Neuzina () is a village in Serbia. It is situated in the SeÃÂanj municipality, in the Central Banat District, Vojvodina province. The village is ethnically mixed and its population numbering 1,371 people (2002 census), including 680 Serbs (49.59%), 488 Hungarians (35.59%) and 95 Roma (6.92%) before others.
In Serbian the village is known as Neuzina (ÃÂõÃÂ÷øýð), in Hungarian as Nezsény, in Croatian as Neuzina or Hrvatska Neuzina, and in German as Neusin.
Historically, there were two Neuzina's, that later merged: Srpska Neuzina (Serb Neuzina) and Hrvatska Neuzina (Croat Neuzina).
Srpska Neuzina (Serbian Cyrillic: áÃÂÿÃÂúð ÃÂõÃÂ÷øýð, Croatian: Srpska Neuzina, Hungarian: Szerb-Neuzina, German: Serbisch Neusin) was few miles southwards from SarÃÂa (today Sutjeska) and few miles westwards from SeÃÂanj, while Hrvatska Neuzina (Serbian Cyrillic: ÃÂ¥ÃÂòðÃÂÃÂúð ÃÂõÃÂ÷øýð, Croatian: Hrvatska Neuzina, Hungarian: Horvát-Neuzina, German: Kroatisch Neusin) was in the very neighbourhood, located southwestwards from Srpska Neuzina, few miles northeastwards from Botoà ¡.
Hrvatska Neuzina got its name after Croatian settlers (nobles that originated from Turopolje), that were settled there by the Diocese of Zagreb on its possessions.
In 1910, Srpska Neuzina was mainly populated by Serbs and Hrvatska Neuzina mainly by Croats. Other ethnic groups in these villages included Hungarians and Germans. German population mostly left from the area after World War II and the Croat population also declined over time.