List of people from Serbia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

List of people from Serbia is a list of notable people from Serbia. The list contains names of people who are associated with Serbia and its territory by their place of birth, and also by naturalization, domicile, citizenship or some other similar connection, modern or historical. List is territorially defined, and includes all people from Serbia, regardless of their ethnic, linguistic, religious or some other personal distinctions.

Royalty and nobility[]

Serbian monarchs[]

Jovan Vladimir
Saint Simeon (Stefan Nemanja)
Stefan the First-Crowned
Stefan Milutin
Stefan Dušan
Karađorđe
Miloš Obrenović
Mihailo Obrenović
Nikola I Petrović-Njegoš
Petar I Karađorđević

Serbian princesses[]

Princess Milica of Serbia
Helena Dragaš
  • Jelena Vukanović, (b. after 1109 – after 1146), Queen of Hungary
  • Jelisaveta Nemanjić, (fl. 1270 – died 1331), Baness of Bosnia
  • Princess Milica of Serbia, (ca. 1335 – 1405)
  • Jelena Balšić, (1365/1366 – 1443), Lady of Zeta; Grand Duchess of Hum
  • Ana-Neda, Empress of Bulgaria
  • Dragana of Serbia, Empress of Bulgaria
  • Helena Dragaš, (c. 1372 – 23 March 1450), Byzantine empress, mother of emperors John VIII Palaiologos and Constantine XI Palaiologos
  • Olivera Lazarević, Ottoman consort
  • Mara Branković, Ottoman consort
  • Kantakuzina Katarina Branković, (1418/19 – 1492), countess of County of Celje
  • Mara Branković, last Queen of Bosnia and Despoina of Serbia
  • Jelena Rareš, princess of Moldavia, regent in 1551–1553
  • Milica Despina of Wallachia, (c. 1485 – 1554), Princess of Wallachia, regent in Wallachia in 1521–1522
  • Ana Jakšić Glinska, mother of Elena Glinskaya and grandmother of Tsar Ivan the Terrible
  • Jelena Jakšić, titular Despotissa of Serbia, wife of Despot Jovan Branković
  • Şehsuvar Sultan, Ottoman consort
  • Ljubica Vukomanović, (September 1788 – 26 May 1843), Princess of Serbia
  • Persida Nenadović, (15 February 1813 – 29 March 1873), Princess of Serbia
  • Draga Mašin, (11 September 1864 – 11 June 1903), Queen of Serbia

Serbian nobility[]

Politicians and diplomats[]

19th and the 20th century[]

Modern times[]

Military[]

Medieval and Early modern period[]

Modern[]

19th-century revolutionaries

See: List of Serbian Revolutionaries

Balkan Wars and World War I
World War II
Yugoslav wars

Foreign service[]

Various states
  • Evgenije Popović fought in a detachment commanded by Giuseppe Garibaldi, Italy.
  • Mićo Ljubibratić also fought with Giuseppe Garibaldi.
  • Ilija Monte Radlovic served in the British Army during World War II.
  • Vito Marija Bettera-Vodopić (1771–1841) in the service of Imperial Russia, died as an Austrian prisoner in occupied-Ukraine.
  • Janos Damjanich (1804–1849), Hungarian General
  • Jakov Ignjatović, Hungary
  • Sebo Vukovics, Hungary
  • Dome Sztojay, Hungary
  • Paul Davidovich, Austria-Hungary
  • Adam Bajalics von Bajahaza, Austria-Hungary
  • Petar Preradović, Austrian general
  • Emil Vojnović, Austrian general and military historian
  • Arsenije Sečujac, Austrian general
  • Jeronim Ljubibratić, Austrian Field marshal
  • Paul von Radivojevich, Austrian general
  • Svetozar Boroević, Baron von Bojna, Austro-Hungarian and Croatian field marshal of Serbian origin
  • Stevan Šupljikac Voivod (Duke) of Serbian Vojvodina (1848), Austria-Hungary
  • Karl Paul von Quosdanovich, Austrian general
  • Peter Vitus von Quosdanovich, Austrian Field marshal
  • Emil Uzelac first joined the Austrian Air Force of Austro-Hungarian Empire.
  • King Peter I of Serbia led his government, army, and civilian refugees through the Montenegrin and Albanian mountains to the Adriatic seacoast where they were eventually transported by Allied ships to Corfu, Vido and Thessaloniki in World War I Greece (Government-in-Exile).
  • Stojan Janković led Serbs from Dalmatia and Montenegro in the Cretan War of 1645–1669 on the side of the Republic of Venice.
  • Starina Novak, Hajduk and Moldavian ally
  • Constantin Brancoveanu, Wallachia
  • At the end of the 15th century, Raci warriors came to the Polish Kingdom and played an important role in forming the Polish hussars.
  • Constantine Tikh of Bulgaria
  • Jovan Monasterlija led Serbian Militia in the name of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor against the Turks.
  • Ilija Perajica was a 17th-century freedom-fighter
  • Vuk Isakovič (1696–1759) was Serb military commander in the Austrian-Ottoman Wars.
  • Petar Marinovich, France
Russian Empire
  • Petar Tekelija, General-in-Chief, achieved the highest rank among the Serbs who served in the Imperial Russian Army, In the service of Peter the Great and his daughter Elizabeth of Russia
  • Semyon Zorich (1743–1799) distinguished himself in the Seven Years' War and the first Russo-Turkish War. He was the recipient of the Order of St. George on Pyotr Rumyantsev's recommendation. He was promoted to Lieutenant-General (1797). In the service of Catherine the Great
  • Mikhail Andreyevich Miloradovich (1771–1825) In the service of Tsar Alexander I during the French invasion of Russia
  • Georgi Emmanuel
  • Nikolay Depreradovich
  • Rajko Depreradović
  • Andrei Miloradovich
  • Ivan Adamovich
  • Jovan Horvat
  • Simeon Piščević
  • Jovan Albanez
  • Simeon Končarević
  • Jovan Šević
  • Ilya Duka
  • Dmitry Horvat
  • Dejan Subotić
  • Ivan Lukačević
  • Radola Gajda, in the service of Czar Nicholas II of Russia during the Great War and after
  • John of Shanghai and San Francisco, In the service of Czar Nicholas II of Russia during the Great War and after
  • John of Tobolsk, in the service of Czar Nicholas II of Russia during the Great War and after
  • Nikolay Gerasimovich Kuznetsov, served during the Great Patriotic War
  • Aleksej Jelačić, served during the Great Patriotic War
  • Aleksa Dundić
  • Nikolai Dimitrievich Dabić
Ottoman Empire
  • Veli Mahmud Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier 1456–68 and 1472–74, Serbian-Byzantine from Novo Brdo.[2]
  • Zagan Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1453 to 1456
  • Deli Husrev Pasha, Ottoman statesman and second vizier
  • Hadım Ali Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1501 to 1503 and 1506 to 1511
  • Lala Mustafa Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier in 1580
  • Semiz Ali Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1561 to 1565
  • Sokolluzade Lala Mehmed Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1604 to 1606
  • Boşnak Derviş Mehmed Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier during 1606
  • Nevesinli Salih Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1645 to 1647
  • Kara Musa Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier during 1647
  • Sarı Süleyman Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1685 to 1687
  • Daltaban Mustafa Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1702 to 1703
  • Damat Melek Mehmed Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1792 to 1794
  • Ivaz Mehmed Pasha, Ottoman Grand Vizier from 1739 to 1740
  • Yavuz Ali Pasha, Ottoman Governor of Egypt from 1601 to 1603
  • George Berovich, Governor-General of Crete and Prince of Samos.
  • Gedik Ahmed Pasha, Grand Vizier 1474–77. Serbian from Vranje.[3]
  • Omar Pasha (Serbian: Mihajlo Latas; 1806–1871), general, convert
  • Mara Branković, wife of Murad II, very influential in imperial affairs, ambassador to Venice
  • Aşub Sultan, originally Katarina, consort of Sultan Ibrahim I and mother of Sultan Suleiman II.[4][5][6]
  • Şehsuvar Sultan, originally Maria, consort of Sultan Mustafa II (r. 1695–1703) and mother of Sultan Osman III (r. 1754–1757).[7]
  • Olivera Despina, daughter of Prince Lazar, consort of Sultan Bayezid I.
  • Osman Aga of Temesvar (1670–1725), Ottoman commander
  • Meylişah Hatun, Consort to Sultan Osman II
  • Skenderbeg Crnojević
  • George Berovich
  • Aganlija
  • Kučuk-Alija
  • Sali Aga
USA

For Serbian American military personnel, see this list

Religion[]

Heads of the Serbian Orthodox Church
  • Saint Sava
  • Saint Arsenije I Sremac (1233–1263)
  • Saint Sava II (1263–1271)
  • Archbishop Danilo I (1271–1272)
  • Joanikije I (1272–1276)
  • Saint Jevstatije I (1279–1286)
  • Saint Jakov (1286–1292)
  • Saint Jevstatije II (1292–1309)
  • Saint Sava III (1309–1316)
  • Saint Nikodim I (1316–1324)
  • Saint Danilo II (1324–1337)
  • Saint Joanikije II, (1338–1345) and as first Serbian patriarch (1346–1354)
  • Patriarch Sava IV (1354–1375)
  • Jefrem (1375–1380) and (1389–1390)
  • Spiridon (1380–11 August 1389)
  • Danilo III (1390–1396)
  • Patriarch Arsenije III Crnojević (1672–1690)
  • Patriarch Kalinik I (1691–1710)
  • Patriarch Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta (1726–1737)
  • Serbian Patriarch Joanikije III (1739–1746)
  • Patriarch Kalinik II (1765–1766)
  • Serbian Patriarch Dimitrije (1920–1930)
  • Serbian Patriarch Varnava (1930–1937)
  • Serbian Patriarch Gavrilo V (1838–1950)
  • Serbian Patriarch Vikentije II (1950–1958)
  • Serbian Patriarch German (1958–1990)
  • Serbian Patriarch Pavle (1990–2009)
  • Serbian Patriarch Irinej (2010–20??)
  • Saint Angelina (died 1520), despotess consort of Stephen Branković, wrote a hagiography
  • Stefan Brankovic
  • Lazar Brankovic
  • Jovan Vladimir
  • Lazar of Serbia
  • Nikolaj Velimirović
  • Slobodan Šiljak
  • Stefan Stiljanovic
  • Theodor Komogovinski
  • Đorđe Bogić (1911–1941), parish priest of Našice, was tortured and slain by the Ustasha on the order of a Roman Catholic priest of the same village
  • Mitrofan Ban, Exarch, receiver of the Obilić medal in the Montenegrin-Ottoman War 1876–1878
  • Saint Platon of Banja Luka
  • Dositej Vasić
Theologians

Artists[]

Visual artists[]

Architects[]

Sculptors[]

Painters, cartoonists, illustrators[]

Designers[]

Photographers[]

Writers[]

Medieval[]

  • Buća, noble family, originating in Kotor during the Middle Ages. Some of their antecedents were writers and poets.
  • Miroslav of Hum, 12th-century Great Prince (Велики Жупан) of Zachlumia from 1162 to 1190, an administrative division (appanage) of the medieval Serbian Principality (Rascia) covering Herzegovina and southern Dalmatia.
  • Anonymous author of the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja, a 12th-century literary work, preserved in its Latin version only, has all the indication that it was written in Old Slavic, or, at least, that a portion of the material included in it existed previously in the Slavic language.
  • Stefan Nemanja (1113–1199), issued an edict called the "Hilandar Charter" for the newly established Serbian monastery at Mount Athos.
  • Stefan the First-Crowned (1165–1228), wrote "The Life of Stefan Nemanja", a biography of his father.
  • Saint Sava (1174–1236), Serbian royalty and Archbishop, author of oldest known Serbian constitution – the Zakonopravilo . Also, he authored Karyes Typikon in 1199 and Studenica Typikon in 1208.
  • Monk Simeon (c. 1170–1230), wrote Vukan's Gospel.
  • Atanasije (scribe) (c. 1200–1265), a disciple of Saint Sava, was a Serbian monk-scribe who wrote a "Hymn to Saint Sava" and a "Eulogy to Saint Sava".
  • Grigorije the Pupil, author of Miroslav Gospel and Miroslav of Hum commissioned it.
  • Domentijan (c. 1210–died after 1264), Serbian scholar and writer. For most of his life, he was a monk dedicated to writing biographies of clerics, including "Life of St. Sava."
  • Bratko Menaion, represents the oldest Serbian transcription of this liturgical book, discovered in the village of Banvani, and written by presbyter Bratko during the reign of king Stefan Vladislav I of Serbia in 1234.
  • Stefan Uroš I of Serbia (1223–1277), author of the Ston Charter (1253).
  • Dragolj Code, written in 1259 by Serbian monk Dragolj.
  • Theodosius the Hilandarian (1246–1328), technically the first Serbian novelist, wrote biographies of Saint Sava and St. Simeon
  • Nikodim I (c. 1250–1325), Abbot of Hilandar (later Serbian Archbishop), issued an edict (gramma) wherein he grants to the monks of the Kelion of St. Sava in Karyes a piece of land and an abandoned monastery. He translated numerous ancient texts and wrote some poetry. Also, he wrote Rodoslov (The Lives of Serbian Kings and Bishops).
  • Jakov of Serres (1300–1365), author of Triodion.
  • Elder Grigorije (fl. 1310–1355), Serbian nobleman and monk, possibly "Danilo's pupil" (Danilov učenik), i.e. the main author of "Žitija kraljeva i arhiepiskopa srpskih".
  • Isaija the Monk (14th century), translated the works of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite.
  • Anonymous Athonite (also known in Serbia as Nepoznati Svetogorac; late 14th to mid-15th century) was Isaija the Monk's biographer and one of the many unidentified authors of Medieval works.
  • Elder Siluan (14th century), author of a hymn to Saint Sava. Hesychasm left a strong imprint in Serbian medieval literature and art, which is evident in works by Domentijan and Teodosije the Hilandarian, but most prominently in the writings of Danilo of Peć, Isaija the Monk and Elder Siluan.
  • Stefan Dušan (1308–1355), author of Dušan's Code, the second oldest preserved constitution of Serbia.
  • Stanislav of Lesnovo (c. 1280–1350), wrote "Oliver's Menologion" in Serbia in 1342.
  • Jefrem (patriarch) (c. 1312–1400), born in a priestly family, of Bulgarian origin, was the Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church, from 1375 to 1379 and from 1389 to 1392. He was also a poet who left a large body of work, preserved in a 14th-century manuscript from Hilandar Monastery.
  • Dorotej of Hilandar, wrote a charter for the monastery of Drenča in 1382.
  • Cyprian, Metropolitan of Moscow (1336–1406), Bulgarian-born, Serbian clergyman who as the Metropolitan of Moscow wrote The Book of Degrees (Stepénnaya kniga), which grouped Russian monarchs in the order of their generations. The book was published in 1563.
  • Rajčin Sudić (1335–after 1360), Serbian monk-scribe who lived during the time of Lord Vojihna, the father of Jefimija.
  • Jefimija (1310–1405), daughter of Caesar Vojihna and widow of Jovan Uglješa Mrnjavčević, took monastic vows and is the author of three found works, including "Praise to Prince Lazar". One of the earliest European female writers.
  • Saint Danilo II, wrote biographies of Serbian medieval rulers, including the biography of Jelena, the wife of King Stefan Dragutin.
  • Antonije Bagaš, translated works from Greek into Serbian.
  • Euthymius of Tarnovo, founder of the Tarnovo Literary School that standardized the literary texts of all Orthodox Slavs, including those in Serbia and in Kievan Rus (Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia).
  • Nikola Radonja (c. 1330–1399), as monk Gerasim, served and helped with great merit Hilandar and other monasteries at Mount Athos, and authored "Gerasim Chronicle" (Gerasimov letopis).
  • Princess Milica (1335–1405), consort of Prince Lazar. One of the earliest European female writers.
  • Psalter of Branko Mladenović, dated 1346.
  • Vrhobreznica Chronicle, also written between 1350 and 1400 by an anonymous monk-scribe.
  • Jefrem (patriarch), twice Serbian patriarch, though Bulgarian born. He was also a poet.
  • Maria Angelina Doukaina Palaiologina (1350–1394), Serbian writer.
  • Kalist Rasoder
  • Gregory Tsamblak (fl. 1409–1420), Bulgarian writer and cleric, abbot of Serbia's Visoki Dečani, wrote A Biography of and Service to St. Stephen Uroš III Dečanski of Serbia, and On the Transfer of Relics of Saint Paraskeva to Serbia.
  • Danilo III, Patriarch of the Serbs (c. 1350–1400), Serbian patriarch and writer. He wrote Slovo o knezu Lazaru (Narrative About Prince Lazar).
  • Nikola Stanjević (fl. 1355), commissioned monk Feoktist to write Tetravangelion at the Hilandar monastery, now on exhibit at the British Museum in London, collection No. 154.
  • Jelena Balšić (1366–1443), educated Serbian noblewoman, who wrote the Gorički zbornik, correspondence between her and Nikon of Jerusalem, a monk in Gorica monastery (Jelena's monastic foundation) on Beška (Island) in Zeta under the Balšići. She is now regarded as a representative of Montenegro because she was married on what eventually became Montenegrin territory, though Montenegro did not exist in her day.
  • Stefan Lazarević(1374–1427), Knez/Despot of Serbia (1389–1427), wrote biographies and poetry, one of the most important Serbian medieval writers. He founded the Resava School at Manasija monastery.
  • Kir Joakim, late 14th century musical writer.
  • Dečani Chronicle, written by an anonymous monk, also from the Resava School made famous by Manasija monastery. Rewritten and published in 1864 by Archimandrite Serafim Ristić of the Dečani Monastery
  • Oxford Serbian Psalter, written by an anonymous monk-scribe.
  • Munich Serbian Psalter, written by an anonymous monk-scribe.
  • Tomić Psalter, named after Simon Tomić, a Serbian art collector, found the 14th century illuminated manuscript in Old Serbia in 1901.
  • Đurađ Branković (1377–1456), author psalter Oktoih, published posthumously in 1494 by Hieromonk Makarije, the founder of Serbian and Romanian printing.
  • Romylos of Vidin, also known as Romylos of Ravanica where he died in the late 1300s.
  • Kir Stefan the Serb (late 14th and early 15th century), Serbian monk-scribe and composer.
  • Nikola the Serb (late 14th and early 15th century), Serbian monk-scribe and composer.
  • Isaiah the Serb, monk-scribe and composer of chants in the 15th century. He finished the translation from Greek to Serbian of the Corpus Areopagiticum, the works of Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite, in 1371, and transcribed the manuscripts of Joachim, Domestikos of Serbia.
  • Danilo III (patriarch), writer and poet.
  • Constantine of Kostenets (fl. 1380–1431), Bulgarian writer and chronicler who lived in Serbia, author of the biography of Despot Stefan Lazarević and of the first Serbian philological study, Skazanije o pismenah (A History on the Letters).
  • Kantakuzina Katarina Branković (1418/19–1492), remembered for commissioning the Varaždin Apostol in 1454.
  • Radoslav Gospels, work of both Celibate Priest Feodor, also known as "Inok from Dalsa" (fl. 1428–1429), who is credited for transcribing the Radoslav Gospel (Tetraevangelion) in the Serbian recension, now in the National Library of Russia in St. Petersburg. Radoslav is the famed miniaturist who illuminated the pages.
  • Jelena Balšić's correspondence with monk Nikon of Jerusalem between 1441 and 1442 is found in Gorički zbornik, named after the island of Gorica in Lake Skadar where Jelena built a church.
  • Dimitrije Kantakuzin, while residing in the Rila monastery in 1469 Kantakuzin wrote a biography of Saint John of Rila and a touching "Prayer to the Holy Virgin" imploring her aid in combating sin.
  • Konstantin Mihailović (c. 1430–1501), the last years of his life were spent in Poland where he wrote his Turkish Chronicle, an interesting document with a detailed description of the historical events of that period as well as various customs of the Turks and Christians.
  • Pachomius the Serb (Paxomij Logofet), prolific hagiographer who came from Mount Athos to work in Russia between 1429 and 1484. He wrote eleven saint's lives (zhitie) while employed by the Russian Orthodox Church in Novgorod. He was one of the representatives of the ornamental style known as pletenje slova (word-braiding).
  • Dimitar of Kratovo, 15th-century Serb writer and lexicographer of the Kratovo Literary School.
  • Ninac Vukoslavić (fl. 1450–1459), chancellor and scribe at the court of Scanderbeg, and author of his letters.
  • Deacon Damian who wrote "Koporin Chronicle" in 1453.
  • Vladislav the Grammarian (fl. 1456–1483), Serbian monk, writer, historian and theologian.
  • Đurađ Crnojević (fl. 1490–1496), first printed the Oktoih at Cetinje in 1495.
  • Božidar Vuković (ca. 1465–1540), one of the writers and early printers of Serb books.
  • Andrija Paltašić, early printer and publisher of Serb books.
  • Dimitar of Kratovo was a 15th-century Serb writer and lexicographer, one of the most important members of the Kratovo literary school.
  • Martin Segon was a Serbian writer, Catholic Bishop of Ulcinj and a 15th-century humanist.
  • Lazar of Hilandar After Pachomius the Serb, the most significant Serbian monk in Imperial Russia.
  • Hieromonk Makarije (1465–c. 1530) is the founder of Serbian and Romanian printing, having printed the first book in the Serbian language in Obod (Crnagora) in 1493, and the first book in Wallachia. He also wrote extensively.

Baroque[]

  • Hieromonk Pahomije (c. 1480–1544) learned the skills of the printing trade from Hieromonk Makarije at the Crnojević printing house.
  • Paskoje Primojević (fl. 1482–1527) was a poet and Serbian scribe in the Serbian Chancellery in Dubrovnik during the time of the Republic of Ragusa.
  • Božidar Goraždanin founded the Goražde printing house in the 1520s.
  • Benedikt Kuripečič (1491–1531) was the first to record part of the folk songs of the Battle of Kosovo dealing with Miloš Obilić's exploits.
  • Stefan Paštrović (fl. 1560–1599), author of two books, engaged a certain hieromonk Sava of Visoki Dečani to print them in Venice at the Francesco Rampazetto and Heirs publishing house in 1597.
  • Hegumen Mardarije (fl. 1543–45) was a Serbian Orthodox abbott and one of the first printers.
  • Hieromonk Mardarije (fl. 1550–1568) used to print his books at Mrkšina crkva printing house before the Ottomans destroyed it.
  • Bonino De Boninis, early printer and publisher in Dubrovnik.
  • Trojan Gundulić is remembered for printing the first book in Belgrade in 1552, "The Four Gospels".
  • Vićenco Vuković was one of the major printers of 16th century Serbia, like his father before him.
  • Jerolim Zagurović was a Catholic-Serb printer from Kotor.
  • Stefan Marinović was a Serb printer from Scutari during the time of Vićenco Vuković, Jerolim Zagurović, Jakov of Kamena Reka and others. The longest-lived printing in the Balkans was done at Scutari, where Stefan Skadranin worked between 1563 and 1580. When his press stopped, because of continued Turkish authority over the region, Serbian printing left the Balkans. Later, Serbian books were printed in Venice, Leipzig, Vienna, and Trieste.
  • Jakov of Kamena Reka worked in the Vuković printing house in Venice with Vićenco Vuković, son of Božidar.
  • Radiša Dimitrović owned the Belgrade printing house where many medieval works were published.
  • Mojsije Dečanac (fl. 1536–40) is remembered for printing Praznićni minej (Holiday Menaion) of Božidar Vuković in Venice in 1538.
  • Hieromonk Genadije was another printer who worked alongside hieromonk Teodosije at Mileševa monastery and later in Venice with hierodeacon Mojsije and hieromonk Teodosije.
  • Dimitrije Karaman, born in Lipova, Arad in the early 1500s, was an early Serbian poet and bard.
  • Peja (priest) wrote a poem In the Court and in the Dungeon, from The Service of Saint George of Kratovo, and a biography of the same saint between 1515 and 1523.
  • Teodor Ljubavić wrote the Goražde Psalter in 1521.
  • Tronoša Chronicle was written in 1526 and transcribed by hieromonk Josif Tronoša in the eighteenth century.
  • Jovan Maleševac was a Serbian Orthodox monk and scribe who collaborated in 1561 with the Slovene Protestant reformer Primož Trubar to print religious books in Cyrillic.
  • Matija Popović was a 16th-century Serbian Orthodox cleric from Ottoman Bosnia who also supported the Reformation movement.
  • Peter Petrovics was a 16th-century Serbian magnate and one of Hungary's most influential and fervent supporters of the Reformation.
  • Luka Radovanović was a 15th-century Serb Catholic priest from Ragusa who owned a small printing press, one of the earliest at the time.
  • Luka Primojević is another early printer of the 16th century from Ragusa to use Church Slavonic, Cyrillic type.
  • Dimitrije Ljubavić (1519–1563) was a Serbian Orthodox deacon, humanist, writer, and printer who sought to bring a rapprochement between the Lutherans and the Eastern Orthodox Church.
  • Pajsije I Janjevac (1542–1649) was a Serbian Patriarch and an author whose works showed an admixture of popular elements.
  • Jovan the Serb of Kratovo (1526–1583) was a Serbian writer and monk whose name is preserved as the author of six books, now part of the Museum Collection of the Serbian Orthodox Church.
  • Teodor Račanin (Bajina Bašta, c. 1500–Bajina Bašta, past-1560) was the first Serbian writer and monk of the Rachan Scriptorium School mentioned in Ottoman and Serbian sources.
  • Inok Sava (c. 1530–after 1597) was the first to write and publish a Serbian Primer (syllabary) at the printing press of Giovanni Antonio Rampazetto in Venice in two editions, first on the 20th and the second on the 25th of May 1597, after which the book somehow fell into neglect only to be rediscovered recently.
  • Georgije Mitrofanović (c.1550–1630) was a Serbian Orthodox monk and painter whose work can be seen in the church at the Morača monastery.
  • Vićenco Vuković was one of the major printers of 16th century Serbia, like his father before him.
  • Mavro Orbin (1563–1614) was the author of the "Realm of the Slavs" (1601) which made a significant impact on Serbian historiography, influencing future historians, particularly Đorđe Branković (count).
  • Zograf Longin was an icon painter and writer.
  • Jerolim Zagurović was a Catholic-Serb printer from Kotor.
  • Stefan Marinović was a Serb printer from Scutari during the time of Vićenco Vuković, Jerolim Zagurović, Jakov of Kamena Reka and others.
  • Jakov of Kamena Reka worked in the Vuković printing house in Venice with Vićenco Vuković.
  • Mariano Bolizza (fl. 1614) was a prominent Serbian writer who also wrote in Italian.
  • Gavril Stefanović Venclović (fl. Bajina Bašta, 1670–Szentendre, 1749), one of the first and most notable representatives of Serbian Baroque and Enlightenment literature, wrote in the vernacular. Milorad Pavić saw Venclović as a living link between the Byzantine literary tradition and the emerging new views on modern literature. He was the precursor of enlightenment aiming, most of all, to educate the common folk.
  • Zaharije Orfelin (1726–1785), one of the most notable representatives of the Serbian Baroque in art and literature

Enlightenment[]

  • John of Tobolsk (1651–1715) was a Serbian cleric born in Nizhyn, in the Czernihow Voivodeship of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth of the time, now revered as a saint.
  • Radul of Riđani (fl. 1650–1666) was a Serbian Orthodox priest and chieftain of Riđani, and a prolific letter writer who kept the authorities of Perast informed about Ottoman preparations for the Battle of Perast. A collection of his letters are kept in a museum.
  • Kiprijan Račanin (c. 1650–1730) was a Serbian writer and monk who founded a copyist school in Szentendre in Hungary, like the one he left behind at the Rača monastery in Serbia at the beginning of the Great Turkish War in 1689.
  • Jerotej Račanin (c. 1650–after 1727) was a Serbian writer and copyist of church manuscripts and books. After visiting Jerusalem in 1704 he wrote a book about his travel experiences from Hungary to the Holy Land and back.
  • Čirjak Račanin (Bajina Bašta, c. 1660–Szentendre, 1731) was a Serbian writer and monk, a member of the famed "School of Rača".
  • Đorđe Branković, Count of Podgorica (1645–1711) who wrote the first history of Serbia in five volumes.
  • Tripo Kokolja (1661��1713) was a well-known Serbian-Venetian painter.
  • Sava Vladislavich (1669–1738), framed Peter the Great's proclamation of 1711, translated Mavro Orbin's Il regno de gli Slavi (1601); The Realm of the Slavs) from Italian into Russian, and composed the Treaty of Kiakhta and many others
  • Julije Balović (1672–1727) wrote in Italian and Serbian. He is the author of Practichae Schrivaneschae, a manual for a ship's scribe, and Perast Chronicles, a collection of epic poetry.
  • Ivan Krušala (1675–1735) is best known for writing a poem about the Battle of Perast in 1654, among others. He worked in a Russian embassy in China at the time when Sava Vladislavich was the ambassador.
  • Hristofor Žefarović was a 17th- and 18th- century Serbian poet who died in Imperial Russia spreading the Pan-Slav culture.
  • Simeon Končarević (c. 1690–1769), a Serbian writer and Bishop of Dalmatia who, exiled twice from his homeland, settled in Russia where he wrote his chronicles.
  • Parteniy Pavlovich (c. 1695–1760) was a Serbian Orthodox Church cleric who championed South Slavic revival.
  • Danilo I, Metropolitan of Cetinje (1697–1735) was a writer and founder of the Petrović Njegoš dynasty.
  • Sava Petrović (1702–1782) wrote numerous letters to the Moscow metropolitan and the Empress Elizabeth of Russia about the deploring conditions of the Serb Nation under occupation by the Turks, Republic of Venice and the Habsburg Empire.
  • Pavle Nenadović (1703–1768) was commissioned by Serbian Orthodox Metropolitan of Karlovci, Arsenije IV Jovanović Šakabenta to compose a heraldic book, Stemmatographia.
  • Vasilije III Petrović-Njegoš (1709–1766), Serbian Orthodox Metropolitan of Montenegro, wrote patriotic poetry and the first history of Montenegro, published in Moscow in 1754
  • Pavle Julinac (1730–1785) was a Serbian writer, historian, traveler, soldier, and diplomat
  • Jovan Rajić (1726–1801), writer, historian, traveler, and pedagogue, who wrote the first systematic work on the history of Croats and Serbs
  • Mojsije Putnik (1728–1790), Metropolitan, educator, writer, and founder of secondary schools and institutions of higher learning.
  • Nikola Nešković (1740–1789) was a most prolific Serbian icon, fresco and portrait painter in the Baroque style.
  • Teodor Ilić Češljar (1746–1793) was one of the best late Baroque Serbian painters from the region of Vojvodina.
  • Pavel Đurković (1772–1830) was one of the most important Serbian Baroque artists (writers, icon painters, goldsmiths, woodcarvers) along with Jakov Orfelin (1750–1803), Stefan Gavrilović, Georgije Bakalović, and others.
  • Jovan Četirević Grabovan (1720–1781) was a Serbian icon painter. He painted the Lepavina and Orahovica monasteries, among others.
  • Kiril Zhivkovich (1730–1807) was a Serbian and Bulgarian writer.
  • Petar I Petrović Njegoš (1748–1830) was a writer and poet besides being a spiritual and temporal ruler of the "Serb land of Montenegro" as he called it.
  • Sofronije Jugović-Marković (fl. 1789) was a Serbian writer and activist in Russian service. He wrote "Serbian Empire and State" in 1792 in order to raise the patriotic spirit of the Serbs in both the Habsburg and Ottoman empires.
  • Tomo Medin (1725–1788) was a Montenegrin Serb writer and adventurer. He and Casanova had two duels together.
  • Stefano Zannowich (1751–1786) was a Montenegrin Serb writer and adventurer. From his early youth, he was prone to challenges and adventures, unruly and dissipated life. He wrote in Italian and French, besides Serbian. He is known for his "Turkish Letters" that fascinated his contemporaries. His works belong to the genre of epistolary novel.
  • Tripo Smeća (1755–1812) was a Venetian historian and writer who wrote in Italian and in Serbian.
  • Hadži-Ruvim (1752–1804) was a Serbian Orthodox archimandrite who documented events and wars in his time, established a private library, wrote library bibliographies, collected books in which he drew ornaments and miniatures. He did wood carving and woodcutting.

Rationalism[]

  • Simeon Piščević (1731–1797), was a Serbian writer and high-ranking officer in the service of both Austria and Imperial Russia.
  • Dositej Obradović (1739–1811), the influential protagonist of the Serbian national and cultural renaissance, founder of modern Serbian literature
  • Teodor Janković-Mirijevski (1740–1814), the most influential educational reformer in the Habsburg Empire and Imperial Russia
  • Avram Miletić (1755–after 1826) was a merchant and writer of epic folk songs.
  • Avram Mrazović (1756–1826) was a Serbian writer, translator, and pedagogue.
  • Jovan Muškatirović (1743–1809) was one of the early disciples of Dositej Obradović.
  • Aleksije Vezilić (1753–1792) was a Serbian lyric poet who introduced the Teutonic vision of the Enlightenment to the Serbs.
  • Emanuilo Janković (1758–1792) was a Serbian man of letters and of science.
  • Stefan von Novaković (1740–1826) was a Serbian writer, publisher, and patron of Serbian literature.
  • Pavle Solarić (1779–1821) was Obradović's disciple who wrote poetry and the first book on geography in the vernacular.
  • Gerasim Zelić (1752–1828), Serbian Orthodox Church archimandrite, traveler and writer (compatriot of Dositej). His chief work was the travel memoirs Žitije (Lives), which also served as a sociological work.
  • Sava Tekelija (1761–1842) was the patron of Matica Srpska, a literary and cultural society
  • Gligorije Trlajić (1766–1811), writer, poet, polyglot and professor of law at the universities of St. Petersburg and Kharkiv (Harkov), author of a textbook on Civil Law which according to some laid the foundations of Russian civil law doctrine
  • Atanasije Stojković (1773–1832) was a Serbian writer, pedagogue, physicist, mathematician and astronomer in the service of Imperial Russia. He also taught mathematics at the University of Kharkiv.
  • Vićentije Rakić (1750–1818) was a Serbian writer and poet. He founded the School of Theology (now part of the University of Belgrade) when in 1810 he headed a newly established theological college and in 1812 the first students graduated from it. He was a disciple of Dositej Obradović.
  • Jovan Pačić (1771–1848) was a Serbian poet, writer, translator, painter, and soldier. He translated Goethe
  • Teodor Filipović (1778–1807), writer, jurist, and educator, wrote the Decree of the Governing Council of Revolutionary Serbia. He taught at the newly-founded National University of Kharkiv, with his compatriots, Gligorije Trlajić and Atanasije Stojković.
  • Jovan Došenović (1781–1813) was a Serbian philosopher, poet, and translator.
  • Jovan Avakumović (1748–1810), known as a representative of the Serbian folk poetry of the 18th century, though he only wrote a few poems which were part of handwritten poem books

Rationalism to Romanticism[]

  • Lukijan Mušicki (1777–1837), Serbian Orthodox Abbott, poet, prose writer, and polyglot.
  • Georgije Magarašević (1793–1830), eminent writer, historian, dramatist, publisher, and founder and first editor of Serbski Letopis.
  • Joakim Vujić, (1772–1847), writer, dramatist, actor, traveller and polyglot. He is known as the Father of Serbian Theatre.[46]
  • Matija Nenadović (1777–1854) author of Memoirs, an eyewitness account of the First Serbian Uprising in 1804 and the Second Serbian Uprising in 1815.
  • Stevan Živković-Telemak (1780-1831) is the author of Obnovljene Srbije, 1780-1831 (Serbie nouvelle, 1780-1731) [1] and Serbian translator of François Fénelon's Les Aventures de Télémaque.
  • Dimitrije Davidović (1789–1838), Minister of Education of the Principality of Serbia, writer, journalist, publisher, historian, diplomatist, and founder of modern Serbian journalism and publishing.
  • Luka Milovanov Georgijević (1784-1828) is considered the first children's poet of new Serbian literature. He collaborated with Vuk Karadžić on the production of grammars and the dictionary.
  • Stefan Stefanović (1807–1828) is a Serbian writer who lived and worked in Novi Sad and Budapest
  • Tomo Milinović (1770–1846) is a Serbian writer and freedom-fighter. He authored two books, Umotvorina (published posthumously 1847) and Istorija Slavenskog Primorija (lost and never published).
  • Dimitrije Vladisavljević (1788–1858) is a Serbian grammarian, translator and writer.
  • Jovan Hadžić (1799–1869) was a Serbian writer and legislator
  • Jovan Stejić (1803–1853) was a Serbian physician writer, philosopher, translator, and a critic of Vuk Karadžić's language reform.
  • Jovan Sterija Popović, (1806–1856), playwright, poet and pedagogue who taught at the University of Belgrade, then known as Grande École (Velika škola).
  • Nikanor Grujić, (1810–1887), Rationalism to Romanticism
  • Jovan Đorđević (1826–1900), Serbian man of letters, writer of lyrics to the Serbian National anthem
  • Vasa Živković, Rationalism to Romanticism
  • Svetozar Miletić, writer and editor of a magazine called Slavjanka, in which Serbian students living under Habsburg occupation championed their ideas of national freedom
  • Ljubomir Nenadović, writer
  • Milica Stojadinović-Srpkinja (1828–1878), poet

Romanticism[]

Realism[]

Moderna[]

Avant-Garde[]

Contemporary[]

Performing artists[]

Actors[]

Film/TV directors and screenwriters[]

Models[]

Musicians[]

Singers and rappers[]

Music performers[]

Composers[]

Opera singers[]

  • Biserka Cvejić (born 1923), Serbian famous opera singer and university professor, mezzo-soprano
  • Radmila Bakočević (born 1933), spinto soprano
  • Oliver Njego (born 1959), baritone, student of Bakočević, who also crossed over into popular music, eventually becoming a prominent opera singer.
  • Nikola Mijailović (born 1973), baritone
  • David Bižić (born 1975), baritone
  • Laura Pavlović, lyric and spinto soprano opera singer, and a soloist with the Serbian National Theatre Opera in Novi Sad.
  • Radmila Smiljanić, classical soprano who has had an active international career in operas and concerts since 1965. She is particularly known for her portrayals of heroines from the operas of Giuseppe Verdi and Giacomo Puccini.[51]
  • Milena Kitic, Serbian-born American mezzo-soprano

Dancers and choreographers[]

Journalists and critics[]

Scientists and scholars[]

Natural science[]

  • Mileva Marić, mathematician, wife of Albert Einstein
  • Miodrag Stojković, genetic scientist
  • Milutin Milanković, geophysicist, astronomer
  • Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic, biomedical engineer.
  • Pavle Vujević, geophysicist
  • Siniša Stanković, biologist
  • Svetozar Kurepa, mathematician
  • Dušan Kanazir, molecular biologist
  • Pavle Savić, physicist and chemist, together with Irène Joliot-Curie he was nominated for Nobel Prize in Physics
  • Jovan Cvijić, geographer, ethnographer and geologist
  • Nikola Hajdin, construction engineer
  • Tatomir Anđelić, mathematician
  • Dimitrije Nešić, mathematician
  • Jovan Čokor, epidemiologist
  • Aleksandar Despić, physicist
  • Vuk Marinković, physicist
  • Rajko Tomović, physicist and inventor
  • Slobodan Ćuk, electrical engineer, professor and inventor
  • Ljubomir Klerić, mining engineer and mathematician
  • Milomir Kovac, veterinary surgeon and professor
  • Milan Damnjanović, physicist
  • Ilija Đuričić, veterinary physician
  • Bogdan Duricic, biochemist
  • Miodrag Radulovacki, neuropharmacologist and professor
  • Bogdan Maglich, nuclear physicist
  • Jovan Rašković, psychiatrist
  • Draga Ljočić, Serbia's first female doctor and women's rights activist
  • Petar V. Kokotovic, engineering professor and theorist
  • Milan Raspopović, mathematician
  • Jovan Karamata, mathematician
  • Danilo Blanusa, mathematician, of Serb heritage
  • Zoran Knežević, astronomer
  • Đuro Kurepa, mathematician
  • Vladimir Markovic, mathematician
  • Dušanka Đokić, physicist
  • Petar Đurković, astronomer
  • Milan Kurepa, physicist
  • Marko V. Jaric, physicist
  • Laza Lazarević, physician
  • Marko Leko, chemist
  • Sima Lozanić, chemist
  • Gradimir Milovanović, mathematician
  • Dragoslav Mitrinović, mathematician
  • Milorad B. Protić, astronomer
  • Ljubisav Rakic, neurobiologist
  • Dušan Ristanović, medical biophysicist
  • Stevo Todorčević, mathematician
  • Pavle Vujevic, geographer and meteorologist
  • Miomir Vukobratovic, mechanical engineer and pioneer in humanoid robots
  • Bogdan Gavrilović, mathematician
  • Milan Vukcevich, chemist and grandmaster of chess problem composition
  • Jovan Žujović (1856–1938), pioneer in geological and paleontological science in Serbia
  • Miodrag Petković, mathematician
  • Srđan Ognjanović, mathematician
  • Vlatko Vedral, physicist, known for his research on the theory of Entanglement and Quantum Information Theory
  • Tihomir Novakov, physicist
  • Petar Đurković, astronomer
  • Mihajlo D. Mesarovic, scientist and Club of Rome member.
  • Lazar the Hilandarian (fl. 1404), Serbian Orthodox monk who built the first mechanical clock tower in Russia
  • Ognjeslav Kostović Stepanović (1851–1916), created "arbonite" (i.e. plywood).
  • Voja Antonić (born 1952), inventor, journalist, writer, magazine editor, radio show contributor, also creator of a build-it-yourself home computer Galaksija
  • Mihajlo Idvorski Pupin (1854–1935), physicist, professor and inventor of a new telecommunications technology
  • Mihailo Petrović Alas (1868–1943), author of the mathematical phenomenology and inventor of the first hydraulic computer capable to solve differential equations
  • Pavle Vujević (1881–1966), founder of the science of microclimatology, and one of the first in the science of potamology
  • Ljubinka Nikolić, geographer and geologist, future colonist chosen for the Mars One project (representing Serbia)[52]
  • Gordana Lazarevich, Serbian born Canadian musicologist and university department head[53]
  • Vesna Milosevic-Zdjelar, Serbian born Canadian astrophysicist and science educator
  • Jelena Kovacevic, Dean of Engineering at NYU's Tandon School and Carnegie Mellon University
  • Jasmina Vujic, nuclear engineering professor at Berkeley, 1st female nuclear engineering department chair in the US[54][55]
  • Gojko Lalic, chemistry professor at the University of Washington[56]
  • Zorica Pantic, engineer and president of Wentworth Institute of Technology
  • Maja Pantic, A.I. expert and professor
  • Petar Gburčik, meteorologist and professor
  • Adolf Hempt, biologist and the founder of the Pasteur Institute

Philosophers[]

Historians and archeologists[]

Economists and sociologysts[]

Editors and publishers[]

  • Jovan Jovanović Zmaj, one of the co-founders of Javor (The Maple) at Novi Sad in 1862, was its editor for many years. Zmaj is best known for his poetry.
  • Sava Bjelanović was the publisher of Srpski List in Zadar.
  • Dejan Ristanović
  • Darko F. Ribnikar
  • Vladislav F. Ribnikar
  • Dimitrije Ruvarac, brother of Ilarion Ruvarac
  • Velibor Gligorić, literary critic, editor and writer

Linguists and philologists[]

  • Dejan Ajdačić
  • Rajna Dragićević (born 1968), Serbian linguist, lexicologist and lexicographer.
  • Pavle Ivić was a leading South Slavic and general dialectologist and phonologist, and one of the signatories of the 1986 Memorandum of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
  • Vuk Stefanović Karadžić (1787–1864), philologist and linguist who was the major reformer of the Serbian language. He deserves, perhaps, for his collections of songs, fairy tales, and riddles to be called the father of the study of Serbian folklore. He was also the author of the first Serbian dictionary.
  • Branko Mikasinovich (born 1938), Slavist
  • Milan Rešetar (1860–1942), linguist, Ragusologist, historian and literary critic from Dubrovnik who was a member of the Serb Catholic movement in Dubrovnik.
  • Luko Zore
  • Mateja Matejić (priest), Slavist
  • Svetomir Nikolajevic, the first professor at the Department of World Literature in Belgrade's School of Philosophy.
  • Katarina Milovuk, author of linguistics textbooks, translator, professor and women's rights activist
  • Ljiljana Crepajac
  • Sava Mrkalj
  • Milan Budimir
  • Rajko Đurić
  • Ivan Klajn

Legal experts and lawyers[]

Business entrepreneures[]

  • Drago K. Jovanovich (Co-founder of the Helicopter Engineering Research Corporation in Philadelphia with F. Kozloski)
  • Milan Mandarić, Serbian-American business tycoon
  • Miroslav Mišković President of Delta Holding
  • Milan Panić President and Chief Executive Officer, MP Global Enterprises & Associates, USA
  • Dejan Ristanović, founder and owner of Sezam Pro and PC PRESS
  • Philip Zepter (born Milan Janković), owner of Zepter International
  • Ljubomir Vracarevic, developed Real Aikido, a new fighting technique in martial arts.
  • Vane Ivanović, President of Crestline Shipping Company, London, UK
  • Veselin Jevrosimović, CEO and founder of Serbian IT company ComTrade Group
  • Miodrag Kostić, CEO and founder of MK Group
  • Bogoljub Karić

Criminals[]

  • Vojislav Stanimirović former Journalist Boss of YACS Crime Group that his son Punch Pavle Stanimirović took over in NYC
  • Zvezdan Jovanović, former member of the Serbian special police, assassinated Serbian Minister Zoran Đinđić
  • Mijailo Mijailović, Swedish psychopath, assassin of Swedish Foreign Minister Anna Lindh
  • Arkan, warlord, organized cime
  • Kristijan Golubović, organized crime
  • Pink Panthers, jewel theft network
  • Milorad Ulemek, assassin of Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić and former Serbian President Ivan Stambolić

Sportspeople[]

Basketball[]

Baseball[]

  • Brian Bogusevic, MLB player
  • Jess Dobernic, MLB player
  • Walt Dropo, MLB player
  • Eli Grba, American League Champion with the New York Yankees
  • Mike Kekich, MLB player
  • Mike Krsnich, MLB player
  • Rocky Krsnich, MLB player
  • Babe Martin, MLB player
  • Doc Medich, MLB player
  • Johnny Miljus, MLB player
  • Paul Popovich, MLB player
  • Dave Rajsich, MLB player
  • Gary Rajsich, MLB player
  • Jeff Samardzija, player for the Chicago White Sox, also wide receiver at Notre Dame.
  • Nick Strincevich, MLB player
  • Pete Suder, MLB player
  • Steve Sundra, 1939 World Series Champion, pitched with the New York Yankees, Washington Senators, and St. Louis Browns
  • Peter Vuckovich, AL Cy Young winner: 1982)
  • George Vukovich, MLB player
  • John Vukovich, MLB player and coach
  • Emil Verban, second baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs, and Boston Braves.
  • Wally Judnich, MLB player
  • Mike Kreevich, MLB player, notable center fielder during the 1930s and 1940s
  • Christian Yelich, MLB player
  • Mickey Lolich, MLB Player
  • Al Niemiec, player for the Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia Athletics, and Seattle Rainiers
  • Steve Swetonic, MLB Player
  • Ryan Radmanovich, MLB Player and member of Canada Olympic baseball team
  • Erik Bakich, college baseball coach
  • Joe Tepsic, MLB Player

Chess[]

Football[]

Tennis[]

Boxers[]

Ice hockey[]

  • For Serbian American ice hockey players, see this list.
  • For Serbian Canadian ice hockey players, see this list.
  • Dragan Umicevic, Swedish
  • Alex Andjelic, Serbian, coach
  • Ivan Prokić, Serbian
  • Milan Lucic, Canadian

Other sports[]

For Serbian-American American football players, see this list; for baseball players, see this list.

Other[]

  • George Fisher (Serbian: Đorđe Šagić; 1795–1873), American military and politician, fought in the Texas Revolution and First Serbian Uprising
  • Nick Vujicic, preacher and motivational speaker
  • Vesna Vulović, flight attendant. She holds the world record, according to the Guinness Book of Records, for surviving the highest fall without a parachute: 10,160 metres (33,330 ft).[61][62]
  • Šćepan Mali (fl. 1767–1773), impostor pretender of Montenegro, by falsely representing himself as the Russian Tsar Peter III.
  • Black Mike Winage (1870–1977), Serbian-Canadian miner, pioneer, adventurer and one of the original settlers in the Yukon during the Klondike Gold Rush who lived to be 107 years old.
  • Nedeljko Čabrinović, member of the Black Hand

Spies[]

YouTubers[]

  • Bogdan Ilić (born 1996), Rapper, gamer, actor & entertainer.
  • Stefan Vuksanović (born 1998), Gamer & streamer.

Fictional and mythological characters[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Zulfikarpašić, Adil (1998). The Bosniak. Milovan Djilas. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. p. 7. ISBN 1-85065-339-9.
  2. ^ Stavrides 2001.
  3. ^ Heath W. Lowry (2003). The Nature of the Early Ottoman State. SUNY Press. p. 116. ISBN 978-0-7914-8726-6. Retrieved 20 February 2013.
  4. ^ "Sultan II. Süleyman Han". Republic of Turkey Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Retrieved 2009-02-06.
  5. ^ Günseli İnal; Semiramis Arşivi (2005). Semiramis: Sultan'ın gözünden şenlik. YKY. p. 27. ISBN 978-975-08-0928-6. Siileyman'in annesi Sirp Katrin yani Dilasiip Hatun
  6. ^ Ali Kemal Meram (1977). Padişah anaları: resimli belgesel tarih romanı. Öz Yayınları. p. 325.
  7. ^ Meram 1977, p. 355, "İkinci Mustafa'nın (Şehsuvar Sultan) takma adlı câriyesi Sırp kızı Mari'den doğan oğlu Üçüncü Osman", İnal & Arşivi 2005, p. 27, "Osman'in annesi Sirp Mari yani §ehsiivar Sultan"
  8. ^ Departure of Aleksandar Đokić (in Serbian)
  9. ^ Blagojevic, Ljiljana (2003). Modernism in Serbia: The Elusive Margins of Belgrade Architecture, 1919–1941. MIT Press. Dust jacket. ISBN 978-0-262-02537-9.
  10. ^ "The discipline of architecture and Freedom of spirit" (PDF) (in Serbian). 23 March 2006. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
  11. ^ "Arhitektura u Srbiji u XX veku" [Serbian architecture in XX century] (in Serbian). archive.is. Archived from the original on 13 July 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2017.
  12. ^ Architecture in Serbia, Milan Zloković Archived 2008-12-03 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Ćeranić, Milica. "Svetozar Ivačković – problemi istraživanja". Leskovački zbornik 2007. Archived from the original on 26 August 2011. Retrieved 2 October 2010.
  14. ^ Danas, Monografija o arhitekti Đorđu Tabakoviću Archived 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 23 December 2017
  15. ^ Architectural guide (in Slovene)
  16. ^ "Dimitrije T. Leko biography" (in Serbian). Retrieved 23 December 2017.
  17. ^ http://izk.tugraz.at/people/faculty-staff/assistant-professor-dubravka-sekulic/
  18. ^ http://www.akademie-solitude.de/en/fellowship/fellows/dubravka-sekulic~pe1542/
  19. ^ http://www.msub.org.rs/tri-tacke-oslonca-zoran-bojovic
  20. ^ http://www.zua.rs/sr/research/alfa-i-omega-arhitekture-energoprojekta/
  21. ^ http://architectuul.com/architect/ivanka-raspopovic
  22. ^ http://www.zua.rs/en/research-en/enigmatic-lady-of-serbian-modernism/
  23. ^ https://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/27/style/tmagazine/27belgrade.html
  24. ^ http://www.politika.rs/scc/clanak/391626/Prva-zena-inzenjer-u-Nemackoj
  25. ^ Biodata, Olja Ivanjicki Archived 2009-07-01 at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ "Pola veka Fis dizajna: Retrospektivna izložba Ljubomira Pavićevića Fisa". Museum of Applied Arts, Belgrade. Archived from the original on 2012-03-12. Retrieved 2011-06-27.
  27. ^ https://www.itsnicethat.com/features/artists-in-conversation-ansel-krut-ana-milenkovic-160217
  28. ^ https://griffingallery.co.uk/artists/ana-milenkovic
  29. ^ http://www.artnet.com/artists/dragutin-inkiostri-medenjak/
  30. ^ fr:Sacha Lakic
  31. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2017-12-25. Retrieved 2018-04-12.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  32. ^ http://www.vijesti.me/zivot/ivana-pilja-modna-pista-je-pozornica-za-dizajnera-857365
  33. ^ http://fablstyle.com/5-serbian-designer-definitely-heard/
  34. ^ https://zena.blic.rs/moda/ana-ljubinkovic-predstavila-dve-nove-kolekcije-modeli-inspirisani-starim/y30hxhe
  35. ^ http://fablstyle.com/5-serbian-designer-definitely-heard/
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  37. ^ http://bturn.com/3377/fashion-ana-rajcevic
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