About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 46. Chapters: Danube Swabian communities, Johnny Weissmuller, Freidorf, Stani i, Danube Swabians, Herta Muller, Banat Swabians, Skorenovac, Dude tii Noi, Apatin, Robert Zollitsch, Od aci, Me a, Ni chidorf, Nikolaus Lenau, Ferenc Rajniss, Solymar, Jimbolia, Sannicolau Mare, Torokbalint, Ferenc Erkel, Richard Wagner, Karoly Molter, Stefan Jager, Gyorgy Klapka, Lov enac, Buzia, Banatski Brestovac, or e Vajfert, Ba ki Gra ac, Swabian Turkey, Veliki Gaj, Ovidiu Gan, Villany, Liebling, Timi, Robert Hammerstiel, Vaskut, Peregu Mare, Lenauheim, Franz Anton Basch, Becicherecu Mic, St. George's Cathedral, Timi oara, Deta, Romania, Robert Dornhelm, Or i oara, Satchinez, Satu Mare Swabians, Foeni, Bethausen, Gottlob, Timi, German People's Union - National Association of Danube Swabians in Croatia. Excerpt: Stani i ( ) is a village in Serbia. It is situated in the Sombor municipality, in the West Ba ka District, Vojvodina province. The village has a Serb ethnic majority and its population numbering 4,808 people (2002 census). In Serbian, the village is known as Stani i or, in German as Stanischitsch, Stanischitz, Tannenschutz, Tannischitz, Tanaschitz or Donauwachenheim, in Croatian as Stani i, in Hungarian as rszallas, and in Bunjevac as Stani i . The village of Stani i is located in the Northwestern part of Serbia in the municipality of Sombor, about 7 miles from the Hungarian border between Ri ica, Gakovo, Svetozar Mileti and Aleksa anti . It is located just on the edge of the great land-plateau called Tele ka (Tele ka lesna zaravan) about 91 meters above the sea level. Some minor parts of the village are about 1 meter lower being in the terrain beside the land-plateau. In the times prior to the 18th and 19th centuries the whole area beside the plateau (towards Kru evlje and Gakovo) was in fens, morasses and swa...