Bosiljevo is a village and municipality in Karlovac County, Croatia. It is located in the Gorski Kotar region, 25 km south-west from Karlovac, on the highways A1 and A6 leading to Zagreb, Rijeka and Split.
It was recorded as Boszilieuo on the 1673 map of .
The total population of the municipality is 1,284, in the following forty-three settlements (villages and hamlets):
The Bosiljevo municipality is divided into four districts: Bosiljevo, Grabrk, Prikuplje and Vodena Draga.
It is situated between the rivers Kupa (the western part lying roughly along the Slovenia-Croatia border) and Dobra. To the south, the municipality shares borders with the Primorje-Gorski Kotar County and the town of Vrbovsko, to the south-east Ogulin, to the east Generalski Stol, and NetretiÃÂ to the north.
Located in Gorski Kotar, the area's landscape is shaped by karst relief, and its most prominent features are the hills Druà ¾ac and Privis, which stand at 469 and 461 meters respectively. The geology and climate of the region have traditionally been well-suited for pastoralism.
Since records began in 1981, the highest temperature recorded at the local weather station was , on 8 August 2013. The coldest temperature was , on 13 February 1985.
The area has been inhabited since the Neolithic period, as evidenced by pottery found in a site near the village of Hrsina.
The earliest references to Bosiljevo date back to documents from the year 1334 when Ivan the Archdeacon of Gorica mentioned the parish church of Sancti Mauri in Bozilio in the constitution of the Zagreb bishopric. The Bosiljevo castle was most likely built in the early 15th century, and its first owner was Bartol IX Frankopan, a member of the Frankopan family.
During the fortification of Karlovac in 1588, Bosiljevo was part of its supply chain, being counted together with Dubovac, Novigrad and Ribnik. Ozalj owed the same as all of these four. Each owed 6 carts of timber, and although there were complaints about the conduct of the soldiers stationed in Karlovac, the order was complied with.
For the fortification of For the fortification of IvaniÃÂ in 1598, Bosiljevo and Novigrad had to supply 30 labourers.
On 17 September 1602, the à ¾upanijski sudac Bernardo Severà ¡iàissued from Bosiljevo a judgement on a case between the Frankapan family members Juraj, Nikola and Vuk on the one hand ant the Vlachs of Gomirje on the other.
On 30 September 1632, a document written by a committee including Ivan Adam ÃÂ Vernegg and Zagreb cleric Ivan Somogy tasked with delimiting the border between the possessions of the Zrinski family and of the Frankapan family was written in Bosiljevo.
On 9 June 1774, Gregorij Kneà ¾iàlord of Bosiljevo drew up in Bosiljevo on behalf of the widow lady Ana Vojkoviàand her housekeeper Elizabeth de Pozzi a list of duties of freemen in Jadràand Osojnik. The transcript survives in the HDA in Zagreb, and was published by . The original survives in the HDA, and was published by .
In 1870, the road through à  tokani was repaired.
Cultural and historical monuments, such as the Castle Frankopan (which has been in a desolate state of frame since the nuns were expelled in the late 70's), the ruins of the Castle Steljnik, old mansions, churches and monasteries yield the county a certain attraction.
Two volunteer fire departments are presently active in Bosiljevo. The first one, DVD Bosiljevo, was founded on 2 December 1934 by Matija Bukovac. The other, DVD Grabrk, was founded on 17 June 1951. Together with the DVD Prikuplje in Ribnik, these make up the VZ OpÃÂine Bosiljevo.
There is also a local cultural club called "Frankopan" and the hunting club "Druà ¾ac".
In July 1941, when the deportations of Serbs to accommodate the Slovenes of the population exchange commenced, the logornik in Vrbovsko informed his superiors that all the Serbs were in Moravice apart from two retired Serb gunmen in Severin na Kupi. For the temporary accommodation of Slovenes in Bosilhevo, the castle was offered for the housing of 30 people but for its occupation by the Italians.
At 21:00 on 21 June, a large group of Partisans attacked the arms depot in Bosiljevo. The attack lasted until 4:00 the next morning, but was ultimately repelled. A search of the grounds found much blood and a Mannlicher rifle, meaning there were losses on the Partisan side.
Bosiljevo has one post office, one tavern (stand 2006), two shops and the restaurant "Bosiljevo" in Bosanci, on the old road (Rijeka-Zagreb). The most important companies are "Maier-Textil" in Bosiljevo and the saw-mill "KoreniÃÂ" in Orià ¡je. With the new roads, Bosiljevo and the surrounding area are opening up for the future.
From 31 January to 2 February 2014, while S and SW geostrophic wind dominated, freezing rain fell on Gorski Kotar, glazing the entire region. It wrecked roofs, power lines an forests, causing power loss for about 14,000 households households in Gorski Kotar, or about 80% of its population. Because of power lines falling on the A6, the highway was closed in of Rijeka between Bosiljevo and Kikovica, and between Kikovica and Delnice in the direction of Zagreb. It took about 10 days to restore essential infrastructure to the region, and within months electricity was back in most of its former range, but at a cost of about 84.4 million HRK to HEP. At the time it was the largest peacetime damage since its Secession from Yugoslavia, even without counting the forestry losses. Clearing blocked forestry roads and forest paths would take years, and thanks to the declining population some were never cleared.
At the 1920 Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes Constitutional Assembly election in Modruà ¡-Rijeka County, Bosiljevo voted mainly for the Croatian People's Peasant Party.
The current mayor of Bosiljevo County is Josip KoreniÃÂ, also the owner of the Koreniàsaw mill in Orià ¡je.
Municipal notaries:
It is the seat of the of Bosiljevo, encompassing itself, BeÃÂ, Bitorajci, DugaÃÂe, FuÃÂkovac, Hrsina, KoreniàBrdo, Kraljevo Selo, KràBosiljevski, LaslaviÃÂi, LisiÃÂina Gorica, Novo Selo Bosiljevsko, Orià ¡je, Podrebar, Potok Bosiljevski, RenduliÃÂi, Resnik Bosiljevski, SkobliàBrdo, Strgari and Varoà ¡ Bosiljevski, Vrhova Gorica.
In 1811, the Vrbovski kanton comprised the kotari of Vrbovsko, Severin and Bosiljevo. The Bosiljevski kotar had a population of 3995 in 30 villages.
In 1890, the opÃÂina of Bosiljevo (court at Popovci), with an area of , belonged to the kotar and electoral district of Vrbovsko (Vrbovsko court) in the à ¾upanija of Modruà ¡-Rieka (Ogulin court and financial board). There were 1051 houses (1102 in 1910), with a population of 7165 (the largest in Vrbovsko kotar): 3163 male and 4002 female; this fell to 6029 in 1910. The majority were Croatian or Serbian speakers, but 66 spoke Slovene, 7 Czech, 1 Hungarian, 1 German and 8 spoke other languages. The majority were Catholic, but 10 were Eastern Orthodox. Its 56 villages and 37 hamlets were divided for taxation purposes into 16 porezne opÃÂine, under the Ogulin office.
In 1910, the entire opÃÂina had only one resident soldier. Militarily, Bosiljevo fell under the and 26th Landsturm Infantry Brigade, both at Karlovac.
According to the 2011 census, Bosiljevo has a population of 1,284 inhabitants, of which 97% are ethnic Croats. The local dialect is mixed Kajkavian-Chakavian.
The patron saint of Bosiljevo is St. Vitus the Martyr, who is celebrated on 15 June.
Karlovac was once the seat of the kotar court for an 1870 population of 53,148. In 1875, the kotar court of Karlovac was responsible for the opÃÂine: Karlovac city, Banija, ReÃÂica, DraganiÃÂ, Ozalj, Novigrad, Ribnik, Bosiljevo and Severin.