The regions of Serbia include geographical and, to a lesser extent, traditional and historical areas. Geographical regions have no official status, though some of them serve as a basis for the second-level administrative divisions of Serbia, okrugs (districts of Serbia). Not being administratively defined, the boundaries of the regions are in many cases vague: they may overlap, and various geographers and publications may delineate them differently, not just in the sense of regions' extents, but also in the sense as to whether they form separate geographical entities or subsist as parts of other super-regions, etc.
For the most part, regions correspond to the valleys or to the watershed-areas of rivers and were simply named after them (some even a millennium ago), while mountain ridges and peaks often mark boundaries. In some cases, a defined region may refer only to the inhabited parts of the valleys (see župa).
Valleys and plains along the largest rivers are special cases. The Serbian language usually forms their names with the prefix po- (Sava – Posavina, Danube (Dunav) – Podunavlje, Tisa – Potisje, etc.). Considered geographical regions per se, they usually have very elongated shapes and cover large areas (Pomoravlje), sometimes spreading through several countries (Posavina, Potisje, Podrinje, etc.). For the most part they overlap with other, smaller regions established during history along their course, in most cases named after the tributaries of the main river (most notably, in the case of all three sections of Pomoravlje).
For the purpose of easier presentation in the tables, the territory of Serbia is roughly divisible into six geographical sections: northern, western, central, eastern, south-western and south. Thus the tables do not follow the political divisions. Kosovo declared independence in February 2008. Serbia and a number of UN member states have not recognised its independence, and the territory is disputed.
Major river basin regions
Morava Valley (Pomoravlje), includes Morava rivers basin in Serbia.
Podunavlje, includes Danube river basin in Serbia and Croatia.
Posavina, includes Sava river basin in Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Slovenia.
Podrinje, includes Drina river basin in Serbia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Northern Serbia
Region
Population centers
Notes
Bačka
Novi Sad, Subotica
part of Vojvodina; partially in Hungary (Bácska)
Gornji Breg
Gornji Breg
sub-region of Bačka
Potisje
Bečej, Senta
sub-region of both Bačka and Banat
Šajkaška
Temerin, Žabalj
sub-region of Bačka
Telečka
Vrbas, Kula
sub-region of Bačka
Banat
Zrenjanin, Pančevo
part of Vojvodina; partially in Romania, Hungary (Bánság) and Central Serbia
Gornje Livade
sub-region of Banat
Ilandžanski Rit
Ilandža, Lokve
sub-region of Banat
Pančevački Rit
Borča, Krnjača
sub-region of Banat; part of Central Serbia
Pomorišje
Novi Kneževac, Srpski Krstur
today considered sub-region of Banat; partially in Hungary and Romania
Repište
Knićanin
sub-region of Banat
Veliki Rit
north-west of Vršac
sub-region of Banat
Srem
Belgrade, Sremska Mitrovica
part of Vojvodina; partially in Central Serbia and Croatia (Srijem)
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