The 100 most prominent Serbs

The 100 most prominent Serbs (Serbian Cyrillic: 100 најзнаменитијих Срба) is a book containing the biographies of the hundred most important Serbs compiled by a committee of academicians at the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts. The committee members were Sava Vuković, Pavle Ivić, Dragoslav Srejović, Dejan Medaković, Dragomir Vitorović, Zvonimir Kostić, Vasilije Krestić, Miroslav Pantić and Danica Petrović. The book was first published in 1993 on 20+617 pages, reprinted in 2001, and the third extended edition was printed in 2009.

Inclusion criteria and controversies

When the expert committee created the list in 1993, one of the criteria was that only dead people were eligible. As a result only two of the 100 people on the list - Meša Selimović and Vasko Popa - were born in the 20th century. This has raised the question of the relevance of the list.

Far more serious problem was that the fact that the list was concluded at the time of Yugoslav wars caused by the breakup of Yugoslavia, as well as by the institution that some at that time regarded as one the sources of Greater Serbian nationalism. Thus the issue of objectivity also arose, especially regarding the personalities such as Ruđer Bošković, Ivan Gundulić, Ivo Andrić and Meša Selimović, for which there is no general consensus of ethnic affiliation within the Serbian ethnic corpus.

The inclusion of Milan Nedić has also stirred some controversy, given his reputation as a Nazi collaborator in the Second World War.[1]

The list

  1. Stefan Nemanja
  2. Stefan the First-Crowned
  3. Saint Sava
  4. Domentijan
  5. Stephen Uroš II Milutin of Serbia
  6. Teodosije the Hilandarian
  7. Saint Danilo II
  8. Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia
  9. Lazar of Serbia
  10. Miloš Obilić
  11. Jefimija
  12. Prince Marko
  13. Stefan Lazarević
  14. Kir Stefan the Serb
  15. Đurađ Branković
  16. Makarije Sokolović
  17. Dživo Gundulić
  18. Arsenije III Čarnojević
  19. Pavle Nenadović
  20. Roger Joseph Boscovich
  21. Dositej Obradović
  22. Petar I Petrović-Njegoš
  23. Stefan Stratimirović
  24. Karađorđe
  25. Filip Višnjić
  26. Matija Nenadović
  27. Veljko Petrović
  28. Miloš Obrenović I, Prince of Serbia
  29. Vuk Stefanović Karadžić
  30. Konstantin Danil
  31. Jovan Sterija Popović
  32. Ilija Garašanin
  33. Petar II Petrović-Njegoš
  34. Josif Pančić
  35. Mihailo Obrenović III, Prince of Serbia
  36. Branko Radičević
  37. Đuro Daničić
  38. Svetozar Miletić
  39. Jovan Ristić
  40. Kornelije Stanković
  41. Ilarion Ruvarac
  42. Đura Jakšić
  43. Jovan Jovanović Zmaj
  44. Valtazar Bogišić
  45. Nicholas I of Montenegro
  46. Laza Kostić
  47. Stojan Novaković
  48. Peter I of Serbia
  49. Vladan Đorđević
  50. Nikola Pašić
  51. Nikodim Milaš
  52. Svetozar Marković
  53. Sima Lozanić
  54. Radomir Putnik
  55. Đorđe Krstić
  56. Laza Lazarević
  57. Simo Matavulj
  58. Pera Dobrinović
  59. Milan I of Serbia
  60. Mihajlo Pupin
  61. Živojin Mišić
  62. Stevan Sremac
  63. Stepa Stepanović
  64. Jovan Žujović
  65. Stevan Mokranjac
  66. Nikola Tesla
  67. Paja Jovanović
  68. Vojislav Ilić
  69. Ljubomir Stojanović
  70. Bogdan Popović
  71. Branislav Nušić
  72. Jovan Cvijić
  73. Mihailo Petrović
  74. Pavle Popović
  75. Slobodan Jovanović
  76. Miloje Vasić
  77. Jovan Dučić
  78. Radoje Domanović
  79. Nadežda Petrović
  80. Branislav Petronijević
  81. Borisav Stanković
  82. Milan Rakić
  83. Aleksandar Belić
  84. Milan Nedić
  85. Isidora Sekulić
  86. Petar Kočić
  87. Jovan Skerlić
  88. Milutin Milanković
  89. Nikolaj Velimirović
  90. Petar Konjović
  91. Vladimir Ćorović
  92. Stevan Hristić
  93. Jovan Bijelić
  94. Alexander I of Yugoslavia
  95. Petar Dobrović
  96. Ivo Andrić
  97. Miloš Crnjanski
  98. Sava Šumanović
  99. Meša Selimović
  100. Vasko Popa

References

  1. "Rehabilitacija Milana Nedića" (in Serbian). BBC. July 7, 2008. Retrieved February 19, 2014.
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