List of Habsburg Serbs
The following is a list of Habsburg Serbs (Serbian: Habzburški Srbi), that is, ethnic Serbs active in the Habsburg Monarchy (1526–1804).
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Nobility and military personnel
- Péter Petrovics
- Nikola Crepović (fl. 1542–58)
- Ivan Rac (fl. 1551), Austrian nobleman
- Jovan Temišvarac (fl. 1564)
- Mihajlo Temišvarac (fl. 1571)
- Sava Temišvarac (fl. 1594–1610)
- Deli-Marko (fl. 1596)
- Đorđe Rac Slankamenac (fl. 1596), ban of Craiova, member of the Branković
- Petar Rac (fl. 1596)
- Starina Novak (fl. 1596)
- Jovan Rac-Toholjević-Smederevac
- Adam Rac
- Alexandru Iliaş (fl. 1616–18), commander
- Vučina, commander under Matei Basarab in Muntenia
- Sava Temišvarac the Younger (fl. 1640s)
- Stefan Osmokruhović (fl. 1665–d. 1666), rebel leader
- Jovan Monasterlija (fl. 1683–1706), general, Serbian Militia
- Antonije Znorić (fl. 1688–d. 1695), Austrian colonel, Serbian Militia
- Staniša Marković-Mlatišuma (1664–1741), Serbian Militia commander
- Vuk Isakovič (1696–1759), Serbian Militia commander
- Đorđe Sečujac (fl. 1715–59), Austrian captain (active 1715–59)
- Bogić Vučković (fl. 1735–45), rebel leader in Austrian service
- Petar Ljubojević (fl. 1754–55), rebel leader
- Jovan Šević (d. c. 1764), Austrian and Russian general
- Jeronim Ljubibratić (1716–1779), Austrian general
- Vuča Žikić (fl. 1788–d. 1808), Austrian soldier and Serbian Revolutionary
- Arsenije Sečujac (1720–1814), Austrian general (active 1741–83)
- Stanoje Glavaš (1763–1815), hajduk and Serbian Revolutionary
- Karađorđe (1768–1817), leader of the First Serbian Uprising
Clergy
- Teodor of Vršac (fl. 1594–96), bishop of Vršac, leader of Banat Uprising
- Arsenije III Čarnojević (1633–1706), exiled Serbian Patriarch
- Vikentije Jovanović (1689–1737), Metropolitan of Karlovci (1732–37)
- Pavle Nenadović (1703–1768), Metropolitan of Karlovci (1749–68)
- Teodor Komogovinski (d. 1788), martyr
- Mojsije Putnik (1728–1790), Metropolitan of Karlovci (1781–90)
- Stefan Stratimirović (1757–1836), Metropolitan of Karlovci (1790–1836)
Politicians
- Đorđe Branković (1645–1711), Transylvanian diplomat and writer
Other
- Pavel Đurković (1772–1830), painter
- Teodor Ilić Češljar (1746–1793), painter
- Petar Blagojevich (d. 1725), and Arnold Paole (d. c. 1726), alleged vampires
- Gavril Stefanović Venclović (1670–1749), priest, writer, poet, orator, philosopher, and illuminator.
- Zaharije Orfelin (1726–1785), polymath
- Emanuilo Janković (1758–1792), writer, dramatist, philosopher, translator and editor
- Jovan Rajić (1726–1801), writer, historian, traveller, and pedagogue, considered one of the greatest Serbian academics of the 18th century.
- Teodor Filipović (1778–1807), writer, jurist and educator
- Jovan Muškatirović (1743–1809), writer, lawyer and educator
- Dositej Obradović (1739–1811), author, philosopher, linguist, traveler, polyglot and the first minister of education of Serbia
- Avram Miletić (1755–fl. 1826), merchant and songwriter
Families
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Habsburg Serbs. |
Bibliography
- Popović, Dušan J. (1990). Srbi u Vojvodini. Matica srpska.
Сава Темишварац
- Kolundžija, Zoran (2008). Vojvodina: Od najstarijih vremena do velike seobe. Prometej.
- Samardžić, Radovan (1981). Istorija srpskog naroda. 3, Part 1. Srpska književna zadruga.
- Karlovačka mitropolija (1910). Srpska pravoslavna mitropolija karlovačka: po podacima od 1905. Saborski odbor.
- Cerović, Ljubivoje (1997). "Srbi u Rumuniji od ranog srednjeg veka do današnjeg vremena". Projekat Rastko.
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