Vučedol culture-
graves from the
Bronze Age were found in the fields of Batajnica. In May 2020, during the construction of the Batajnica
interchange on the
Belgrade bypass, remains from the 1st century BC (Later
Iron Age) were discovered. The archaeological locality was previously unknown. Discovered pottery artifacts were large, nicely preserved and made using
potter's wheel, a technology brought by the
Celts in these areas, so it is believed that the
find was Celtic settlement or place of worship, built before the
Roman conquest of the region. The locality was surveyed in July 2020, with additional pottery, bronze
fibulas and residuals of bonfires being discovered. The locality is situated in the territory surrounded by the discoveries of Celtic settlements from that period, in both downtown and wider Belgrade area (
Singidunum,
Rospi Ćuprija,
Karaburma,
Jakovo,
Stari Slankamen). The modern settlement is first registered in 1708, of a school in the village and mentioning of the settlement in 1725 and 1753, when it was described as a small village with 90 wealthy households. The settlement in its modern shape originates from the period of the abolition of the
Military Frontier in 1873 and the settlements of the former soldiers and their families in the village. This practice was continued further, so after
World War I, war veterans were also settled in Batajnica. Batajnica was a district (
srez) seat between two World Wars. After the war it became part of the Zemun district, but still as a separate municipality, and together with it part of Belgrade district in 1955, when the municipality was abolished. A movement for re-creating the old Batajnica municipality was very active in 2002, when
Surčin also (and successfully) campaigned, but was not much in the public media. Proposed municipality of Batajnica would split from the municipality of Zemun and comprise Batajnica and Ugrinovci (with Busije and
Grmovac), with a population of 37,371 in 2002. The movement for splitting from Zemun was revived in the 2010s by the citizens' groups, but also by some politicians, though no official steps were taken. In 2020, some city officials stated unofficially that Batajnica is the most probable candidate for the new, 18th municipality of Belgrade.
Grassroots movement for separate municipality was founded in June 2021 ("Option for our municipality Batajnica"). Coalition
Moramo, during the campaign for the April 2022 local elections in Belgrade, opted for creating a new Batajnica municipality. In the past Batajnica almost had no urban connection to the rest of the city, but now situation is changed. Batajnica was declared a part of the Belgrade City proper (
uža teritorija grada) in the early 1970s, losing the status of the separate settlement. Batajnica was a target of NATO airstrikes during its bombing of Yugoslavia, conducted in the form of Operation
Allied Force, lasting from March 24, 1999, until June 10, 1999.
Milica Rakić, a three-year-old, was killed from a NATO shrapnel on April 25, 1999. Batajnica is the site of the
Batajnica mass graves, where the bodies of 744
Kosovo Albanians civilians were founded. ==Demographics==