Ljubuški is a town in western Herzegovina, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Herzegovina (natively Херцеговина/Hercegovina) is a historical region in the Dinaric Alps that composes the southern part of present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina. ...
In 1991, the municipality of Ljubuški had a population of 27,182, of which there were 25,180 Croats (92.6%), 1,569 Bosniaks (5.9%), 222 Yugoslavs (0.8%), 64 Serbs (0.2%), and 147 others (0.5%). The town of Ljubuški had 7,407 residents: 75% Croats, 20% Bosniaks, 3% Yugoslavs, 1% Serbs and 1% others. Croats (Croatian: Hrvati) are a south Slavic people mostly living in Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina (where theyre one of the constitutive nations). ... Bosniaks (natively: Bošnjaci) are South Slavs descended from those who converted to Islam during the Ottoman period (15th-19th century). ... The Yugoslavs were a relatively short-lived nationality that was created at the time of Yugoslavia. ... Serbs (in the Serbian language Срби, Srbi) are a south Slavic people living chiefly in Serbia and Montenegro and Bosnia and Herzegovina. ...
Ljubuski is a city that belongs to maritime Hercegovina.
Ljubuski is an area that has an abundant amount of water which in turn makes it rich in flora and fauna.
All in all, it was populated in the pre-historic era which is proven by findings of stone, bones and metal which are all preserved in the museum of Humac in the Franciscan monastery, the oldest museum in Bosnia and Hercegovina, established in the year 1884.