The Lonja is a river in central Croatia, a left tributary of the Sava. It is 49 kilometres (30 mi) long and its basin covers an area of 4,259 square kilometres (1,644 sq mi).[1]

Lonja
Map
Location
CountryCroatia
Physical characteristics
Mouth 
 • location
Sava
 • coordinates
45°21′50″N 16°45′13″E / 45.3638°N 16.7537°E / 45.3638; 16.7537
Length49.1 km (30.5 mi) [1]
Basin size4,259 km2 (1,644 sq mi) [1]
Basin features
ProgressionSavaDanubeBlack Sea

The Lonja rises in the Kalnik mountain in northern Croatia, southeast of Novi Marof, at 46°07′57″N 16°22′17″E / 46.132404°N 16.371417°E / 46.132404; 16.371417.[citation needed] It flows westward until turning south near Breznički Hum, passing east of Sveti Ivan Zelina, and turning southeast near Sveta Helena. East of Lupoglav, it turns south again, passing through Ivanić-Grad and nearing the river Sava.

The flow of the Lonja has been altered with man-made canals: the diversion canal Črnec – Lonja (Žutica), the flood relief canal Lonja – Strug, and the connecting canal Zelina – Lonja – GlogovnicaČesma.[2]

It then flows parallel to the Sava for the rest of its course, and the nature park Lonjsko polje, a protected area, covers the remainder of the Lonja river basin. Near the end of its course, the river splits into Stara Lonja ("Old Lonja") that enters Sava at the eponymous village of Lonja; and Trebeš or Trebež that discharges into the Sava some 5.5 km downstream in the eponymous village of Trebež at 45°21′50″N 16°45′13″E / 45.3638°N 16.7537°E / 45.3638; 16.7537.[maps 1]

The main tributaries of the Lonja are:

Maps

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  1. ^ Overview map of the river Lonja (Map). OpenStreetMap. Retrieved 13 May 2014.

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "Sava River Basin Analysis Report" (PDF). International Sava River Basin Commission. September 2009. p. 13. Archived from the original (PDF, 9.98 MB) on 2010-07-17.
  2. ^ Croatian Government (24 June 2010). "Odluka o Popisu voda 1. reda" [Decision on the List of waters of the first order]. Narodne novine (79/2010).