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Issuance of the new plates started on 20 February 2012, and they introduced a fourth digit and the blue field on the left side. The standard registration plates dimensions are 520 by 110 millimetres (20.5 in × 4.3 in). [1] The international country code NMK is applied (formerly MK) on the blue field on the left side of the plate.
On 6 December 2010, a new design was introduced [3] containing the letters RKS (Republic of Kosovo) on a blue field, a two digit number corresponding to the districts of Kosovo, the coat of arms of Kosovo, a three-digit number and finally two serial letters. [4] The three-digit number starts at 101 and the serial letters start at AA.
In 1977, after eight years of successful co-operation, the iron foundry in Kikinda signed a joint venture and long-term co-operation manufacturing contract valid for a period of 15 years with Adam Opel AG (Opel). US$78.5 million were invested in the newly established IDA-Kikinda factory, funded 51% by Kikinda Iron Foundry and 49% by General Motors.
The first modern Serb printing house was founded in Kikinda in 1878, to be followed a year later by the opening of the first library. This city is also reputable for its painters, including Teodor Ilić Češljar , Nikola Aleksić , Đura Pecić, and Đura Jakšić , a painter and author.
Kikinda (Serbian Cyrillic: Кикинда, pronounced; Hungarian: Nagykikinda) is a city and the administrative center of the North Banat District in Serbia.The city's urban area has 32,084 inhabitants, while the city administrative area has 49,326 inhabitants.
It is the primary archival institution for the municipalities of Kikinda, Čoka and Novi Kneževac while the western Bačka parts of the district are covered by the Historical Archive of Senta. [2] Historical Archive of Kikinda is housed in the palace of the District of Velika Kikinda which is today housing both the archive and the city museum.
Until 1778, the District of Velika Kikinda was part of the Banat of Temeswar (a separate Habsburg entity), and then part of the Torontal County within the Habsburg Kingdom of Hungary. From 1848 to 1849 it was part of the autonomous Serbian Vojvodina , and from 1849 to 1860 it was part of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar , a ...
Sajan (Serbian Cyrillic: Сајан, Hungarian: Szaján) is a village in the Kikinda municipality, in the North Banat District of Serbia. It is situated in the Autonomous Province of Vojvodina . The village has a Hungarian ethnic majority (88.64%) and a population of 1,164 (2011 census).