Tuzla (Cyrillic: Тузла) is a city and municipality in Bosnia and Herzegovina. At the time of the 1991 census, it had 131,000 inhabitants. Taking the influx of refugees into account, the city is currently estimated to have 160,000 inhabitants. After Sarajevo and Banja Luka, Tuzla is the third largest city in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the seat of the Tuzla Canton and Tuzla Municipality. The name " Tuzla" is derived from the Turkish word for salt, and refers to the extensive salt deposits found underneath the city.

Grb Tuzla
Geography
Tuzla is located in the northeastern part of Bosnia, settled just underneath the Majevica mountain range, on the Jala river. The central zone lies in an east-west oriented plain, with residential areas in the north and south of the city located on the Ilinčica, Kicelj and Gradina hills. The climate is moderate continental.
Tuzla on map BiH Population 165,000
History
First mentioned in 950 as a county under Hungarian rule, the town was later referred to by historians as Soli. Soli means "salts" in the Bosnian, Croatian or Serbian language and the city's present name means "place of salt" in Turkish. However, there is enough archaeologic evidence to suggest that Tuzla was a rich neolithic settlement, and hence inhabited continuously for more than 6,000 years which makes Tuzla one of the oldest European settlements with sustained living. An open-air museum at Solni Trg, opened in 2004, tells the story of salt production in Tuzla.
On October 2, 1943, Tuzla became the largest liberated town in Europe to the time. It developed into a major industrial and cultural centre during the communist period in former Yugoslavia. In the 1990 elections the Reformists won control of the municipality being the only municipality in Bosnia where non-nationalists won. During the Bosnian war, 1992-1995 the town was the only municipality not governed by nationalist authorities, and was besieged by Serb nationalist forces. The town was not spared the atrocities of war. On May 25, 1995, a Serb artillery shell killed 71 youngsters in Tuzla massacre, the single most deadly incident of the war in Tuzla.
Demographics
In the early stages of the war in Bosnia, many Croats left for Croatia and many Serbs for Republika Srpska or Serbia while a significant number remained in Tuzla and joined the multiethnic territorial defense forces defending the city against nationalist Serb forces. The demographics of Tuzla after minor displacings:
1991 Census in %.
- 47.6% - Bosniaks
- 15.6% - Serbs
- 15.5% - Croats
- 21.3% - Yugoslavs and other
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