ŽFK Spartak Subotica
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ŽFK Spartak Subotica
ŽFK Spartak Subotica (Serbian Cyrillic alphabet, Serbian Cyrillic: ЖФК Спартак Суботица) is women's association football, women's football team from Subotica, Serbia. The team has won ten national championships, including nine in a row from 2011 to 2019. It also has appeared in the UEFA Women's Champions League. History In May 1970 employees of the railway company Željezničar established a women's football club SD Željezničar, of the same name in Subotica, which became a member of the sports association Jovan Mikic Spartak. ŽFK Željezničar won the first Prva ženska liga, Yugoslavia women's football league in 1975. The team was later renamed Spartak, and following the break-up of Yugoslavia it played the Serbian League. In 2011, forty years after the club's creation, Spartak won its second championship, and in the next two seasons it won both the championship and the Serbian Women's Cup, national cup. The team couldn't make it past the qualifying round in ...
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Serbian SuperLiga (women)
The Serbian Women's Super League ( / Super Liga Žene) is the top level women's Association football, football league of Serbia. It was founded in 2006. The team with the most championships to date is ŽFK Spartak Subotica with 13 titles. The current champions are ŽFK Crvena zvezda, winning their first title in 2023/24 season. Until 2013/14 the top-level league was called Prva Ženska Liga (First League). For that season the Super Liga was created on top of the Serbian football league system#Women, league system. The second-level league is now the prva liga. Current format Until 2012/13 the league played a double round robin. The winner was the champion of Serbia. From 2013/14 onwards, with only eight teams in the league there are two stages. In the first stage, each team plays the other teams two times for a total of 14 matches. After that, the top four teams play a Championship play-off and the bottom four a relegation play-off (play-out). Matches against the teams from the ...
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Kaela Hansen
Kaela Danielle Mercado Hansen (born April 13, 2000) is a Canadian professional soccer who plays for AFC Toronto in the Northern Super League. Early life Hansen began playing youth soccer at age five with Burnaby Metro Select SC. She later joined Cliff Avenue United FC, Burnaby Girls SC, and Mountain United. She then joined the Whitecaps FC Girls Elite. She was named the Whitecaps FC Youth Player of the Month for July 2016. College career In 2018, Hansen began attending the University of Kansas, where she played for the women's soccer team. In 2019, she won the Big 12 Conference title with the team. She earned Academic All-Big 12 honours four times (2018, 2020, 2021, and 2022) during her time at Kansas. Over her five seasons, she started every match for the team, finishing as the program's all-timer leader in career starts (98) and minutes played (8302). Club career In 2023, Hansen signed with ŽFK Spartak Subotica of the Serbian Women's Super League. On May 14, 2023, she ...
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Elena Cvetković
Elena may refer to: People * Elena (given name) Elena is a popular female given name of Greek origin. The name means "shining light". Nicknames of the name Elena are Lena, Lennie, Ella, Ellie, Nellie, or Nena (less common). Other common variants are Alena (German, Czech, Russian, Belarusian, ..., including a list of people and characters with this name * Raymond Elena (1931-2024), French former professional racing cyclist. * Joan Ignasi Elena (born 1968), Catalan politician * Francine Elena (born 1986), British poet Geography * Elena (town), a town in Veliko Tarnovo Province, Bulgaria ** Elena Municipality * Elena (village), a village in Haskovo Province Film and television * ''Elena'' (2011 film), a 2011 Russian film * ''Elena'' (2012 film), a Brazilian film * ''Elena'' (TV series), a Mexican telenovela * '' Elena of Avalor'', an American TV series * '' Daniele Cortis'', a 1947 Italian film also known as ''Elena'' Music * ''Elena'' (Cavalli), a 1659 opera by Fran ...
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Anastasija Ćirić
Anastasija ( Serbian and Macedonian: Анастасија) is a transliteration of the Greek name Anastasia in Serbian, Macedonian, and Latvian. Its male counterpart is ''Anastasije ( Serbian: Анастасије). It may refer to: * Saint Anastasija (fl. 1166–1196), Serbian Queen * Anastasija Babović (born 2000), Montenegrin handball player * Anastasija Grigorjeva (b. 1990), Latvian wrestler * Anastasija Grišanina (born 1996), Lithuanian rhythmic gymnast * Anastasija Khmelnytska (born 1997), German rhythmic gymnast * Anastasija Kravčenoka (b. 1997), Latvian beach volleyball player * Anastasija Reiberger (b. 1977), Russian-born German pole vaulter * Anastasija Sevastova (b. 1990), Latvian tennis player * Anastasija Zolotic (born 2002), American taekwondo athlete * Anastasia (band) (est. 1990), Macedonian electronic music See also * Anastacia (given name) *Anastasia Anastasia (from ) is a feminine given name of Greek and Slavic origin, derived from the Greek word () ...
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Nađa Uvalin
Nadja is a female name, that is used predominantly throughout the Mediterranean region, and the Arab world. Its origins are in the Arabic languages. The Serbian and Montenegrin spelling is Nađa. Notable people with the name include: * Nadja Abd el Farrag (born 1965), German television personality * Nadja Auermann (born 1971), German model and actress * Nadja Awad (born 1991), Swedish politician * Nadja Becker (born 1978), German actress * Nadja Benaissa (born 1982), German singer, member of No Angels * Nadja Bender (born 1990), Danish fashion model * Nadja Bergknecht, German swimmer * (born 1975), Austrian news presenter * Nadja Brand (born 1975), South African film actor * Nadja Breytenbach (born 1995), Namibian model and beauty pageant titleholder * Nadja Drost, Canadian journalist * Nadja Drygalla (born 1989), German rower * Nadja Durbach, American professor of history * Nađa Đurđevac (born 2002), Montenegrin football player * Nadja Furrer (born 1998), Swiss fo ...
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Anđela Marković
Anđela is a South Slavic feminine given name, cognate to Angela. Notable people with the name include: * Anđela Bulatović (born 1987), Montenegrin handball player * Anđela Frajtović (born 2000), Serbian football player * Anđela Janjušević Anđela Janjušević ( sr-cyr, Анђела Јањушевић; born 18 June 1995) is a Serbian handball player for CS Rapid București (handball), CS Rapid București and the Serbia women's national handball team, Serbian national team. Referen ... (born 1995), Serbian handball player * Anđela Mužinić (born 1992), Croatian table tennis player * Anđela Šešlija (born 1995), Bosnian football player See also * * Anđelo References {{given name Serbian feminine given names Feminine given names Croatian feminine given names ...
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Milica Šarić
Milica ( sr-Cyrl, Милица; pronounced 'Millitsa') is a feminine name popular in Balkan countries. It is a diminutive form of the given name Mila, meaning 'kind', 'dear' or 'sweet'. The name was used for a number of queens and princesses, including Milica of Serbia, wife of Tsar Lazar, who is honored as a saint in the Serbian Orthodox Church. Milica has been the most popular name for girls born in Serbia since 1991, and is overall the most common female given name in the country. The English version of the name is Milicent. The name of Princess Milica of Montenegro was often translated as Milizza in English language publications. Individuals named Milica * Milica of Serbia (1335–1405), Princess of Serbia, wife of Lazar of Serbia * Milica Despina (1485–1554), Princess consort of Wallachia, wife of Neagoe Basarab * Milica of Montenegro (1866–1951), Montenegrin princess * Milica Branković (died 1464), Serbian princess, wife of Leonardo III Tocco * Milica Čubrilo (born ...
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Aleksandra Gajić
Alexandra () is a female given name of Greek origin. It is the first attested form of its variants, including Alexander (, ). Etymologically, the name is a compound of the Greek verb (; meaning 'to defend') and (; GEN , ; meaning 'man'). Thus it may be roughly translated as "defender of man" or "protector of man". The name Alexandra was one of the epithets given to the Greek goddess Hera and as such is usually taken to mean "one who comes to save warriors". The earliest attested form of the name is the Mycenaean Greek ( or //), written in the Linear B syllabic script.Tablet MY V 659 (61). Alexandra and its masculine equivalent, Alexander, are both common names in Greece as well as countries where Germanic, Romance, and Slavic languages are spoken. Variants * Alejandra, Alejandrina (diminutive) (Spanish) * Aleksandra (Александра) ( Albanian, Bulgarian, Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Macedonian, Polish, Russian, Serbo-Croatian) * Alessandra (Italian) * ...
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Biljana Ilić
Biljana () is a settlement east of Dobrovo in the Municipality of Brda in the Littoral region of Slovenia, very close to the border with Italy. Name Biljana was first mentioned in written sources in 1205 as ''Beliana'' (and as ''Villana'' in 1233, ''Billgianis'' in 1270, and ''Bigliana'' in 1480). The oldest transcriptions indicate that the name was originally ''*Běľana'', with the later development of unstressed ''-ě-'' > ''-i-''. The suffix ''-ana'' generally indicates a Romance or pre-Romance origin, but because the name cannot be explained through Romance roots it is assumed that it is Slavic in origin, possibly derived from the plural demonym ''*Běľane'' (literally, 'residents of ''*Belъjь's'' village'). History The lords of Biljana lived in a building known as ''Dorišče'' in the 13th and 14th centuries. Ownership of the building changed frequently over the centuries. During the late 19th century, the national revival movement took hold here; the Lipa Reading and ...
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Milica Gaković
Milica ( sr-Cyrl, Милица; pronounced 'Millitsa') is a feminine name popular in Balkan countries. It is a diminutive form of the given name Mila, meaning 'kind', 'dear' or 'sweet'. The name was used for a number of queens and princesses, including Milica of Serbia, wife of Tsar Lazar, who is honored as a saint in the Serbian Orthodox Church. Milica has been the most popular name for girls born in Serbia since 1991, and is overall the most common female given name in the country. The English version of the name is Milicent. The name of Princess Milica of Montenegro was often translated as Milizza in English language publications. Individuals named Milica * Milica of Serbia (1335–1405), Princess of Serbia, wife of Lazar of Serbia * Milica Despina (1485–1554), Princess consort of Wallachia, wife of Neagoe Basarab * Milica of Montenegro (1866–1951), Montenegrin princess * Milica Branković (died 1464), Serbian princess, wife of Leonardo III Tocco * Milica Čubrilo (born ...
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