Counties of the Independent State of Croatia
The great counties or grand governorates (Croatian: velika župa, pl. velike župe, German: Großgespanschaft[1][2]) were the primary territorial subdivisions of the Independent State of Croatia. In 1941–1943, there were twenty-two of them, with the capital city of Zagreb serving as the twenty-third.

1941–1943

1943–1944
| County | Capital | 
|---|---|
| Baranja | Osijek | 
| Bilogora | Bjelovar | 
| Bribir and Sidraga | Knin | 
| Cetina | Omiš | 
| Dubrava | Dubrovnik | 
| Gora | Petrinja | 
| Hum | Mostar | 
| Krbava - Psat | Bihać | 
| Lašva and Glaž | Travnik | 
| Lika and Gacka | Gospić | 
| Livac and Zapolje | Nova Gradiška | 
| Modruš | Ogulin | 
| Pliva and Rama | Jajce | 
| Pokupje | Karlovac | 
| Posavje | Slavonski Brod | 
| Prigorje | Zagreb | 
| Sana and Luka | Banja Luka | 
| Usora and Soli | Tuzla | 
| Vinodol and Podgorje | Senj | 
| Vrhbosna | Sarajevo | 
| Vuka | Vukovar | 
| Zagorje | Varaždin | 
| City of Zagreb | Zagreb | 
See also
References
- ^ Sattler 1943, p. 80
 - ^ Sundhaussen 1983, pp. 100–104
 
Sources
- Sundhaussen, Holm (1983). Wirtschaftsgeschichte Kroatiens im nationalsozialistischen Grossraum (in German). Dt. Verlag -Anst. ISBN 978-3-421-06150-8.
 - Sattler, Wilhelm (1943). Die deutsche Volksgruppe im unabhängigen Staat Kroatien. Steierische Verlag Anst.