Dimitrije Nešić (Belgrade, Principality of Serbia, 20 October 1836 – Belgrade, Kingdom of Serbia, 9 May 1904) was mathematician and president of the Serbian Royal Academy.
After the assassination, the conspirators were arrested in Bosnia-Herzegovina and tried in Sarajevo in October 1914.
During World War I he was civil counselor of the military administration in occupied Kingdom of Serbia.
The orders, decorations, and medals of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia were inherited from the Kingdom of Serbia and also established during the Kingdom of Yugoslavia period from 1918 to 1945.
United Kingdom | Serbia | Parliament of the United Kingdom | Prime Minister of the United Kingdom | United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland | House of Commons of the United Kingdom | Cinema of the United Kingdom | Kingdom of Great Britain | Kingdom of Hungary | George III of the United Kingdom | Acts of Parliament in the United Kingdom | Privy Council of the United Kingdom | George IV of the United Kingdom | Peerage of the United Kingdom | Kingdom of England | United Kingdom general election, 2010 | Kingdom of Yugoslavia | Isambard Kingdom Brunel | United Kingdom general election, 1997 | Kingdom of Saxony | Territorial Army (United Kingdom) | Kingdom of Naples | Kingdom of Hanover | Abolitionism in the United Kingdom | Serbia and Montenegro | Kingdom of Scotland | William IV of the United Kingdom | Kingdom of Bavaria | United Kingdom general election, February 1974 | Kingdom of Sardinia |
In 1717 the Austrians took the city again, and Belgrade and its surroundings became the Kingdom of Serbia, 1718–1739, and the villages around Belgrade were deserted and therefore temporarely settled with families from Worms and Styria, including Begaljica, which under Austrian administration was called Bigaliza.
Gavrilo Vitković (Buda, Austrian Empire 28 January 1829 – 25 July 1902 Negotin, Kingdom of Serbia) was an engineer, historian, professor and collector of old manuscripts.
A few days before the assassination of Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo, which resulted in World War I, Tisza supported a strong stand against Serbia.
Born in Đakovica (known in Albanian as Gjakova), back then part of Kingdom of Serbia, Kryeziu was a particularly quick right wing able to run 100 m in 11 seconds.
With Italian and Serbian financial backing he established armed forces in Dibër and captured interior of Albania and Dures.
He begin his playing career while being a refugee in Rome, Italy, while Kingdom of Serbia was fighting World War I. At the end of the war he returned to Serbia, and played with BSK Belgrade until 1925.
Their liaisons in the homeland were the United Yugoslav Youth, an illegal youth organization formed in 1914 in Vienna, and on the other hand the Government of the Kingdom of Serbia.