Vusanje

Coordinates: 42°31′46″N 19°50′25″E / 42.52944°N 19.84028°E / 42.52944; 19.84028
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Vuthaj
Вусање
Vuthaj
Town
UTC+2 (CEST)
Area code+382 51
Vehicle registrationGS
ClimateCfb

Vusanje (Cyrillic: Вусање; Albanian: Vuthaj) is a village in Gusinje Municipality, Montenegro. According to the 2003 census, the town had 648 inhabitants.

Geography

Vusanje is located within the Plav municipality, below the town of Gusinje. It is located in the geographical region of Prokletije mountain, in the basin of the Lim river.[1] There is a notable waterfall Grlja.

History

The village was settled by ancestors of the Kelmendi region of Albania, by Gjonbalaj and Nrel Bala family. Until 1912, it was part of Ottoman Empire. During the First Balkan War in 1912 it became part of the Kingdom of Montenegro. The village is made up of two settlements, Katundi i siper (upper village) and katundi i ulet (lower village). Also there is a hamlet called Zarunic. Post 1913, the village was subjected to repression and discrimination from the Montenegrin and Yugoslavian governments. The result was the expulsion of the 90% of the population to the United States, mostly in the New York area. The remaining population is now 100% Albanian.

There is an old cemetery in the village, called "the Catholic cemetery".[2]

Culture

The population of the village identifies as Muslim. Currently, there are two Mosques in the village (1990).[3]

Anthropology

The village is Albanian-inhabited, one of three

Slavicised and the population identify as Slavic Muslims
.

Families


During SFR Yugoslavia, families had Serbian(ized) surnames.[4]

Demographics

There is a high demographic vitality in Vusanje in relation to the other villages in the municipality.[5] The village is inhabited exclusively by Albanians,[6] Muslims by religion (2011 census).[7] The Albanians of this village speak with the Gheg dialect of the Albanian language.

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1948 781—    
1953 859+10.0%
1961 935+8.8%
1971 1,103+18.0%
1981 1,399+26.8%
1991 1,103−21.2%
2003 866−21.5%
2011 648−25.2%
Source: [citation needed]

Notable people

References

Sources