Serbia

Author: www.NiNa.Az
Feb 04, 2025 / 13:48

Serbia officially the Republic of Serbia is a landlocked country at the crossroads of Southeast and Central Europe locat

Serbia
Serbia
Serbia

Serbia, officially the Republic of Serbia, is a landlocked country at the crossroads of Southeast and Central Europe, located in the Balkans and the Pannonian Plain. It borders Hungary to the north, Romania to the northeast, Bulgaria to the southeast, North Macedonia to the south, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to the west, and Montenegro to the southwest. Serbia claims a border with Albania through the disputed territory of Kosovo. Serbia has about 6.6 million inhabitants, excluding Kosovo. Its capital Belgrade is also the largest city.

Republic of Serbia
Република Србија,
Republika Srbija
 (Serbian)
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Flag
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Coat of arms
Anthem: Боже правде
Bože pravde
(English: "God of Justice")
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Location of Serbia (green) and the claimed but uncontrolled territory of Kosovo (light green) in Europe (dark grey)
Capital
and largest city
Belgrade
44°48′N 20°28′E / 44.800°N 20.467°E / 44.800; 20.467
Official languagesSerbian
Ethnic groups
(2022; excluding Kosovo)
  • 84.4% Serbs
  • 2.6% Hungarians
  • 2.2% Bosniaks
  • 1.2% Roma
  • 9.6% other / unanswered
Religion
(2022; excluding Kosovo)
    • 86.6% Christianity
      • 81.1% Serbian Orthodoxy
      • 3.9% Catholicism
      • 1.6% other Christian
  • 4.2% Islam
  • 1.1% no religion
  • 8.0% other / unanswered
Demonym(s)Serbian
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary republic
• President
Aleksandar Vučić
• Prime Minister
Miloš Vučević (Caretaker)
• President of the National Assembly
Ana Brnabić
LegislatureNational Assembly
Establishment history
• Principality
780
• Kingdom
1217
• Empire
1346
• Ottoman conquest
1459–1804
• Serbian Revolution
1804–1835
• Principality of Serbia
1815
• Independence recognized
13 July 1878
• Kingdom of Serbia
18 March 1882
• Yugoslavia
1 December 1918
• Serbia and Montenegro
27 April 1992
• Independence restored
5 June 2006
Area
• Total
88,499 km2 (34,170 sq mi) (111th)
• Excluding Kosovo
77,612 km2 (29,966 sq mi)
Population
• January 2024 estimate
image 6,605,168 (excluding Kosovo) (108th)
• 2022 census
image 6,647,003 (excluding Kosovo) (107th)
• Density
85/km2 (220.1/sq mi) (130th)
GDP (PPP)2024 estimate
• Total
image $191.561 billion (78th)
• Per capita
image $29,038 (67th)
GDP (nominal)2024 estimate
• Total
image $82.550 billion (75th)
• Per capita
image $12,513 (80th)
Gini (2023)image 31.7
medium inequality
HDI (2022)image 0.805
very high (65th)
CurrencySerbian dinar (RSD)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
• Summer (DST)
UTC+2 (CEST)
Calling code+381
ISO 3166 codeRS
Internet TLD
  • .rs
  • .срб

Continuously inhabited since the Paleolithic Age, the territory of modern-day Serbia faced Slavic migrations in the 6th century. Several regional states were founded in the early Middle Ages and were at times recognised as tributaries to the Byzantine, Frankish and Hungarian kingdoms. The Serbian Kingdom obtained recognition by the Holy See and Constantinople in 1217, reaching its territorial apex in 1346 as the Serbian Empire. By the mid-16th century, the Ottomans annexed the entirety of modern-day Serbia; their rule was at times interrupted by the Habsburg Empire, which began expanding towards Central Serbia from the end of the 17th century while maintaining a foothold in Vojvodina. In the early 19th century, the Serbian Revolution established the nation-state as the region's first constitutional monarchy, which subsequently expanded its territory. In 1918, in the aftermath of World War I, the Kingdom of Serbia united with the former Habsburg crownland of Vojvodina; later in the same year it joined with other South Slavic nations in the foundation of Yugoslavia, which existed in various political formations until the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s. During the breakup of Yugoslavia, Serbia formed a union with Montenegro, which was peacefully dissolved in 2006, restoring Serbia's independence as a sovereign state. In 2008, representatives of the Assembly of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence, with mixed responses from the international community while Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory.

Serbia is an upper-middle income economy and provides universal health care and free primary and secondary education to its citizens. It is a unitary parliamentary constitutional republic, member of the UN, CoE, OSCE, PfP, BSEC, CEFTA, and is acceding to the WTO. Since 2014, the country has been negotiating its EU accession, with the possibility of joining the European Union by 2030. Serbia formally adheres to the policy of military neutrality.

Etymology

The origin of the name Serbia is unclear. Historically, authors have mentioned the Serbs (Serbian: Srbi / Срби) and the Sorbs of Eastern Germany (Upper Sorbian: Serbja; Lower Sorbian: Serby) in a variety of ways: Cervetiis (Servetiis), gentis (S)urbiorum, Suurbi, Sorabi, Soraborum, Sorabos, Surpe, Sorabici, Sorabiet, Sarbin, Swrbjn, Servians, Sorbi, Sirbia, Sribia, Zirbia, Zribia, Suurbelant, Surbia, Serbulia / Sorbulia among others. These authors used these names to refer to Serbs and Sorbs in areas where their historical and current presence is not disputable (notably in the Balkans and Lusatia). However, there are also sources that have used similar names in other parts of the world (most notably in the Asiatic Sarmatia in the Caucasus).

There exist two prevailing theories about the origin of the ethnonym *Sŕbъ (plur. *Sŕby), one from a Proto-Slavic language with an appellative meaning of a "family kinship" and "alliance", while another from an Iranian-Sarmatian language with various meanings. In his work, De Administrando Imperio, Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus suggests that the Serbs originated from White Serbia near Francia.

From 1815 to 1882, the official name for Serbia was the Principality of Serbia. From 1882 to 1918, it was renamed to the Kingdom of Serbia, later from 1945 to 1963, the official name for Serbia was the People's Republic of Serbia. This was again renamed the Socialist Republic of Serbia from 1963 to 1990. Since 1990, the official name of the country has been the Republic of Serbia.

History

Prehistory and antiquity

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Vinča culture figurine, 4000–4500 BC

Archaeological evidence of Paleolithic settlements on the territory of present-day Serbia is scarce. A fragment of a hominid jaw found in Sićevo (Mala Balanica) is believed to be up to 525,000–397,000 years old.

Approximately 6,500 BC, during the Neolithic, the Starčevo and Vinča cultures existed in the region of modern-day Belgrade. They dominated much of Southeast Europe as well as parts of Central Europe and Anatolia. Several important archaeological sites from this era, including Lepenski Vir and Vinča-Belo Brdo, still exist near the Danube.

During the Iron Age, local tribes of Triballi, Dardani, and Autariatae were encountered by the Ancient Greeks during their cultural and political expansion into the region, from the 5th up to the 2nd century BC. The Celtic tribe of Scordisci settled throughout the area in the 3rd century BC. It formed a tribal state, building several fortifications, including their capital at Singidunum (present-day Belgrade) and Naissos (present-day Niš).

The Romans conquered much of the territory in the 2nd century BC. In 167 BC, the Roman province of Illyricum was established; the remainder was conquered around 75 BC, forming the Roman province of Moesia Superior; the modern-day Srem region was conquered in 9 BC; and Bačka and Banat in 106 AD after the Dacian Wars. As a result of this, contemporary Serbia extends fully or partially over several former Roman provinces, including Moesia, Pannonia, Praevalitana, Dalmatia, Dacia, and Macedonia. Seventeen Roman Emperors were born in the area of modern-day Serbia, second only to contemporary Italy. The most famous of these was Constantine the Great, the first Christian Emperor, who issued an edict ordering religious tolerance throughout the Empire.

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Remnants of the Felix Romuliana Imperial Palace, 298 AD, a UNESCO World Heritage Site; Some historians believe as many as 18 Roman emperors were born in modern-day Serbia

When the Roman Empire was divided in 395, most of Serbia remained under the Byzantine Empire, and its northwestern parts were included in the Western Roman Empire. By the 6th century, South Slavs migrated into the Byzantine territory in large numbers. They merged with the local Romanised population that was gradually assimilated.

Middle Ages

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The Coronation of the tsar Stefan Dušan, known as Dušan the Mighty, in Skopje, as Emperor of Serbs and Greeks in 1346

White Serbs, an early Slavic tribe from White Serbia eventually settled in an area between the Sava river and the Dinaric Alps. By the beginning of the 9th century, Serbia achieved a level of statehood.Christianization of Serbia was a gradual process, finalized by the middle of the 9th century. In the mid-10th-century, the Serbian state experienced a fall. During the 11th and 12th century, Serbian state frequently fought with the neighbouring Byzantine Empire. Between 1166 and 1371, Serbia was ruled by the Nemanjić dynasty, under whom the state was elevated to a kingdom in 1217, and an empire in 1346, under Stefan Dušan. The Serbian Orthodox Church was organized as an autocephalous archbishopric in 1219, through the effort of Sava, the country's patron saint, and in 1346 it was raised to the Patriarchate. Monuments of the Nemanjić period survive in many monasteries (several being World Heritage sites) and fortifications.

During these centuries the Serbian state (and influence) expanded significantly. The northern part (modern Vojvodina), was ruled by the Kingdom of Hungary. The period after 1371, known as the Fall of the Serbian Empire saw the once-powerful state fragmented into several principalities, culminating in the Battle of Kosovo (1389) against the rising Ottoman Empire. By the end of the 14th century, the Turks had conquered and ruled the territories south of the Šar Mountains. The political center of Serbia shifted northwards, when the capital of the newly established Serbian Despotate was transferred to Belgrade in 1403, before moving to Smederevo in 1430. The Despotate was then under the double vassalage of Hungary and the Ottoman Empire. The fall of Smederevo on 20 June 1459, which marked the full conquest of the Serbian Despotate by the Ottomans, also symbolically signified the end of the Serbian state.

Ottoman and Habsburg rule

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The Battle of Kosovo (1389) is particularly important to Serbian history, tradition and national identity.

In all Serbian lands conquered by the Ottomans, the native nobility was eliminated and the peasantry was enserfed to Ottoman rulers, while much of the clergy fled or were confined to the isolated monasteries. Under the Ottoman system, Serbs and Christians were considered an inferior class and subjected to heavy taxes, and a portion of the Serbian population experienced Islamization. Many Serbs were recruited during the devshirme system, a form of slavery, in which boys from Balkan Christian families were forcibly converted to Islam and trained for infantry units of the Ottoman army known as the Janissaries. The Serbian Patriarchate of Peć was extinguished in 1463, but reestablished in 1557, providing for limited continuation of Serbian cultural traditions within the Ottoman Empire, under the Millet system.

After the loss of statehood to the Ottoman Empire, Serbian resistance continued in northern regions (modern Vojvodina), under titular despots (until 1537), and popular leaders like Jovan Nenad (1526–1527). From 1521 to 1552, Ottomans conquered Belgrade and regions of Syrmia, Bačka, and Banat. Wars and rebellions constantly challenged Ottoman rule. One of the most significant was the Banat Uprising in 1594 and 1595, which was part of the Long War (1593–1606) between the Habsburgs and the Ottomans. The area of modern Vojvodina endured a century-long Ottoman occupation before being ceded to the Habsburg monarchy, partially by the Treaty of Karlovci (1699), and fully by the Treaty of Požarevac (1718).

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Migration of the Serbs, by Paja Jovanović (c. 1896), depicting the Great Migration of 1690, led by the patriarch Arsenije III Crnojević

During the Habsburg-Ottoman war (1683–1699), much of Serbia switched from Ottoman rule to Habsburg control from 1688 to 1690. However, the Ottoman army reconquered a large part of Serbia in the winter of 1689/1690, leading to a brutal massacre of the civilian population by uncontrolled Albanian and Tatar units. As a result of the persecutions, several tens of thousands of Serbs, led by the patriarch, Arsenije III Crnojević, fled northwards to settle in Hungary, an event known as the Great Migration of 1690. In August 1690, following several petitions, the Emperor Leopold I formally granted Serbs from the Habsburg monarchy a first set of "privileges", primarily to guarantee them freedom of religion. As a consequence, the ecclesiastical centre of the Serbs also moved northwards, to the Metropolitanate of Karlovci, and the Serbian Patriarchate of Peć was once-again abolished by the Ottomans in 1766.

In 1718–39, the Habsburg monarchy occupied much of Central Serbia and established the Kingdom of Serbia as crownland. Those gains were lost by the Treaty of Belgrade in 1739, when the Ottomans retook the region. Apart from territory of modern-day Vojvodina which remained under the Habsburg Empire, central regions of Serbia were occupied once again by the Habsburgs in 1788–1792.

Revolution and independence

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Serbian Revolution, led by Karađorđe Petrović and Miloš Obrenović, marked the foundation of modern Serbia.

The Serbian Revolution for independence from the Ottoman Empire lasted eleven years, from 1804 until 1815. During the First Serbian Uprising (1804–1813), led by vožd Karađorđe Petrović, Serbia was independent for almost a decade before the Ottoman army was able to reoccupy the country. The Second Serbian Uprising began in 1815, led by Miloš Obrenović; it ended with a compromise between Serbian revolutionaries and Ottoman authorities. Serbia was one of the first nations in the Balkans to abolish feudalism. The Akkerman Convention in 1826, the Treaty of Adrianople in 1829 and finally, the Hatt-i Sharif, recognised the suzerainty of Serbia. The First Serbian Constitution was adopted on 15 February 1835, making the country one of the first to adopt a democratic constitution in Europe. 15 February is now commemorated as Statehood Day, a public holiday.

Following the clashes between the Ottoman army and Serbs in Belgrade in 1862, and under pressure from the Great Powers, by 1867 the last Turkish soldiers left the Principality, making the country de facto independent. By enacting a new constitution in 1869, without consulting the Porte, Serbian diplomats confirmed the de facto independence of the country. In 1876, Serbia declared war on the Ottoman Empire, siding with the ongoing Christian uprisings in Bosnia-Herzegovina and Bulgaria.

The formal independence of the country was internationally recognised at the Congress of Berlin in 1878, which ended the Russo-Turkish War; this treaty, however, prohibited Serbia from uniting with other Serbian regions by placing Bosnia and Herzegovina under Austro-Hungarian occupation, alongside the occupation of the region of Raška. From 1815 to 1903, the principality was ruled by the House of Obrenović, save for the rule of Prince Aleksandar Karađorđević between 1842 and 1858. In 1882, Principality of Serbia became the Kingdom of Serbia, ruled by King Milan I. The House of Karađorđević, descendants of the revolutionary leader Karađorđe Petrović, assumed power in 1903 following the May Overthrow. The 1848 revolution in Austria led to the establishment of the autonomous territory of Serbian Vojvodina; by 1849, the region was transformed into the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar.

Balkan Wars and World War I

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King Peter I of Serbia led the nation during the Great Serbian Retreat in 1915. Serbia lost about 850,000 people, a quarter of its pre-war population.

In the First Balkan War in 1912, the Balkan League defeated the Ottoman Empire and captured its European territories, which enabled territorial expansion of the Kingdom of Serbia into regions of Raška, Kosovo, Metohija, and Vardarian Macedonia. The Second Balkan War soon ensued when Bulgaria turned on its former allies, but was defeated, resulting in the Treaty of Bucharest. In two years, Serbia enlarged its territory by 80% and its population by 50%, it also suffered high casualties on the eve of World War I, with more than 36,000 dead. Austria-Hungary became wary of the rising regional power on its borders and its potential to become an anchor for unification of Serbs and other South Slavs, and the relationship between the two countries became tense.

The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria on 28 June 1914 in Sarajevo by Gavrilo Princip, a member of the Young Bosnia organisation, led to Austria-Hungary declaring war on Serbia, on 28 July 1914, setting off World War I.

Serbia won the first major battles of the war, including the Battle of Cer, and the Battle of Kolubara. Despite initial success, it was eventually overpowered by the Central Powers in 1915 and Austro-Hungarian occupation of Serbia followed. Most of its army and some people retreated to Greece and Corfu, suffering immense losses on the way. After the Central Powers' military situation on other fronts worsened, the remains of the Serb army returned east and led a final breakthrough through enemy lines on 15 September 1918, liberating Serbia and defeating Bulgaria and Austria-Hungary. Serbia, with its campaign, was a major Balkan Entente Power which contributed significantly to the Allied victory in the Balkans in November 1918, especially by helping France force Bulgaria's capitulation. Serbia's casualties accounted for 8% of the total Entente military deaths; 58% (243,600) soldiers of the Serbian army perished in the war. The total number of casualties is placed around 700,000, more than 16% of Serbia's prewar size, and a majority (57%) of its overall male population. Serbia suffered the biggest casualty rate in World War I.

Kingdom of Yugoslavia

The Corfu Declaration was a formal agreement between the government-in-exile of the Kingdom of Serbia and the Yugoslav Committee (anti-Habsburg South Slav émigrés) that pledged to unify Kingdom of Serbia and Kingdom of Montenegro with Austria-Hungary's South Slav autonomous crown lands: Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, Kingdom of Dalmatia, Slovenia, Vojvodina (then part of the Kingdom of Hungary) and Bosnia and Herzegovina in a post-war Yugoslav state. It was signed on 20 July 1917 on Corfu.

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The Great People's Assembly of Serbs, Bunjevci and other Slavs in Banat, Bačka and Baranja, the Serbian Crown Lands in Austria-Hungary, (today's Vojvodina) declared unification with the Kingdom of Serbia on 25 November 1918.

As the Austro-Hungarian Empire collapsed, the territory of Syrmia united with Serbia on 24 November 1918. Just a day later, the Great People's Assembly of Serbs, Bunjevci and other Slavs in Banat, Bačka and Baranja declared the unification of these regions (Banat, Bačka, and Baranja) with Serbia.

On 26 November 1918, the Podgorica Assembly deposed the House of Petrović-Njegoš and united Montenegro with Serbia. On 1 December 1918, in Belgrade, Serbian Prince Regent Alexander Karađorđević proclaimed the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, under King Peter I of Serbia. King Peter was succeeded by his son, Alexander, in August 1921. Serb centralists and Croat autonomists clashed in the parliament, and most governments were fragile and short-lived. Nikola Pašić, a conservative prime minister, headed or dominated most governments until his death. King Alexander established a dictatorship in 1929 with the aim of establishing the Yugoslav ideology and single Yugoslav nation, changed the name of the country to Yugoslavia. The effect of Alexander's dictatorship was to further alienate the non-Serbs living in Yugoslavia from the idea of unity.

Alexander was assassinated in Marseille, during an official visit in 1934 by Vlado Chernozemski, member of the IMRO. Alexander was succeeded by his eleven-year-old son Peter II. In August 1939 the Cvetković–Maček Agreement established an autonomous Banate of Croatia as a solution to Croatian concerns.

World War II

In 1941, in spite of Yugoslav attempts to remain neutral, the Axis powers invaded Yugoslavia. The territory of modern Serbia was divided between Hungary, Bulgaria, the Independent State of Croatia, Greater Albania and Montenegro, while the remainder was placed under the military administration of Nazi Germany, with Serbian puppet governments led by Milan Aćimović and Milan Nedić assisted by Dimitrije Ljotić's fascist organization Yugoslav National Movement (Zbor).

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A monument commemorating the victims of the Nazi German established Sajmište concentration camp, a part of the Holocaust in German-occupied Serbia and Genocide of Serbs

The Yugoslav territory was the scene of a civil war between royalist Chetniks commanded by Draža Mihailović and communist partisans commanded by Josip Broz Tito. Axis auxiliary units of the Serbian Volunteer Corps and the Serbian State Guard fought against both of these forces. The siege of Kraljevo was a major battle of the uprising in Serbia, led by Chetnik forces against the Nazis. Several days after the battle began the German forces committed a massacre of approximately 2,000 civilians in an event known as the Kraljevo massacre, in a reprisal for the attack.

Draginac and Loznica massacre of 2,950 villagers in Western Serbia in 1941 was the first large execution of civilians in occupied Serbia by Germans, with Kragujevac massacre and Novi Sad Raid of Jews and Serbs by Hungarian fascists being the most notorious, with over 3,000 victims in each case. After one year of occupation, around 16,000 Serbian Jews were murdered in the area, or around 90% of its pre-war Jewish population during The Holocaust in Serbia. Many concentration camps were established across the area. Banjica concentration camp was the largest concentration camp and jointly run by the German army and Nedić's regime, with primary victims being Serbian Jews, Roma, and Serb political prisoners.

Hundreds of thousands of ethnic Serbs fled the Axis puppet state known as the Independent State of Croatia and sought refuge in German-occupied Serbia, seeking to escape the large-scale persecution and Genocide of Serbs, Jews, and Roma being committed by the Ustaše regime. The number of Serb victims was approximately 300,000 to 350,000. According to Tito himself, Serbs made up the vast majority of anti-fascist fighters and Yugoslav Partisans for the whole course of World War II.

The Republic of Užice was a short-lived liberated territory established by the Partisans and the first liberated territory in World War II Europe, organised as a military mini-state that existed in the autumn of 1941 in the west of occupied Serbia. By late 1944, the Belgrade Offensive swung in favour of the partisans in the civil war; the partisans subsequently gained control of Yugoslavia. Following the Belgrade Offensive, the Syrmian Front was the last major military action of World War II in Serbia. A study by Vladimir Žerjavić estimates total war-related deaths in Yugoslavia at 1,027,000, including 273,000 in Serbia.

Socialist Yugoslavia

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The principle of non-alignment was the core of Yugoslav and later Serbian diplomacy. The First Non-Aligned Movement Summit Conference took place in Belgrade in September 1961.

The victory of the Communist Partisans resulted in the abolition of the monarchy and a subsequent constitutional referendum. A one-party state was soon established in Yugoslavia by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia. It is claimed between 60,000 and 70,000 people died in Serbia during the 1944–45 communist purge. Serbia became a constituent republic within the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia known as the People's Republic of Serbia, and had a republic-branch of the federal communist party, the League of Communists of Serbia. Serbia's most powerful and influential politician in Tito-era Yugoslavia was Aleksandar Ranković, one of the "big four" Yugoslav leaders. Ranković was later removed from the office because of the disagreements regarding Kosovo's nomenklatura and the unity of Serbia. Ranković's dismissal was highly unpopular among Serbs. Pro-decentralisation reformers in Yugoslavia succeeded in the late 1960s in attaining substantial decentralisation of powers, creating substantial autonomy in Kosovo and Vojvodina, and recognising a distinctive "Muslim" nationality. As a result of these reforms, there was a massive overhaul of Kosovo's nomenklatura and police, that shifted from being Serb-dominated to ethnic Albanian-dominated through firing Serbs on a large scale. Further concessions were made to the ethnic Albanians of Kosovo in response to unrest, including the creation of the University of Pristina as an Albanian language institution. These changes created widespread fear among Serbs of being treated as second-class citizens.

Belgrade, the capital of FPR Yugoslavia and PR Serbia, hosted the first Non-Aligned Movement Summit in September 1961, as well as the first major gathering of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) with the aim of implementing the Helsinki Accords from October 1977 to March 1978. The 1972 smallpox outbreak in SAP Kosovo and other parts of SR Serbia was the last major outbreak of smallpox in Europe since World War II.

Breakup of Yugoslavia and political transition

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Slobodan Milošević was a prominent political figure in the former Yugoslavia. His leadership was controversial, with critics stating his government continued to be authoritarian despite constitutional changes.
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The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and territories of Serb breakaway states Republika Srpska and Republika Srpska Krajina during the Yugoslav wars

In 1989, Slobodan Milošević rose to power in Serbia. Milošević promised a reduction of powers for the autonomous provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina, where his allies subsequently took over power, during the Anti-bureaucratic revolution. This ignited tensions between the communist leadership of the other republics of Yugoslavia and awoke ethnic nationalism across Yugoslavia that eventually resulted in its breakup, with Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Macedonia declaring independence during 1991 and 1992.[better source needed] Serbia and Montenegro remained together as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY). However, according to the Badinter Commission, the country was not legally considered a continuation of the former SFRY, but a new state.

Fueled by ethnic tensions, the Yugoslav Wars (1991–2001) erupted, with the most severe conflicts taking place in Croatia and Bosnia, where the large ethnic Serb communities opposed independence from Yugoslavia. The FRY remained outside the conflicts, but provided logistic, military and financial support to Serb forces in the wars. In response, the UN imposed sanctions against Yugoslavia which led to political isolation and the collapse of the economy (GDP decreased from $24 billion in 1990 to under $10 billion in 1993). Serbia was in the 2000s sued on the charges of alleged genocide by neighbouring Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia but in both cases the main charges against Serbia were dismissed.

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Serbian and other refugee children of the Kosovo War. The war ended with NATO bombing which remains a controversial topic.

Multi-party democracy was introduced in Serbia in 1990, officially dismantling the one-party system. Despite constitutional changes, Milošević maintained strong political influence over the state media and security apparatus. When the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia refused to accept its defeat in municipal elections in 1996, Serbians engaged in large protests against the government.

In 1998, continued clashes between the Albanian guerilla Kosovo Liberation Army and Yugoslav security forces led to the short Kosovo War (1998–99), in which NATO intervened, leading to the withdrawal of Serbian forces and the establishment of UN administration in the province. After the Yugoslav Wars, Serbia became home to highest number of refugees and internally displaced persons in Europe.

After presidential elections in September 2000, opposition parties accused Milošević of electoral fraud. A campaign of civil resistance followed, led by the Democratic Opposition of Serbia (DOS), a broad coalition of anti-Milošević parties. This culminated on 5 October when half a million people from all over the country congregated in Belgrade, compelling Milošević to concede defeat. The fall of Milošević ended Yugoslavia's international isolation. Milošević was sent to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. The DOS announced that FR Yugoslavia would seek to join the European Union. In 2003, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was renamed Serbia and Montenegro; the EU opened negotiations with the country for the Stabilisation and Association Agreement.

Serbia's political climate remained tense and in 2003, Prime Minister Zoran Đinđić was assassinated as result of a plot originating from organised crime and former security officials. In 2004 unrest in Kosovo took place, leaving 19 people dead and a number of Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries destroyed or damaged.

Contemporary period

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Zoran Đinđić played a key role in the revolution against the controversial regime of Slobodan Milošević and later became the first democratically elected PM.

On 21 May 2006, Montenegro held a referendum which showed 55.4% of voters in favour of independence, just above the 55% required by the referendum. This was followed on 5 June 2006 by Serbia's declaration of independence, marking the re-emergence of Serbia as an independent state. The National Assembly of Serbia declared Serbia to be the legal successor to the former state union.

The Assembly of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia on 17 February 2008. Serbia immediately condemned the declaration and continues to deny any statehood to Kosovo. The declaration has sparked varied responses from the international community.Status-neutral talks between Serbia and Kosovo-Albanian authorities are held in Brussels, mediated by the EU.

Serbia officially applied for membership in the European Union on 22 December 2009, and received candidate status on 1 March 2012, following a delay in December 2011. Following a positive recommendation of the European Commission and European Council in June 2013, negotiations to join the EU commenced in January 2014.

In 2012 Aleksandar Vučić and his Serbian Progressive Party came to power. According to a number of international analysts, Serbia has suffered from democratic backsliding into authoritarianism, followed by a decline in media freedom and civil liberties. After the COVID-19 pandemic spread to Serbia in March 2020, a state of emergency was declared and a curfew was introduced for the first time in Serbia since World War II. In April 2022, President Aleksandar Vučić was re-elected. In December 2023, President Vučić won a snap parliamentary election. The election resulted in protests, with opposition supporters claiming that the election result was fraudulent. On 16 January 2022, a Serbian constitutional referendum took place in which citizens chose to amend the Constitution concerning the judiciary. The changes were presented as a step toward reducing political influence in the judicial system.

The country was chosen to host international specialised exposition Expo 2027. The Serbian government is working with Rio Tinto corporation on a project which aims to develop Europe's biggest lithium mine. Mining lithium became a matter of debate in the society and several protests against mining took place.

Geography

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Topographic map of Serbia
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View of Ribnica Lake, Zlatibor mountain; there are 165 mountains in the country
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Bačka region; northern part of the country is defined by its mostly flat and fertile terrain.

A landlocked country situated at the crossroads between Central and Southeastern Europe, Serbia is located in the Balkan peninsula and the Pannonian Plain. Serbia lies between latitudes 41° and 47° N, and longitudes 18° and 23° E. The country covers a total of 88,499 km2 (34,170 sq mi); with Kosovo excluded, the total area is 77,474 km2 (29,913 sq mi). Its total border length amounts to 2,027 km (1,260 mi): Albania 115 km (71 mi), Bosnia and Herzegovina 302 km (188 mi), Bulgaria 318 km (198 mi), Croatia 241 km (150 mi), Hungary 151 km (94 mi), North Macedonia 221 km (137 mi), Montenegro 203 km (126 mi) and Romania 476 km (296 mi). All of Kosovo's border with Albania (115 km (71 mi)), North Macedonia (159 km (99 mi)) and Montenegro (79 km (49 mi)) are under control of the Kosovo border police. Serbia treats the 352 km (219 mi) border with Kosovo as an "administrative line"; it is under shared control of Kosovo border police and Serbian police forces. The Pannonian Plain covers the northern third of the country (Vojvodina and Mačva) while the easternmost tip of Serbia extends into the Wallachian Plain. The terrain of the central part of the country consists chiefly of hills traversed by rivers. Mountains dominate the southern third of Serbia. Dinaric Alps stretch in the west and the southwest, following the flow of the rivers Drina and Ibar. The Carpathian Mountains and Balkan Mountains stretch in a north–south direction in eastern Serbia.

Ancient mountains in the southeast corner of the country belong to the Rilo-Rhodope Mountain system. Elevation ranges from the Midžor peak of the Balkan Mountains at 2,169 metres (7,116 feet) (the highest peak in Serbia, excluding Kosovo) to the lowest point of just 17 metres (56 feet) near the Danube river at Prahovo. The largest lake is Đerdap Lake (163 square kilometres (63 sq mi)) and the longest river passing through Serbia is the Danube (587.35 kilometres (364.96 mi)).

Climate

The climate of Serbia is under the influences of the landmass of Eurasia and the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. With mean January temperatures around 0 °C (32 °F), and mean July temperatures of 22 °C (72 °F), it can be classified as a warm-humid continental or humid subtropical climate. In the north, the climate is more continental, with cold winters, and hot, humid summers along with well-distributed rainfall patterns. In the south, summers and autumns are drier, and winters are relatively cold, with heavy inland snowfall in the mountains.

Differences in elevation, proximity to the Adriatic Sea and large river basins, as well as exposure to the winds account for climate variations. Southern Serbia is subject to Mediterranean influences. The Dinaric Alps and other mountain ranges contribute to the cooling of most of the warm air masses. Winters are quite harsh in the Pešter plateau, because of the mountains which encircle it. One of the climatic features of Serbia is Košava, a cold and very squally southeastern wind which starts in the Carpathian Mountains and follows the Danube northwest through the Iron Gate where it gains a jet effect and continues to Belgrade and can spread as far south as Niš.

The average annual air temperature for the period 1961–1990 for the area with an elevation of up to 300 m (984 ft) is 10.9 °C (51.6 °F). The areas with an elevation of 300 to 500 m (984 to 1,640 ft) have an average annual temperature of around 10.0 °C (50.0 °F), and over 1,000 m (3,281 ft) of elevation around 6.0 °C (42.8 °F). The lowest recorded temperature in Serbia was −39.5 °C (−39.1 °F) on 13 January 1985, Karajukića Bunari in Pešter, and the highest was 44.9 °C (112.8 °F), on 24 July 2007, recorded in Smederevska Palanka.

Serbia is one of few European countries with very high risk of natural hazards (earthquakes, storms, floods, droughts). It is estimated that potential floods, particularly in areas of Central Serbia, threaten over 500 larger settlements and an area of 16,000 square kilometres. The most disastrous were the floods in May 2014, when 57 people died and a damage of over 1.5 billion euros was inflicted.

Hydrology

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The Uvac Special Nature Reserve is one of the last remaining habitats of the griffon vulture in Europe
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Picea omorika is a species of coniferous tree endemic to Tara National Park in western Serbia

Almost all of Serbia's rivers drain to the Black Sea, by way of the Danube river. The Danube, the second largest European river, passes through Serbia with 588 kilometres (21% of its overall length) and represents the major source of fresh water. It is joined by its biggest tributaries, the Great Morava (longest river entirely in Serbia with 493 km (306 mi) of length), Sava and Tisza rivers. One notable exception is the Pčinja which flows into the Aegean. Drina river forms the natural border between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia, and represents the main kayaking and rafting attraction in both countries.

Due to configuration of the terrain, natural lakes are sparse and small; most of them are located in the lowlands of Vojvodina, like the aeolian lake Palić or numerous oxbow lakes along river flows (like Zasavica and Carska Bara). However, there are numerous artificial lakes, mostly due to hydroelectric dams, the biggest being Đerdap (Iron Gates) on the Danube with 163 km2 (63 sq mi) on the Serbian side (a total area of 253 km2 (98 sq mi) is shared with Romania); Perućac on the Drina, and Vlasina. The largest waterfall, Jelovarnik, located in Kopaonik, is 71 m high. Abundance of relatively unpolluted surface waters and numerous underground natural and mineral water sources of high water quality presents a chance for export and economy improvement; however, more extensive exploitation and production of bottled water began only recently.[citation needed]

Environment

Serbia is a country of rich ecosystem and species diversity—covering only 1.9% of the whole European territory, Serbia is home to 39% of European vascular flora, 51% of European fish fauna, 40% of European reptiles and amphibian fauna, 74% of European bird fauna, and 67% European mammal fauna. Its abundance of mountains and rivers make it an ideal environment for a variety of animals, many of which are protected including wolves, lynx, bears, foxes, and stags. There are 17 snake species living all over the country; 8 of them are venomous.

Mountain of Tara in western Serbia is one of the last regions in Europe where bears can still live in absolute freedom.[better source needed] Serbia is home to about 380 species of birds. In Carska Bara, there are over 300 bird species on just a few square kilometres.Uvac Gorge is considered one of the last habitats of the Griffon vulture in Europe. In area around the city of Kikinda, in the northernmost part of the country, some 145 endangered long-eared owls are noted, making it the world's biggest settlement of these species. The country is considerably rich with threatened species of bats and butterflies as well.

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Wild horses at the Stara Planina

There are 380 protected areas of Serbia, encompassing 4,947 square kilometres or 6.4% of the country. Those protected areas include 5 national parks (Đerdap, Tara, Kopaonik, Fruška Gora and Šar Mountain), 15 nature parks, 15 "landscapes of outstanding features", 61 nature reserves, and 281 natural monuments. With 29.1% of its territory covered by forest, Serbia is considered to be a middle-forested country, compared on a global scale to world forest coverage at 30%, and European average of 35%. The total forest area in Serbia is 2,252,000 ha (1,194,000 ha or 53% are state-owned, and 1,058,387 ha or 47% are privately owned) or 0.3 ha per inhabitant. It had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5.29/10, ranking it 105th globally out of 172 countries. The most common trees are oak, beech, pines, and firs.

Air pollution is a significant problem in Bor area, due to work of large copper mining and smelting complex, and Pančevo where oil and petrochemical industry is based. Some cities suffer from water supply problems, due to mismanagement and low investments in the past, as well as water pollution (like the pollution of the Ibar River from the Trepča zinc-lead combinate, affecting the city of Kraljevo, or the presence of natural arsenic in underground waters in Zrenjanin).

Poor waste management has been identified as one of the most important environmental problems in Serbia and the recycling is a fledgling activity, with only 15% of its waste being turned back for reuse. The 1999 NATO bombing caused serious damage to the environment, with several thousand tonnes of toxic chemicals stored in targeted factories and refineries released into the soil and water basins.

Politics

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National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia

Serbia is a parliamentary republic, with the government divided into legislative, executive, and judiciary branches. The current constitution was adopted in 2006 in the aftermath of the Montenegro independence referendum. The Constitutional Court rules on matters regarding the Constitution.

The President of the Republic (Predsednik Republike) is the head of state, is elected by popular vote to a five-year term and is limited by the Constitution to a maximum of two terms. In addition to being the commander in chief of the armed forces, the president has the procedural duty of appointing the prime minister with the consent of the parliament, and has some influence on foreign policy. Aleksandar Vučić of the Serbian Progressive Party is the current president following the 2017 presidential election. Seat of the presidency is Novi Dvor.

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Banovina Palace complex, seat of the provincial government and the assembly of Vojvodina province

The Government (Vlada) is composed of the prime minister and cabinet ministers. The Government is responsible for proposing legislation and a budget, executing the laws, and guiding the foreign and internal policies. The current prime minister is Miloš Vučević, nominated by the Serbian Progressive Party.

The National Assembly (Narodna skupština) is a unicameral legislative body. The National Assembly has the power to enact laws, approve the budget, schedule presidential elections, select and dismiss the Prime Minister and other ministers, declare war, and ratify international treaties and agreements. It is composed of 250 proportionally elected members who serve four-year terms. Following the 2020 parliamentary election, the largest political parties in the National Assembly are the populist Serbian Progressive Party and Socialist Party of Serbia, that with its partners, hold more than a supermajority number of seats.

In 2021, Serbia was the 5th country in Europe by the number of women holding high-ranking public functions.[better source needed]

Law and criminal justice

Serbia has a three-tiered judicial system, made up of the Supreme Court of Cassation as the court of the last resort, Courts of Appeal as the appellate instance, and Basic and High courts as the general jurisdictions at first instance.

Courts of special jurisdictions are the Administrative Court, commercial courts (including the Commercial Court of Appeal at second instance) and misdemeanor courts (including High Misdemeanor Court at second instance). The judiciary is overseen by the Ministry of Justice. Serbia has a typical civil law legal system.

Law enforcement is the responsibility of the Serbian Police, which is subordinate to the Ministry of the Interior. Serbian Police fields 27,363 uniformed officers. National security and counterintelligence are the responsibility of the Security Intelligence Agency (BIA).

Foreign relations

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  Kosovo
  States which recognize Kosovo as an independent country
  States that do not recognize Kosovo as an independent country
  States that recognized Kosovo and later withdrew that recognition

Serbia has established diplomatic relations with 191 UN member states, the Holy See, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and the European Union. Foreign relations are conducted through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Serbia has a network of 74 embassies and 25 consulates internationally. There are 69 foreign embassies, 5 consulates and 4 liaison offices in Serbia. Serbian foreign policy is focused on achieving the strategic goal of becoming a member state of the European Union (EU). Serbia officially applied for membership in the European Union on 22 December 2009. It received a full candidate status on 1 March 2012 and started accession talks on 21 January 2014. As of 2018, the European Commission considered accession possible by 2025.

On 17 February 2008, Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia. In protest, Serbia initially recalled its ambassadors from countries that recognised Kosovo's independence. The resolution of 26 December 2007 by the National Assembly stated that both the Kosovo declaration of independence and recognition thereof by any state would be gross violation of international law.

Serbia began cooperation and dialogue with NATO in 2006, when the country joined the Partnership for Peace programme and the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council. The country's military neutrality was formally proclaimed by a resolution adopted by Serbia's parliament in December 2007, which makes joining any military alliance contingent on a popular referendum, a stance acknowledged by NATO. On the other hand, Serbia's relations with Russia are habitually described by mass media as a "centuries-old religious, ethnic and political alliance" and Russia is said to have sought to solidify its relations with Serbia since the imposition of sanctions against Russia in 2014.

Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Serbia drew international scrutiny for not joining EU sanctions against Russia and maintaining bilateral relations, citing its own past suffering with sanctions. It is one of the only countries in Europe not to sanction Russia. However, Serbia voted to condemn the invasion, supporting the adoption of the United Nations draft resolution demanding Russia to withdraw its military forces from Ukraine, as well as supporting the suspension of Russia from the UN Human Rights Council.

Military

Branches of the Serbian Armed Forces
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Special forces brigade
4th Army Brigade
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Serbian Air Force and Air Defence
Eurocopter EC145

The Serbian Armed Forces are subordinate to the Ministry of Defence, and are composed of the Army and the Air Force. Although a landlocked country, Serbia operates a River Flotilla which patrols on the Danube, Sava and Tisa rivers. The Serbian Chief of the General Staff reports to the Defence Minister. The Chief of Staff is appointed by the president, who is the commander-in-chief. As of 2019, Serbian defence budget amounts to $804 million.

Traditionally having relied on a large number of conscripts, Serbian Armed Forces went through a period of downsizing, restructuring and professionalisation. Conscription was abolished in 2011. Serbian Armed Forces have 28,000 active troops, supplemented by the "active reserve" which numbers 20,000 members and "passive reserve" with about 170,000.

The country participates in the NATO Individual Partnership Action Plan programme, but has no intention of joining NATO, due to significant popular rejection, largely a legacy of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999. It is an observer member of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) as of 2013. The country also signed the Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe. The Serbian Armed Forces take part in several multinational peacekeeping missions, including deployments in Lebanon, Cyprus, Ivory Coast, and Liberia.

Serbia is a major producer and exporter of military equipment in the region. Defence exports totaled around $600 million in 2018. The defence industry has seen significant growth over the years and it continues to grow on a yearly basis.

In 2024 the Serbian president approved the reintroduction of mandatory military service, which was abolished in 2011. If the Government adopts this decision, military service will last 75 days, starting with 2025.

Administrative divisions

Serbia is a unitary state composed of municipalities/cities, districts, and two autonomous provinces. In Serbia, excluding Kosovo, there are 145 municipalities (opštine) and 29 cities (gradovi), which form the basic units of local self-government. Apart from municipalities/cities, there are 24 districts (okruzi, 10 most populated listed below), with the City of Belgrade constituting an additional district. Except for Belgrade, which has an elected local government, districts are regional centres of state authority, but have no powers of their own; they present purely administrative divisions.

The Constitution of Serbia recognizes two autonomous provinces, Vojvodina in the north, and the disputed territory of Kosovo and Metohija in the south, while the remaining area of Central Serbia has never had its own regional authority. Following the Kosovo War, UN peacekeepers entered Kosovo and Metohija, as per UNSC Resolution 1244. The government of Serbia does not recognise Kosovo's February 2008 declaration of independence, considering it illegal and illegitimate.

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Demographics

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Ethnic structure of Serbia by municipalities and cities in 2022

As of the 2022 census, Serbia (excluding Kosovo) has a total population of 6,647,003 and the overall population density is medium as it stands at 85.8 inhabitants per square kilometre. The census was not conducted in Kosovo which held its own census that numbered their total population at 1,586,659. Serbia has been enduring a demographic crisis since the beginning of the 1990s, with a death rate that has continuously exceeded its birth rate. It is estimated that 500,000 people left Serbia during the 1990s, 20% of whom had a higher education. Serbia has one of the oldest populations in the world, with the average age of 43.3 years, and its population is shrinking at one of the fastest rates in the world. A fifth of all households consist of only one person, and just one-fourth of four and more persons. The average life expectancy in Serbia is 76.1 years.

During the 1990s, Serbia had the largest refugee population in Europe.Refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Serbia formed between 7% and 7.5% of its population at the time – about half a million refugees sought refuge in the country following the series of Yugoslav wars, mainly from Croatia (and to a lesser extent from Bosnia and Herzegovina) and the IDPs from Kosovo.

Serbs with 5,360,239 are the largest ethnic group in Serbia, representing 81% of the total population (excluding Kosovo). Serbia is one of the European countries with the highest number of registered national minorities, while the province of Vojvodina is recognizable for its multi-ethnic and multi-cultural identity. Despite a decline in recent years, with a population of 184,442, Hungarians remain the largest ethnic minority in Serbia, concentrated predominantly in northern Vojvodina and representing 2.8% of the country's population (10.5% in Vojvodina). Romani population stands at 131,936 according to the 2022 census but unofficial estimates place their actual number between 400,000 and 500,000.Bosniaks with 153,801 and Muslims by nationality with 13,011 are concentrated in Raška (Sandžak), in the southwest. Other minority groups include Albanians, Croats and Bunjevci, Slovaks, Yugoslavs, Montenegrins, Romanians and Vlachs, Macedonians and Bulgarians. Chinese, estimated at 15,000, are the only significant non-European immigrant minority. Most recently, tens of thousands of Russians and Ukrainians have immigrated to Serbia following the Russian Invasion of Ukraine.

As of January 2024, more than 300,000 Russians had emigrated to Serbia since the start of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. About one in 10 have been issued a residence permit, though integration issues have been reported, with Russian immigrants living in a ″parallel society″.

According to World Happiness Report 2024, Serbia is on 37th rank amount 140 countries.

The majority of the population, or 59.4%, reside in urban areas and some 16.1% in Belgrade alone. Belgrade is the only city with more than a million inhabitants and there are four more with over 100,000 inhabitants.

 
 
Largest cities or towns in Serbia
Rank Name District Pop. Rank Name District Pop.
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Belgrade
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Novi Sad
1 Belgrade City of Belgrade 1,197,714 11 Kraljevo Raška District 61,490 image
Niš
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Kragujevac
2 Novi Sad South Bačka 306,702 12 Smederevo Podunavlje District 59,261
3 Niš Nišava District 260,237 13 Leskovac Jablanica District 58,338
4 Kragujevac Šumadija District 146,315 14 Valjevo Kolubara District 56,059
5 Subotica North Bačka 94,228 15 Vranje Pčinja District 55,214
6 Pančevo South Banat 86,408 16 Užice Zlatibor District 54,965
7 Novi Pazar Raška District 71,462 17 Požarevac Braničevo District 51,271
8 Čačak Moravica District 69,598 18 Šabac Mačva District 51,163
9 Kruševac Rasina District 68,119 19 Sombor West Bačka 41,814
10 Zrenjanin Central Banat 67,129 20 Sremska Mitrovica Srem District 40,144

Religion

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The Saint Sava Cathedral in Belgrade is one of the largest Orthodox churches in the world.

The Constitution of Serbia defines it as a secular state with guaranteed religious freedom. Orthodox Christians with 6,079,396 comprise 84.5% of country's population. The Serbian Orthodox Church is the largest and traditional church of the country, adherents of which are overwhelmingly Serbs. Other Orthodox Christian communities in Serbia include Montenegrins, Romanians, Vlachs, Macedonians and Bulgarians.

In 2011, Roman Catholics numbered 356,957 in Serbia, or roughly 6% of the population, mostly in northern Vojvodina which is home to ethnic minority groups such as Hungarians, Croats, and Bunjevci, as well as to some Slovaks and Czechs.Greek Catholic Church is adhered by around 25,000 citizens (0.37% of the population), mostly Rusyns in Vojvodina.

Protestantism accounts for 0.8% of the country's population, chiefly Lutheranism among Slovaks in Vojvodina as well as Calvinism among Reformed Hungarians.

Muslims, with 222,282 or 3% of the population, form the third largest religious group. Islam has a strong historic following in the southern regions of Serbia, primarily in southern Raška. Bosniaks are the largest Islamic community in Serbia, followed by Albanians; estimates are that around a third of the country's Roma people are Muslim.[citation needed]

In 2011, there were only 578 Jews in Serbia, compared to over 30,000 prior to World War II. Atheists numbered 80,053, or 1.1% of the population, and an additional 4,070 declared themselves to be agnostics.

Language

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The standard Serbian language uses both the Cyrillic and the Latin script. Serbian is a rare example of synchronic digraphia, a situation where all literate members of a society have two interchangeable writing systems available to them.

The official language is Serbian, native to 88% of the population. Serbian is the only European language with active digraphia, using both Cyrillic and Latin alphabets. Serbian Cyrillic is designated in the Constitution as the "official script". A survey from 2014 showed that 47% of Serbians favour the Latin alphabet, 36% favour the Cyrillic one and 17% have no preference.

Standard Serbian is mutually intelligible with recognised minority languages of Bosnian and Croatian, as all three are based on the most widespread Shtokavian dialect from Eastern Herzegovina. Other recognised minority languages are: Hungarian, Slovak, Albanian, Romanian, Bulgarian, Rusyn, and Macedonian. All these languages are in official use in municipalities or cities where the ethnic minority exceeds 15% of the total population. In Vojvodina, the provincial administration co-officially uses, besides Serbian, five other languages (Slovak, Hungarian, Croatian, Romanian and Rusyn).

Healthcare

The healthcare system in Serbia is organized and managed by the three primary institutions: The Ministry of Health, The Institute of Public Health of Serbia "Dr Milan Jovanović Batut" and the Military Medical Academy. Healthcare protections are defined as a constitutional right in Serbia. The Serbian public health system is based on the principles of equity and solidarity, organized on the model of compulsory health insurance contributions. Private health care is not integrated into the public health system, but certain services may be included by contracting.

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The newly opened wing of the University Clinical Centre of Serbia, opened in 2022, has 3,150 beds, considered to be the highest number in Europe, and among the highest in the world.

The Ministry of Health determines the healthcare policy and adopts standards for the work of the healthcare service. The Ministry is also in charge of the health care system, health insurance, preservation and improvement of health of citizens, health inspection, supervision over the work of the healthcare service and other tasks in the field of health care.

The Institute of Public Health of Serbia "Dr Milan Jovanović Batut" is responsible for medical statistics, epidemiology and hygiene. This central, tertiary institution manages and coordinates a dense network of municipal and regional Centers of Public Health that provide epidemiological and hygiene services at primary and secondary levels. The National Health Insurance Fund finances the functioning of health care at all levels, and also provides and implements the compulsory health insurance.

One of the most important health institutions in Serbia is the Military Medical Academy in Belgrade. It takes care of about 30,000 patients a year (military and civilian insured). The academy performs around 30,000 surgical interventions and more than 500,000 specialist examinations.

The Clinical Centre of Serbia spreads over 34 hectares in Belgrade and consists of about 50 buildings, while also has 3,150 beds considered to be the highest number in Europe, and among highest in the world.[better source needed]

Other important health institutions include: KBC Dr Dragiša Mišović, Cardiovascular institute Dedinje,Clinical Centre of Kragujevac, Clinical Centre of Niš, Clinical Center of Vojvodina and others.

Economy

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NIS multinational oil and gas company headquarters in Novi Sad

Serbia has an emerging market economy in upper-middle income range. According to the International Monetary Fund, Serbian nominal GDP in 2024 is officially estimated at $81.873 billion or $12,385 per capita while purchasing power parity GDP stood at $185.014 billion or $27,985 per capita. The economy is dominated by services which accounts for 67.9% of GDP, followed by industry with 26.1% of GDP, and agriculture at 6% of GDP. Serbia's arms industry, a legacy of Cold War Yugoslavia, is the leading weapons manufacturer in the Western Balkans and ranked 25th worldwide in arms exports, surpassing $1.6 billion in 2023 and employing 20,000 people. The official currency is Serbian dinar, and the central bank is National Bank of Serbia. The Belgrade Stock Exchange is the only stock exchange in the country, with market capitalisation of $8.65 billion and BELEX15 as the main index representing the 15 most liquid stocks. The country is ranked 52nd on the Social Progress Index as well as 54th on the Global Peace Index.

The economy has been affected by the global economic crisis. After almost a decade of strong economic growth (average of 4.45% per year), Serbia entered the recession in 2009 with negative growth of −3% and again in 2012 and 2014 with −1% and −1.8%, respectively. As the government was fighting effects of crisis the public debt has more than doubled: from pre-crisis level of just under 30% to about 70% of GDP and trending downwards recently to around 50%. Labour force stands at 3.2 million, with 56% employed in services sector, 28.1% in industry and 15.9% in the agriculture. The average monthly net salary in May 2019 stood at 47,575 dinars or $525. The unemployment remains an acute problem, with rate of 11% as of 2021.

Since 2000, Serbia has attracted over $40 billion in foreign direct investment (FDI).Blue-chip corporations making investments include: Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, Siemens, Bosch, Philip Morris, Michelin, Coca-Cola, Carlsberg and others. In the energy sector, Russian energy giants, Gazprom and Lukoil have made large investments. In metallurgy sector, Chinese steel and copper giants, Hesteel and Zijin Mining have acquired key complexes.

Serbia has an unfavourable trade balance: imports exceed exports by 25%.[needs update] Serbia's exports, however, recorded a steady growth in the 2010s reaching $19.2 billion in 2018. The country has free trade agreements with the EFTA and CEFTA, a preferential trade regime with the European Union, a Generalised System of Preferences with the United States, and individual free trade agreements with Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Turkey.

Agriculture

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Serbia is one of the largest providers of frozen fruit to the EU and a big producer of fruits like raspberries, blackberries, apples and plums.

Serbia has very favourable natural conditions (land and climate) for varied agricultural production. It has 5,056,000 ha of agricultural land (0.7 ha per capita), out of which 3,294,000 ha is arable land (0.45 ha per capita). In 2016, Serbia exported agricultural and food products worth $3.2 billion, and the export-import ratio was 178%. Agricultural exports constitute more than a fifth of all Serbia's sales on the world market. Serbia is one of the largest provider of frozen fruit to the EU (largest to the French market, and 2nd largest to the German market).

Agricultural production is most prominent in Vojvodina on the fertile Pannonian Plain. Other agricultural regions include Mačva, Pomoravlje, Tamnava, Rasina, and Jablanica.

In the structure of the agricultural production, 70% is from the crop field production and 30% is from the livestock production. Serbia is world's second largest producer of plums (582,485 tonnes; second to China), second largest of raspberries (89,602 tonnes, second to Poland), it is also a significant producer of maize (6.48 million tonnes, ranked 32nd in the world) and wheat (2.07 million tonnes, ranked 35th in the world). Other important agricultural products are: sunflower, sugar beet, soybean, potato, apple, pork meat, beef, poultry and dairy.

There are 56,000 ha of vineyards in Serbia, producing about 230 million litres of wine annually. The most famous viticulture regions are located in Vojvodina and Šumadija.

Industry

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The Fiat Grande Panda is manufactured in the FCA plant in Kragujevac.

The industry was the economic sector hardest hit by the UN sanctions and trade embargo and NATO bombing during the 1990s and transition to market economy during the 2000s. The industrial output saw dramatic downsizing: in 2013 it was expected to be only a half of that of 1989. Main industrial sectors include: automotive, mining, non-ferrous metals, food-processing, electronics, pharmaceuticals, clothes. Serbia has 14 free economic zones as of September 2017, in which many foreign direct investments are realised.

The automotive industry is dominated by cluster located in Kragujevac and its vicinity, and contributes to export with about $2 billion. Country is a leading steel producer in the wider region of Southeast Europe and had production of nearly 2 million tonnes of raw steel in 2018, coming entirely from Smederevo steel mill, owned by the Chinese Hesteel. Serbia's mining industry is comparatively strong: Serbia is the 18th largest producer of coal (7th in Europe) extracted from large deposits in Kolubara and Kostolac basins; it is also world's 23rd largest (3rd in Europe) producer of copper which is extracted by Zijin Bor Copper, a large copper mining company, acquired by Chinese Zijin Mining in 2018; significant gold extraction is developed around Majdanpek. Serbia notably manufactures intel smartphones named Tesla smartphones.

Food industry is well known both regionally and internationally and is one of the strong points of the economy. Some of the international brand-names established production in Serbia: PepsiCo and Nestlé in food-processing sector; Coca-Cola (Belgrade), Heineken (Novi Sad) and Carlsberg (Bačka Palanka) in beverage industry; Nordzucker in sugar industry. Serbia's electronics industry had its peak in the 1980s and the industry today is only a third of what it was back then, but has witnessed a something of revival in last decade with investments of companies such as Siemens (wind turbines) in Subotica, Panasonic (lighting devices) in Svilajnac, and Gorenje (electrical home appliances) in Valjevo. The pharmaceutical industry in Serbia comprises a dozen manufacturers of generic drugs, of which Hemofarm in Vršac and Galenika in Belgrade, account for 80% of production volume. Domestic production meets over 60% of the local demand.

Energy

The energy sector is one of the largest and most important sectors to the country's economy. Serbia is a net exporter of electricity and importer of key fuels (such as oil and gas).

Serbia has an abundance of coal, and significant reserves of oil and gas. Serbia's proven reserves of 5.5 billion tonnes of coal lignite are the fifth largest in the world (second in Europe, after Germany).

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The Đerdap 1 Hydroelectric Power Station is the largest dam on the Danube river and one of the largest hydro power stations in Europe.

Coal is found in two large deposits: Kolubara (4 billion tonnes of reserves) and Kostolac (1.5 billion tonnes). Despite being small on a world scale, Serbia's oil and gas resources (77.4 million tonnes of oil equivalent and 48.1 billion cubic metres, respectively) have a certain regional importance since they are largest in the region of former Yugoslavia as well as the Balkans (excluding Romania). Almost 90% of the discovered oil and gas are to be found in Banat and those oil and gas fields are by size among the largest in the Pannonian basin but are average on a European scale.

The production of electricity in 2015 in Serbia was 36.5 billion kilowatt-hours (KWh), while the final electricity consumption amounted to 35.5 billion kilowatt-hours (KWh). Most of the electricity produced comes from thermal-power plants (72.7% of all electricity) and to a lesser degree from hydroelectric-power plants (27.3%). There are 6 lignite-operated thermal-power plants with an installed power of 3,936 MW. Total installed power of 9 hydroelectric-power plants is 2,831 MW. In addition to this, there are mazute and gas-operated thermal-power plants with an installed power of 353 MW. The entire production of electricity is concentrated in Elektroprivreda Srbije (EPS), public electric-utility power company.

The current oil production in Serbia amounts to over 1.1 million tonnes of oil equivalent and satisfies some 43% of country's needs while the rest is imported. National petrol company, Naftna Industrija Srbije (NIS), was acquired in 2008 by Gazprom Neft. The company's refinery in Pančevo (capacity of 4.8 million tonnes) is one of the most modern oil-refineries in Europe; it also operates network of 334 filling stations in Serbia (74% of domestic market) and additional 36 stations in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 31 in Bulgaria, and 28 in Romania. There are 155 kilometres of crude oil pipelines connecting Pančevo and Novi Sad refineries as a part of trans-national Adria oil pipeline.

Serbia is heavily dependent on foreign sources of natural gas, with only 17% coming from domestic production (totalling 491 million cubic metres in 2012) and the rest is imported, mainly from Russia (via gas pipelines that run through Ukraine and Hungary).Srbijagas, public company, operates the natural gas transportation system which comprise 3,177 kilometres (1,974 mi) of trunk and regional natural gas pipelines and a 450 million cubic metre underground gas storage facility at Banatski Dvor. In 2021, Balkan Stream gas pipeline opened through Serbia.

Transport

Serbia has a strategic transportation location since the country's backbone, Morava Valley, represents the easiest land route from continental Europe to Asia Minor and the Near East.

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An Air Serbia aircraft taking off from Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport
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Srbijavoz's Stadler KISS Soko train on the rail line connecting the two major cities, Belgrade and Novi Sad

Serbian road network carries the bulk of traffic in the country. Total length of roads is 45,419 km (28,222 mi) of which 962 km (598 mi) are "class-IA state roads" (i.e. motorways); 4,517 km (2,807 mi) are "class-IB state roads" (national roads); 10,941 km (6,798 mi) are "class-II state roads" (regional roads) and 23,780 km (14,780 mi) are "municipal roads". The road network, except for the most of class-IA roads, are of comparatively lower quality to the Western European standards because of lack of financial resources for their maintenance in the last 20 years.

Over 300 km (190 mi) of new motorways were constructed in the last decade and additional 154 km (96 mi) are currently under construction: A5 motorway (from north of Kruševac to Čačak) and 31 km (19 mi)-long segment of A2 (between Čačak and Požega).Coach transport is very extensive: almost every place in the country is connected by bus, from largest cities to the villages; in addition there are international routes (mainly to countries of Western Europe with large Serb diaspora). Routes, both domestic and international, are served by more than hundred intercity coach services, biggest of which are Lasta and Niš-Ekspres. As of 2018, there were 1,999,771 registered passenger cars or 1 passenger car per 3.5 inhabitants.

Serbia has 3,819 km (2,373 mi) of rail tracks, of which 1,279 km (795 mi) are electrified and 283 km (176 mi) are double-track railroad. The major rail hub is Belgrade (and to a lesser degree Niš), while the most important railroads include: Belgrade–Subotica–Budapest (Hungary) (currently upgraded to high-speed status), Belgrade–Bar (Montenegro), Belgrade–Šid–Zagreb (Croatia)/Belgrade–Niš–Sofia (Bulgaria) (part of Pan-European Corridor X), and Niš–Thessaloniki (Greece). Some 75 km (46 mi) of new high-speed rail line between Belgrade and Novi Sad was opened in 2022 and additional 108 km (67 mi) from Novi Sad to Subotica and border with Hungary are currently under construction and due to open in 2025. Construction work for 212 km-long prolongation of the high-speed rail line to the south, to the city of Niš, is set to commence in 2024 and with its planned completion by the end of the decade four of country's five largest cities will be connected by the high-speed rail lines. Rail services are operated by Srbija Voz (passenger transport) and Srbija Kargo (freight transport).

There are three airports with regular passenger services reaching over 6 million passengers in 2022 with Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport serving bulk of it, being a hub of flagship carrier Air Serbia which flies to 80 destinations in 32 countries (including intercontinental flights to New York City, Chicago and Tianjin) and carried 2.75 million passengers in 2022.

Serbia has a developed inland water transport since there are 1,716 km (1,066 mi) of navigable inland waterways (1,043 km, 648 mi of navigable rivers and 673 km, 418 mi of navigable canals), which are almost all located in northern third of the country. The most important inland waterway is the Danube. Other navigable rivers include Sava, Tisza, Begej and Timiş Rivers, all of which connect Serbia with Northern and Western Europe through the Rhine–Main–Danube Canal and North Sea route, to Eastern Europe via the Tisza, Begej and Danube Black Sea routes, and to Southern Europe via the Sava river. More than 8 million tonnes of cargo were transported on Serbian rivers and canals in 2018 while the largest river ports are: Novi Sad, Belgrade, Pančevo, Smederevo, Prahovo and Šabac.

Telecommunications

Fixed telephone lines connect 81% of households in Serbia, and with about 9.1 million users the number of cellphones surpasses the total population of by 28%. The largest mobile operator is Telekom Srbija with 4.2 million subscribers, followed by Yettel with 2.8 million users and A1 with about 2 million. Some 58% of households have fixed-line (non-mobile) broadband Internet connection while 67% are provided with pay television services (i.e. 38% cable television, 17% IPTV, and 10% satellite).Digital television transition has been completed in 2015 with DVB-T2 standard for signal transmission.

Tourism

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Clockwise from left: 1. Kopaonik ski resort 2. Studenica Monastery, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. 3. Golubac Fortress. 4. Subotica, a city built in Art Nouveau style

Serbia is not a mass-tourism destination but nevertheless has a diverse range of touristic products. In 2019, total of over 3.6 million tourists were recorded in accommodations, of which half were foreign. Foreign exchange earnings from tourism were estimated at $1.5 billion.

Tourism is mainly focused on the mountains and spas of the country, which are mostly visited by domestic tourists, as well as Belgrade and, to a lesser degree, Novi Sad, which are preferred choices of foreign tourists (almost two-thirds of all foreign visits are made to these two cities). The most famous mountain resorts are Kopaonik, Stara Planina and Zlatibor. There are also many spas in Serbia, the biggest of which are Vrnjačka Banja, Soko Banja, and Banja Koviljača. City-break and conference tourism is developed in Belgrade and Novi Sad. Other touristic products that Serbia offer are natural wonders like Đavolja varoš, Christian pilgrimage to the many Orthodox monasteries across the country and the river cruising along the Danube. There are several internationally popular music festivals held in Serbia, such as EXIT and the Guča trumpet festival.

Education and science

According to 2011 census, literacy in Serbia stands at 98% of population while computer literacy is at 49% (complete computer literacy is at 34.2%). Same census showed the following levels of education: 16.2% of inhabitants have higher education (10.6% have bachelors or master's degrees, 5.6% have an associate degree), 49% have a secondary education, 20.7% have an elementary education, and 13.7% have not completed elementary education.

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Nikola Tesla was an electrical engineer who helped to develop the modern alternating current electricity supply system
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Milutin Milanković was a climate science theorist who founded the Milankovitch cycles theory

Education in Serbia is regulated by the Ministry of Education and Science. Education starts in either preschools or elementary schools. Children enroll in elementary schools at the age of seven. Compulsory education consists of eight grades of elementary school. Students have the opportunity to attend gymnasiums and vocational schools for another four years, or to enroll in vocational training for two to three years.

Following the completion of gymnasiums or vocational schools, students have the opportunity to attend university. Elementary and secondary education are also available in languages of recognised minorities in Serbia, where classes are held in Hungarian, Slovak, Albanian, Romanian, Rusyn, Bulgarian as well as Bosnian and Croatian languages. Petnica Science Center is a notable institution for extracurricular science education focusing on gifted students.

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The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Belgrade, founded in 1841

There are 19 universities in Serbia (nine public universities with a total number of 86 faculties and ten private universities with 51 faculties). In 2018/2019 academic year, 210,480 students attended 19 universities (181,310 at public universities and some 29,170 at private universities) while 47,169 attended 81 "higher schools". Public universities in Serbia are: the University of Belgrade, University of Novi Sad,University of Niš,University of Kragujevac, University of Priština, Public University of Novi Pazar as well as three specialist universities – University of Arts, University of Defence and University of Criminal Investigation and Police Studies. Largest private universities include Megatrend University and Singidunum University, both in Belgrade, and Educons University in Novi Sad. The University of Belgrade (placed in 301–400 bracket on 2013 Shanghai Ranking of World Universities, being best-placed university in Southeast Europe after those in Athens and Thessaloniki) and University of Novi Sad are generally considered the best institutions of higher learning in the country.

Serbia spent 0.9% of GDP on scientific research in 2017, which is slightly below the European average. Serbia was ranked 52nd in the Global Innovation Index in 2024. Since 2018, Serbia is a full member of CERN. Serbia has a long history of excellence in maths and computer sciences which has created a strong pool of engineering talent, although economic sanctions during the 1990s and chronic underinvestment in research forced many scientific professionals to leave the country. Nevertheless, there are several areas in which Serbia still excels such as growing information technology sector, which includes software development as well as outsourcing. It generated over $1.2 billion in exports in 2018, both from international investors and a significant number of dynamic homegrown enterprises. Serbia is one of the countries with the highest proportion of women in science. Among the scientific institutes operating in Serbia, the largest are the Mihajlo Pupin Institute and Vinča Nuclear Institute, both in Belgrade. The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts is a learned society promoting science and arts from its inception in 1841.

Culture

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Mileševa monastery's White Angel fresco (1235)

For centuries straddling the boundaries between East and West, the territory of Serbia had been divided among the Eastern and Western halves of the Roman Empire; then between Byzantium and the Kingdom of Hungary; and in the early modern period between the Ottoman Empire and the Habsburg Empire. These overlapping influences have resulted in cultural varieties throughout Serbia; its north leans to the profile of Central Europe, while the south is characteristic of the wider Balkans and even the Mediterranean. Serbia was influenced by the Republic of Venice as well, mainly though trade, literature and romanesque architecture.

Serbia has five cultural monuments inscribed in the list of UNESCO World Heritage: the early medieval capital Stari Ras and the 13th-century monastery Sopoćani; the 12th-century Studenica monastery; the Roman complex of Gamzigrad–Felix Romuliana; medieval tombstones Stećci; and finally the endangered Medieval Monuments in Kosovo (the monasteries of Visoki Dečani, Our Lady of Ljeviš, Gračanica and Patriarchal Monastery of Peć).

There are four literary works on UNESCO's Memory of the World Programme: the 12th-century Miroslav Gospel, the electrical engineer and inventor Nikola Tesla's archive, the telegram of Austria-Hungary`s declaration of war on Serbia, and the 1st Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement archives. The slava (patron saint veneration), kolo (traditional folk dance), singing to the accompaniment of the gusle, Zlakusa pottery, slivovitz (plum brandy) and naïve painting practices of Kovačica are inscribed on UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists. The Ministry of Culture and Information is tasked with preserving the nation's cultural heritage and overseeing its development, with further activities undertaken by local governments.

Art and architecture

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Kosovo peonies by Nadežda Petrović, part of the collection of the National Museum of Serbia

Traces of Roman and early Byzantine Empire architectural heritage are found in many royal cities and palaces in Serbia, such as Sirmium, Viminacium, Mediana, Felix Romuliana and Justiniana Prima, since 535 the seat of the Archbishopric of Justiniana Prima.

Serbian monasteries were under the influence of Byzantine Art, particularly after the fall of Constantinople in 1204 when many Byzantine artists fled to Serbia. The monasteries include Studenica (built around 1190), which was a model for such later monasteries as Mileševa, Sopoćani, Žiča, Gračanica and Visoki Dečani. Numerous monuments and cultural sites were destroyed at various stages of Serbian history, including destruction in Kosovo. In the late 14th and the 15th centuries, an autochthonous architectural style known as Morava style evolved in the area around Morava Valley. A characteristic of this style was the wealthy decoration of the frontal church walls. Examples of this include Manasija, Ravanica and Kalenić monasteries.

Frescos include White Angel (Mileševa monastery), Crucifixion (Studenica monastery) and Dormition of the Virgin (Sopoćani).

The country is dotted with many well-preserved medieval fortifications and castles such as Smederevo Fortress (largest lowland fortress in Europe),Golubac, Maglič, Soko grad, Belgrade Fortress, Ostrvica and Ram.

Under Ottoman occupation, Serbian art was virtually non-existent outside the lands ruled by the Habsburg monarchy. Traditional Serbian art showed Baroque influences at the end of the 18th century as shown in the works of Nikola Nešković, Teodor Kračun, Zaharije Orfelin and Jakov Orfelin. Serbian painting showed the influence of Biedermeier and Neoclassicism as seen in works by Konstantin Danil,Arsenije Teodorović and Pavel Đurković. Many painters followed the artistic trends set in the 19th century Romanticism, notably Đura Jakšić, Stevan Todorović, Katarina Ivanović and Novak Radonić. Serbian painters of the first half of the 20th century include Paja Jovanović and Uroš Predić of Realism, Cubist Sava Šumanović, Milena Pavlović-Barili and Nadežda Petrović of Impressionism, Expressionist Milan Konjović. Painters of the second half of 20th century include Marko Čelebonović, Petar Lubarda, Milo Milunović, Ljubomir Popović and Vladimir Veličković.

Anastas Jovanović was one of the earliest photographers in the world. Marina Abramović is a performance artist. Pirot carpet is a traditional handicraft in Serbia.

There are around 180 museums in Serbia, including the National Museum of Serbia, founded in 1844, houses one of the largest art collections in the Balkans. Other art museums include the Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade, the Museum of Vojvodina and the Gallery of Matica Srpska in Novi Sad.

Literature

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Miroslav's Gospel (1186) is a 362-page illuminated manuscript on parchment listed in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register.

Serbian uses the Cyrillic alphabet created by the students of the brothers Cyril and Methodius at the Preslav Literary School in Bulgaria. Serbian works from the early 11th century are written in Glagolitic. Starting in the 12th century, books were written in Cyrillic. The Miroslav Gospels from 1186 are considered to be the oldest book of Serbian medieval history and are listed in UNESCO's Memory of the World Register.

There are 551 public libraries, the largest of which are: the National Library of Serbia in Belgrade with about 6 million items, and Matica Srpska (the oldest matica and Serbian cultural institution, founded in 1826) in Novi Sad with nearly 3.5 million volumes. In 2010, there were 10,989 books and brochures published. The book publishing market is dominated by several major publishers such as Laguna and Vulkan. The industry's centrepiece event, annual Belgrade Book Fair, is the most visited cultural event in Serbia with 158,128 visitors in 2013. The highlight of the literary scene is awarding of NIN Prize, given every January since 1954 for the best newly published novel in Serbian.

Medieval authors include Saint Sava, Jefimija, Stefan Lazarević, Constantine of Kostenets and others. Under Ottoman occupation, when Serbia was not part of the European Renaissance, the tradition of oral story-telling through epic poetry was inspired by the Kosovo battle and folk tales rooted in Slavic mythology. Serbian epic poetry in those times was seen as the most effective way in preserving the national identity. The oldest known, entirely fictional poems, make up the Non-historic cycle, which is followed by poems inspired by events before, during and after the Battle of Kosovo. Folk ballads include The Death of the Mother of the Jugović Family and The Mourning Song of the Noble Wife of the Asan Aga (1646), translated into European languages by Goethe, Walter Scott, Pushkin and Mérimée. A tale from Serbian folklore is The Nine Peahens and the Golden Apples.

Baroque trends in Serbian literature emerged in the late 17th century. Baroque-influenced authors include Gavril Stefanović Venclović, Jovan Rajić, Zaharije Orfelin and Andrija Zmajević.Dositej Obradović was a prominent figure of the Age of Enlightenment, while Jovan Sterija Popović was a Classicist writer whose works also contained elements of Romanticism. In the era of national revival, in the first half of the 19th century, Vuk Stefanović Karadžić collected Serbian folk literature, and reformed the Serbian language and spelling, paving the way for Serbian Romanticism. The first half of the 19th century was dominated by Romanticist writers, including Petar II Petrović-Njegoš, Branko Radičević, Đura Jakšić, Jovan Jovanović Zmaj and Laza Kostić, while the second half of the century was marked by Realist writers such as Milovan Glišić, Laza Lazarević, Simo Matavulj, Stevan Sremac, Vojislav Ilić, Branislav Nušić, Radoje Domanović and Borisav Stanković.

The 20th century was dominated by the prose writers Meša Selimović (Death and the Dervish), Miloš Crnjanski (Migrations), Isidora Sekulić (The Chronicle of a Small Town Cemetery), Branko Ćopić (Eagles Fly Early), Borislav Pekić (The Time of Miracles), Danilo Kiš (The Encyclopedia of the Dead), Dobrica Ćosić (The Roots), Aleksandar Tišma (The Use of Man), Milorad Pavić and others. Notable poets include Milan Rakić, Jovan Dučić, Vladislav Petković Dis, Rastko Petrović, Stanislav Vinaver, Dušan Matić, Branko Miljković, Vasko Popa, Oskar Davičo, Miodrag Pavlović, and Stevan Raičković.

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Writer Ivo Andrić, Nobel prize winner in 1961 and writer and politician Dobrica Ćosić

Pavić is a 21st-century Serbian author whose Dictionary of the Khazars has been translated into 38 languages. Contemporary authors include David Albahari, Svetislav Basara, Goran Petrović, Gordana Kuić, Vuk Drašković and Vladislav Bajac. Serbian comics emerged in the 1930s and the medium remains popular today.

Ivo Andrić (The Bridge on the Drina) is a Serbian author who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1961. Another writer was Desanka Maksimović, who for seven decades was the leading lady of Yugoslav poetry.

Music

Composer and musicologist Stevan Stojanović Mokranjac is considered the founder of modern Serbian music. The Serbian composers of the first generation Petar Konjović, Stevan Hristić, and Miloje Milojević maintained the national expression and modernised the romanticism into the direction of impressionism. Other famous classical Serbian composers include Isidor Bajić, Stanislav Binički and Josif Marinković. There are three opera houses in Serbia: Opera of the National Theatre and Madlenianum Opera, both in Belgrade, and Opera of the Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad. Four symphonic orchestra operate in the country: Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra, Niš Symphony Orchestra, Novi Sad Philharmonic Orchestra and Symphonic Orchestra of Radio Television of Serbia. The Choir of Radio Television of Serbia is a leading vocal ensemble in the country. The BEMUS is one of the most prominent classical music festivals in the Southeastern Europe.

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Filip Višnjić sings to the gusle by Sreten Stojanović, Kruševac, central Serbia

Traditional Serbian music includes various kinds of bagpipes, flutes, horns, trumpets, lutes, psalteries, drums and cymbals. The kolo is the traditional collective folk dance, which has a number of varieties throughout the regions. The most popular are those from Užice and Morava region. Sung epic poetry has been an integral part of Serbian and Balkan music for centuries. In the highlands of Serbia these long poems are typically accompanied on a one-string fiddle called the gusle, and concern themselves with themes from history and mythology. There are records of gusle being played at the court of the 13th-century king Stefan the First-Crowned.

Balkan Brass, or truba ("trumpet") is a popular genre, especially in Central and Southern Serbia where Balkan Brass originated. There are two main varieties of this genre, one from Western Serbia and the other from Southern Serbia, with brass musician Boban Marković being one of the most respected names in the world of modern brass band bandleaders.

The most popular music festivals are Guča Trumpet Festival, with over 300,000 annual visitors, and Exit in Novi Sad (won the Best Major Festival award at the European Festivals Awards for 2013 and 2017.), with 200,000 visitors in 2013. Other festivals include Nišville Jazz Festival in Niš and Gitarijada rock festival in Zaječar.

Pop music artist Željko Joksimović won second place at the 2004 Eurovision Song Contest and Marija Šerifović won the 2007 Eurovision Song Contest with the song "Molitva", and Serbia was the host of the 2008 edition of the contest. Pop singers include Zdravko Čolić, Vlado Georgiev, Aleksandra Radović, Jelena Tomašević, Nataša Bekvalac, Jelena Karleuša and Teya Dora among others.

Serbian rock was part of the former Yugoslav rock scene during the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s. During the 1990s and 2000s, the popularity of rock music declined in Serbia, and although several major mainstream acts managed to sustain their popularity, an underground and independent music scene developed. The 2000s saw a revival of the mainstream scene and the appearance of a large number of notable acts. Serbian rock acts include Atheist Rap, Bajaga i Instruktori, Đorđe Balašević, Bjesovi, Block Out, Crni Biseri, Darkwood Dub, Disciplina Kičme, Elipse, Ekatarina Velika, Električni Orgazam, Eva Braun, Galija, Generacija 5, Goblini, Idoli, Kanda, Kodža i Nebojša, Kerber, Korni Grupa, Laboratorija Zvuka, Slađana Milošević, Neverne Bebe, Obojeni Program, Orthodox Celts, Partibrejkers, Pekinška Patka, Piloti, Riblja Čorba, Ritam Nereda, Rambo Amadeus, S.A.R.S., Siluete, S Vremena Na Vreme, Šarlo Akrobata, Pop Mašina, Smak, U Škripcu, Van Gogh, YU Grupa, Zana and others.

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Exit Festival in Novi Sad, proclaimed as the Best Major European festival at the EU Festival Awards

Folk music in its original form has been a prominent music style since World War I following the early success of Sofka Nikolić. The music has been further promoted by Danica Obrenić, Anđelija Milić, Nada Mamula, and during the 60s and 70s with performers like Silvana Armenulić, Toma Zdravković, Lepa Lukić, Vasilija Radojčić, Vida Pavlović and Gordana Stojićević.

Turbo-folk music is a subgenre that was developed in Serbia in the late 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s and has since enjoyed an immense popularity through acts of Dragana Mirković, Zorica Brunclik, Šaban Šaulić, Ana Bekuta, Sinan Sakić, Vesna Zmijanac, Mile Kitić, Snežana Đurišić, Šemsa Suljaković, and Nada Topčagić. It is a blend of folk music with pop and dance elements and can be seen as a result of the urbanisation of folk music. In recent years, turbo-folk has featured even more pop music elements, and some of the performers have been labeled as pop-folk. The most famous among them are Ceca (often considered to be the biggest music star of Serbia), Jelena Karleuša,Aca Lukas, Seka Aleksić, Dara Bubamara, Indira Radić, Saša Matić, Viki Miljković, Stoja and Lepa Brena, arguably the most prominent performer of former Yugoslavia.

Theatre and cinema

Serbia has a well-established theatrical tradition with Joakim Vujić considered the founder of modern Serbian theatre. Serbia has 38 professional theatres and 11 theatres for children, the most important of which are National Theatre in Belgrade, Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad, National Theatre in Subotica, National Theatre in Niš and Knjaževsko-srpski teatar in Kragujevac (the oldest theatre in Serbia, established in 1835). The Belgrade International Theatre Festival – BITEF, founded in 1967, is one of the oldest theatre festivals in the world, and it has become one of the five biggest European festivals.Sterijino pozorje is, on the other hand, a festival showcasing national drama plays. The most important Serbian playwrights were Jovan Sterija Popović and Branislav Nušić, while recent renowned names are Dušan Kovačević and Biljana Srbljanović.

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Emir Kusturica won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes twice
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Želimir Žilnik won the Golden Bear at the Berlinale

The country has a rich cinematic legacy. Serbia's film scene is one of the most dynamic smaller European cinemas. The film industry is heavily subsidized by the government, mainly through grants approved by the Film Centre of Serbia. As of 2019, there were 26 feature films produced in Serbia, of which 14 were domestic films. There are 23 operating cinemas in the country, with total attendance reaching 4.8 million. A comparatively high percentage of 20% of total tickets sold were for domestic films. Modern PFI Studios located in Šimanovci is nowadays Serbia's only major film studio complex. The Yugoslav Film Archive used to be former Yugoslavia's and now is Serbia's national film archive – with over 100 thousand film prints, it is among the five largest film archives in the world.

Famous Serbian filmmaker Emir Kusturica won two Palmes d'Or for Best Feature Film at the Cannes Film Festival, for When Father Was Away on Business in 1985 and then again for Underground in 1995; he has also won a Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival for Arizona Dream and a Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival for Black Cat, White Cat. Other renowned directors include Dušan Makavejev, Želimir Žilnik (Golden Berlin Bear winner), Aleksandar Petrović, Živojin Pavlović, Goran Paskaljević, Goran Marković, Srđan Dragojević, Srdan Golubović and Mila Turajlić among others. Serbian-American screenwriter Steve Tesich won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1979.

Prominent movie stars in Serbia have left a celebrated heritage in the cinematography of Yugoslavia as well. Notable mentions are Zoran Radmilović, Pavle Vuisić, Ljubiša Samardžić, Olivera Marković, Mija Aleksić, Miodrag Petrović Čkalja, Ružica Sokić, Velimir Bata Živojinović, Danilo Bata Stojković, Seka Sablić, Dragan Nikolić, Mira Stupica, Nikola Simić, Bora Todorović, Nebojša Glogovac, Miloš Biković and others. Milena Dravić was one of the most celebrated actresses in Serbian cinematography, winning the Best Actress Award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1980.

Media

Freedom of the press and freedom of speech are guaranteed by the constitution of Serbia. Serbia is ranked 90th out of 180 countries in the 2019 Press Freedom Index report compiled by Reporters Without Borders. The report noted that media outlets and journalists continue to face partisan and government pressure over editorial policies.

According to EBU research in 2018, Serbs on average watch five and a half hours of television per day, making it the second highest average in Europe. There are seven nationwide free-to-air television channels, with public broadcaster Radio Television of Serbia (RTS) operating three (RTS1, RTS2 and RTS3) and private broadcasters operating four (Pink, Prva, Happy, and O2). There are 28 regional television channels and 74 local television channels. Besides terrestrial channels there are dozens of Serbian television channels available only on cable or satellite. These include regional news N1, commercial channel Nova S, and regional sports channels Sport Klub and Arena Sport, among others.

There are 247 radio stations in Serbia. Out of these, six are radio stations with national coverage, including two of public broadcaster Radio Television of Serbia (Radio Belgrade 1 and Radio Belgrade 2/Radio Belgrade 3) and four private ones (Radio S1, Radio S2, Play Radio, and Radio Hit FM). Also, there are 34 regional stations and 207 local stations.

There are 305 newspapers published in Serbia of which 12 are daily newspapers. Dailies Politika and Danas are Serbia's papers of record, the former being the oldest newspaper in the Balkans, founded in 1904. Highest circulation newspapers are tabloids Večernje Novosti, Blic, Kurir, and Informer, all with more than 100,000 copies sold. There is one daily newspaper devoted to sports (Sportski žurnal), one business daily (Privredni pregled), two regional newspapers (Dnevnik published in Novi Sad and Narodne novine from Niš), and one minority-language daily (Magyar Szo in Hungarian, published in Subotica).

There are 1,351 magazines published in the country. These include: weekly news magazines NIN, Vreme and Nedeljnik; popular science magazine Politikin Zabavnik; women's magazine Lepota & Zdravlje; auto magazine SAT revija; and IT magazine Svet kompjutera. In addition, there is a wide selection of Serbian editions of international magazines, such as Cosmopolitan, Elle, Men's Health, National Geographic, Le Monde diplomatique, Playboy, and Hello!, among others.

The main news agencies are Tanjug, Beta and Fonet.

As of 2017, out of 432 web-portals (mainly on the .rs domain) the most visited are online editions of printed dailies Blic and Kurir, news web-portal B92 and classifieds KupujemProdajem.

Cuisine

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A Serbian Christmas meal with roast pork, Russian salad and red wine
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, a cake made with fruits and almonds

Serbian cuisine is largely heterogeneous in a way characteristic of the Balkans and, especially, the former Yugoslavia. It features foods characteristic of lands formerly under Turkish suzerainty as well as cuisine originating from other parts of Central Europe (especially Austria and Hungary). Food is very important in Serbian social life, particularly during religious holidays such as Christmas, Easter and feast days i.e. slava.

Staples of the Serbian diet include bread, meat, fruits, vegetables, and dairy products. Bread plays an important role in Serbian cuisine and can be found in religious rituals. A traditional Serbian welcome is to offer bread and salt to guests. Meat is widely consumed, as is fish. The southern Serbian city of Leskovac is host to Roštiljijada, considered the biggest barbecue festival in the Balkans.

Other Serbian specialties include ćevapčići (grilled and seasoned caseless sausages made from minced meat), pljeskavica (grilled spiced meat patty made from a mixture of pork, beef and lamb), gibanica (cheese pie), burek (baked pastry made from a thin flaky dough that is stuffed with meat, cheese or vegetables), sarma (stuffed cabbage), punjena paprika (stuffed pepper), moussaka (casserole made from minced meat, eggs, and potatoes), Karađorđeva šnicla (veal or pork schnitzel that is stuffed with kajmak), đuveč (meat and vegetable stew), pasulj (bean soup), podvarak (roast meat with sauerkraut), ajvar (roasted red pepper spread), kajmak (dairy product similar to clotted cream), čvarci (variant of pork rinds), proja (cornbread) and kačamak (corn-flour porridge).

Serbians claim their country as the birthplace of rakia (rakija), a highly alcoholic drink primarily distilled from fruit. Rakia in various forms is found throughout the Balkans, notably in Bulgaria, Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro, Hungary and Turkey. Slivovitz (šljivovica), a plum brandy, is a type of rakia which is considered the national drink of Serbia. In 2021, Serbia's sljivovica was added to the United Nations Intangible Cultural Heritage List as a "cherished tradition to be preserved by humanity".

Serbian wines are produced in 22 different geographical regions, with white wine dominating the total amount. Besides rakia and wine, beer is a very popular alcoholic beverage in the country.Pale lagers are currently and have been the traditional beer choice for Serbians. The most popular domestic brands of beer are Jelen, followed by Lav.

As in the rest of the former Yugoslavia, coffee drinking is an important cultural and social practice and Serbian coffee (a local variant of Turkish coffee) is the most commonly consumed non-alcoholic beverage.

Sports

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Tennis player Novak Djokovic holds the all-time record of 24 Grand Slam men's singles titles; Nikola Jokić (right), is a three-time NBA MVP
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Serbia men's national water polo team held the Olympic Games, World Championship, European Championship, World Cup and World League titles simultaneously from 2014 to 2016.

Serbia has hosted a number of major international sport competitions. The most important annual sporting events in the country are the Belgrade Marathon and the Tour de Serbie cycling race.

Football is the most popular sport in Serbia, with the Football Association of Serbia being the largest sporting association, with 146,845 registered players.Dragan Džajić was recognized as "the best Serbian player of all time" by the association. More recently, players like Nemanja Vidić, Dejan Stanković, Branislav Ivanović, Aleksandar Kolarov, Nemanja Matić, Dušan Tadić and Aleksandar Mitrović have achieved significant success in the UEFA Champions League, boosting Serbia's reputation as a leading exporter of footballers. The national team has qualified for three of the last four FIFA World Cups but lacks significant success. Serbia's two main football clubs, Red Star Belgrade and Partizan, have storied histories, with Red Star winning the 1990–91 European Cup and Partizan reaching the 1965–66 European Cup final. Their rivalry is known as the "Eternal Derby".

The country is a powerhouse in world basketball, with the men's national team winning two World Championships, three EuroBasket titles, two Olympic silver medals, and a bronze medal in 2024. The women's team has won two EuroBasket Women titles and an Olympic bronze medal. Serbia's men's 3x3 team has won six FIBA 3x3 World Cups and five FIBA 3x3 Europe Cups. A total of 34 Serbian players have played in the NBA over the last three decades, including Nikola Jokić, a three-time NBA MVP and 2023 NBA Finals MVP. The "Serbian coaching school" has produced many of Europe's most successful basketball coaches, including Željko Obradović, who has won a record 9 Euroleague titles. KK Partizan won the 1992 EuroLeague, and KK Crvena zvezda won the 1974 FIBA Saporta Cup.

The Serbia men's national water polo team is one of the most successful, with three Olympic gold medals, three World Championships, and seven European Championships.VK Partizan has won seven Champions League titles.

The recent success of Serbian tennis players, especially Novak Djokovic, who holds a record 24 Grand Slam singles titles, has led to a surge in the sport's popularity in Serbia. Djokovic has held the No. 1 ATP ranking for a record 428 weeks and achieved a Career Super Slam with his Olympic gold in 2024. Ana Ivanovic, Jelena Janković and Nenad Zimonjić have also been ranked No. 1 in the WTA rankings.

The men's national team won the 2010 Davis Cup and 2020 ATP Cup. Serbia's men's national volleyball team won the 2000 Olympic gold medal, three European Championships, and the 2016 FIVB Volleyball World League. The women's team has won two World Championships, three European Championships, and two Olympic medals.

Serbian chess players excelled from 1950 to 1980, winning 15 Olympic medals. The men's team won the 2023 European Team Competition, and women's clubs have won the European Champions Cup five times.Svetozar Gligorić and Ljubomir Ljubojević were among the world's best players outside the USSR.

Notable Serbian athletes include sport shooters Jasna Šekarić and Damir Mikec, handball player Svetlana Kitić, volleyball player Nikola Grbić, swimmer Milorad Čavić, track and field athlete Ivana Španović, wrestler Davor Štefanek, and taekwondoist Milica Mandić.

See also

  • Index of Serbia-related articles
  • Outline of Serbia

Notes

  1. Recognised as minority languages:
    Hungarian, Bosnian, Albanian, Croatian, Slovak, Romanian, Bulgarian, Rusyn and Macedonian
  2. Excludes data for Kosovo.
  3. /ˈsɜːrbiə/ SUR-bee-ə; Serbian: Србија, Srbija, pronounced [sř̩bija]
    In minority languages:
    • Albanian: Serbia
    • Bulgarian: Сърбия (Sarbiya) pronounced [ˈsɤrbijɐ]
    • Croatian: Srbija
    • Hungarian: Szerbia Hungarian pronunciation: [ˈsɛrbijɒ]
    • Macedonian: Србија (Srbija)
    • Pannonian Rusyn: Се́рбія (Serbiya)
    • Romanian: Serbia pronounced [serbjˈa]
    • Slovak: Srbsko Slovak pronunciation: [ˈsr̩bskɔ]
  4. Serbian: Република Србија, Republika Srbija, pronounced [repǔblika sř̩bija]
    In minority languages:
    • Albanian: Republika e Serbisë
    • Bulgarian: Република Сърбия (Republika Sarbiya)
    • Croatian: Republika Srbija
    • Hungarian: Szerb Köztársaság
    • Macedonian: Република Србија (Republika Srbija)
    • Pannonian Rusyn: Републі́ка Се́рбія (Republika Serbiya)
    • Romanian: Republica Serbia
    • Slovak: Srbská republika
  5. Including the disputed territory of Kosovo.

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Serbia officially the Republic of Serbia is a landlocked country at the crossroads of Southeast and Central Europe located in the Balkans and the Pannonian Plain It borders Hungary to the north Romania to the northeast Bulgaria to the southeast North Macedonia to the south Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina to the west and Montenegro to the southwest Serbia claims a border with Albania through the disputed territory of Kosovo Serbia has about 6 6 million inhabitants excluding Kosovo Its capital Belgrade is also the largest city Republic of SerbiaRepublika Srbiјa Republika Srbija Serbian Flag Coat of armsAnthem Bozhe pravde Boze pravde English God of Justice source source source track track track track track track track track track Show globeShow map of EuropeLocation of Serbia green and the claimed but uncontrolled territory of Kosovo light green in Europe dark grey Capitaland largest cityBelgrade 44 48 N 20 28 E 44 800 N 20 467 E 44 800 20 467Official languagesSerbianEthnic groups 2022 excluding Kosovo 84 4 Serbs2 6 Hungarians2 2 Bosniaks1 2 Roma9 6 other unansweredReligion 2022 excluding Kosovo 86 6 Christianity 81 1 Serbian Orthodoxy 3 9 Catholicism 1 6 other Christian4 2 Islam1 1 no religion8 0 other unansweredDemonym s SerbianGovernmentUnitary parliamentary republic PresidentAleksandar Vucic Prime MinisterMilos Vucevic Caretaker President of the National AssemblyAna BrnabicLegislatureNational AssemblyEstablishment history Principality780 Kingdom1217 Empire1346 Ottoman conquest1459 1804 Serbian Revolution1804 1835 Principality of Serbia1815 Independence recognized13 July 1878 Kingdom of Serbia18 March 1882 Yugoslavia1 December 1918 Serbia and Montenegro27 April 1992 Independence restored5 June 2006Area Total88 499 km2 34 170 sq mi 111th Excluding Kosovo77 612 km2 29 966 sq mi Population January 2024 estimate6 605 168 excluding Kosovo 108th 2022 census6 647 003 excluding Kosovo 107th Density85 km2 220 1 sq mi 130th GDP PPP 2024 estimate Total 191 561 billion 78th Per capita 29 038 67th GDP nominal 2024 estimate Total 82 550 billion 75th Per capita 12 513 80th Gini 2023 31 7 medium inequalityHDI 2022 0 805 very high 65th CurrencySerbian dinar RSD Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Calling code 381ISO 3166 codeRSInternet TLD rs srb Continuously inhabited since the Paleolithic Age the territory of modern day Serbia faced Slavic migrations in the 6th century Several regional states were founded in the early Middle Ages and were at times recognised as tributaries to the Byzantine Frankish and Hungarian kingdoms The Serbian Kingdom obtained recognition by the Holy See and Constantinople in 1217 reaching its territorial apex in 1346 as the Serbian Empire By the mid 16th century the Ottomans annexed the entirety of modern day Serbia their rule was at times interrupted by the Habsburg Empire which began expanding towards Central Serbia from the end of the 17th century while maintaining a foothold in Vojvodina In the early 19th century the Serbian Revolution established the nation state as the region s first constitutional monarchy which subsequently expanded its territory In 1918 in the aftermath of World War I the Kingdom of Serbia united with the former Habsburg crownland of Vojvodina later in the same year it joined with other South Slavic nations in the foundation of Yugoslavia which existed in various political formations until the Yugoslav Wars of the 1990s During the breakup of Yugoslavia Serbia formed a union with Montenegro which was peacefully dissolved in 2006 restoring Serbia s independence as a sovereign state In 2008 representatives of the Assembly of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence with mixed responses from the international community while Serbia continues to claim it as part of its own sovereign territory Serbia is an upper middle income economy and provides universal health care and free primary and secondary education to its citizens It is a unitary parliamentary constitutional republic member of the UN CoE OSCE PfP BSEC CEFTA and is acceding to the WTO Since 2014 the country has been negotiating its EU accession with the possibility of joining the European Union by 2030 Serbia formally adheres to the policy of military neutrality EtymologyThe origin of the name Serbia is unclear Historically authors have mentioned the Serbs Serbian Srbi Srbi and the Sorbs of Eastern Germany Upper Sorbian Serbja Lower Sorbian Serby in a variety of ways Cervetiis Servetiis gentis S urbiorum Suurbi Sorabi Soraborum Sorabos Surpe Sorabici Sorabiet Sarbin Swrbjn Servians Sorbi Sirbia Sribia Zirbia Zribia Suurbelant Surbia Serbulia Sorbulia among others These authors used these names to refer to Serbs and Sorbs in areas where their historical and current presence is not disputable notably in the Balkans and Lusatia However there are also sources that have used similar names in other parts of the world most notably in the Asiatic Sarmatia in the Caucasus There exist two prevailing theories about the origin of the ethnonym Sŕb plur Sŕby one from a Proto Slavic language with an appellative meaning of a family kinship and alliance while another from an Iranian Sarmatian language with various meanings In his work De Administrando Imperio Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus suggests that the Serbs originated from White Serbia near Francia From 1815 to 1882 the official name for Serbia was the Principality of Serbia From 1882 to 1918 it was renamed to the Kingdom of Serbia later from 1945 to 1963 the official name for Serbia was the People s Republic of Serbia This was again renamed the Socialist Republic of Serbia from 1963 to 1990 Since 1990 the official name of the country has been the Republic of Serbia HistoryPrehistory and antiquity Vinca culture figurine 4000 4500 BC Archaeological evidence of Paleolithic settlements on the territory of present day Serbia is scarce A fragment of a hominid jaw found in Sicevo Mala Balanica is believed to be up to 525 000 397 000 years old Approximately 6 500 BC during the Neolithic the Starcevo and Vinca cultures existed in the region of modern day Belgrade They dominated much of Southeast Europe as well as parts of Central Europe and Anatolia Several important archaeological sites from this era including Lepenski Vir and Vinca Belo Brdo still exist near the Danube During the Iron Age local tribes of Triballi Dardani and Autariatae were encountered by the Ancient Greeks during their cultural and political expansion into the region from the 5th up to the 2nd century BC The Celtic tribe of Scordisci settled throughout the area in the 3rd century BC It formed a tribal state building several fortifications including their capital at Singidunum present day Belgrade and Naissos present day Nis The Romans conquered much of the territory in the 2nd century BC In 167 BC the Roman province of Illyricum was established the remainder was conquered around 75 BC forming the Roman province of Moesia Superior the modern day Srem region was conquered in 9 BC and Backa and Banat in 106 AD after the Dacian Wars As a result of this contemporary Serbia extends fully or partially over several former Roman provinces including Moesia Pannonia Praevalitana Dalmatia Dacia and Macedonia Seventeen Roman Emperors were born in the area of modern day Serbia second only to contemporary Italy The most famous of these was Constantine the Great the first Christian Emperor who issued an edict ordering religious tolerance throughout the Empire Remnants of the Felix Romuliana Imperial Palace 298 AD a UNESCO World Heritage Site Some historians believe as many as 18 Roman emperors were born in modern day Serbia When the Roman Empire was divided in 395 most of Serbia remained under the Byzantine Empire and its northwestern parts were included in the Western Roman Empire By the 6th century South Slavs migrated into the Byzantine territory in large numbers They merged with the local Romanised population that was gradually assimilated Middle Ages The Coronation of the tsar Stefan Dusan known as Dusan the Mighty in Skopje as Emperor of Serbs and Greeks in 1346 White Serbs an early Slavic tribe from White Serbia eventually settled in an area between the Sava river and the Dinaric Alps By the beginning of the 9th century Serbia achieved a level of statehood Christianization of Serbia was a gradual process finalized by the middle of the 9th century In the mid 10th century the Serbian state experienced a fall During the 11th and 12th century Serbian state frequently fought with the neighbouring Byzantine Empire Between 1166 and 1371 Serbia was ruled by the Nemanjic dynasty under whom the state was elevated to a kingdom in 1217 and an empire in 1346 under Stefan Dusan The Serbian Orthodox Church was organized as an autocephalous archbishopric in 1219 through the effort of Sava the country s patron saint and in 1346 it was raised to the Patriarchate Monuments of the Nemanjic period survive in many monasteries several being World Heritage sites and fortifications During these centuries the Serbian state and influence expanded significantly The northern part modern Vojvodina was ruled by the Kingdom of Hungary The period after 1371 known as the Fall of the Serbian Empire saw the once powerful state fragmented into several principalities culminating in the Battle of Kosovo 1389 against the rising Ottoman Empire By the end of the 14th century the Turks had conquered and ruled the territories south of the Sar Mountains The political center of Serbia shifted northwards when the capital of the newly established Serbian Despotate was transferred to Belgrade in 1403 before moving to Smederevo in 1430 The Despotate was then under the double vassalage of Hungary and the Ottoman Empire The fall of Smederevo on 20 June 1459 which marked the full conquest of the Serbian Despotate by the Ottomans also symbolically signified the end of the Serbian state Ottoman and Habsburg rule The Battle of Kosovo 1389 is particularly important to Serbian history tradition and national identity In all Serbian lands conquered by the Ottomans the native nobility was eliminated and the peasantry was enserfed to Ottoman rulers while much of the clergy fled or were confined to the isolated monasteries Under the Ottoman system Serbs and Christians were considered an inferior class and subjected to heavy taxes and a portion of the Serbian population experienced Islamization Many Serbs were recruited during the devshirme system a form of slavery in which boys from Balkan Christian families were forcibly converted to Islam and trained for infantry units of the Ottoman army known as the Janissaries The Serbian Patriarchate of Pec was extinguished in 1463 but reestablished in 1557 providing for limited continuation of Serbian cultural traditions within the Ottoman Empire under the Millet system After the loss of statehood to the Ottoman Empire Serbian resistance continued in northern regions modern Vojvodina under titular despots until 1537 and popular leaders like Jovan Nenad 1526 1527 From 1521 to 1552 Ottomans conquered Belgrade and regions of Syrmia Backa and Banat Wars and rebellions constantly challenged Ottoman rule One of the most significant was the Banat Uprising in 1594 and 1595 which was part of the Long War 1593 1606 between the Habsburgs and the Ottomans The area of modern Vojvodina endured a century long Ottoman occupation before being ceded to the Habsburg monarchy partially by the Treaty of Karlovci 1699 and fully by the Treaty of Pozarevac 1718 Migration of the Serbs by Paja Jovanovic c 1896 depicting the Great Migration of 1690 led by the patriarch Arsenije III Crnojevic During the Habsburg Ottoman war 1683 1699 much of Serbia switched from Ottoman rule to Habsburg control from 1688 to 1690 However the Ottoman army reconquered a large part of Serbia in the winter of 1689 1690 leading to a brutal massacre of the civilian population by uncontrolled Albanian and Tatar units As a result of the persecutions several tens of thousands of Serbs led by the patriarch Arsenije III Crnojevic fled northwards to settle in Hungary an event known as the Great Migration of 1690 In August 1690 following several petitions the Emperor Leopold I formally granted Serbs from the Habsburg monarchy a first set of privileges primarily to guarantee them freedom of religion As a consequence the ecclesiastical centre of the Serbs also moved northwards to the Metropolitanate of Karlovci and the Serbian Patriarchate of Pec was once again abolished by the Ottomans in 1766 In 1718 39 the Habsburg monarchy occupied much of Central Serbia and established the Kingdom of Serbia as crownland Those gains were lost by the Treaty of Belgrade in 1739 when the Ottomans retook the region Apart from territory of modern day Vojvodina which remained under the Habsburg Empire central regions of Serbia were occupied once again by the Habsburgs in 1788 1792 Revolution and independence Serbian Revolution led by Karađorđe Petrovic and Milos Obrenovic marked the foundation of modern Serbia The Serbian Revolution for independence from the Ottoman Empire lasted eleven years from 1804 until 1815 During the First Serbian Uprising 1804 1813 led by vozd Karađorđe Petrovic Serbia was independent for almost a decade before the Ottoman army was able to reoccupy the country The Second Serbian Uprising began in 1815 led by Milos Obrenovic it ended with a compromise between Serbian revolutionaries and Ottoman authorities Serbia was one of the first nations in the Balkans to abolish feudalism The Akkerman Convention in 1826 the Treaty of Adrianople in 1829 and finally the Hatt i Sharif recognised the suzerainty of Serbia The First Serbian Constitution was adopted on 15 February 1835 making the country one of the first to adopt a democratic constitution in Europe 15 February is now commemorated as Statehood Day a public holiday Following the clashes between the Ottoman army and Serbs in Belgrade in 1862 and under pressure from the Great Powers by 1867 the last Turkish soldiers left the Principality making the country de facto independent By enacting a new constitution in 1869 without consulting the Porte Serbian diplomats confirmed the de facto independence of the country In 1876 Serbia declared war on the Ottoman Empire siding with the ongoing Christian uprisings in Bosnia Herzegovina and Bulgaria The formal independence of the country was internationally recognised at the Congress of Berlin in 1878 which ended the Russo Turkish War this treaty however prohibited Serbia from uniting with other Serbian regions by placing Bosnia and Herzegovina under Austro Hungarian occupation alongside the occupation of the region of Raska From 1815 to 1903 the principality was ruled by the House of Obrenovic save for the rule of Prince Aleksandar Karađorđevic between 1842 and 1858 In 1882 Principality of Serbia became the Kingdom of Serbia ruled by King Milan I The House of Karađorđevic descendants of the revolutionary leader Karađorđe Petrovic assumed power in 1903 following the May Overthrow The 1848 revolution in Austria led to the establishment of the autonomous territory of Serbian Vojvodina by 1849 the region was transformed into the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar Balkan Wars and World War I King Peter I of Serbia led the nation during the Great Serbian Retreat in 1915 Serbia lost about 850 000 people a quarter of its pre war population In the First Balkan War in 1912 the Balkan League defeated the Ottoman Empire and captured its European territories which enabled territorial expansion of the Kingdom of Serbia into regions of Raska Kosovo Metohija and Vardarian Macedonia The Second Balkan War soon ensued when Bulgaria turned on its former allies but was defeated resulting in the Treaty of Bucharest In two years Serbia enlarged its territory by 80 and its population by 50 it also suffered high casualties on the eve of World War I with more than 36 000 dead Austria Hungary became wary of the rising regional power on its borders and its potential to become an anchor for unification of Serbs and other South Slavs and the relationship between the two countries became tense The assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria on 28 June 1914 in Sarajevo by Gavrilo Princip a member of the Young Bosnia organisation led to Austria Hungary declaring war on Serbia on 28 July 1914 setting off World War I Serbia won the first major battles of the war including the Battle of Cer and the Battle of Kolubara Despite initial success it was eventually overpowered by the Central Powers in 1915 and Austro Hungarian occupation of Serbia followed Most of its army and some people retreated to Greece and Corfu suffering immense losses on the way After the Central Powers military situation on other fronts worsened the remains of the Serb army returned east and led a final breakthrough through enemy lines on 15 September 1918 liberating Serbia and defeating Bulgaria and Austria Hungary Serbia with its campaign was a major Balkan Entente Power which contributed significantly to the Allied victory in the Balkans in November 1918 especially by helping France force Bulgaria s capitulation Serbia s casualties accounted for 8 of the total Entente military deaths 58 243 600 soldiers of the Serbian army perished in the war The total number of casualties is placed around 700 000 more than 16 of Serbia s prewar size and a majority 57 of its overall male population Serbia suffered the biggest casualty rate in World War I Kingdom of Yugoslavia The Corfu Declaration was a formal agreement between the government in exile of the Kingdom of Serbia and the Yugoslav Committee anti Habsburg South Slav emigres that pledged to unify Kingdom of Serbia and Kingdom of Montenegro with Austria Hungary s South Slav autonomous crown lands Kingdom of Croatia Slavonia Kingdom of Dalmatia Slovenia Vojvodina then part of the Kingdom of Hungary and Bosnia and Herzegovina in a post war Yugoslav state It was signed on 20 July 1917 on Corfu The Great People s Assembly of Serbs Bunjevci and other Slavs in Banat Backa and Baranja the Serbian Crown Lands in Austria Hungary today s Vojvodina declared unification with the Kingdom of Serbia on 25 November 1918 As the Austro Hungarian Empire collapsed the territory of Syrmia united with Serbia on 24 November 1918 Just a day later the Great People s Assembly of Serbs Bunjevci and other Slavs in Banat Backa and Baranja declared the unification of these regions Banat Backa and Baranja with Serbia On 26 November 1918 the Podgorica Assembly deposed the House of Petrovic Njegos and united Montenegro with Serbia On 1 December 1918 in Belgrade Serbian Prince Regent Alexander Karađorđevic proclaimed the Kingdom of the Serbs Croats and Slovenes under King Peter I of Serbia King Peter was succeeded by his son Alexander in August 1921 Serb centralists and Croat autonomists clashed in the parliament and most governments were fragile and short lived Nikola Pasic a conservative prime minister headed or dominated most governments until his death King Alexander established a dictatorship in 1929 with the aim of establishing the Yugoslav ideology and single Yugoslav nation changed the name of the country to Yugoslavia The effect of Alexander s dictatorship was to further alienate the non Serbs living in Yugoslavia from the idea of unity Alexander was assassinated in Marseille during an official visit in 1934 by Vlado Chernozemski member of the IMRO Alexander was succeeded by his eleven year old son Peter II In August 1939 the Cvetkovic Macek Agreement established an autonomous Banate of Croatia as a solution to Croatian concerns World War II In 1941 in spite of Yugoslav attempts to remain neutral the Axis powers invaded Yugoslavia The territory of modern Serbia was divided between Hungary Bulgaria the Independent State of Croatia Greater Albania and Montenegro while the remainder was placed under the military administration of Nazi Germany with Serbian puppet governments led by Milan Acimovic and Milan Nedic assisted by Dimitrije Ljotic s fascist organization Yugoslav National Movement Zbor A monument commemorating the victims of the Nazi German established Sajmiste concentration camp a part of the Holocaust in German occupied Serbia and Genocide of Serbs The Yugoslav territory was the scene of a civil war between royalist Chetniks commanded by Draza Mihailovic and communist partisans commanded by Josip Broz Tito Axis auxiliary units of the Serbian Volunteer Corps and the Serbian State Guard fought against both of these forces The siege of Kraljevo was a major battle of the uprising in Serbia led by Chetnik forces against the Nazis Several days after the battle began the German forces committed a massacre of approximately 2 000 civilians in an event known as the Kraljevo massacre in a reprisal for the attack Draginac and Loznica massacre of 2 950 villagers in Western Serbia in 1941 was the first large execution of civilians in occupied Serbia by Germans with Kragujevac massacre and Novi Sad Raid of Jews and Serbs by Hungarian fascists being the most notorious with over 3 000 victims in each case After one year of occupation around 16 000 Serbian Jews were murdered in the area or around 90 of its pre war Jewish population during The Holocaust in Serbia Many concentration camps were established across the area Banjica concentration camp was the largest concentration camp and jointly run by the German army and Nedic s regime with primary victims being Serbian Jews Roma and Serb political prisoners Hundreds of thousands of ethnic Serbs fled the Axis puppet state known as the Independent State of Croatia and sought refuge in German occupied Serbia seeking to escape the large scale persecution and Genocide of Serbs Jews and Roma being committed by the Ustase regime The number of Serb victims was approximately 300 000 to 350 000 According to Tito himself Serbs made up the vast majority of anti fascist fighters and Yugoslav Partisans for the whole course of World War II The Republic of Uzice was a short lived liberated territory established by the Partisans and the first liberated territory in World War II Europe organised as a military mini state that existed in the autumn of 1941 in the west of occupied Serbia By late 1944 the Belgrade Offensive swung in favour of the partisans in the civil war the partisans subsequently gained control of Yugoslavia Following the Belgrade Offensive the Syrmian Front was the last major military action of World War II in Serbia A study by Vladimir Zerjavic estimates total war related deaths in Yugoslavia at 1 027 000 including 273 000 in Serbia Socialist Yugoslavia The principle of non alignment was the core of Yugoslav and later Serbian diplomacy The First Non Aligned Movement Summit Conference took place in Belgrade in September 1961 The victory of the Communist Partisans resulted in the abolition of the monarchy and a subsequent constitutional referendum A one party state was soon established in Yugoslavia by the Communist Party of Yugoslavia It is claimed between 60 000 and 70 000 people died in Serbia during the 1944 45 communist purge Serbia became a constituent republic within the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia known as the People s Republic of Serbia and had a republic branch of the federal communist party the League of Communists of Serbia Serbia s most powerful and influential politician in Tito era Yugoslavia was Aleksandar Rankovic one of the big four Yugoslav leaders Rankovic was later removed from the office because of the disagreements regarding Kosovo s nomenklatura and the unity of Serbia Rankovic s dismissal was highly unpopular among Serbs Pro decentralisation reformers in Yugoslavia succeeded in the late 1960s in attaining substantial decentralisation of powers creating substantial autonomy in Kosovo and Vojvodina and recognising a distinctive Muslim nationality As a result of these reforms there was a massive overhaul of Kosovo s nomenklatura and police that shifted from being Serb dominated to ethnic Albanian dominated through firing Serbs on a large scale Further concessions were made to the ethnic Albanians of Kosovo in response to unrest including the creation of the University of Pristina as an Albanian language institution These changes created widespread fear among Serbs of being treated as second class citizens Belgrade the capital of FPR Yugoslavia and PR Serbia hosted the first Non Aligned Movement Summit in September 1961 as well as the first major gathering of the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe OSCE with the aim of implementing the Helsinki Accords from October 1977 to March 1978 The 1972 smallpox outbreak in SAP Kosovo and other parts of SR Serbia was the last major outbreak of smallpox in Europe since World War II Breakup of Yugoslavia and political transition Slobodan Milosevic was a prominent political figure in the former Yugoslavia His leadership was controversial with critics stating his government continued to be authoritarian despite constitutional changes The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and territories of Serb breakaway states Republika Srpska and Republika Srpska Krajina during the Yugoslav wars In 1989 Slobodan Milosevic rose to power in Serbia Milosevic promised a reduction of powers for the autonomous provinces of Kosovo and Vojvodina where his allies subsequently took over power during the Anti bureaucratic revolution This ignited tensions between the communist leadership of the other republics of Yugoslavia and awoke ethnic nationalism across Yugoslavia that eventually resulted in its breakup with Slovenia Croatia Bosnia and Herzegovina and Macedonia declaring independence during 1991 and 1992 better source needed Serbia and Montenegro remained together as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia FRY However according to the Badinter Commission the country was not legally considered a continuation of the former SFRY but a new state Fueled by ethnic tensions the Yugoslav Wars 1991 2001 erupted with the most severe conflicts taking place in Croatia and Bosnia where the large ethnic Serb communities opposed independence from Yugoslavia The FRY remained outside the conflicts but provided logistic military and financial support to Serb forces in the wars In response the UN imposed sanctions against Yugoslavia which led to political isolation and the collapse of the economy GDP decreased from 24 billion in 1990 to under 10 billion in 1993 Serbia was in the 2000s sued on the charges of alleged genocide by neighbouring Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia but in both cases the main charges against Serbia were dismissed Serbian and other refugee children of the Kosovo War The war ended with NATO bombing which remains a controversial topic Multi party democracy was introduced in Serbia in 1990 officially dismantling the one party system Despite constitutional changes Milosevic maintained strong political influence over the state media and security apparatus When the ruling Socialist Party of Serbia refused to accept its defeat in municipal elections in 1996 Serbians engaged in large protests against the government In 1998 continued clashes between the Albanian guerilla Kosovo Liberation Army and Yugoslav security forces led to the short Kosovo War 1998 99 in which NATO intervened leading to the withdrawal of Serbian forces and the establishment of UN administration in the province After the Yugoslav Wars Serbia became home to highest number of refugees and internally displaced persons in Europe After presidential elections in September 2000 opposition parties accused Milosevic of electoral fraud A campaign of civil resistance followed led by the Democratic Opposition of Serbia DOS a broad coalition of anti Milosevic parties This culminated on 5 October when half a million people from all over the country congregated in Belgrade compelling Milosevic to concede defeat The fall of Milosevic ended Yugoslavia s international isolation Milosevic was sent to the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia The DOS announced that FR Yugoslavia would seek to join the European Union In 2003 the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was renamed Serbia and Montenegro the EU opened negotiations with the country for the Stabilisation and Association Agreement Serbia s political climate remained tense and in 2003 Prime Minister Zoran Đinđic was assassinated as result of a plot originating from organised crime and former security officials In 2004 unrest in Kosovo took place leaving 19 people dead and a number of Serbian Orthodox churches and monasteries destroyed or damaged Contemporary period Zoran Đinđic played a key role in the revolution against the controversial regime of Slobodan Milosevic and later became the first democratically elected PM On 21 May 2006 Montenegro held a referendum which showed 55 4 of voters in favour of independence just above the 55 required by the referendum This was followed on 5 June 2006 by Serbia s declaration of independence marking the re emergence of Serbia as an independent state The National Assembly of Serbia declared Serbia to be the legal successor to the former state union The Assembly of Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia on 17 February 2008 Serbia immediately condemned the declaration and continues to deny any statehood to Kosovo The declaration has sparked varied responses from the international community Status neutral talks between Serbia and Kosovo Albanian authorities are held in Brussels mediated by the EU Serbia officially applied for membership in the European Union on 22 December 2009 and received candidate status on 1 March 2012 following a delay in December 2011 Following a positive recommendation of the European Commission and European Council in June 2013 negotiations to join the EU commenced in January 2014 In 2012 Aleksandar Vucic and his Serbian Progressive Party came to power According to a number of international analysts Serbia has suffered from democratic backsliding into authoritarianism followed by a decline in media freedom and civil liberties After the COVID 19 pandemic spread to Serbia in March 2020 a state of emergency was declared and a curfew was introduced for the first time in Serbia since World War II In April 2022 President Aleksandar Vucic was re elected In December 2023 President Vucic won a snap parliamentary election The election resulted in protests with opposition supporters claiming that the election result was fraudulent On 16 January 2022 a Serbian constitutional referendum took place in which citizens chose to amend the Constitution concerning the judiciary The changes were presented as a step toward reducing political influence in the judicial system The country was chosen to host international specialised exposition Expo 2027 The Serbian government is working with Rio Tinto corporation on a project which aims to develop Europe s biggest lithium mine Mining lithium became a matter of debate in the society and several protests against mining took place GeographyTopographic map of SerbiaView of Ribnica Lake Zlatibor mountain there are 165 mountains in the countryBacka region northern part of the country is defined by its mostly flat and fertile terrain A landlocked country situated at the crossroads between Central and Southeastern Europe Serbia is located in the Balkan peninsula and the Pannonian Plain Serbia lies between latitudes 41 and 47 N and longitudes 18 and 23 E The country covers a total of 88 499 km2 34 170 sq mi with Kosovo excluded the total area is 77 474 km2 29 913 sq mi Its total border length amounts to 2 027 km 1 260 mi Albania 115 km 71 mi Bosnia and Herzegovina 302 km 188 mi Bulgaria 318 km 198 mi Croatia 241 km 150 mi Hungary 151 km 94 mi North Macedonia 221 km 137 mi Montenegro 203 km 126 mi and Romania 476 km 296 mi All of Kosovo s border with Albania 115 km 71 mi North Macedonia 159 km 99 mi and Montenegro 79 km 49 mi are under control of the Kosovo border police Serbia treats the 352 km 219 mi border with Kosovo as an administrative line it is under shared control of Kosovo border police and Serbian police forces The Pannonian Plain covers the northern third of the country Vojvodina and Macva while the easternmost tip of Serbia extends into the Wallachian Plain The terrain of the central part of the country consists chiefly of hills traversed by rivers Mountains dominate the southern third of Serbia Dinaric Alps stretch in the west and the southwest following the flow of the rivers Drina and Ibar The Carpathian Mountains and Balkan Mountains stretch in a north south direction in eastern Serbia Ancient mountains in the southeast corner of the country belong to the Rilo Rhodope Mountain system Elevation ranges from the Midzor peak of the Balkan Mountains at 2 169 metres 7 116 feet the highest peak in Serbia excluding Kosovo to the lowest point of just 17 metres 56 feet near the Danube river at Prahovo The largest lake is Đerdap Lake 163 square kilometres 63 sq mi and the longest river passing through Serbia is the Danube 587 35 kilometres 364 96 mi Climate The climate of Serbia is under the influences of the landmass of Eurasia and the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea With mean January temperatures around 0 C 32 F and mean July temperatures of 22 C 72 F it can be classified as a warm humid continental or humid subtropical climate In the north the climate is more continental with cold winters and hot humid summers along with well distributed rainfall patterns In the south summers and autumns are drier and winters are relatively cold with heavy inland snowfall in the mountains Differences in elevation proximity to the Adriatic Sea and large river basins as well as exposure to the winds account for climate variations Southern Serbia is subject to Mediterranean influences The Dinaric Alps and other mountain ranges contribute to the cooling of most of the warm air masses Winters are quite harsh in the Pester plateau because of the mountains which encircle it One of the climatic features of Serbia is Kosava a cold and very squally southeastern wind which starts in the Carpathian Mountains and follows the Danube northwest through the Iron Gate where it gains a jet effect and continues to Belgrade and can spread as far south as Nis The average annual air temperature for the period 1961 1990 for the area with an elevation of up to 300 m 984 ft is 10 9 C 51 6 F The areas with an elevation of 300 to 500 m 984 to 1 640 ft have an average annual temperature of around 10 0 C 50 0 F and over 1 000 m 3 281 ft of elevation around 6 0 C 42 8 F The lowest recorded temperature in Serbia was 39 5 C 39 1 F on 13 January 1985 Karajukica Bunari in Pester and the highest was 44 9 C 112 8 F on 24 July 2007 recorded in Smederevska Palanka Serbia is one of few European countries with very high risk of natural hazards earthquakes storms floods droughts It is estimated that potential floods particularly in areas of Central Serbia threaten over 500 larger settlements and an area of 16 000 square kilometres The most disastrous were the floods in May 2014 when 57 people died and a damage of over 1 5 billion euros was inflicted Hydrology The Uvac Special Nature Reserve is one of the last remaining habitats of the griffon vulture in EuropePicea omorika is a species of coniferous tree endemic to Tara National Park in western Serbia Almost all of Serbia s rivers drain to the Black Sea by way of the Danube river The Danube the second largest European river passes through Serbia with 588 kilometres 21 of its overall length and represents the major source of fresh water It is joined by its biggest tributaries the Great Morava longest river entirely in Serbia with 493 km 306 mi of length Sava and Tisza rivers One notable exception is the Pcinja which flows into the Aegean Drina river forms the natural border between Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia and represents the main kayaking and rafting attraction in both countries Due to configuration of the terrain natural lakes are sparse and small most of them are located in the lowlands of Vojvodina like the aeolian lake Palic or numerous oxbow lakes along river flows like Zasavica and Carska Bara However there are numerous artificial lakes mostly due to hydroelectric dams the biggest being Đerdap Iron Gates on the Danube with 163 km2 63 sq mi on the Serbian side a total area of 253 km2 98 sq mi is shared with Romania Perucac on the Drina and Vlasina The largest waterfall Jelovarnik located in Kopaonik is 71 m high Abundance of relatively unpolluted surface waters and numerous underground natural and mineral water sources of high water quality presents a chance for export and economy improvement however more extensive exploitation and production of bottled water began only recently citation needed Environment Serbia is a country of rich ecosystem and species diversity covering only 1 9 of the whole European territory Serbia is home to 39 of European vascular flora 51 of European fish fauna 40 of European reptiles and amphibian fauna 74 of European bird fauna and 67 European mammal fauna Its abundance of mountains and rivers make it an ideal environment for a variety of animals many of which are protected including wolves lynx bears foxes and stags There are 17 snake species living all over the country 8 of them are venomous Mountain of Tara in western Serbia is one of the last regions in Europe where bears can still live in absolute freedom better source needed Serbia is home to about 380 species of birds In Carska Bara there are over 300 bird species on just a few square kilometres Uvac Gorge is considered one of the last habitats of the Griffon vulture in Europe In area around the city of Kikinda in the northernmost part of the country some 145 endangered long eared owls are noted making it the world s biggest settlement of these species The country is considerably rich with threatened species of bats and butterflies as well Wild horses at the Stara Planina There are 380 protected areas of Serbia encompassing 4 947 square kilometres or 6 4 of the country Those protected areas include 5 national parks Đerdap Tara Kopaonik Fruska Gora and Sar Mountain 15 nature parks 15 landscapes of outstanding features 61 nature reserves and 281 natural monuments With 29 1 of its territory covered by forest Serbia is considered to be a middle forested country compared on a global scale to world forest coverage at 30 and European average of 35 The total forest area in Serbia is 2 252 000 ha 1 194 000 ha or 53 are state owned and 1 058 387 ha or 47 are privately owned or 0 3 ha per inhabitant It had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 5 29 10 ranking it 105th globally out of 172 countries The most common trees are oak beech pines and firs Air pollution is a significant problem in Bor area due to work of large copper mining and smelting complex and Pancevo where oil and petrochemical industry is based Some cities suffer from water supply problems due to mismanagement and low investments in the past as well as water pollution like the pollution of the Ibar River from the Trepca zinc lead combinate affecting the city of Kraljevo or the presence of natural arsenic in underground waters in Zrenjanin Poor waste management has been identified as one of the most important environmental problems in Serbia and the recycling is a fledgling activity with only 15 of its waste being turned back for reuse The 1999 NATO bombing caused serious damage to the environment with several thousand tonnes of toxic chemicals stored in targeted factories and refineries released into the soil and water basins PoliticsNational Assembly of the Republic of Serbia Serbia is a parliamentary republic with the government divided into legislative executive and judiciary branches The current constitution was adopted in 2006 in the aftermath of the Montenegro independence referendum The Constitutional Court rules on matters regarding the Constitution The President of the Republic Predsednik Republike is the head of state is elected by popular vote to a five year term and is limited by the Constitution to a maximum of two terms In addition to being the commander in chief of the armed forces the president has the procedural duty of appointing the prime minister with the consent of the parliament and has some influence on foreign policy Aleksandar Vucic of the Serbian Progressive Party is the current president following the 2017 presidential election Seat of the presidency is Novi Dvor Banovina Palace complex seat of the provincial government and the assembly of Vojvodina province The Government Vlada is composed of the prime minister and cabinet ministers The Government is responsible for proposing legislation and a budget executing the laws and guiding the foreign and internal policies The current prime minister is Milos Vucevic nominated by the Serbian Progressive Party The National Assembly Narodna skupstina is a unicameral legislative body The National Assembly has the power to enact laws approve the budget schedule presidential elections select and dismiss the Prime Minister and other ministers declare war and ratify international treaties and agreements It is composed of 250 proportionally elected members who serve four year terms Following the 2020 parliamentary election the largest political parties in the National Assembly are the populist Serbian Progressive Party and Socialist Party of Serbia that with its partners hold more than a supermajority number of seats In 2021 Serbia was the 5th country in Europe by the number of women holding high ranking public functions better source needed Law and criminal justice Serbia has a three tiered judicial system made up of the Supreme Court of Cassation as the court of the last resort Courts of Appeal as the appellate instance and Basic and High courts as the general jurisdictions at first instance Courts of special jurisdictions are the Administrative Court commercial courts including the Commercial Court of Appeal at second instance and misdemeanor courts including High Misdemeanor Court at second instance The judiciary is overseen by the Ministry of Justice Serbia has a typical civil law legal system Law enforcement is the responsibility of the Serbian Police which is subordinate to the Ministry of the Interior Serbian Police fields 27 363 uniformed officers National security and counterintelligence are the responsibility of the Security Intelligence Agency BIA Foreign relations Kosovo States which recognize Kosovo as an independent country States that do not recognize Kosovo as an independent country States that recognized Kosovo and later withdrew that recognition Serbia has established diplomatic relations with 191 UN member states the Holy See the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and the European Union Foreign relations are conducted through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Serbia has a network of 74 embassies and 25 consulates internationally There are 69 foreign embassies 5 consulates and 4 liaison offices in Serbia Serbian foreign policy is focused on achieving the strategic goal of becoming a member state of the European Union EU Serbia officially applied for membership in the European Union on 22 December 2009 It received a full candidate status on 1 March 2012 and started accession talks on 21 January 2014 As of 2018 update the European Commission considered accession possible by 2025 On 17 February 2008 Kosovo unilaterally declared independence from Serbia In protest Serbia initially recalled its ambassadors from countries that recognised Kosovo s independence The resolution of 26 December 2007 by the National Assembly stated that both the Kosovo declaration of independence and recognition thereof by any state would be gross violation of international law Serbia began cooperation and dialogue with NATO in 2006 when the country joined the Partnership for Peace programme and the Euro Atlantic Partnership Council The country s military neutrality was formally proclaimed by a resolution adopted by Serbia s parliament in December 2007 which makes joining any military alliance contingent on a popular referendum a stance acknowledged by NATO On the other hand Serbia s relations with Russia are habitually described by mass media as a centuries old religious ethnic and political alliance and Russia is said to have sought to solidify its relations with Serbia since the imposition of sanctions against Russia in 2014 Following the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine Serbia drew international scrutiny for not joining EU sanctions against Russia and maintaining bilateral relations citing its own past suffering with sanctions It is one of the only countries in Europe not to sanction Russia However Serbia voted to condemn the invasion supporting the adoption of the United Nations draft resolution demanding Russia to withdraw its military forces from Ukraine as well as supporting the suspension of Russia from the UN Human Rights Council Military Branches of the Serbian Armed Forces Special forces brigade 4th Army Brigade Serbian Air Force and Air Defence Eurocopter EC145 The Serbian Armed Forces are subordinate to the Ministry of Defence and are composed of the Army and the Air Force Although a landlocked country Serbia operates a River Flotilla which patrols on the Danube Sava and Tisa rivers The Serbian Chief of the General Staff reports to the Defence Minister The Chief of Staff is appointed by the president who is the commander in chief As of 2019 update Serbian defence budget amounts to 804 million Traditionally having relied on a large number of conscripts Serbian Armed Forces went through a period of downsizing restructuring and professionalisation Conscription was abolished in 2011 Serbian Armed Forces have 28 000 active troops supplemented by the active reserve which numbers 20 000 members and passive reserve with about 170 000 The country participates in the NATO Individual Partnership Action Plan programme but has no intention of joining NATO due to significant popular rejection largely a legacy of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 It is an observer member of the Collective Security Treaty Organisation CSTO as of 2013 The country also signed the Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe The Serbian Armed Forces take part in several multinational peacekeeping missions including deployments in Lebanon Cyprus Ivory Coast and Liberia Serbia is a major producer and exporter of military equipment in the region Defence exports totaled around 600 million in 2018 The defence industry has seen significant growth over the years and it continues to grow on a yearly basis In 2024 the Serbian president approved the reintroduction of mandatory military service which was abolished in 2011 If the Government adopts this decision military service will last 75 days starting with 2025 Administrative divisions Serbia is a unitary state composed of municipalities cities districts and two autonomous provinces In Serbia excluding Kosovo there are 145 municipalities opstine and 29 cities gradovi which form the basic units of local self government Apart from municipalities cities there are 24 districts okruzi 10 most populated listed below with the City of Belgrade constituting an additional district Except for Belgrade which has an elected local government districts are regional centres of state authority but have no powers of their own they present purely administrative divisions The Constitution of Serbia recognizes two autonomous provinces Vojvodina in the north and the disputed territory of Kosovo and Metohija in the south while the remaining area of Central Serbia has never had its own regional authority Following the Kosovo War UN peacekeepers entered Kosovo and Metohija as per UNSC Resolution 1244 The government of Serbia does not recognise Kosovo s February 2008 declaration of independence considering it illegal and illegitimate BorBranicevoBelgradeZajecarWest BackaZlatiborJablanicaSouth BanatSouth BackaKolubara KosovoKosovska MitrovicaKosovo PomoravljeMacvaMoravicaNisavaPecPirotPodunavljePomoravlje PrizrenPcinjaRasinaRaskaNorth BanatNorth BackaCentral BanatSremToplicaSumadijaDemographicsEthnic structure of Serbia by municipalities and cities in 2022 As of the 2022 census Serbia excluding Kosovo has a total population of 6 647 003 and the overall population density is medium as it stands at 85 8 inhabitants per square kilometre The census was not conducted in Kosovo which held its own census that numbered their total population at 1 586 659 Serbia has been enduring a demographic crisis since the beginning of the 1990s with a death rate that has continuously exceeded its birth rate It is estimated that 500 000 people left Serbia during the 1990s 20 of whom had a higher education Serbia has one of the oldest populations in the world with the average age of 43 3 years and its population is shrinking at one of the fastest rates in the world A fifth of all households consist of only one person and just one fourth of four and more persons The average life expectancy in Serbia is 76 1 years During the 1990s Serbia had the largest refugee population in Europe Refugees and internally displaced persons IDPs in Serbia formed between 7 and 7 5 of its population at the time about half a million refugees sought refuge in the country following the series of Yugoslav wars mainly from Croatia and to a lesser extent from Bosnia and Herzegovina and the IDPs from Kosovo Serbs with 5 360 239 are the largest ethnic group in Serbia representing 81 of the total population excluding Kosovo Serbia is one of the European countries with the highest number of registered national minorities while the province of Vojvodina is recognizable for its multi ethnic and multi cultural identity Despite a decline in recent years with a population of 184 442 Hungarians remain the largest ethnic minority in Serbia concentrated predominantly in northern Vojvodina and representing 2 8 of the country s population 10 5 in Vojvodina Romani population stands at 131 936 according to the 2022 census but unofficial estimates place their actual number between 400 000 and 500 000 Bosniaks with 153 801 and Muslims by nationality with 13 011 are concentrated in Raska Sandzak in the southwest Other minority groups include Albanians Croats and Bunjevci Slovaks Yugoslavs Montenegrins Romanians and Vlachs Macedonians and Bulgarians Chinese estimated at 15 000 are the only significant non European immigrant minority Most recently tens of thousands of Russians and Ukrainians have immigrated to Serbia following the Russian Invasion of Ukraine As of January 2024 more than 300 000 Russians had emigrated to Serbia since the start of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine About one in 10 have been issued a residence permit though integration issues have been reported with Russian immigrants living in a parallel society According to World Happiness Report 2024 Serbia is on 37th rank amount 140 countries The majority of the population or 59 4 reside in urban areas and some 16 1 in Belgrade alone Belgrade is the only city with more than a million inhabitants and there are four more with over 100 000 inhabitants Largest cities or towns in SerbiaRank Name District Pop Rank Name District Pop Belgrade Novi Sad 1 Belgrade City of Belgrade 1 197 714 11 Kraljevo Raska District 61 490 Nis Kragujevac2 Novi Sad South Backa 306 702 12 Smederevo Podunavlje District 59 2613 Nis Nisava District 260 237 13 Leskovac Jablanica District 58 3384 Kragujevac Sumadija District 146 315 14 Valjevo Kolubara District 56 0595 Subotica North Backa 94 228 15 Vranje Pcinja District 55 2146 Pancevo South Banat 86 408 16 Uzice Zlatibor District 54 9657 Novi Pazar Raska District 71 462 17 Pozarevac Branicevo District 51 2718 Cacak Moravica District 69 598 18 Sabac Macva District 51 1639 Krusevac Rasina District 68 119 19 Sombor West Backa 41 81410 Zrenjanin Central Banat 67 129 20 Sremska Mitrovica Srem District 40 144 Religion The Saint Sava Cathedral in Belgrade is one of the largest Orthodox churches in the world The Constitution of Serbia defines it as a secular state with guaranteed religious freedom Orthodox Christians with 6 079 396 comprise 84 5 of country s population The Serbian Orthodox Church is the largest and traditional church of the country adherents of which are overwhelmingly Serbs Other Orthodox Christian communities in Serbia include Montenegrins Romanians Vlachs Macedonians and Bulgarians In 2011 Roman Catholics numbered 356 957 in Serbia or roughly 6 of the population mostly in northern Vojvodina which is home to ethnic minority groups such as Hungarians Croats and Bunjevci as well as to some Slovaks and Czechs Greek Catholic Church is adhered by around 25 000 citizens 0 37 of the population mostly Rusyns in Vojvodina Protestantism accounts for 0 8 of the country s population chiefly Lutheranism among Slovaks in Vojvodina as well as Calvinism among Reformed Hungarians Muslims with 222 282 or 3 of the population form the third largest religious group Islam has a strong historic following in the southern regions of Serbia primarily in southern Raska Bosniaks are the largest Islamic community in Serbia followed by Albanians estimates are that around a third of the country s Roma people are Muslim citation needed In 2011 there were only 578 Jews in Serbia compared to over 30 000 prior to World War II Atheists numbered 80 053 or 1 1 of the population and an additional 4 070 declared themselves to be agnostics Language The standard Serbian language uses both the Cyrillic and the Latin script Serbian is a rare example of synchronic digraphia a situation where all literate members of a society have two interchangeable writing systems available to them The official language is Serbian native to 88 of the population Serbian is the only European language with active digraphia using both Cyrillic and Latin alphabets Serbian Cyrillic is designated in the Constitution as the official script A survey from 2014 showed that 47 of Serbians favour the Latin alphabet 36 favour the Cyrillic one and 17 have no preference Standard Serbian is mutually intelligible with recognised minority languages of Bosnian and Croatian as all three are based on the most widespread Shtokavian dialect from Eastern Herzegovina Other recognised minority languages are Hungarian Slovak Albanian Romanian Bulgarian Rusyn and Macedonian All these languages are in official use in municipalities or cities where the ethnic minority exceeds 15 of the total population In Vojvodina the provincial administration co officially uses besides Serbian five other languages Slovak Hungarian Croatian Romanian and Rusyn Healthcare The healthcare system in Serbia is organized and managed by the three primary institutions The Ministry of Health The Institute of Public Health of Serbia Dr Milan Jovanovic Batut and the Military Medical Academy Healthcare protections are defined as a constitutional right in Serbia The Serbian public health system is based on the principles of equity and solidarity organized on the model of compulsory health insurance contributions Private health care is not integrated into the public health system but certain services may be included by contracting The newly opened wing of the University Clinical Centre of Serbia opened in 2022 has 3 150 beds considered to be the highest number in Europe and among the highest in the world The Ministry of Health determines the healthcare policy and adopts standards for the work of the healthcare service The Ministry is also in charge of the health care system health insurance preservation and improvement of health of citizens health inspection supervision over the work of the healthcare service and other tasks in the field of health care The Institute of Public Health of Serbia Dr Milan Jovanovic Batut is responsible for medical statistics epidemiology and hygiene This central tertiary institution manages and coordinates a dense network of municipal and regional Centers of Public Health that provide epidemiological and hygiene services at primary and secondary levels The National Health Insurance Fund finances the functioning of health care at all levels and also provides and implements the compulsory health insurance One of the most important health institutions in Serbia is the Military Medical Academy in Belgrade It takes care of about 30 000 patients a year military and civilian insured The academy performs around 30 000 surgical interventions and more than 500 000 specialist examinations The Clinical Centre of Serbia spreads over 34 hectares in Belgrade and consists of about 50 buildings while also has 3 150 beds considered to be the highest number in Europe and among highest in the world better source needed Other important health institutions include KBC Dr Dragisa Misovic Cardiovascular institute Dedinje Clinical Centre of Kragujevac Clinical Centre of Nis Clinical Center of Vojvodina and others EconomyNIS multinational oil and gas company headquarters in Novi Sad Serbia has an emerging market economy in upper middle income range According to the International Monetary Fund Serbian nominal GDP in 2024 is officially estimated at 81 873 billion or 12 385 per capita while purchasing power parity GDP stood at 185 014 billion or 27 985 per capita The economy is dominated by services which accounts for 67 9 of GDP followed by industry with 26 1 of GDP and agriculture at 6 of GDP Serbia s arms industry a legacy of Cold War Yugoslavia is the leading weapons manufacturer in the Western Balkans and ranked 25th worldwide in arms exports surpassing 1 6 billion in 2023 and employing 20 000 people The official currency is Serbian dinar and the central bank is National Bank of Serbia The Belgrade Stock Exchange is the only stock exchange in the country with market capitalisation of 8 65 billion and BELEX15 as the main index representing the 15 most liquid stocks The country is ranked 52nd on the Social Progress Index as well as 54th on the Global Peace Index The economy has been affected by the global economic crisis After almost a decade of strong economic growth average of 4 45 per year Serbia entered the recession in 2009 with negative growth of 3 and again in 2012 and 2014 with 1 and 1 8 respectively As the government was fighting effects of crisis the public debt has more than doubled from pre crisis level of just under 30 to about 70 of GDP and trending downwards recently to around 50 Labour force stands at 3 2 million with 56 employed in services sector 28 1 in industry and 15 9 in the agriculture The average monthly net salary in May 2019 stood at 47 575 dinars or 525 The unemployment remains an acute problem with rate of 11 as of 2021 update Since 2000 Serbia has attracted over 40 billion in foreign direct investment FDI Blue chip corporations making investments include Fiat Chrysler Automobiles Siemens Bosch Philip Morris Michelin Coca Cola Carlsberg and others In the energy sector Russian energy giants Gazprom and Lukoil have made large investments In metallurgy sector Chinese steel and copper giants Hesteel and Zijin Mining have acquired key complexes Serbia has an unfavourable trade balance imports exceed exports by 25 needs update Serbia s exports however recorded a steady growth in the 2010s reaching 19 2 billion in 2018 The country has free trade agreements with the EFTA and CEFTA a preferential trade regime with the European Union a Generalised System of Preferences with the United States and individual free trade agreements with Russia Belarus Kazakhstan and Turkey Agriculture Serbia is one of the largest providers of frozen fruit to the EU and a big producer of fruits like raspberries blackberries apples and plums Serbia has very favourable natural conditions land and climate for varied agricultural production It has 5 056 000 ha of agricultural land 0 7 ha per capita out of which 3 294 000 ha is arable land 0 45 ha per capita In 2016 Serbia exported agricultural and food products worth 3 2 billion and the export import ratio was 178 Agricultural exports constitute more than a fifth of all Serbia s sales on the world market Serbia is one of the largest provider of frozen fruit to the EU largest to the French market and 2nd largest to the German market Agricultural production is most prominent in Vojvodina on the fertile Pannonian Plain Other agricultural regions include Macva Pomoravlje Tamnava Rasina and Jablanica In the structure of the agricultural production 70 is from the crop field production and 30 is from the livestock production Serbia is world s second largest producer of plums 582 485 tonnes second to China second largest of raspberries 89 602 tonnes second to Poland it is also a significant producer of maize 6 48 million tonnes ranked 32nd in the world and wheat 2 07 million tonnes ranked 35th in the world Other important agricultural products are sunflower sugar beet soybean potato apple pork meat beef poultry and dairy There are 56 000 ha of vineyards in Serbia producing about 230 million litres of wine annually The most famous viticulture regions are located in Vojvodina and Sumadija Industry The Fiat Grande Panda is manufactured in the FCA plant in Kragujevac The industry was the economic sector hardest hit by the UN sanctions and trade embargo and NATO bombing during the 1990s and transition to market economy during the 2000s The industrial output saw dramatic downsizing in 2013 it was expected to be only a half of that of 1989 Main industrial sectors include automotive mining non ferrous metals food processing electronics pharmaceuticals clothes Serbia has 14 free economic zones as of September 2017 in which many foreign direct investments are realised The automotive industry is dominated by cluster located in Kragujevac and its vicinity and contributes to export with about 2 billion Country is a leading steel producer in the wider region of Southeast Europe and had production of nearly 2 million tonnes of raw steel in 2018 coming entirely from Smederevo steel mill owned by the Chinese Hesteel Serbia s mining industry is comparatively strong Serbia is the 18th largest producer of coal 7th in Europe extracted from large deposits in Kolubara and Kostolac basins it is also world s 23rd largest 3rd in Europe producer of copper which is extracted by Zijin Bor Copper a large copper mining company acquired by Chinese Zijin Mining in 2018 significant gold extraction is developed around Majdanpek Serbia notably manufactures intel smartphones named Tesla smartphones Food industry is well known both regionally and internationally and is one of the strong points of the economy Some of the international brand names established production in Serbia PepsiCo and Nestle in food processing sector Coca Cola Belgrade Heineken Novi Sad and Carlsberg Backa Palanka in beverage industry Nordzucker in sugar industry Serbia s electronics industry had its peak in the 1980s and the industry today is only a third of what it was back then but has witnessed a something of revival in last decade with investments of companies such as Siemens wind turbines in Subotica Panasonic lighting devices in Svilajnac and Gorenje electrical home appliances in Valjevo The pharmaceutical industry in Serbia comprises a dozen manufacturers of generic drugs of which Hemofarm in Vrsac and Galenika in Belgrade account for 80 of production volume Domestic production meets over 60 of the local demand Energy The energy sector is one of the largest and most important sectors to the country s economy Serbia is a net exporter of electricity and importer of key fuels such as oil and gas Serbia has an abundance of coal and significant reserves of oil and gas Serbia s proven reserves of 5 5 billion tonnes of coal lignite are the fifth largest in the world second in Europe after Germany The Đerdap 1 Hydroelectric Power Station is the largest dam on the Danube river and one of the largest hydro power stations in Europe Coal is found in two large deposits Kolubara 4 billion tonnes of reserves and Kostolac 1 5 billion tonnes Despite being small on a world scale Serbia s oil and gas resources 77 4 million tonnes of oil equivalent and 48 1 billion cubic metres respectively have a certain regional importance since they are largest in the region of former Yugoslavia as well as the Balkans excluding Romania Almost 90 of the discovered oil and gas are to be found in Banat and those oil and gas fields are by size among the largest in the Pannonian basin but are average on a European scale The production of electricity in 2015 in Serbia was 36 5 billion kilowatt hours KWh while the final electricity consumption amounted to 35 5 billion kilowatt hours KWh Most of the electricity produced comes from thermal power plants 72 7 of all electricity and to a lesser degree from hydroelectric power plants 27 3 There are 6 lignite operated thermal power plants with an installed power of 3 936 MW Total installed power of 9 hydroelectric power plants is 2 831 MW In addition to this there are mazute and gas operated thermal power plants with an installed power of 353 MW The entire production of electricity is concentrated in Elektroprivreda Srbije EPS public electric utility power company The current oil production in Serbia amounts to over 1 1 million tonnes of oil equivalent and satisfies some 43 of country s needs while the rest is imported National petrol company Naftna Industrija Srbije NIS was acquired in 2008 by Gazprom Neft The company s refinery in Pancevo capacity of 4 8 million tonnes is one of the most modern oil refineries in Europe it also operates network of 334 filling stations in Serbia 74 of domestic market and additional 36 stations in Bosnia and Herzegovina 31 in Bulgaria and 28 in Romania There are 155 kilometres of crude oil pipelines connecting Pancevo and Novi Sad refineries as a part of trans national Adria oil pipeline Serbia is heavily dependent on foreign sources of natural gas with only 17 coming from domestic production totalling 491 million cubic metres in 2012 and the rest is imported mainly from Russia via gas pipelines that run through Ukraine and Hungary Srbijagas public company operates the natural gas transportation system which comprise 3 177 kilometres 1 974 mi of trunk and regional natural gas pipelines and a 450 million cubic metre underground gas storage facility at Banatski Dvor In 2021 Balkan Stream gas pipeline opened through Serbia Transport Serbia has a strategic transportation location since the country s backbone Morava Valley represents the easiest land route from continental Europe to Asia Minor and the Near East An Air Serbia aircraft taking off from Belgrade Nikola Tesla AirportSrbijavoz s Stadler KISS Soko train on the rail line connecting the two major cities Belgrade and Novi Sad Serbian road network carries the bulk of traffic in the country Total length of roads is 45 419 km 28 222 mi of which 962 km 598 mi are class IA state roads i e motorways 4 517 km 2 807 mi are class IB state roads national roads 10 941 km 6 798 mi are class II state roads regional roads and 23 780 km 14 780 mi are municipal roads The road network except for the most of class IA roads are of comparatively lower quality to the Western European standards because of lack of financial resources for their maintenance in the last 20 years Over 300 km 190 mi of new motorways were constructed in the last decade and additional 154 km 96 mi are currently under construction A5 motorway from north of Krusevac to Cacak and 31 km 19 mi long segment of A2 between Cacak and Pozega Coach transport is very extensive almost every place in the country is connected by bus from largest cities to the villages in addition there are international routes mainly to countries of Western Europe with large Serb diaspora Routes both domestic and international are served by more than hundred intercity coach services biggest of which are Lasta and Nis Ekspres As of 2018 update there were 1 999 771 registered passenger cars or 1 passenger car per 3 5 inhabitants Serbia has 3 819 km 2 373 mi of rail tracks of which 1 279 km 795 mi are electrified and 283 km 176 mi are double track railroad The major rail hub is Belgrade and to a lesser degree Nis while the most important railroads include Belgrade Subotica Budapest Hungary currently upgraded to high speed status Belgrade Bar Montenegro Belgrade Sid Zagreb Croatia Belgrade Nis Sofia Bulgaria part of Pan European Corridor X and Nis Thessaloniki Greece Some 75 km 46 mi of new high speed rail line between Belgrade and Novi Sad was opened in 2022 and additional 108 km 67 mi from Novi Sad to Subotica and border with Hungary are currently under construction and due to open in 2025 Construction work for 212 km long prolongation of the high speed rail line to the south to the city of Nis is set to commence in 2024 and with its planned completion by the end of the decade four of country s five largest cities will be connected by the high speed rail lines Rail services are operated by Srbija Voz passenger transport and Srbija Kargo freight transport There are three airports with regular passenger services reaching over 6 million passengers in 2022 with Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport serving bulk of it being a hub of flagship carrier Air Serbia which flies to 80 destinations in 32 countries including intercontinental flights to New York City Chicago and Tianjin and carried 2 75 million passengers in 2022 Serbia has a developed inland water transport since there are 1 716 km 1 066 mi of navigable inland waterways 1 043 km 648 mi of navigable rivers and 673 km 418 mi of navigable canals which are almost all located in northern third of the country The most important inland waterway is the Danube Other navigable rivers include Sava Tisza Begej and Timis Rivers all of which connect Serbia with Northern and Western Europe through the Rhine Main Danube Canal and North Sea route to Eastern Europe via the Tisza Begej and Danube Black Sea routes and to Southern Europe via the Sava river More than 8 million tonnes of cargo were transported on Serbian rivers and canals in 2018 while the largest river ports are Novi Sad Belgrade Pancevo Smederevo Prahovo and Sabac Telecommunications Fixed telephone lines connect 81 of households in Serbia and with about 9 1 million users the number of cellphones surpasses the total population of by 28 The largest mobile operator is Telekom Srbija with 4 2 million subscribers followed by Yettel with 2 8 million users and A1 with about 2 million Some 58 of households have fixed line non mobile broadband Internet connection while 67 are provided with pay television services i e 38 cable television 17 IPTV and 10 satellite Digital television transition has been completed in 2015 with DVB T2 standard for signal transmission Tourism Clockwise from left 1 Kopaonik ski resort 2 Studenica Monastery a UNESCO World Heritage Site 3 Golubac Fortress 4 Subotica a city built in Art Nouveau style Serbia is not a mass tourism destination but nevertheless has a diverse range of touristic products In 2019 total of over 3 6 million tourists were recorded in accommodations of which half were foreign Foreign exchange earnings from tourism were estimated at 1 5 billion Tourism is mainly focused on the mountains and spas of the country which are mostly visited by domestic tourists as well as Belgrade and to a lesser degree Novi Sad which are preferred choices of foreign tourists almost two thirds of all foreign visits are made to these two cities The most famous mountain resorts are Kopaonik Stara Planina and Zlatibor There are also many spas in Serbia the biggest of which are Vrnjacka Banja Soko Banja and Banja Koviljaca City break and conference tourism is developed in Belgrade and Novi Sad Other touristic products that Serbia offer are natural wonders like Đavolja varos Christian pilgrimage to the many Orthodox monasteries across the country and the river cruising along the Danube There are several internationally popular music festivals held in Serbia such as EXIT and the Guca trumpet festival Education and scienceAccording to 2011 census literacy in Serbia stands at 98 of population while computer literacy is at 49 complete computer literacy is at 34 2 Same census showed the following levels of education 16 2 of inhabitants have higher education 10 6 have bachelors or master s degrees 5 6 have an associate degree 49 have a secondary education 20 7 have an elementary education and 13 7 have not completed elementary education Nikola Tesla was an electrical engineer who helped to develop the modern alternating current electricity supply systemMilutin Milankovic was a climate science theorist who founded the Milankovitch cycles theory Education in Serbia is regulated by the Ministry of Education and Science Education starts in either preschools or elementary schools Children enroll in elementary schools at the age of seven Compulsory education consists of eight grades of elementary school Students have the opportunity to attend gymnasiums and vocational schools for another four years or to enroll in vocational training for two to three years Following the completion of gymnasiums or vocational schools students have the opportunity to attend university Elementary and secondary education are also available in languages of recognised minorities in Serbia where classes are held in Hungarian Slovak Albanian Romanian Rusyn Bulgarian as well as Bosnian and Croatian languages Petnica Science Center is a notable institution for extracurricular science education focusing on gifted students The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Belgrade founded in 1841 There are 19 universities in Serbia nine public universities with a total number of 86 faculties and ten private universities with 51 faculties In 2018 2019 academic year 210 480 students attended 19 universities 181 310 at public universities and some 29 170 at private universities while 47 169 attended 81 higher schools Public universities in Serbia are the University of Belgrade University of Novi Sad University of Nis University of Kragujevac University of Pristina Public University of Novi Pazar as well as three specialist universities University of Arts University of Defence and University of Criminal Investigation and Police Studies Largest private universities include Megatrend University and Singidunum University both in Belgrade and Educons University in Novi Sad The University of Belgrade placed in 301 400 bracket on 2013 Shanghai Ranking of World Universities being best placed university in Southeast Europe after those in Athens and Thessaloniki and University of Novi Sad are generally considered the best institutions of higher learning in the country Serbia spent 0 9 of GDP on scientific research in 2017 which is slightly below the European average Serbia was ranked 52nd in the Global Innovation Index in 2024 Since 2018 Serbia is a full member of CERN Serbia has a long history of excellence in maths and computer sciences which has created a strong pool of engineering talent although economic sanctions during the 1990s and chronic underinvestment in research forced many scientific professionals to leave the country Nevertheless there are several areas in which Serbia still excels such as growing information technology sector which includes software development as well as outsourcing It generated over 1 2 billion in exports in 2018 both from international investors and a significant number of dynamic homegrown enterprises Serbia is one of the countries with the highest proportion of women in science Among the scientific institutes operating in Serbia the largest are the Mihajlo Pupin Institute and Vinca Nuclear Institute both in Belgrade The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts is a learned society promoting science and arts from its inception in 1841 CultureMileseva monastery s White Angel fresco 1235 For centuries straddling the boundaries between East and West the territory of Serbia had been divided among the Eastern and Western halves of the Roman Empire then between Byzantium and the Kingdom of Hungary and in the early modern period between the Ottoman Empire and the Habsburg Empire These overlapping influences have resulted in cultural varieties throughout Serbia its north leans to the profile of Central Europe while the south is characteristic of the wider Balkans and even the Mediterranean Serbia was influenced by the Republic of Venice as well mainly though trade literature and romanesque architecture Serbia has five cultural monuments inscribed in the list of UNESCO World Heritage the early medieval capital Stari Ras and the 13th century monastery Sopocani the 12th century Studenica monastery the Roman complex of Gamzigrad Felix Romuliana medieval tombstones Stecci and finally the endangered Medieval Monuments in Kosovo the monasteries of Visoki Decani Our Lady of Ljevis Gracanica and Patriarchal Monastery of Pec There are four literary works on UNESCO s Memory of the World Programme the 12th century Miroslav Gospel the electrical engineer and inventor Nikola Tesla s archive the telegram of Austria Hungary s declaration of war on Serbia and the 1st Summit of the Non Aligned Movement archives The slava patron saint veneration kolo traditional folk dance singing to the accompaniment of the gusle Zlakusa pottery slivovitz plum brandy and naive painting practices of Kovacica are inscribed on UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage Lists The Ministry of Culture and Information is tasked with preserving the nation s cultural heritage and overseeing its development with further activities undertaken by local governments Art and architecture Kosovo peonies by Nadezda Petrovic part of the collection of the National Museum of Serbia Traces of Roman and early Byzantine Empire architectural heritage are found in many royal cities and palaces in Serbia such as Sirmium Viminacium Mediana Felix Romuliana and Justiniana Prima since 535 the seat of the Archbishopric of Justiniana Prima Serbian monasteries were under the influence of Byzantine Art particularly after the fall of Constantinople in 1204 when many Byzantine artists fled to Serbia The monasteries include Studenica built around 1190 which was a model for such later monasteries as Mileseva Sopocani Zica Gracanica and Visoki Decani Numerous monuments and cultural sites were destroyed at various stages of Serbian history including destruction in Kosovo In the late 14th and the 15th centuries an autochthonous architectural style known as Morava style evolved in the area around Morava Valley A characteristic of this style was the wealthy decoration of the frontal church walls Examples of this include Manasija Ravanica and Kalenic monasteries Frescos include White Angel Mileseva monastery Crucifixion Studenica monastery and Dormition of the Virgin Sopocani The country is dotted with many well preserved medieval fortifications and castles such as Smederevo Fortress largest lowland fortress in Europe Golubac Maglic Soko grad Belgrade Fortress Ostrvica and Ram Under Ottoman occupation Serbian art was virtually non existent outside the lands ruled by the Habsburg monarchy Traditional Serbian art showed Baroque influences at the end of the 18th century as shown in the works of Nikola Neskovic Teodor Kracun Zaharije Orfelin and Jakov Orfelin Serbian painting showed the influence of Biedermeier and Neoclassicism as seen in works by Konstantin Danil Arsenije Teodorovic and Pavel Đurkovic Many painters followed the artistic trends set in the 19th century Romanticism notably Đura Jaksic Stevan Todorovic Katarina Ivanovic and Novak Radonic Serbian painters of the first half of the 20th century include Paja Jovanovic and Uros Predic of Realism Cubist Sava Sumanovic Milena Pavlovic Barili and Nadezda Petrovic of Impressionism Expressionist Milan Konjovic Painters of the second half of 20th century include Marko Celebonovic Petar Lubarda Milo Milunovic Ljubomir Popovic and Vladimir Velickovic Anastas Jovanovic was one of the earliest photographers in the world Marina Abramovic is a performance artist Pirot carpet is a traditional handicraft in Serbia There are around 180 museums in Serbia including the National Museum of Serbia founded in 1844 houses one of the largest art collections in the Balkans Other art museums include the Museum of Contemporary Art in Belgrade the Museum of Vojvodina and the Gallery of Matica Srpska in Novi Sad Literature Miroslav s Gospel 1186 is a 362 page illuminated manuscript on parchment listed in UNESCO s Memory of the World Register Serbian uses the Cyrillic alphabet created by the students of the brothers Cyril and Methodius at the Preslav Literary School in Bulgaria Serbian works from the early 11th century are written in Glagolitic Starting in the 12th century books were written in Cyrillic The Miroslav Gospels from 1186 are considered to be the oldest book of Serbian medieval history and are listed in UNESCO s Memory of the World Register There are 551 public libraries the largest of which are the National Library of Serbia in Belgrade with about 6 million items and Matica Srpska the oldest matica and Serbian cultural institution founded in 1826 in Novi Sad with nearly 3 5 million volumes In 2010 there were 10 989 books and brochures published The book publishing market is dominated by several major publishers such as Laguna and Vulkan The industry s centrepiece event annual Belgrade Book Fair is the most visited cultural event in Serbia with 158 128 visitors in 2013 The highlight of the literary scene is awarding of NIN Prize given every January since 1954 for the best newly published novel in Serbian Medieval authors include Saint Sava Jefimija Stefan Lazarevic Constantine of Kostenets and others Under Ottoman occupation when Serbia was not part of the European Renaissance the tradition of oral story telling through epic poetry was inspired by the Kosovo battle and folk tales rooted in Slavic mythology Serbian epic poetry in those times was seen as the most effective way in preserving the national identity The oldest known entirely fictional poems make up the Non historic cycle which is followed by poems inspired by events before during and after the Battle of Kosovo Folk ballads include The Death of the Mother of the Jugovic Family and The Mourning Song of the Noble Wife of the Asan Aga 1646 translated into European languages by Goethe Walter Scott Pushkin and Merimee A tale from Serbian folklore is The Nine Peahens and the Golden Apples Baroque trends in Serbian literature emerged in the late 17th century Baroque influenced authors include Gavril Stefanovic Venclovic Jovan Rajic Zaharije Orfelin and Andrija Zmajevic Dositej Obradovic was a prominent figure of the Age of Enlightenment while Jovan Sterija Popovic was a Classicist writer whose works also contained elements of Romanticism In the era of national revival in the first half of the 19th century Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic collected Serbian folk literature and reformed the Serbian language and spelling paving the way for Serbian Romanticism The first half of the 19th century was dominated by Romanticist writers including Petar II Petrovic Njegos Branko Radicevic Đura Jaksic Jovan Jovanovic Zmaj and Laza Kostic while the second half of the century was marked by Realist writers such as Milovan Glisic Laza Lazarevic Simo Matavulj Stevan Sremac Vojislav Ilic Branislav Nusic Radoje Domanovic and Borisav Stankovic The 20th century was dominated by the prose writers Mesa Selimovic Death and the Dervish Milos Crnjanski Migrations Isidora Sekulic The Chronicle of a Small Town Cemetery Branko Copic Eagles Fly Early Borislav Pekic The Time of Miracles Danilo Kis The Encyclopedia of the Dead Dobrica Cosic The Roots Aleksandar Tisma The Use of Man Milorad Pavic and others Notable poets include Milan Rakic Jovan Ducic Vladislav Petkovic Dis Rastko Petrovic Stanislav Vinaver Dusan Matic Branko Miljkovic Vasko Popa Oskar Davico Miodrag Pavlovic and Stevan Raickovic Writer Ivo Andric Nobel prize winner in 1961 and writer and politician Dobrica Cosic Pavic is a 21st century Serbian author whose Dictionary of the Khazars has been translated into 38 languages Contemporary authors include David Albahari Svetislav Basara Goran Petrovic Gordana Kuic Vuk Draskovic and Vladislav Bajac Serbian comics emerged in the 1930s and the medium remains popular today Ivo Andric The Bridge on the Drina is a Serbian author who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1961 Another writer was Desanka Maksimovic who for seven decades was the leading lady of Yugoslav poetry Music Composer and musicologist Stevan Stojanovic Mokranjac is considered the founder of modern Serbian music The Serbian composers of the first generation Petar Konjovic Stevan Hristic and Miloje Milojevic maintained the national expression and modernised the romanticism into the direction of impressionism Other famous classical Serbian composers include Isidor Bajic Stanislav Binicki and Josif Marinkovic There are three opera houses in Serbia Opera of the National Theatre and Madlenianum Opera both in Belgrade and Opera of the Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad Four symphonic orchestra operate in the country Belgrade Philharmonic Orchestra Nis Symphony Orchestra Novi Sad Philharmonic Orchestra and Symphonic Orchestra of Radio Television of Serbia The Choir of Radio Television of Serbia is a leading vocal ensemble in the country The BEMUS is one of the most prominent classical music festivals in the Southeastern Europe Filip Visnjic sings to the gusle by Sreten Stojanovic Krusevac central Serbia Traditional Serbian music includes various kinds of bagpipes flutes horns trumpets lutes psalteries drums and cymbals The kolo is the traditional collective folk dance which has a number of varieties throughout the regions The most popular are those from Uzice and Morava region Sung epic poetry has been an integral part of Serbian and Balkan music for centuries In the highlands of Serbia these long poems are typically accompanied on a one string fiddle called the gusle and concern themselves with themes from history and mythology There are records of gusle being played at the court of the 13th century king Stefan the First Crowned Balkan Brass or truba trumpet is a popular genre especially in Central and Southern Serbia where Balkan Brass originated There are two main varieties of this genre one from Western Serbia and the other from Southern Serbia with brass musician Boban Markovic being one of the most respected names in the world of modern brass band bandleaders The most popular music festivals are Guca Trumpet Festival with over 300 000 annual visitors and Exit in Novi Sad won the Best Major Festival award at the European Festivals Awards for 2013 and 2017 with 200 000 visitors in 2013 Other festivals include Nisville Jazz Festival in Nis and Gitarijada rock festival in Zajecar Pop music artist Zeljko Joksimovic won second place at the 2004 Eurovision Song Contest and Marija Serifovic won the 2007 Eurovision Song Contest with the song Molitva and Serbia was the host of the 2008 edition of the contest Pop singers include Zdravko Colic Vlado Georgiev Aleksandra Radovic Jelena Tomasevic Natasa Bekvalac Jelena Karleusa and Teya Dora among others Serbian rock was part of the former Yugoslav rock scene during the 1960s 1970s and 1980s During the 1990s and 2000s the popularity of rock music declined in Serbia and although several major mainstream acts managed to sustain their popularity an underground and independent music scene developed The 2000s saw a revival of the mainstream scene and the appearance of a large number of notable acts Serbian rock acts include Atheist Rap Bajaga i Instruktori Đorđe Balasevic Bjesovi Block Out Crni Biseri Darkwood Dub Disciplina Kicme Elipse Ekatarina Velika Elektricni Orgazam Eva Braun Galija Generacija 5 Goblini Idoli Kanda Kodza i Nebojsa Kerber Korni Grupa Laboratorija Zvuka Slađana Milosevic Neverne Bebe Obojeni Program Orthodox Celts Partibrejkers Pekinska Patka Piloti Riblja Corba Ritam Nereda Rambo Amadeus S A R S Siluete S Vremena Na Vreme Sarlo Akrobata Pop Masina Smak U Skripcu Van Gogh YU Grupa Zana and others Exit Festival in Novi Sad proclaimed as the Best Major European festival at the EU Festival Awards Folk music in its original form has been a prominent music style since World War I following the early success of Sofka Nikolic The music has been further promoted by Danica Obrenic Anđelija Milic Nada Mamula and during the 60s and 70s with performers like Silvana Armenulic Toma Zdravkovic Lepa Lukic Vasilija Radojcic Vida Pavlovic and Gordana Stojicevic Turbo folk music is a subgenre that was developed in Serbia in the late 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s and has since enjoyed an immense popularity through acts of Dragana Mirkovic Zorica Brunclik Saban Saulic Ana Bekuta Sinan Sakic Vesna Zmijanac Mile Kitic Snezana Đurisic Semsa Suljakovic and Nada Topcagic It is a blend of folk music with pop and dance elements and can be seen as a result of the urbanisation of folk music In recent years turbo folk has featured even more pop music elements and some of the performers have been labeled as pop folk The most famous among them are Ceca often considered to be the biggest music star of Serbia Jelena Karleusa Aca Lukas Seka Aleksic Dara Bubamara Indira Radic Sasa Matic Viki Miljkovic Stoja and Lepa Brena arguably the most prominent performer of former Yugoslavia Theatre and cinema Serbia has a well established theatrical tradition with Joakim Vujic considered the founder of modern Serbian theatre Serbia has 38 professional theatres and 11 theatres for children the most important of which are National Theatre in Belgrade Serbian National Theatre in Novi Sad National Theatre in Subotica National Theatre in Nis and Knjazevsko srpski teatar in Kragujevac the oldest theatre in Serbia established in 1835 The Belgrade International Theatre Festival BITEF founded in 1967 is one of the oldest theatre festivals in the world and it has become one of the five biggest European festivals Sterijino pozorje is on the other hand a festival showcasing national drama plays The most important Serbian playwrights were Jovan Sterija Popovic and Branislav Nusic while recent renowned names are Dusan Kovacevic and Biljana Srbljanovic Emir Kusturica won the Palme d Or at the Cannes twiceZelimir Zilnik won the Golden Bear at the Berlinale The country has a rich cinematic legacy Serbia s film scene is one of the most dynamic smaller European cinemas The film industry is heavily subsidized by the government mainly through grants approved by the Film Centre of Serbia As of 2019 there were 26 feature films produced in Serbia of which 14 were domestic films There are 23 operating cinemas in the country with total attendance reaching 4 8 million A comparatively high percentage of 20 of total tickets sold were for domestic films Modern PFI Studios located in Simanovci is nowadays Serbia s only major film studio complex The Yugoslav Film Archive used to be former Yugoslavia s and now is Serbia s national film archive with over 100 thousand film prints it is among the five largest film archives in the world Famous Serbian filmmaker Emir Kusturica won two Palmes d Or for Best Feature Film at the Cannes Film Festival for When Father Was Away on Business in 1985 and then again for Underground in 1995 he has also won a Silver Bear at the Berlin Film Festival for Arizona Dream and a Silver Lion at the Venice Film Festival for Black Cat White Cat Other renowned directors include Dusan Makavejev Zelimir Zilnik Golden Berlin Bear winner Aleksandar Petrovic Zivojin Pavlovic Goran Paskaljevic Goran Markovic Srđan Dragojevic Srdan Golubovic and Mila Turajlic among others Serbian American screenwriter Steve Tesich won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1979 Prominent movie stars in Serbia have left a celebrated heritage in the cinematography of Yugoslavia as well Notable mentions are Zoran Radmilovic Pavle Vuisic Ljubisa Samardzic Olivera Markovic Mija Aleksic Miodrag Petrovic Ckalja Ruzica Sokic Velimir Bata Zivojinovic Danilo Bata Stojkovic Seka Sablic Dragan Nikolic Mira Stupica Nikola Simic Bora Todorovic Nebojsa Glogovac Milos Bikovic and others Milena Dravic was one of the most celebrated actresses in Serbian cinematography winning the Best Actress Award at the Cannes Film Festival in 1980 Media Freedom of the press and freedom of speech are guaranteed by the constitution of Serbia Serbia is ranked 90th out of 180 countries in the 2019 Press Freedom Index report compiled by Reporters Without Borders The report noted that media outlets and journalists continue to face partisan and government pressure over editorial policies According to EBU research in 2018 Serbs on average watch five and a half hours of television per day making it the second highest average in Europe There are seven nationwide free to air television channels with public broadcaster Radio Television of Serbia RTS operating three RTS1 RTS2 and RTS3 and private broadcasters operating four Pink Prva Happy and O2 There are 28 regional television channels and 74 local television channels Besides terrestrial channels there are dozens of Serbian television channels available only on cable or satellite These include regional news N1 commercial channel Nova S and regional sports channels Sport Klub and Arena Sport among others There are 247 radio stations in Serbia Out of these six are radio stations with national coverage including two of public broadcaster Radio Television of Serbia Radio Belgrade 1 and Radio Belgrade 2 Radio Belgrade 3 and four private ones Radio S1 Radio S2 Play Radio and Radio Hit FM Also there are 34 regional stations and 207 local stations There are 305 newspapers published in Serbia of which 12 are daily newspapers Dailies Politika and Danas are Serbia s papers of record the former being the oldest newspaper in the Balkans founded in 1904 Highest circulation newspapers are tabloids Vecernje Novosti Blic Kurir and Informer all with more than 100 000 copies sold There is one daily newspaper devoted to sports Sportski zurnal one business daily Privredni pregled two regional newspapers Dnevnik published in Novi Sad and Narodne novine from Nis and one minority language daily Magyar Szo in Hungarian published in Subotica There are 1 351 magazines published in the country These include weekly news magazines NIN Vreme and Nedeljnik popular science magazine Politikin Zabavnik women s magazine Lepota amp Zdravlje auto magazine SAT revija and IT magazine Svet kompjutera In addition there is a wide selection of Serbian editions of international magazines such as Cosmopolitan Elle Men s Health National Geographic Le Monde diplomatique Playboy and Hello among others The main news agencies are Tanjug Beta and Fonet As of 2017 update out of 432 web portals mainly on the rs domain the most visited are online editions of printed dailies Blic and Kurir news web portal B92 and classifieds KupujemProdajem Cuisine A Serbian Christmas meal with roast pork Russian salad and red wine a cake made with fruits and almonds Serbian cuisine is largely heterogeneous in a way characteristic of the Balkans and especially the former Yugoslavia It features foods characteristic of lands formerly under Turkish suzerainty as well as cuisine originating from other parts of Central Europe especially Austria and Hungary Food is very important in Serbian social life particularly during religious holidays such as Christmas Easter and feast days i e slava Staples of the Serbian diet include bread meat fruits vegetables and dairy products Bread plays an important role in Serbian cuisine and can be found in religious rituals A traditional Serbian welcome is to offer bread and salt to guests Meat is widely consumed as is fish The southern Serbian city of Leskovac is host to Rostiljijada considered the biggest barbecue festival in the Balkans Other Serbian specialties include cevapcici grilled and seasoned caseless sausages made from minced meat pljeskavica grilled spiced meat patty made from a mixture of pork beef and lamb gibanica cheese pie burek baked pastry made from a thin flaky dough that is stuffed with meat cheese or vegetables sarma stuffed cabbage punjena paprika stuffed pepper moussaka casserole made from minced meat eggs and potatoes Karađorđeva snicla veal or pork schnitzel that is stuffed with kajmak đuvec meat and vegetable stew pasulj bean soup podvarak roast meat with sauerkraut ajvar roasted red pepper spread kajmak dairy product similar to clotted cream cvarci variant of pork rinds proja cornbread and kacamak corn flour porridge Serbians claim their country as the birthplace of rakia rakija a highly alcoholic drink primarily distilled from fruit Rakia in various forms is found throughout the Balkans notably in Bulgaria Croatia Slovenia Montenegro Hungary and Turkey Slivovitz sljivovica a plum brandy is a type of rakia which is considered the national drink of Serbia In 2021 Serbia s sljivovica was added to the United Nations Intangible Cultural Heritage List as a cherished tradition to be preserved by humanity Serbian wines are produced in 22 different geographical regions with white wine dominating the total amount Besides rakia and wine beer is a very popular alcoholic beverage in the country Pale lagers are currently and have been the traditional beer choice for Serbians The most popular domestic brands of beer are Jelen followed by Lav As in the rest of the former Yugoslavia coffee drinking is an important cultural and social practice and Serbian coffee a local variant of Turkish coffee is the most commonly consumed non alcoholic beverage Sports Tennis player Novak Djokovic holds the all time record of 24 Grand Slam men s singles titles Nikola Jokic right is a three time NBA MVP Serbia men s national water polo team held the Olympic Games World Championship European Championship World Cup and World League titles simultaneously from 2014 to 2016 Serbia has hosted a number of major international sport competitions The most important annual sporting events in the country are the Belgrade Marathon and the Tour de Serbie cycling race Football is the most popular sport in Serbia with the Football Association of Serbia being the largest sporting association with 146 845 registered players Dragan Dzajic was recognized as the best Serbian player of all time by the association More recently players like Nemanja Vidic Dejan Stankovic Branislav Ivanovic Aleksandar Kolarov Nemanja Matic Dusan Tadic and Aleksandar Mitrovic have achieved significant success in the UEFA Champions League boosting Serbia s reputation as a leading exporter of footballers The national team has qualified for three of the last four FIFA World Cups but lacks significant success Serbia s two main football clubs Red Star Belgrade and Partizan have storied histories with Red Star winning the 1990 91 European Cup and Partizan reaching the 1965 66 European Cup final Their rivalry is known as the Eternal Derby The country is a powerhouse in world basketball with the men s national team winning two World Championships three EuroBasket titles two Olympic silver medals and a bronze medal in 2024 The women s team has won two EuroBasket Women titles and an Olympic bronze medal Serbia s men s 3x3 team has won six FIBA 3x3 World Cups and five FIBA 3x3 Europe Cups A total of 34 Serbian players have played in the NBA over the last three decades including Nikola Jokic a three time NBA MVP and 2023 NBA Finals MVP The Serbian coaching school has produced many of Europe s most successful basketball coaches including Zeljko Obradovic who has won a record 9 Euroleague titles KK Partizan won the 1992 EuroLeague and KK Crvena zvezda won the 1974 FIBA Saporta Cup The Serbia men s national water polo team is one of the most successful with three Olympic gold medals three World Championships and seven European Championships VK Partizan has won seven Champions League titles The recent success of Serbian tennis players especially Novak Djokovic who holds a record 24 Grand Slam singles titles has led to a surge in the sport s popularity in Serbia Djokovic has held the No 1 ATP ranking for a record 428 weeks and achieved a Career Super Slam with his Olympic gold in 2024 Ana Ivanovic Jelena Jankovic and Nenad Zimonjic have also been ranked No 1 in the WTA rankings The men s national team won the 2010 Davis Cup and 2020 ATP Cup Serbia s men s national volleyball team won the 2000 Olympic gold medal three European Championships and the 2016 FIVB Volleyball World League The women s team has won two World Championships three European Championships and two Olympic medals Serbian chess players excelled from 1950 to 1980 winning 15 Olympic medals The men s team won the 2023 European Team Competition and women s clubs have won the European Champions Cup five times Svetozar Gligoric and Ljubomir Ljubojevic were among the world s best players outside the USSR Notable Serbian athletes include sport shooters Jasna Sekaric and Damir Mikec handball player Svetlana Kitic volleyball player Nikola Grbic swimmer Milorad Cavic track and field athlete Ivana Spanovic wrestler Davor Stefanek and taekwondoist Milica Mandic See alsoIndex of Serbia related articles Outline of SerbiaNotesRecognised as minority languages Hungarian Bosnian Albanian Croatian Slovak Romanian Bulgarian Rusyn and Macedonian Excludes data for Kosovo ˈ s ɜːr b i e SUR bee e Serbian Srbiјa Srbija pronounced sr bija In minority languages Albanian Serbia Bulgarian Srbiya Sarbiya pronounced ˈsɤrbijɐ Croatian Srbija Hungarian Szerbia Hungarian pronunciation ˈsɛrbijɒ Macedonian Srbiјa Srbija Pannonian Rusyn Se rbiya Serbiya Romanian Serbia pronounced serbjˈa Slovak Srbsko Slovak pronunciation ˈsr bskɔ Serbian Republika Srbiјa Republika Srbija pronounced repǔblika sr bija In minority languages Albanian Republika e Serbise Bulgarian Republika Srbiya Republika Sarbiya Croatian Republika Srbija Hungarian Szerb Koztarsasag Macedonian Republika Srbiјa Republika Srbija Pannonian Rusyn Republi ka Se rbiya Republika Serbiya Romanian Republica Serbia Slovak Srbska republika Including the disputed territory of Kosovo ReferencesCitations Mother tongue religion and ethnic affiliation ABOUT CENSUS Archived from the original on 15 July 2023 Retrieved 10 November 2023 Kovacevic Miladin 2023 Statistichki godishњak Republike Srbiјe 2023 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