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Jevto Dedijer (Serbian Cyrillic: Јевто Дедијер; 15 August 1880 – 24 December 1918) was a Serb writer and geographer from the Maleševci clan who was influential in the formation of the Serb Academy.
Mother tongue (Serbian, Hungarian, Albanian, etc.) Mathematics: Serbian as a second language: English language: Fine art: Music: Physical Education: Compulsory Elective (either Religious education or Civics) The World Around Us: Nature and Society Foreign language (usually German, French, Russian, Spanish or Italian) History: Biology: Geography ...
Language: Hungarian, Serbian: Hours in school day: 8 averagely (varies from 7 to 9, 45-minute lectures) Campus: Urban: Colour(s) Red, Blue and White Accreditation: Ministry of Education of Hungary: Song: Hymn to Saint Sava: Website: www.nikola-tesla.hu
The Three-finger salute, also called the "Serb salute", is a popular expression for ethnic Serbs and Serbia, originally expressing Serbian Orthodoxy and today simply being a symbol for ethnic Serbs and the Serbian nation, made by extending the thumb, index, and middle fingers of one or both hands.
The 100 most prominent Serbs (Serbian: 100 најзнаменитијих Срба, romanized: 100 najznamenitijih Srba) is a book containing the biographies of the hundred most important Serbs [2] as compiled by a committee of academicians at the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts.
Pretty Village, Pretty Flame (Serbian: Лепа села лепо горе / Lepa sela lepo gore, literally "Pretty villages burn nicely") is a 1996 Serbian film directed by Srđan Dragojević with a screenplay based on a book written by Vanja Bulić.
The “All-Serb Assembly” with a slogan “One People, One Gathering” included thousands of Bosnian Serbs and those who traveled to the Serbian capital, Belgrade, from neighboring countries ...
In 1838, a wealthy Serb landowner, Sava Tekelija, left the Matica a legacy to support Serbian students at the University of Pest and a college named after him, Tekelijanum (Tokolyanum in Hungarian). The Hungarian authorities were suspicious of the Matica and even suspended its activities in 1835–1836 for alleged pan-Slavism, but they resisted ...