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Additionally, plates have vertically orientated two-letter initials in small letters on the left side (after blue stripe) indicating the city in which they were issued (BG for Belgrade) and two numbers on the right side indicating the year for which they are valid (e.g., 12 for 2012).
'U' is currently used for registration plates for US Forces in Portugal (Lajes, Azores). UZ Uzbekistan: 1992 SU Formerly part of the Soviet Union. Coincides with ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 code. V Vatican City: 1931 CV (Italian: Città del Vaticano) is used as a prefix on the licence plate number itself
The National Bank kept its head office in the National Bank Building, Belgrade, originally erected for the National Bank of the Kingdom of Serbia in 1890, and expanded it in 1922-1925 on designs by the original architect, Konstantin Jovanović. In 1920, it had taken over a number of former branches of the Austro-Hungarian Bank.
A Yugoslav plate from Sarajevo. Car number plates in SFR Yugoslavia consisted of a two-letter district code that showed the place where the car carrying them was registered, followed by a red star and two groups of digits that could contain two or three characters, for example: BG 12-34, BG 123-45 or BG 123-456.
The bank was founded on 1 December 1970 in Belgrade, SFR Yugoslavia. [1] On 6 May 1992, it was transformed into joint-stock company , with Government of Serbia being its majority owner. [ 1 ] In November 2002, Komercijalna banka established Komercijalna banka Budva , operating in Montenegro . [ 3 ]
On 12 February 1991, Société Générale Yugoslav Bank was founded as the first bank with foreign capital to be established in former FR Yugoslavia. The bank was a joint venture between Paris-based Société Générale (75%), and the now defunct Beogradska banka (20%) and Banque Franco-Yougoslave (5%). At first, it was established as a unit of ...
The National Bank building in Belgrade (Serbian: Зграда Народне банке у Београду, romanized: Zgrada Narodne Banke u Beogradu) is a historically significant building located in Belgrade, Serbia, at 12 King Petar St. [1] As of 2023, it hosted a visitor center of the National Bank of Serbia.
Poštanska štedionica (meaning "Post's savings service") was founded on 26 June 1921 in Palilula, Belgrade when the law of postal savings service was implemented. By 1926 it had become the main financial savings institution in Kingdom of Yugoslavia , with branches in all postal offices in the entire county.