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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › IsniqIsniq - Wikipedia

    Isniq. Isniq is a settlement north of Deçan in Western Kosovo about 45 miles (or 72 km) west of Pristina. [citation needed] The village is based on the plains of Dukagjini at the foot of the Accursed Mountains next to the Deçani's White Drin River and is the biggest village in Kosovo. Medicinal plants grow at the mountains of 2656 meters ...

  2. Istinić is a settlement north of Deçan in Western Kosovo about 45 miles west of Pristina. The village is based on the plains of Dukagjini at the foot of the Accursed Mountains next to the Deçani's White Drin River and is the biggest village in Kosovo.

  3. Istinić is a settlement north of Deçan in Western Kosovo about 45 miles (or 72 km) west of Pristina. [citation needed] The village is based on the plains of Dukagjini at the foot of the Accursed Mountains next to the Deçani's White Drin River and is the biggest village in Kosovo.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › DeçanDeçan - Wikipedia

    Deçan (Albanian: Deçani, pronounced [dɛˈtʃan]; Serbian: Дечани, pronounced [dɛ̌t͡ʃani]) is a town and municipality in the district of Gjakova, Kosovo. The municipality has an area of 293.94 km 2 (113.49 sq mi) and it includes the town and 37 smaller settlements. According to the last census of 2024, the municipality has a population of 27,758. [2]

  5. Aug 16, 2017 · Istog (or Istok in the Serbian language) is a twin village, in a peculiarly Kosovar Albanian sense. Its twin is Isniq (Istinić in Serbian). In fact, it would be more true to say that, rather than siblings, Isniq is the parent settlement which gave birth to Istog. The founding myth is as follows.

  6. Feb 15, 2022 · Ann Christine Eek’s striking visual record of life in a Kosovo village in the 1970s offers unique insight into a world of ancient customs and sacred rituals that war and the passage of time have...

  7. Jun 13, 2024 · In August and September 1976, she travelled with the Norwegian anthropologist Berit Backer (1947-1993) to the Albanian village Isniq in Kosovo. After several weeks’ stay in what was then a patriarchal society, documenting a traditional culture about to vanish, Backer and Eek returned home with thousands of photographs, numerous notes, and ...