On April 13, 1964, an earthquake occurred at the Dilj mountain near the towns of Slavonski Brod and ÃÂakovo in Slavonia, Croatia (at the time part of SFR Yugoslavia). A number of people were killed, and the damage to vulnerable structures was extensive.
Slavonia, the eastern part of Croatia, is located on the Eurasian plate. The mountains of Psunj, Papuk, Krndija, and Dilj are considered less seismically active than others in the country. An earthquake was recorded in the vicinity of ÃÂakovo in 1884.
The earthquake measured 5.7 on the moment magnitude scale. The tremor was assigned VII (Very strong) on the Modified Mercalli intensity scale.
The epicenter was near the towns of Slavonski Brod and ÃÂakovo.
While the initial reporting on the earthquake in Glas Slavonije did not indicate a severe event, within a few days it became apparent that the damage would be measured in billions of Yugoslav dinars.
On April 24, the newly-founded Disaster Protection Headquarters of the Osijek kotar reported its initial findings of 17 billion dinars worth of damage to public and private buildings.
A 5th grade pupil died when a staircase collapsed in the "Ivan Goran KovaÃÂiÃÂ" elementary school in ÃÂakovo. At the end of April, official reports also listed one other fatality, but because the deceased person was not named, this information was not necessarily reliable. Another fatality was reportedly in Slavonski Brod, as well as a person in the village of Karavukovo in the nearby western Vojvodina. Another man from Belgrade suffered a fatal stroke during the earthquake.
The NCEI Global Historical Hazard Database cites 3 fatalities from this earthquake.
In response to the earthquake, the government established a reconstruction fund, which managed to raise around 3 billion dinars in 1964. It disbursed the funds to the affected municipalities in the following ratios: Slavonski Brod 77%, ÃÂakovo 17% and Slavonska Poà ¾ega 6%.
In the ÃÂakovo region, the Yugoslav People's Army sent 100 and then up to 200 tents to accommodate the people most affected, as well as food and clothing. The worst affected villages were MusiÃÂ, Lapovci, Hrkanovci, OvÃÂara, PauÃÂje, Slobodna Vlast, Levanjska Varoà ¡, VuÃÂevci and Ivanovci. The damage included the destruction of 301 residential buildings and damage to 5,291 more. Nine schools were rendered unusable, affecting around 1,000 students, and 43 more were damaged, affecting about 8,000 more. The medical facilities in ÃÂakovo were damaged to the extent that they had to be demolished, while significant damage was also recorded in several other villages, including on veterinarian stations, the ÃÂakovo Cathedral, and other historical churches.
In the Slavonski Brod region, the worst affected places were the city itself, and the villages of Jeà ¾evik, Bukovlje, Vranovci, Podcrkavlje, Podvinje, Kindrovo and others, where more than half the building stock was damaged. In the city, over 500 buildings were damaged, including almost all of the schools, and the ÃÂuro ÃÂakoviàand other factories.
The earthquake was felt as far away as Zagreb, Belgrade and Sarajevo, the major nearby cities of Yugoslavia.
The earthquake caused a wide area of Slavonia to enter a period of several years of reconstruction, made longer because of a bad economic situation and the unfortunate circumstance of the country's resources already being spread thin on recovery from other significant earthquakes.