Only one city in the world can boast of being Constantine the Great’s birthplace. Add in a tower made of skulls during Ottoman rule, fortress ruins dating from the Roman era, and a Nazi concentration camp and Niš, Serbia has one of the most historic timelines in the world.   Restaurants Hotels Museums Entertainment Attractions

  • November 14, 2020
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By the Battle Of Kumanovo on 23 – 24 October 1912, the First Balkan War was young, but already in full swing – it would be a decisive victory for the Serbian forces, and a shattering loss for the Ottoman.  Just a week prior, on 18 October 1912, King Peter I of Serbia had issued …

  • October 9, 2020
  • Serbia
  • Comments Off on Franco-Serbian Tactics and Prussian-Ottoman Strategy in Kumanovo

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What city has been fought over in more than 115 wars, razed to the ground at least 44 times, a church decorated entirely with WWI trench art, and features pizza slathered with different condiment-stye toppings? The White City – Belgrade! Of course! With ruins and archeological discoveries from the pre-Roman period as well as the …

  • August 15, 2020
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Between 1804 and 1835 Serbia fought for independence from the Ottoman Empire that had ruled over the Balkans for more than 400 years. Men like Dositej Obradović and Vuk Karadžić emphasized the essentials of being Serbian, the things that unified the Serbian people and nation.  Language, customs, and a shared history became the foundation of the rallying …

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In August 1963, one month after an earthquake decimated the capital of Skopje, an open topped car zipped around the Socialist Republic of Macedonia carrying two powerful men who were dancing around a renewed relationship.  Josip Broz Tito, whose fantastic response to Stalin’s constant dispatching of assassins ended Soviet/Yugoslav relations for many years, was showing …

  • May 20, 2020
  • Macedonia
  • Comments Off on Neither Greece, Nor Bulgaria, Nor Serbia

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From fairy tales and legends of ancient warriors to a history of rescuing the Christian world, we will bring to life the influences that shape an ethnicity.  Truth is lost between history and belief   The alphabet. The religion. The tragedies. the glory.     The Slavic world is often an enigma to the west, …

  • July 9, 2023
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At the same time of the turn of the nineteenth century that Franz Ferdinand and Sophie Chotek of Austria-Hungary were attempting to convince Emperor Franz Josef that their marriage would not lead to the end of the Empire, another culturally inappropriate marriage was taking place between Alexander I of Serbia and Draga Lunjevica Mašin.  Draga, …

  • June 14, 2021
  • History
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Anka Obrenović, who was also called Ana, was self-confident and fearless.  She loved her last name and luxury.  Because of her love of Viennese fashion, she was nicknamed “Anka Pomodarka”.  She was killed in 1868 in the Topčider forest during the assassination of Mihailo Obrenović, and it is little known that she tried to protect …

  • June 11, 2021
  • History
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Historical fiction can be the a fantastic way to ingrain history events as long as it doesn’t deviate too far from the dry and dusty demands of factual “truthiness”, and in the vein The Second Seal by Dennis Wheatley is an excellent primer for the dabbler who wants to get started in the area World …

  • May 7, 2021
  • Reading , Review
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