Labin

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Template:Main otherScript error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Main other Labin (Italian/Istriot: Albona) is a town in Istria, west Croatia, with a town population of 5,806 (2021) and 10,424 in the greater municipality (which also includes the small towns of Rabac-Porto Albona and Vinež-Vines, as well as a number of smaller villages).[1]

History

File:Panorama Labina9220678.JPG
View over the town

Labin developed from the site of the Roman settlement of Albona. Its name predates classical antiquity and is derived from Proto-Indo-European *alb- ("eminence", "hill").Template:Sfn Before and under the Roman occupation, Albona was an important commune. On a marble tablet the Roman inscription we read that under the Emperor Marco Iulio Severo Filippo noble Caesar noble Prince made Albona a Republic. To be a republic it had to have two joined Magistrates called Duumviri and Public officers called Aediles which took care of Public buildings and other official duties.[2]

From 1295 it was under the rule of the dukes of Pazin, and from 1381 it found itself under the jurisdiction of the Patriarchate of Aquileia. From 1420 until 1797 it was ruled from the Republic of Venice and after that belonged to Austrian Empire until 1918, when it was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy. Labin, as a Croatian-speaking town, was for a long time the centre of Croatia's largest coal mining district, with four mines operating at the height of its production. In March and April 1921, the town was the scene of a miners' strike which quickly grew into an anti-fascist rebellion, considered to be the first of its kind, and the declaration of the short-lived Labin Republic.[3] The mine in downtown Labin closed in 1989. The large, coal-fired power plant in nearby Plomin now has its coal imported from outside sources once the mines were closed. After the Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947, Labin, like the whole of Istria, was annexed to Yugoslavia.

The famous Lutheran reformer Matthias Flacius Illyricus (3 March 1520 – 11 March 1575), was born in Labin and a small exhibition in what was once his house, commemorates this. Unfortunately, due to the counter-reformation, he was forced to live most of his life in exile in Germany where he became the undisputed leader of the conservative wing of the Lutheran movement after the death of Luther. His chief literary legacy was in the area of biblical exegesis.

Population

Settlements

The town's administrative area consists of 17 settlements:

Demographics

Template:Historical populations Template:Croatian population data graph

Religion in Labin (2021 Census)[4]
religion percent
Roman Catholic
53.83%
Atheism and Agnosticism
13.76%
Islam
9.95%
Other Christians
5.84%
Undeclared
5.61%
Eastern Orthodoxy
2.28%
Protestantism
0.07%
Others and unspecified
8.66%
Ethnic composition in Labin (2021 Census)[4]
ethnicity percent
Croats
71.19%
Istrians
9.65%
Bosniaks
7.44%
Serbs
1.89%
Italians
1.77%
Albanians
0.61%
Slovenes
0.48%
Montenegrins
0.15%
Germans
0.14%
Others and unspecified
6.68%
Ethnic composition in Labin (1945 Census)[5]
ethnicity percent
Croats
80.27%
Italians
16.31%
Slovenes
2.40%
Undeclared
0.62%
Serbs
0.09%
Others
0.23%









Climate

Between 1993 and 2006, the highest temperature recorded at the local weather station was Template:Convert, on 4 August 1994.[6] The coldest temperature was Template:Convert, on 26 January 2000.[7]

Since records began in 2006, the lowest temperature recorded at the Dubrova weather station was Template:Convert, on 17 January 2010.[8]

Template:Weather box

Culture

Language

Labinjonska Cakavica, one of the most interesting and oldest Istrian dialects spoken in and around the town of Labin. It belongs to Northern Chakavian dialect of the Chakavian variety of Croatian. It differs from the usual Chakavian (with typical pronoun "ča") because it lacks most palatals, with other parallel deviations called "tsakavism" (cakavizam). In 2019, by the decision of the Ministry of Culture, Labinjonska Cakavica became a protected intangible cultural asset of the Republic of Croatia.[9]

Sport

The city is the home of football club NK Rudar Labin, and handball clubs ŽRK Rudar Labin and RK Mladi Rudar Labin.

Notable people

Artists

Handball players

HNK Rijeka footballers

Science and humanities

Others

Administration and politics

Mayor

The current mayor of Labin is Valter Glavičić (IDS), elected in the 2021 Labin local elections which were held on 16 May 2021. There is one deputy mayor elected from the same list, Federika Mohorović Čekada.[12]

Municipal Council

The Labin Council is composed of 15 representatives, elected in the 2021 Labin local elections.

The political groups represented in the Council (as of June 2021):

Elected on 16 May 2021
Groups No. of members per group
2021
IDS, ISU Template:Composition bar
Democrats Template:Composition bar
SDP Template:Composition bar
Independents together Template:Composition bar
HDZ Template:Composition bar
Source:[13]

Councils of Local Committees

In 2020, elections were held for the councils of all seven local committees of the City of Labin.[14]

Elected on 5 July 2020
Groups No. of members per group
2020
IDS Template:Composition bar
SDP Template:Composition bar
MOST Template:Composition bar
Source:[14]

International relations

Twin towns – sister cities[15]

Partnerships[15]

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Sources

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External links

Template:Sister project

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  3. G. Scotti - L. Giuricin. La Repubblica di Albona e il movimento dell'occupazione delle fabbriche in Italia
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