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
- Stefan Nemanja
- Stefan the First-Crowned
- Saint Sava
- Domentijan
- Stephen Uroš II Milutin of Serbia
- Teodosije the Hilandarian
- Saint Danilo II
- Stephen Uroš IV Dušan of Serbia
- Lazar of Serbia
- Miloš Obilić
- Jefimija
- Prince Marko
- Stefan Lazarević
- Kir Stefan the Serb
- Đurađ Branković
- Makarije Sokolović
- Dživo Gundulić
- Arsenije III Čarnojević
- Pavle Nenadović
- Roger Joseph Boscovich
- Dositej Obradović
- Petar I Petrović-Njegoš
- Stefan Stratimirović
- Karađorđe
- Filip Višnjić
- Matija Nenadović
- Veljko Petrović
- Miloš Obrenović I, Prince of Serbia
- Vuk Stefanović Karadžić
- Konstantin Danil
- Jovan Sterija Popović
- Ilija Garašanin
- Petar II Petrović-Njegoš
- Josif Pančić
- Mihailo Obrenović III, Prince of Serbia
- Branko Radičević
- Đuro Daničić
- Svetozar Miletić
- Jovan Ristić
- Kornelije Stanković
- Ilarion Ruvarac
- Đura Jakšić
- Jovan Jovanović Zmaj
- Valtazar Bogišić
- Nicholas I of Montenegro
- Laza Kostić
- Stojan Novaković
- Peter I of Serbia
- Vladan Đorđević
- Nikola Pašić
- Nikodim Milaš
- Svetozar Marković
- Sima Lozanić
- Radomir Putnik
- Đorđe Krstić
- Laza Lazarević
- Simo Matavulj
- Pera Dobrinović
- Milan I of Serbia
- Mihajlo Pupin
- Živojin Mišić
- Stevan Sremac
- Stepa Stepanović
- Jovan Žujović
- Stevan Mokranjac
- Nikola Tesla
- Paja Jovanović
- Vojislav Ilić
- Ljubomir Stojanović
- Bogdan Popović
- Branislav Nušić
- Jovan Cvijić
- Mihailo Petrović
- Pavle Popović
- Slobodan Jovanović
- Miloje Vasić
- Jovan Dučić
- Radoje Domanović
- Nadežda Petrović
- Branislav Petronijević
- Borisav Stanković
- Milan Rakić
- Aleksandar Belić
- Milan Nedić
- Isidora Sekulić
- Petar Kočić
- Jovan Skerlić
- Milutin Milanković
- Nikolaj Velimirović
- Petar Konjović
- Vladimir Ćorović
- Stevan Hristić
- Jovan Bijelić
- Alexander I of Yugoslavia
- Petar Dobrović
- Ivo Andrić
- Miloš Crnjanski
- Sava Šumanović
- Meša Selimović
- Vasko Popa
References
- ↑ "Rehabilitacija Milana Nedića" (in Serbian). BBC. July 7, 2008. Retrieved February 19, 2014.