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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.
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.
Belgrade is the financial centre of Serbia and Southeast Europe, with a total of 17 × 10 ^ 6 m 2 (180 × 10 ^ 6 sq ft) of office space. [155] It is also home to the country's Central Bank . 750,550 people are employed (July 2020) [ 156 ] in 120,286 companies, [ 157 ] 76,307 enterprises and 50,000 shops.
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 Technology and group for Materials.
Robne kuće Beograd company was founded in 1965 and soon became the largest supermarket chain in former SFR Yugoslavia, and third largest chain in Europe. [3] [4] In 1970, it opened a store in the capital city of Belgrade that opened 24 hours a day, the first such store in SFR Yugoslavia. [5]
The Faculty of Dramatic Arts (Serbian: Факултет драмских уметности, romanized: Fakultet dramskih umetnosti; abbreviated FDU) is a constituent institution of the University of Arts in Belgrade which focuses on education and research in the fields of film, theatre, dramaturgy, culture, radio, acting and medias.
Apart from the one tall, whose price in few days grew to 230 million dinars (1.9 million euros), 30 additional flagmasts, each 30 m (98 ft) high, are planned. Three of them will be placed on ten entry points into the city. They will cost additional 134 million dinars (1.1 million euros), so 31 flagmasts will cost the city almost 3 million euros.
[10] [11] [12] Also, in 1821, the state government decided to put the food trade in order and to establish the quantity and quality of the goods imported to the city. Part of the project was introduction of the excise on the goods (in Serbian called trošarina ) and setting of a series of excise check points on the roads leading to the city.