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BANJALUKA (sometimes written BANIALUKA, or BAINALUKA) , the capital of aSee also: district bearing the same name, in Bosnia
.
Pop
.
(1895) 13,666, of whom about 7000 were Moslems
.
Banjaluka lies on the See also: river Vrbas, and at the See also: terminus of a military railway which meets the Hungarian See also: state See also: line at Jasenovac, 30 M
.
N.N.W
.
Banjaluka is the seat of See also: Roman Catholic and Orthodox bishops, a district See also: court, and an See also: Austrian garrison
.
It is at the See also: head of a
narrow See also: defile, shut in by steep hills on the See also: east and west but expanding on the See also: north to meet the valley of the Save
.
A small stream called the Crkvina enters the Vrbas from the north-east and in the angle thus formed stand the citadel and barracks, with the 16th-century Ferhadiya Jamia, largest and most beautiful of more than 40 mosques in the city
.
The celebrated Roman See also: baths are all in ruins, except one massive, domed See also: building, dating from the 6th century and still in use, although See also: modern baths are also open, for the development of the hot springs
.
Other noteworthy buildings are the Franciscan and Trappist monasteries, a girls' school, belonging to the Sisterhood of the Sacred See also: Blood of See also: Nazareth, a real-school and a See also: Turkish See also: bazaar
.
See also: Coal, iron, See also: silver and other minerals are found in the adjoining hills; and the city possesses a See also: government See also: tobacco factory, a brewery, See also: cloth-mills, See also: gunpowder-mills, a See also: model See also: farm and many corn-mills, worked by the two rapid See also: rivers
.
Banjaluka is probably the Roman fort, marked, in the Tabula Peutingeriana, as Castra, on the river Urbanus and the road from Salona on the Adriatic to Servitium in See also: Pannonia
.
The origin of its later name, meaning the " Baths of St See also: Luke," is uncertain
.
In the 15th century, the fall of See also: Jajce, a See also: rival stronghold 22 M
.
S., led to the rapid rise of Banjaluka, which was thenceforward the scene of many encounters between Austrians and See also: Turks; notably in 1527, 1688 and 1737
.
No Bosnian city had greater prosperity or importance in the last See also: half of the 18th century
.
In 1831, Hussein See also: Aga Borberli, called the " Dragon of Bosnia," or Zmaj Bosanski, set forth from Banjaluka on his See also: holy war against the sultan Mahmud II
.
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