The TimoÃÂka Krajina (, ) or Timok Valley (), is a geographical region in eastern Serbia around the Timok River. It roughly corresponds to two administrative districts, Bor and ZajeÃÂar, which have a combined population of 197,815.
The Serbian name is derived from the hydronym Timok and krajina ("frontier, march"), named such due to its location and history as a borderland. The term was in use in the 19th century. In 1876, TimoÃÂka Krajina was described as including the okrug of Aleksinac, Gurgusovac, Crna Reka and Krajina. It was introduced officially in the interwar period as denoting the Timok confluence with the Negotinska Krajina and KljuÃÂ, and is noted as having no historical or geographical basis. The (), which existed between 1922 and 1929, was also known as TimoÃÂka Krajina.
In Romanian, the term "Timoc Valley" () is used for the area inhabited by the Romanian-speaking Vlachs. The region was sometimes known as Podunavia (Podunavlje) in medieval times.
In the 21st-century, TimoÃÂka Krajina is described as extending from the KuÃÂaj foothills near Knjaà ¾evac to the Vratarnica river. In Socialist Serbia, the region included the towns of Negotin (also belonging to Negotinska Krajina), Knjaà ¾evac and ZajeÃÂar.
Early Bronze Age pottery of the Kostolac-Kocofeni culture has been found throughout the region. During the Roman era, the area was administratively part of the Dacia Ripensis. During emperor Justinian's reign there were numerous fortifications in the area. Notable Roman sites include Timacum Minus, Trajan's Bridge, Diana Fortress, and others. The Bulgarian ruler Ivan Stratsimir (Vidin Principate) and Wallachian Voivode Mircea the Elder controlled the territory of Podunavia (the Timok Valley) until the Ottoman conquest in the 14th century. Several settlements in the region received Habsburg monarchy frontier status after the 1718 Treaty of Passarowitz; the area became a frontier towards the Ottoman Empire.
The area was a battleground between Serbian rebels and the Ottoman Empire during the First Serbian Uprising (1804âÂÂ1813).
A peasant uprising took place in 1883, known as the Timok Rebellion, resulting from various economic, political, and social factors.
Between 1918 and 1922, there were two districts of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes in the area â Krajina District, with seat in Negotin, and Timok District with seat in ZajeÃÂar. In 1922, these two districts were merged into the newly formed Timok Oblast with seat in ZajeÃÂar. Timok Oblast existed until 1929 when it was included into the newly formed Morava Banovina with seat in Nià ¡.
During World War II it was an area of operations of the Yugoslav Partisans.
At present there are two administrative districts encompassing the area: Bor District with seat in Bor; and ZajeÃÂar District with seat in ZajeÃÂar.
There are three towns with over 10,000 inhabitants.
The region is inhabited by a majority of Serbs and minority of Vlachs. The Serb community traditionally speak the KosovoâÂÂResava dialect in the north and the Prizren-Timok dialect in the south; however, standard Serbian is used in formal communication. The Vlachs speak a variety of two dialects (Banat and Oltenian dialects) of the Romanian language, which awaits standardization into a hypothetical new language for the Vlachs. Both Serbs and Vlachs are Eastern Orthodox by denomination. There is ongoing debate over the ethnic identification of the Vlach community and whether they are Romanians or not.
ZajeÃÂar, the biggest town in the region, has a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification: Dfa), bordering on a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfa).