Bratunac

Bratunac (Serbian Cyrillic: Братунац) is a town and municipality located in the easternmost part of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

At the time, Bratunac was composed of five houses and had a population of roughly 30 people.

Under Ottoman rule, it was transformed into a kasbah that included mosques, a madrasa, several mekteps, shadirvans, caravanserais, and other types of Islamic architecture.

In 1878, as the Ottoman Empire fell into decline, Austro-Hungary annexed Bosnia and Herzegovina and ruled over Bratunac until its dissolution at the end of the WW1.

The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in professional fields per their core activity (as of 2018):[1] Una-Sana  Central Bosnia Posavina  Herzegovina-Neretva Tuzla  West Herzegovina Zenica-Doboj  Sarajevo Bosnian Podrinje Canton 10

Serbian Orthodox cemetery in Bratunac.
The landscape of Bratunac