1 / 10

Žilinský region

Žilinský region. Erik Sečen 9.A.

inga-cooke
Download Presentation

Žilinský region

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Žilinskýregion Erik Sečen 9.A

  2. TheŽilina Region is one of the eight Slovakadministrativesregions and consists of 11 districts and 315 municipalities, from which 18 have a town status. The region was established in 1923, however, in its present borders exists from 1996. It is more industrial region with several large towns. Žilina is region administrative center and a strong cultural environment is in Martin.

  3. Geography • It is located in northern Slovakia and has an area of 6,804 km² and a population of 688,851 (2011). The whole area is mountainous, belonging to the Western Carpathians. Some of the mountain ranges in the region include Javorníky, the Lesser Fatra and theGreaterFatra inthewest, OravskáMagura, Chočskévrchy, Low Tatras and Western Tatras in the east. Whole area belongs to the Váh river basin. Some of its left tributariesare Turiec and Rajčanka rivers and its right tributaries Belá, Orava and Kysuca. National parks on the region's territory are the Lesser, Greater Fatra, Low Tatras and Tatra; landscape protected areas are Strážovskévrchy, Kysuce and HornáOrava

  4. Economy • From the stagnation in the 1990s the region now enjoys relative prosperity. Main employers are industry and tourism. The river Váhvalley, which runs across the entire region, forms a strong industrial base with wood pulp and engineering factories as well asVolkswagen and Kia plants in Žilina and Martin.

  5. History • After the fall of Great Moravia in the early 9th century, the area became part of the Kingdom of Hungary in the 12th century practically to 1918. Before the break it was part of the Hungarian counties of Trenčín, Turiec, Orava and Liptov. After incorporation into Czechoslovakia, the counties continued to exist under their Slovak names of Trenčín, Turiec, Orava and Liptov, but only to 1923, when they were replaced by (grand) counties ((veľ)župy) From 1928 it was part of the administrative unit "Slovak Land". During the WWII Slovak Republic, the area was split between Trenčín and Tatracounties.

  6. ... Since 1928 it was part of the administrative after reincorporation into Czechoslovakia in 1945, the pre-war state was restored. In 1949-1960 there was a unit with the name Žilina Region but it was abolished in 1960 and the area became part of new Central Slovak Region, of which it was part until 1990 (except 1969-70) when it was abolished. After the independence of Slovakia in 1993, the current region was established in 1996. Since the administrative regions became autonomous in 2002, it is governed by the Žilina Self-Governing Region.

  7. Demographics • The population density in the region is 102 inhabitants per km². The largest towns are Žilina, Martin, LiptovskýMikuláš, Ružomberok and Čadca. The level of urbanization is relatively low, with about 50% of the population living in the towns, with the Námestovo District having the lowest urbanization in the whole of Slovakia, only 15%. According to the 2001 census, there were 692,332 inhabitants in the region, almost wholly Slovaks (97.5%), with small minorities of Czechs (1%) and Roma (0.5%).

  8. Top 10 ofŽilina‘sregion • Weddingpalace - Bytča • Slovak betlehem – Rajecká Lesná • Rajecké teplice • MedievalvillagePaseka - Hrad Strečno • BathhouseAphrodite • Rafting on river Váh • Orava‘scastle • Chalet Krajinka • Museumof Orava village • Slovak orloj – Stará Bystrica

  9. Thanksforyourattention

More Related