Ancient history In antiquity, a road ran from
Narona (near
Metković) to
Epidaurum (
Cavtat) via Pardua, in the present-day village of
Gradac near Ljubinje. The remains of a Roman settlement have been identified near Ljubinje. No systematic expert investigations have been conducted in the area (since 1973).
Middle Ages In the early medieval period the area of the present-day Ljubinje municipality belonged to the large
župa (county) of
Popovo, constituting the northernmost part of the Popovo county, bordering the counties of Dubrave and
Dabar. Politically, the area belonged to
Zahumlje ("Hum"), ruled between the 12th and early 14th century with minor interruptions by the
Nemanjić dynasty. After the
War of Hum (1326–1329), this part of Hum was occupied by the Bosnian Ban
Stjepan II Kotromanić, whose heir
Tvrtko I had by 1373 extended the Bosnian borders southwards to include all of Hum. Tvrtko's reign saw the rise of the
Kosača family, of whom
Vlatko Vuković had already by that time begun to rule much of Hum. Hum was governed by the family through
Sandalj Hranić (1392–1435),
Stjepan Vukčić Kosača (1435–1466), and the latter's sons, until 1482.
Ottoman period killed 36 locals by throwing them alive into a mass grave, as part of the wider
Genocide of the Serbs The
Ottoman Empire occupied the area around Ljubinje between 1465 and 1467, and the
defter (tax registry) of the
Bosnian sanjak for 1468/69 already included the
nahiya of Ljubinje.
Austro-Hungarian rule Under article 29 of the
Treaty of Berlin of 1878,
Austria-Hungary received special rights in the Ottoman Empire's provinces of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the
Sanjak of Novi Pazar. On 14 August 1878, the Austro-Hungarian army marched into Ljubinje, ending Ottoman rule in the region. On 6 October 1908,
Emperor Franz Joseph announced to the people of Bosnia and Herzegovina his intention to give them an autonomous and constitutional regime. The provinces were then annexed. The annexation of Bosnia and Herzegovina was not countenanced by the Treaty of Berlin and set off a flurry of diplomatic protests and discussions. Ljubinje remained part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire until the liberation at the end of World War I, when the Serbian army marched into Ljubinje.
World War II In June 1941
Ustaše soldiers killed 36 locals by throwing them alive into a mass grave, which was part of the wider
Genocide of Serbs in the Independent State of Croatia. ==Culture==