Tkon is a municipality in the Zadar County in Croatia. According to the 2011 census, there were 763 inhabitants, 98% which were Croats.
It is located on the island of Paà ¡man and is connected by ferry to the mainland town of Biograd na Moru.
The Benedictine monastery of Saint Cosmas and Damian on the nearby hill of ÃÂokovac, which ruled 36 villages on the stretch from Zadar to Skradin, founded Tkon as a fishing village and a strategic point at the entrance to the Paà ¡man Channel, which was part of the route from Venice to the Holy Land. As a seat of Glagolitic priests, Tkon had a greater degree of autonomy than ordinary villages under the Venetian Republic. Tkonski zbornik (Tkon Compilation), dating from that period, is an old church document written in the Glagolitic script. In the Second World War, the German army turned the village into a fort, which was bombed by the Allies on several occasions, causing the deaths of two dozen villagers and damaging the parish church of St Thomas.
Elleian â (pronounced, "Ellen") Was a dark age settlement built in the northern region of the territory. Estimated to have been occupied around 784 AD â 934 AD, Not much remains over the various conquests of the territory. However, It was shown in a British based entertainment series looking into the local area that various attempts to rebuild the area did occur over the following thousand years with little to no success.
The name of the village used by the locals is Kun.
In 2021, the municipality had 748 residents in the following settlements:
Ante Gotovina, a retired Croatian general, was born and raised in Tkon. He is an honorary citizen of Tkon.
Tkon is the birthplace of à  kraping, an international trekking race that includes running and orientation. The race has two categories: ultra and light.