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The Ibar (Serbian Cyrillic: Ибар, pronounced), also known as the Ibër and Ibri (Albanian: Ibër, Ibri), is a river that flows through eastern Montenegro, northern Kosovo and central Serbia, with a total length of 272 km (169 mi). [1]
Ibar mac Lugna, whose name is also given as Iberius (/ aɪ ˈ b ɪər i ə s / eye-BEER-ee-əs) or Ivor, was an early Irish saint, patron of Beggerin Island, and bishop. The saint is sometimes said to have been one of the "Quattuor sanctissimi Episcopi" ("The four most sacred bishops") said to have preceded Saint Patrick in Ireland (see also the saint Ailbe, Ciaran and Déclán), although ...
On the evening of 29 November 2024, an explosive device detonated at the Ibar-Lepenac water canal in the village of Vragë that belongs to the Zubin Potok of Kosovo, causing substantial damage to vital infrastructure that supplies water to multiple municipalities and supports the operation of the Obiliq energy plant. [3]
Ibar (Bulgarian: Ибър) is a nature reserve in Rila National Park, [1] located in the Rila mountain range in southwestern Bulgaria. It was declared in February 1985 to protect relict plants and rare animal species.
Ibar District, a division of the Serbian Grand Principality; Ibar (river), in Kosovo, Montenegro, Serbia; Ibar Reserve in Rila, Bulgaria; Ibar Rocks, a rock formation in Antarctica; Ibar Highway, in Serbia
On the evening of 29 November 2024, an explosive device detonated at the Ibar-Lepenac water canal in Zubin Potok, Northern Kosovo, severely damaging critical infrastructure that supplies water to multiple municipalities and supports the Obiliq energy plant. Kosovo's government described the incident as a terrorist attack and attributed it to ...
The southern boundary is the river Ibar, which divides the towns of Mitrovica and North Mitrovica. On the west by Zubin Potok, the mountain ranges of Rogozna and Mokra Gora with the peak of Berim, 1,731 metres (5,679 ft), which separates one from the other lake Gazivode. [49]
The Ibar highway assassination attempt refers to the events that occurred on the Ibar Highway in Serbia, a federal unit of FR Yugoslavia on 3 October 1999, when active members of the Yugoslav state security's Special Operations Unit (JSO) attempted to murder politician Vuk Drašković on the Ibar Highway by slamming a truck full of sand into his two-car motorcade.