Soli means salt in Bosnian, and the city's present name means "place of salt" in Turkish. However, there is enough archaeologic evidence to suggest that Tuzla was a rich neolithic settlement, and hence inhabited continuously for more than 6,000 years which makes Tuzla as oldest European city with sustained living.
On October 2, 1943, Tuzla became the largest liberated town in Europe to the time. It developed into a major industrial and cultural centre during the communist period in former Yugoslavia. During the Bosnian war, 1992-1995, Tuzla was the only municipality in Bosnia that wasn't governed by nationalists. The town itself, however, was not spared of the atrocities of war, on May 25, 1995, a mortar killed 72 youngsters in the single most deadly incident of the war.
The city has Europe's only salt lake as part of its central park; more than 100,000 people visit its shores every year. From Tuzla hails one of the most influential writers in the Balkans, Meša Selimović.
| Cities of Bosnia and Herzegovina |
|---|
| Banja Luka | Bihać | Bijeljina | Bosanska Krupa | Brčko | Bugojno | Cazin | Derventa | Doboj | Gračanica | Gradačac | Bosanska Gradiška | Kakanj | Ilidža | Livno | Lukavac | Mostar | Neum | Prijedor | Sanski Most | Sarajevo | Foča | Srebrenica | Teslić | Tešanj | Travnik | Trebinje | Tuzla | Velika Kladuša | Visoko | Zavidovići | Zenica | Zvornik | Živinice |