à ½abalj (, ; ) is a town and municipality located in the South BaÃÂka District of the autonomous province of Vojvodina, Serbia. According to 2022 census, the town à ½abalj has a population of 8,449 and the municipality à ½abalj has a population of 23,853. It is located in southeastern part of BaÃÂka, known as à  ajkaà ¡ka. All settlements in the municipality have an ethnic Serb majority.
Its name came from the Serbian word "à ¾aba"/öðñð ("frog" in English). In Serbian, the town is known as à ½abalj (ÃÂðñðÃÂ), in Hungarian as Zsablya or Józseffalva (between 1886 and 1919), in Pannonian Rusyn as , in German as Josefdorf, and in Croatian as à ½abalj.
à ½abalj was first mentioned in 1514 as Zeble, a fortress captured by György Dózsa. During the Ottoman rule (16th-17th century), it was populated by ethnic Serbs.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, à ½abalj was part of the Habsburg Military Frontier (à  ajkaà ¡ Battalion). The first church in à ½abalj was mentioned in 1720, but it was later razed. After 1763, the village was part of à  ajkaà ¡ Battalion until the military administration was abolished in 1783. Present-day Orthodox churches dedicated to Saint Nicholas were built in 1835. In 1901, a Catholic church was built as well.
It belonged to Hungary 1920, when by the Treaty of Trianon it became part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and subsequent South Slavic states.
After the 1941 annexation of the town by Hungary, in a 1942 raid, 666 inhabitants of the town were murdered: 355 men, 141 women, 101 children, and 69 elderly people. Those who were liable, were convicted by Hungary in 1943.
à ½abalj municipality encompasses the town of à ½abalj, and the following villages:
The population of the à ½abalj municipality:
The following table gives a preview of total number of employed people per their core activity (as of 2017):