Lokve is a Croatian municipality in the PrimorjeâÂÂGorski Kotar County. With an area of 42 km<sup>2</sup>, it had a population of 850 in 2021.
The municipality is located in the mountainous region of Gorski kotar. The Lokvarsko Lake () is located between the settlements of Homer and Mrzla Vodica.
The dolines across the river Lokvarka from the meander are known as Ponikve.
Between 1960 and 2016, the highest temperature recorded at the local weather station was , on 27 July 1983. The coldest temperature was , on 8 January 1985.
In 1870, Lokve opÃÂina, in Delnice podà ¾upanija, had 291 houses, with a population of 2173. Its 8 villages were divided into 2 porezne obÃÂine for taxation purposes. Lokve had its own parish.
In 1895, the obÃÂina of Lokve (court at Lokve), with an area of , belonged to the kotar of Delnice (Delnice court and electoral district) in the à ¾upanija of Modruà ¡-Rieka (Ogulin court and financial board). There were 389 houses, with a population of 2363. Its 6 villages and 2 hamlets were divided for taxation purposes into 2 porezne obÃÂine, under the Delnice office.
In 2021, the municipality consisted of the following settlements:
There was a sawmill in Lokve.
At the 1920 Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes Constitutional Assembly election in Modruà ¡-Rijeka County, Lokve voted mainly for the Communist Party and to a lesser extent the Croatian Union and Croatian People's Peasant Party.
Lokve was first mentioned on 22 February 1481 in a document freeing the citizens of GriÃÂ from tariffs in Lokve and elsewhere.
In 1860âÂÂ1879, Matija Maà ¾uraniàwrote a 62 folio manuscript today titled Writings on the Building of Roads in Gorski Kotar and Lika (), today with signature HR-ZaNSK R 6424. A 21 folio manuscript dated 1872 titled Darstellung der Entstehung des Baues ... der Luisenstrasse together with a translation by I. Miklouà ¡iàis kept as HR-ZaNSK R 4572.
The volunteer fire department DVD Lokve was founded in 1905, and is today part of the Poà ¾arno podruÃÂje Gorski Kotar I. Its current commander is Lordan à  tokan.
A 22 December 1939 decision as part of agrarian reforms by Ban à  ubaà ¡iàto confiscate the local forest property of the Thurn and Taxis family, Kálmán Ghyczy and Nikola Petroviàresulted in a legal dispute known as the Thurn and Taxis Affair, in part because of the relative status of the family and in part because of the proximity to the Italian border.
In the morning of 13 April 1941, the bus carrying Ante Paveliàstopped in Lokve together with a throng of Ustaà ¡a followers. He went to the post office in Lokve for a telephone call to Zagreb.
At 6:30 on 10 June 1942, Partisans intercepted an armed patrol from Lokve of 2 at Homer, heavily wounding Ivan MatijeviÃÂ in the battle, capturing and disarming Petar IviÃÂeviÃÂ and letting him return to Lokve. After disarming MatijeviÃÂ, a villager took him to Lokve where an Italian military doctor administered first aid and then transferred him to the Italian military hospital in Delnice.
On the 11th, an Italian train was attacked with rifle and machine gun fire between Lokve and Delnice, wounding a number of Italian soldiers.
On 15 July, a train encountered an improvised explosive device between Delnice and Lokve. There were no victims, and transport was restored shortly after.
At the behest of Duà ¡an Raà ¡koviÃÂ, Adolf Hvala parish priest of Lokve and others gathered in Delnice signed a document recognising the JNOF on 21 February 1945, selecting a delegation to represent the priesthood before their authority.
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. The à  umarija Lokve lost 23% of its wood mass. Clearing blocked forestry roads and forest paths would take years, and thanks to the declining population some were never cleared.
Since 1974, Lokve hosts the festival à ½abarska noÃÂ.
The 1st Underwater Orienteering World Championships was held in Lokve in 1973.
Beginning in 2013, the 7 stage long Cycling Trail of Gorski Kotar () passes through Lokve.
The "Gorski Kotar Bike Tour", held annually since 2012, sometimes goes through Lokve, such as in the first leg for 2022.
The local HPS chapter was called HPD "Runolist", but it was liquidated on 7 October 1936.
In 1875, the kotar court of Delnice encompassed a population of 28,347, being responsible for the opÃÂine: Delnice, Lokve, Fuà ¾ine, Mrkopalj, Ravna Gora, Brod, Skrad, Vrbovsko.