Gojbulja
Gojbulja (Serbian Cyrillic: Гојбуља) is a settlement in the Vučitrn municipality in the disputed region of Kosovo. The rural settlement lies on a cadastral area with the same name, with 692 hectares. It lies 687 m above sea level. The village is exclusively inhabited by Serbs, and is one of the Serb enclaves in Kosovo and Metohija; in the 1991 census, it had 454 inhabitants.
Today, it is one of four Serbian villages in Vučitrn, with ca. 300 residents.[1] There is a local elementary school in the village.
History
Gojbulja is mentioned for the first time in an Ottoman defter (tax register) of 1455, as a village with 33 Serb houses, and a Serbian Orthodox Church, dedicated to Parascheva (Sv. Petka). On the tumulus of that old church, which lies at the rural cemetery, a new Church dedicated to Parascheva was built in 1986. The church was burnt during the 2004 unrest in Kosovo.[1] In 2006 it was desecrated and looted.[2] The church, parish house and the people's refectory are restored, but there is much effort left for the restoration of the interior and to make it available for regular services.[1] The village is part of the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Raška and Prizren.
Ethnic group | 1948 | 1953 | 1961 | 1971 | 1981[3] | 1991 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Serbs | 423 (100%) | |||||
Total[4] | 449 | 502 | 482 | 473 | 423 | 454 |
References
Coordinates: 42°50′56″N 20°59′30″E / 42.84889°N 20.99167°E