Serbs in France
Serbs in France (French: Serbes en France; Serbian: Срби у Француској / Srbi u Francuskoj) or French Serbs (Serbian: Француски Срби / Francuski Srbi), number around 120,000 according to estimations.[1][2] They are located mostly in the regions of Paris, Lyon, Grenoble, Belfort, Montbéliard, Mulhouse and Strasbourg.
Total population | |
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120,000 (estimate) | |
Regions with significant populations | |
Île de France, Alsace, Franche Comté, Rhône-Alpes | |
Languages | |
French and Serbian | |
Religion | |
Serbian Orthodox Church | |
Related ethnic groups | |
South Slavs |
Part of a series of articles on |
Serbs |
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Native communities
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Related groups |
A wave of Serbs came with the influx of other Southern Europeans (Italians, Spaniards, Portuguese, and Greeks) in the 1920s. A minority are (descendants of) people of Serbian origin who were established in France in the aftermath of the First World War (e.g. Michel Auclair). Most Serbs however moved to France during the 1960s and 1970s, some also came as refugees during the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s.
Notable people
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- Pierre Marinovitch, World War I flying ace
- Vladimir Veličković, painter
- Ljubomir Popović, surrealist painter
- Filip Nikolic, singer
- Sara Brajovic, model and actress[3][4]
- Michel Auclair, film actor
- Alexis Josic, architect
- SebastiAn, musician
- Aleksandar Josipović, dancer
- Nikola Karabatić, handball player
- Luka Karabatic, handball player
- Kristina Mladenovic, tennis player
- Irena Pavlovic, tennis player
- Sara Cakarevic, tennis player
- Dušan Maravić, football player
- Marko Muslin, football player
- Lidija Turčinović, basketball player
gollark: It's going onto my pile of "abandoned until I can find a non-eldritch way to do this" things.
gollark: "Interesting" and highly cursed: Google appear to have implemented some sort of horrible BASIC-y language encoded in YAML for "cloud workflows": https://cloud.google.com/workflows/docs/reference/syntax
gollark: I don't really know about the details at all, but I think the way it works is that when you observe one end, it collapses into one of two random states, and the other one collapses into the other. Or something vaguely like that.
gollark: It doesn't allow FTL communications.
gollark: Faster than light communication would break causality though, which is bad.
See also
References
- Mediaspora (2002). "Rezultat istrazivanja o broju Srpskih novinara i medija u svetu". Srpska dijaspora. Archived from the original on 2016-01-27.
FRANCUSKA - 120 hiljada Srba
- Bilbija, Bojan (2013-12-29), Dijaspora može da promeni Srbiju, Politika,
procenjeno brojno stanje u januaru 2012 [estimation in January 2012]
- "My Style: Sara Brajovic". Fashion We Like. 2014-02-17. Retrieved 2020-03-01.
External links
- French-Serbian friendship site (in French and Serbian only)
- Serbian Orthodox Church in France (in French and Serbian only)
- Serbian-French association (in French and Serbian only)
- Serbian-French cultural and sports association (in French and Serbian only)
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