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  2. Serbian Wikipedia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_Wikipedia

    The Serbian Wikipedia (Serbian: Википедија на српском језику, Vikipedija na srpskom jeziku) is the Serbian-language version of the free online encyclopedia Wikipedia. Created on 16 February 2003, it reached its 100,000th article on 20 November 2009 before getting to another milestone with the 200,000th article on 6 July ...

  3. Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbia

    Serbia is an upper-middle income economy and provides universal health care and free primary and secondary education to its citizens. It is a unitary parliamentary constitutional republic, member of the UN, CoE, OSCE, PfP, BSEC, CEFTA, and is acceding to the WTO.

  4. Serbian language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbian_language

    Serbian is a standardized variety of Serbo-Croatian, [20] [21] a Slavic language (Indo-European), of the South Slavic subgroup. Other standardized forms of Serbo-Croatian are Bosnian, Croatian, and Montenegrin.

  5. Serbs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Serbs

    Older forms of literary Serbian are Church Slavonic of the Serbian recension, which is still used for ecclesiastical purposes, and Slavonic-Serbian—a mixture of Serbian, Church Slavonic and Russian used from the mid-18th century to the first decades of the 19th century. Serbian has active digraphia, using both Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. [122]

  6. History of Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Serbia

    The history of Serbia covers the historical ... On 20 October 1944 the Soviet Red Army liberated Belgrade and by the end of 1944 all Serbia was free from German ...

  7. Economy of Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Serbia

    The economy of Serbia is a service-based upper-middle income economy, with the tertiary sector accounting for two-thirds of total gross domestic product (GDP). The economy functions on the principles of the free market.

  8. Timeline of Serbian history - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Serbian_history

    Most of Serbian culture, including its patriarchy (Metropolitanate of Karlovci), is now "in exile" across the Danube and Sava rivers overlooking Ottoman Serbia to the south. More Serbian cities are granted a Free Royal Status in years to come chiefly by Maria Theresa of Austria: Sombor, Bečkerek, Subotica (Maria-Theresiopolis), etc. 1755

  9. Portal:Serbia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Serbia

    Serbia, officially the Republic of Serbia, is a landlocked country at the crossroads of Southeast and Central Europe, located in the Balkans and the Pannonian Plain.It borders Hungary to the north, Romania to the northeast, Bulgaria to the southeast, North Macedonia to the south, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to the west, and Montenegro to the southwest.