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As of 2016, it has 3.20% market share in Serbia. [4] As of 2018, its retail chain contains a total of over 180 stores. [5] Main fields of business of Univerexport company are wholesale, supermarkets, and minimarkets. Univerexport retail chain is mainly located in northern Serbia, province of Vojvodina. Univerexport was founded on 25 September 1990.
Name Stores First store in Serbia Parent; BENU: 451 [53]: 2010: Phoenix Pharmahandel: Lilly: 234 [54]: 2006: Lilly drogerie DM: 132 [55]: 2004: DM: Jasmin: 27 [56 ...
As of 2022–23 school year, there are 248,508 enrolled students at universities in Serbia, [1] of whom 177,180 (84.5%) study at public universities and 32,441 (15.5%) at private universities. Also, there are 38,887 enrolled students at independent faculties and public and private colleges in Serbia.
University of Belgrade in 1890. The University of Belgrade was established in 1808 as the Belgrade Higher School (Serbian: Београдска Велика школа, romanized: Beogradska Velika škola; a Grandes écoles) by Dositej Obradović, Serbian key figure in the Age of Enlightenment.
The Faculty of Fine Arts (Serbian: Факултет ликовних уметности, romanized: Fakultet likovnih umetnosti) is a higher education institution that was established in 1937 by Toma Rosandić, Milo Milunović and Petar Dobrović as the Academy of Fine Arts, and became a faculty and acquired its current name in 1973. [4]
School of Electrical engineering was the first institution in South-east Europe that started nuclear engineering program. After the departments of telecommunications and energy, third department was technical physics department (also known as applied or engineering physics) had two scientific groups, group for Nuclear Technoloy and group for Materials.
The original Latin word universitas refers in general to "a number of persons associated into one body, a society, company, community, guild, corporation, etc". [13] As urban town life and medieval guilds developed, specialized associations of students and teachers with collective legal rights (these rights were usually guaranteed by charters issued by princes, prelates, or their towns) became ...
Bulevar kralja Aleksandra (Serbian Cyrillic: Булевар краља Александра, "King Alexander Boulevard") is the longest street entirely within the urban limits of Serbian capital Belgrade, with length of 7.5 kilometers. [1]