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Field uniforms of the Royal Serbian Army, 1914. Parade uniforms of the Royal Serbian Army, 1914. Military ranks of the Royal Serbian Army. The Army of the Kingdom of Serbia (Serbian Cyrillic: Војска Краљевине Србије, romanized: Vojska Kraljevine Srbije), known in English as the Royal Serbian Army, was the army of the Kingdom of Serbia that existed between 1882 and 1918 ...
The order of battle of the Serbian Army in the First Balkan War is a list of the Serbian units that fought the major campaigns against the Ottoman army from October 1912 to May 1913. [ 1 ] Apart from the infantry divisions of the Serbian army, one Bulgarian infantry division was also part of it.
This page was last edited on 21 November 2024, at 11:05 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Divisions and brigades Regiments Drina division I ban 5. inf.reg. I ban; 6. inf.reg. I ban; 17. inf.reg. I ban; 3. supernumerary inf.reg. I ban
Serbia: Sniper rifle: Standard sniper rifle. [7] Zastava M07 Serbia: Sniper rifle: Future standard sniper rifle. [8] [9] Sako TRG Finland: Sniper rifle: Sniper rifle for the special forces units (72nd Brigade for Special Operations and 63rd Parachute Brigade). [10] [11] Zastava M93 Serbia: Anti-materiel rifle: Standard anti-materiel rifle. [1 ...
When the fourth, combined German, Austro-Hungarian, and Bulgarian invasion force attacked Serbia in 1915, the First Army was tasked with defence of the western border of Serbia (along the river Drina). It faced mostly units of Austro-Hungarian Third Army and was mostly under less pressure then other Serbian units facing Germans or Bulgarians.
The modern Serbian military dates back to the Serbian revolution which started in 1804 with the First Serbian Uprising against the Ottoman occupation of Serbia.The victories in the battles of Ivankovac (1805), Mišar (August 1806), Deligrad (December 1806) and Belgrade (November–December 1806), led to the establishment of the Principality of Serbia in 1817.
The Bulgarian First Army first made quick progress as the Serbs had moved troops north and the border units were of "low quality" but was stopped by the Serbian Second Army which made the German general staff request reinforcements, resulting in the German Alpine Corps brought in from the French front, as well as the Austro-Hungarian 10th ...