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The Palace of Serbia (Serbian: Палата Србије, romanized: Palata Srbije) is a government building currently housing several cabinet level ministries and site for state visits of foreign head of states to Serbia. Building is located in Novi Beograd, Belgrade. [1]
The Novi Dvor (Serbian: Нови двор, lit. "New Palace") is the seat of the President of Serbia. It was a royal residence of the Karađorđević dynasty of Kingdom of Yugoslavia from 1922 to 1934. The palace is located on Andrićev Venac in Belgrade, opposite Stari Dvor (Belgrade City Hall).
"Old Palace") is the city hall of Belgrade, Serbia, housing the office of the Mayor of Belgrade. It was the royal residence of Serbian royal family (the Obrenović and later Karađorđević) from 1884 to 1922. The palace is located on the corner of Kralja Milana and Dragoslava Jovanovića streets, opposite Novi Dvor (seat of the President of ...
Designed by Živojin Nikolić and Nikolay Krasnov, the palace is an example of Serbo-Byzantine Revival architecture. [2]On the ground floor there are: the King's Cabinet, the Golden Salon, the Library, the large Dining Room and the Ceremonial Hall, all furnished in the Renaissance style, and the Blue Salon furnished in the Baroque style.
The Dedinje Royal Compound (Serbian: Дворски комплекс на Дедињу, romanized: Dvorski kompleks na Dedinju) is a complex of former royal residences commissioned by and built with the personal funds of King Alexander I in the Dedinje neighborhood of Belgrade, Serbia, between 1924 and 1937.
In 1924 Petar Kokotović opened a kafana on Tošin Bunar with the prophetic name Novi Beograd. After 1945, Kokotović was president of the local community of Novo Naselje–Bežanija, which later grew into the municipality of Novi Beograd. [15] In 1924 an airport was built in Bežanija, and in 1928 the Rogožerski factory was constructed. In ...
This page was last edited on 24 November 2024, at 17:32 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The entire western side of the promenade is occupied by Novi Dvor (New Palace), the seat of the President of the Republic. Novi Dvor was built between 1913 and 1918 on a project by Stojan Titelbah, as a new palace for King Peter I Karađorđević and it is separated just by a lawn from Stari Dvor (Old Palace), used by the previous monarchs of ...