List of Famous people born in Serbia
Milan Milanović
Milan Milanović is a Serbian football manager and former player. He was the manager of Kazakh club Irtysh Pavlodar.Now he is without a job and is looking for new manager jobs
Mihailo Petrović
Mihailo Petrović Alas, was an influential Serbian mathematician and inventor. He was also a distinguished professor at Belgrade University, an academic, fisherman, writer, publicist, musician, businessman, traveler and volunteer in the Balkan Wars, the First and Second World Wars. He was a student of Henri Poincaré, Paul Painlevé, Charles Hermite and Émile Picard. Petrović contributed significantly to the study of differential equations and phenomenology, founded Engineering mathematics in Serbia, and invented one of the first prototypes of a hydraulic analog computer.
Slobodan Janković
Slobodan Janković is a retired Serbian football midfielder who played for SFR Yugoslavia.
Marina Petrowa
Marina Gmizić, better known as Marina Petrova,(born February 6, 1939) is a Serbian film actress known for her performances in West German productions of the 1950s and 1960s such as Das Nachtlokal zum Silbermond.
Árpád Kosztolányi
Vladislav F. Ribnikar
Vladislav F. Ribnikar was a Serbian journalist, known for founding Politika, the oldest Serbian daily. He led the newspaper from the day it was founded in 1904 until his death in combat in 1914.
Heinrich Knirr
Heinrich Knirr was an Austrian-born German painter, known for genre scenes and portraits, although he also did landscapes and still-lifes. He is best-known for creating the official portrait of Adolf Hitler for 1937 and is the only artist known to have painted Hitler from life.
Dionisije Njaradi
Dionisije Njaradi was a Yugoslavian Greek Catholic hierarch of Rusyn origin. He was auxiliary bishop and Apostolic Administrator from 1914 to 1920 and bishop from 1920 to 1940 of the Eastern Catholic Eparchy of Križevci and Apostolic Administrator of Slovak Catholic Eparchy of Prešov from 1922 to 1927.
Dejan Bućin
Vilmos Lázár
Vilmos Lázár was a honvéd colonel in the Hungarian Army. He was executed for his part in the Hungarian Revolution of 1848, and is considered one of the 13 Martyrs of Arad. According to historian Gábor Bóna, he was from a family of Hungarian nobility of Armenian descent.