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There is also the Central Library of Serbs in Croatia as part of Prosvjeta, Tesla Bank, Metropolitanate of Zagreb, Ljubljana and all Italy which maintains the Choral Society and Museum. Every year since 2006 there are held days of Serbian culture. Weekly Novosti and monthly magazine Identitet are published in Zagreb.
According to the 2021 census, there were 123,892 ethnic Serbs living in Croatia, 3.20% of the total population. Their number was reduced by more than three-quarters in the aftermath of the 1991–95 War in Croatia as the 1991 pre-war census had reported 581,663 Serbs living in Croatia, 12.2% of the total population.
The Croat National Council is a body of self-government of the Croatian minority in Serbia. [15] On 11 June 2005 the Council adopted the historical coat of arms of Croatia, a checkerboard consisting of 13 red and 12 white fields (the difference with the Croatian coat of arms being the crown on top).
Croatian and Serbian, official in Croatia and Serbia respectively, are mutually intelligible standard varieties of the Serbo-Croatian language. Between the two states, 186,633 Serbs live in Croatia with 57,900 Croats living in Serbia (as of 2011). [1] [2] Croatia has an embassy in Belgrade and a general consulate in Subotica.
Ivo Vojnović (1857–1929), writer, a part of the Serb-Catholic movement in Dubrovnik [3] [4] [full citation needed] [5] [full citation needed] Marko Car (1859–1953), writer, politician and activist, a part of the Serb-Catholic movement in Dubrovnik; Marko Murat (1864–1944), painter, a part of the Serb-Catholic movement in Dubrovnik
The archive collects materials related to the history of Serbs in Croatia to ensure greater security and accessibility of existing materials in one place. [ 2 ] The institution was established in 2006 by the Serb National Council , an elected political, consulting and coordinating body, and cultural and scientific organization SKD Prosvjeta . [ 3 ]
He organised and conducted a professional concert on the 25 February 1871, in Stanković's theatre (the present-day building of the Zagreb Assembly). [2] The orchestra performed a Quodlibet , a style of composition where melodies and motifs from a range of pieces would be combined into a single performance.
The territory of modern-day Croatia is divided between 7 eparchies of the Serbian Orthodox Church. 5 of them have their seat in Croatia, one in Serbia and one in Bosnia and Herzegovina. As of March 2021 the central public Records of Religious Communities in the Republic of Croatia listed 431 " organizational units " of the Serbian Orthodox ...