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Serbian diaspora refers to Serbian emigrant communities in the diaspora. The existence of a numerous diaspora of Serbian nationals is mainly a consequence of either economic or political (coercion or expulsion) reasons. There were different waves of Serb migration, characterized by: [1] Economic emigration (end of 19th–beginning of 20th c.)
Serbian diaspora in Europe (23 C, 19 P) ... Pages in category "Serbian diaspora" The following 44 pages are in this category, out of 44 total.
Serbian Orthodox metropolitan Isaija Đaković, who visited Austrian capital on several occasions since 1690, also died in Vienna, in 1708. [5] During the 18th and 19th century, new communities of ethnic Serbs were developing in major Austrian cities, consisted mainly of merchants, officers and students, who were under the spiritual ...
The names of Croatian students were published without their consent in the pro-government media and, upon leaving Serbia, they were given alcoholic beverages with a note to "send their regards to SOA" by the Serbian border police. [36] [37] The Croatian Prime minister Andrej Plenković has described Vučić's claim as "laughable". [38]
Serb diaspora (Serbian: Српска дијаспора/Srpska dijaspora) refers to the diaspora communities of ethnic Serbs. It is not to be confused with the Serbian diaspora , which refers to migrants , regardless of ethnicity, from Serbia .
Serbian Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom (1 C, 2 P) Pages in category "Serbian diaspora in Europe" The following 19 pages are in this category, out of 19 total.
Cathedral of Saint Sava in Düsseldorf, seat of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Düsseldorf and all of Germany. Serbs in Germany (Serbian: Срби у Немачкој, romanized: Srbi u Nemačkoj; German: Serben in Deutschland) refers to persons living in Germany who have total or partial Serbian ancestry.
In World War I, there were several camps in Minsk, Gomel and other places where Serbian volunteers gathered. It is known that around three hundred Serbs from Bačka and Baranja fought in Belarus as part of fifty partisan units in World War II, and this is evidenced by the lists from the former Party Museum in Minsk.