GRE Testing Locations
Decided to take GRE exam? Now it is time to determine where to take the test. This site provides a full list of GRE testing centers in Croatia, among which, you can choose one that is nearest to you. Good news is that the following GRE test locations in Croatia offer both GRE general test and the GRE subject tests.
- ZAGREB, CROATIA – APCU-8489
University College Nikola Subic Zrinski, Selska cesta 119, Zagreb, Croatia 10000, Zagreb
Croatia
Computer Based Test
GRE Test Dates
There are two types of test format offered by the test maker – ETS: Computer-delivered and Paper-delivered GRE general tests. For computer based test format, the GRE General Test is offered year-round on a continuous basis, and available for registration on a first-come, first-served basis. For paper based general test, testing is available three times per year. The following test dates apply:
Test Dates for Paper Based | Deadlines for Registration | Scores Available |
---|---|---|
November 09, 2019 | October 4, 2019 | December 20, 2019 |
February 1, 2020 | December 27, 2019 | March 13, 2020 |
GRE Subject Tests in Croatia
The GRE Subject Tests are available on paper based only. In all GRE test centers throughout the world (both inside and outside United States), the exam is available three times a year. The three test dates are:
- April
- September
- October
More about Croatia
Population
Around 90.4% of the population are Croatians, 4.4% Serbs, 0.7% Bosniaks, 0.4% each of Italians, Albanians and Roma, 0.3% Hungarians, 0.2% each of Czechs and Slovenes, 0 each, 1% Macedonians, Montenegrins and Slovaks. 2.3% are made up of various other ethnic groups. Of the Serbs who fled or expelled during the Yugoslav civil war (1991–95), only a small number returned after 1995.
The average population density (2017) is 74 residents / km 2. The settlement focus is the Croatian part of the Pannonian Basin, in particular the agglomeration of Zagreb, as well as the regional centers Split, Rijeka and Osijek. Overall, 60% of the population live in cities.
From the Adriatic coastline, massive migration to overseas began as early as the late 19th century, which was overshadowed by migration to Croatian cities and labor migration to western European countries in the inter-war and post-war periods, and finally to almost all of Croatia’s rural areas. Only the tourist regions on the coast were less affected by migration.
The total population of Croatia decreased by 7.2% between 1991 and 2001, which was mainly due to negative net migration. The latter was essentially caused by the events of the war.
The biggest cities in Croatia
*) 2018 | |
Biggest Cities (Residents 2011) | |
Zagreb | 806 300 *) |
Split | 167 100 |
Rijeka | 128 400 |
Osijek | 84 100 |
Zadar | 71 500 |
Religion
The constitution (Article 40) guarantees religious freedom and, based on the principle of the separation of state and religion, obliges the state to religious neutrality and parity (Article 41). The basis of the relationship between the state and the Catholic Church, which, as the largest religious community, traditionally occupies a special position in public life and in the national consciousness of the Croats, is formed by several agreements concluded between the government and the Holy See since 1996 (1996; 1998; 2002) fundamental questions of church activity.
About 91% of the population are Christians: over 86% of them belong to the Catholic Church (including most of the around 0.35% Catholics of the Byzantine rite in the Diocese of Križevci [Kreutz]), about 4.4% of the Serbian Orthodox Church (Archdiocese of Zagreb-Ljubljana [seat: Zagreb], diocese of Dalmatia [seat: Šibenik], diocese of Pakrac), almost 0.3% various Protestant churches and communities (Reformed, Lutherans, Adventists, Baptists, Pentecostals, etc.), around 0.1% the Old Catholic Croatian Catholic Church (seat of the Archbishop: Zagreb). Non-Christian religious minorities are made up of Muslims (around 1.5% of the population) and Jews.
The Catholic Church in Croatia comprises four archdioceses (Djakovo-Osijek, Rijeka, Split-Makarska, Zagreb) with 16 suffragan dioceses, plus the former Archdiocese of Zadar. In terms of numbers, the Reformation denominations are the Reformed Christian (Calvinist) Church in Croatia (approx. 4,000 members in 23 parishes [2017], bishop’s office in Lug / Laskó) and the Lutheran Evangelical Church in the Republic of Croatia (approx. 3,300 members in 11 parishes [2017]).
The Muslims are Sunnis from the Hanefi school of law. Spiritually, together with the Muslims in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Slovenia, they are subordinate to the »Islamic Seniorat« in Sarajevo. The spiritual center is the mosque in Zagreb (since 1995 with an attached spiritual college [Medrese]). The Jewish community (synagogues in Zagreb, Rijeka, Dubrovnik and Split) has around 2,000 members (0.05% of the population; 1940: around 25,000); historically, its roots go back to the second half of the 18th century.