Davče Trajković
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Davče Trajković
Medieval nobility * Branko Mladenović, Serbian magnate * Vuk Branković, medieval Serbian nobleman * Dejan (magnate), Dejan, medieval Serbian nobleman * Constantine Dragaš, medieval Serbian nobleman * Jovan Dragaš, medieval Serbian nobleman * Grgur Golubić, medieval Serbian nobleman * King Vukašin, medieval Serbian king (1365-1371) * King Marko, medieval Serbian king (1371-1395) * Jovan Oliver, medieval Serbian nobleman * Paskač, medieval Serbian nobleman * Vlatko Paskačić, medieval Serbian nobleman * Ostoja Rajaković, medieval Serbian nobleman * Nikola Stanjević, medieval Serbian nobleman Churchmen * Mihailo Bojčić, metropolitan of Kratovo, Macedonia, Kratovo * Serbian Patriarch Maksim I, Maksim I, Serbian Patriarch (1655-1672) * Jefrem Janković Tetovac, Orthodox bishop * Atanasije II Gavrilović, Serbian Patriarch (1747-1752) * Zaharija Dečanac, Metropolitan of Raška and Prizren (1819-1830) * Dositej Novaković, Orthodox bishop of Timok * Dimitrije Mladenović ...
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Branko Mladenović
Branko ( sr-cyr, Бранко; 1331–65) was a Serbian magnate who served to king and Serbian Empire, emperor Stefan Dušan (r. 1331–55), and emperor Stefan Uroš V (r. 1355–71), with the titles of ''sluga'' and later ''sevastokrator''. A member of an old and respectable family, possibly descending from the Serbian dynasty itself, Branko began his royal service in the nearest circle of the ruler. After the elevation of the Serbian state to the Serbian Empire, Empire (1346), Branko received the second-highest court title, ''sevastokrator'', usually given to relatives. He governed the Ohrid region (in Macedonia (region), Macedonia). Branko had three sons and a daughter, of whom Vuk Branković would become an important person in the period of the Fall of the Serbian Empire. Origin and early life Branko's father Mladen (magnate), Mladen ( 1319–26) was a great dignitary that served the Serbian kings Stefan Milutin (r. 1282–1321) and Stefan Dečanski (r. 1321–31). He first he ...
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Atanasije II Gavrilović
Atanasije II Gavrilović ( sr-cyr, Атанасије II Гавриловић; Skopje, late 17th century – Peć, 1752) was Archbishop of Peć and Serbian Patriarch from 1747 to 1752. He was first mentioned in 1741 as the Metropolitan of Skopje. At that time, the throne of Serbian Patriarchate of Peć was contested between the Serbs, who were seen as rebels by the Ottomans, and Phanariote Greeks, who were very much loyal to the authorities. In the last Austro-Turkish War (1737–1739), in which Serbs supported Vienna, a major migration northwards into Habsburg territory was led by Serbian Patriarch Arsenije IV. The Ottomans brought Joanikije III, a Greek, to the throne in Peć. During his days all connections with Serbs in the Habsburg Empire were cut. Thus, the election – an Ottoman approval – of a Serb as the head of the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć delighted all the Serbs. Immediately after his election Atanasije II made a canonical visit to Sarajevo. In 1748 we find ...
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Olga Jančić
Olga Jančić (Олга Јанчић; 1 February 1929, in Bitola – 25 October 2012, in Belgrade) was a Serbian sculptor Sculpture is the branch of the visual arts that operates in three dimensions. Sculpture is the three-dimensional art work which is physically presented in the dimensions of height, width and depth. It is one of the plastic arts. Durable sc .... References Serbian sculptors 2012 deaths 1929 births Serbian women sculptors {{Serbia-sculptor-stub ...
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Siniša Vuković
Siniša ( sr-Cyrl, Синиша) is a South Slavic masculine given name of medieval Serbian origin. It may refer to: * Simeon Uroš "Siniša" (1326–1371), Serbian ruler of Epirus and Thessaly * Siniša Branković (born 1979), Serbian soccer player *Siniša Dobrasinović (born 1977), Montenegrin-born Cypriot football player * Sinişa Dragin (born 1960), Serbian-Romanian film director *Siniša Đurić (born 1976), Bosnian Serb football manager and former player *Siniša Ergotić (born 1968), Croatian long jumper * Siniša Gagula (born 1984), Bosnian football player *Siniša Glavašević (1960–1991), Croatian reporter who was killed in the Battle of Vukovar *Siniša Gogić (born 1963), Serbian and Cypriot football striker *Siniša Janković (born 1978), Serbian football forward *Siniša Kelečević (born 1970), Croatian basketball player * Siniša Kovačević (born 1954), Serbian author and playwright, professor of the Belgrade Academy of Arts *Siniša Linić (born 1982), Croatia ...
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Mladen Srbinović
Mladen Srbinović (Sušica near Gostivar, 29 November 1925 — Belgrade, 12 May 2009) was a Serbian painter, member of the Arts and Sciences academies of Serbia and Macedonia and professor of Belgrade University. Biography Mladen Srbinović was born in 1925 in the village of Sušica near Gostivar in a local Serb family. Srbinovićs moved to Belgrade in 1930 where Mladen finished primary school and high school. He continued his studies at the Art Academy (1947–51) finishing his post-graduate studies in 1953. In the same year he became assistant professor at the Academy, later on becoming a professor and teaching until 1988. His first exhibited his paintings in 1948 and had a solo exhibition in 1952. Later in his career he represented Yugoslavia on many exhibitions abroad. He is one of the founders of the "December Group" (1955). He published two "graphic maps" inspired by the verses of Lorka. Parallel with his painting and graphic art from 1960 Srbinović started working ...
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Ljubica Sokić
Ljubica "Cuca" Sokić (9 December 1914 – 8 January 2009) was a prominent Serbian and Yugoslav painter of the twentieth century. Biography She was born in Bitola, North Macedonia, where her mother Ruža was refugee during the World War I. Her father was Manojlo Sokić, a journalist, who owned defunct Belgrade paper Pravda. She attended the high school in Belgrade, where Zora Petrović was her professor. She was also taught painting by, among others, Beta Vukanović and Ivan Radović. She also studied in Paris from 1936 to 1939, where she attended evening nude classes at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière, and began studying graphics at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Having returned from Paris to Belgrade, she presented her works independently for the first time in 1939 in Belgrade pavilion Cvijeta Zuzorić. She was one of the founders of the art group ''"Desetorica"'' ("The Group of Ten"). She was a professor at the Academy of Visual Arts in Belgrade between 1948–72, where sh ...
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Radomir Reljić
Radomir Reljić ( sr-Cyrl, Радомир Рељић) (1938 - 6 November 2006), was a Serbian painter, a professor of the Faculty of Fine Arts In European academic traditions, fine art is developed primarily for aesthetics or creative expression, distinguishing it from decorative art or applied art, which also has to serve some practical function, such as pottery or most metalwork ... in Belgrade, and a member of SANU. References 1938 births 2006 deaths Members of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts 20th-century Serbian painters Serbian male painters 20th-century Serbian male artists {{serbia-painter-stub ...
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Đorđe Ilić
Đorđe ( sr-Cyrl, Ђорђе; transliterated Djordje) is a Serbian given name, a Serbian variant, derived from Greek ''Georgios'' ('' George'' in English). Other variants include: Đurđe, Đurađ, Đura, Đuro, Georgije. It may refer to: * Đorđe Andrejević Kun (1904–1964), Serbian painter * Đorđe Babalj (born 1981), Serbian association football player * Đorđe Balašević (1953–2021), Serbian and former Yugoslav recording artist and singer-songwriter * Đorđe Bogić (1911–1941), protopresbyter and parish priest in the Serbian Orthodox Church * Đorđe Čotra (born 1984), Serbian association football player * Đorđe Denić (born 1996), Serbian association football player * Djordje Djokovic (Đorđe Đoković, born 1995), Serbian tennis player * Đorđe Ivelja (born 1984), Serbian association football player * Đorđe Jokić (born 1981), Serbian association football player * Đorđe Jovanović (1861–1953), Serbian sculptor * Đorđe Kamber (born 1983), Bosnia ...
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Kosta Bradić
Kosta may refer to: * Kosta, Estonia, a village in Vihula Parish, Lääne-Viru County, Estonia * Kosta, Greece a community in Greece * Kosta, Sweden, a village in Sweden * Coastal Andhra, region in India * Kosta Glasbruk, a glassworks in Sweden * Constantine (name), a shortened form common in Bulgaria and Greece (Kostandino) * Kosta (given name), Serbian masculine given name * Kosta (architectural feature), in Hindu temples See also * * Costa (other) * Costas (other) * Koshta Koshta (also spelt as Koshti) are a Hindu caste found in the Indian states of Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Maharashtra, Gujarat and Andhra Pradesh. Origin Koshta claim to be descendants of Markandeya Rishi.Encyclopaedi ...
, a Hindu caste {{disambig, geo ...
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Jovan Of Kratovo
Jovan the Serb of Kratovo ( sr-cyr, Јован Србин из Кратова; 1526–1583) or Protopop Jovan (Протопоп Јован) was a Serb Orthodox priest and scribe with an opus of six works, of which one is the Velika Remeta Gospel (1580). He was a monk at Hilandar. Life Little is known about his life. He first appears in 1526 when he transcribed a prayer book in which he is desperate about the end of the world coming in near future. Until 1569 he lived in Kratovo, at the time an important town and mining center, where he was a priest (''pop''). After that date we find him in Craiova in Wallachia where in 1580 he signed one Evangelion as “Priest Jovan, a Serb from the town of Kratovo” (''Srbin od mesta Kratova''). In Wallachia he is also mentioned as ''protopop'', "archpriest". Migrations of revered men of church to Wallachia were not uncommon in those days, since there they would find patronage from Christian princes or rich landowners, a strata that did ...
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Petar Popović (architect)
Petar J. Popović (25 May 1873 – 4 February 1945) was a prominent Serbian architect. In addition to notable architectural achievements, Petar Popović made a great contribution to Serbian heraldry and vexillology. He was also a painter. Early life and schooling Popović was born into an old and distinguishable family of priests in the town of Prilep, at the time in Ottoman Empire. His family left Old Serbia (then under the Ottoman Empire) when he was a child and came to the north in Smederevo, where Petar received his primary education. He continued schooling in Belgrade wherein 7th grade he switched from classical to technical high school which he finished with excellent grades. Popović proceeded to study architecture at the Technical Faculty of Velika škola (1892-1896). This is where he got interested in monuments of Serbian medieval art, which he considered of utmost importance for Serbian architecture. Career In 1897 Popović started working in the Ministry of Cons ...
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Josif Mihajlović Jurukovski
Josif ( sr, Јосиф) is a masculine given name, a cognate of Joseph. It may refer to: *Josif Chirila (born 1983), Romanian sprint canoeist who has competed since 2004 *Josif Dorfman (born 1952), Ukrainian-French chess Grandmaster, coach, and chess writer *Josif Marinković (1851–1931), Serbian composer of the nineteenth century *Josif Pančić (1814–1888), Serbian botanist *Josif Rajačić (1785–1861), metropolitan of Sremski Karlovci, Serbian patriarch, administrator of Serbian Vojvodina, baron *Josif Runjanin (1821–1878), Croatian composer of Serbian ethnicity, composed the melody of the Croatian national anthem *Josif Shtokalo (1897–1987), Ukrainian mathematician See also *Joseph (other) Joseph is a masculine given name. Joseph may also refer to: Religion * Joseph (Genesis), an important figure in the Bible's Book of Genesis * Joseph in Islam, an important figure in Islam mentioned in the Qur'an * Saint Joseph, a figure in the ... * Josifović, Serbian ...
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