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Wikipedia

Belgrade

Belgrade (/bɛlˈɡrd/ bel-GRAYD, /ˈbɛlɡrd/ BEL-grayd;[note 1] Serbian: Београд / Beograd, lit.'White City', pronounced [beǒɡrad] (listen); names in other languages) is the capital and largest city of Serbia. It is located at the confluence of the Sava and Danube rivers and at the crossroads of the Pannonian Plain and the Balkan Peninsula.[10] The population of the Belgrade metropolitan area is 1,681,405 according to the 2022 census.[4] It is the third most populated of all cities on the Danube river.

Belgrade
Београд
Beograd
Град Београд
Grad Beograd

City of Belgrade
BeograđankaEastern City GateBranko's BridgeOld Sava BridgeSava RiverHouse of the National AssemblyNew PalaceAvala TowerUšće TowerGardoš TowerSerbian Academy of Sciences and Arts' buildingChurch of Saint SavaBelgrade FortressMonument to the Unknown Hero
Anthem: Химна Београду
Himna Beogradu
"Hymn to Belgrade"
Belgrade
Location within Serbia
Belgrade
Location within Europe
Coordinates: 44°49′04″N 20°27′25″E / 44.81778°N 20.45694°E / 44.81778; 20.45694Coordinates: 44°49′04″N 20°27′25″E / 44.81778°N 20.45694°E / 44.81778; 20.45694
Country Serbia
DistrictBelgrade
Municipalities17
EstablishmentPrior to 279 B.C. (Singidunum)[2]
Government
 • BodyCity Assembly of Belgrade
 • MayorAleksandar Šapić (SNS)
 • Deputy MayorVesna Vidović (SNS)
 • Ruling partiesSNSSPS
Area
 • Capital city359.9 km2 (139.0 sq mi)
 • Urban
1,035 km2 (400 sq mi)
 • Metro
3,222.6 km2 (1,244.3 sq mi)
Elevation117 m (384 ft)
Population
 (2022)
 • Capital city1,197,714[1]
 • Density3,328/km2 (8,620/sq mi)
 • Urban
1,383,875[5]
 • Urban density1,337/km2 (3,460/sq mi)
 • Metro
1,681,405[4]
 • Metro density522/km2 (1,350/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Belgradian (en)
Beograđanin (m.) / Beograđanka (f.) (sr)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
11000
Area code+381(0)11
ISO 3166 codeRS-00
Vehicle registrationBG
HDI (2019)0.834[7]very high
Websitebeograd.rs

Belgrade is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Europe and the world. One of the most important prehistoric cultures of Europe, the Vinča culture, evolved within the Belgrade area in the 6th millennium BC. In antiquity, Thraco-Dacians inhabited the region and, after 279 BC, Celts settled the city, naming it Singidūn.[11] It was conquered by the Romans under the reign of Augustus and awarded Roman city rights in the mid-2nd century.[12] It was settled by the Slavs in the 520s, and changed hands several times between the Byzantine Empire, the Frankish Empire, the Bulgarian Empire, and the Kingdom of Hungary before it became the seat of the Serbian king Stefan Dragutin in 1284. Belgrade served as capital of the Serbian Despotate during the reign of Stefan Lazarević, and then his successor Đurađ Branković returned it to the Hungarian king in 1427. Noon bells in support of the Hungarian army against the Ottoman Empire during the siege in 1456 have remained a widespread church tradition to this day. In 1521, Belgrade was conquered by the Ottomans and became the seat of the Sanjak of Smederevo.[13] It frequently passed from Ottoman to Habsburg rule, which saw the destruction of most of the city during the Ottoman–Habsburg wars.

Following the Serbian Revolution, Belgrade was once again named the capital of Serbia in 1841. Northern Belgrade remained the southernmost Habsburg post until 1918, when it was attached to the city, due to former Austro-Hungarian territories becoming part of the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes after World War I. Belgrade was the capital of Yugoslavia from its creation in 1918 to its dissolution in 2006.[note 2] In a fatally strategic position, the city has been battled over in 115 wars and razed 44 times, being bombed five times and besieged many times.[14]

Being Serbia's primate city, Belgrade has special administrative status within Serbia.[15] It is the seat of the central government, administrative bodies, and government ministries, as well as home of almost all of the largest Serbian companies, media, and scientific institutions. Belgrade is classified as a Beta-Global City.[16] The city is home to the Clinical Centre of Serbia, one of the hospital complexes with the largest capacity in the world, the Church of Saint Sava, one of the largest Orthodox church buildings, and the Štark Arena, one of the largest capacity indoor arenas in Europe. Belgrade hosted major international events such as the Danube River Conference of 1948, the first Non-Aligned Movement Summit (1961), the first major gathering of the OSCE (1977–1978), the Eurovision Song Contest (2008), as well as sports events such as the first FINA World Aquatics Championships (1973), UEFA Euro (1976), Summer Universiade (2009) and EuroBasket three times (1961, 1975, 2005).

History

Prehistory

 
Vinča culture figurine, 4000–4500 BC.

Chipped stone tools found in Zemun show that the area around Belgrade was inhabited by nomadic foragers in the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic eras. Some of these tools are of Mousterian industry—belonging to Neanderthals rather than modern humans. Aurignacian and Gravettian tools have also been discovered near the area, indicating some settlement between 50,000 and 20,000 years ago.[17]

 
Belgrade Fortress, built during a long period of time from the 2nd to the 18th century, located on the confluence of the two rivers Sava and Danube

The first farming people to settle in the region are associated with the Neolithic Starčevo culture, which flourished between 6200 and 5200 BC.[18] There are several Starčevo sites in and around Belgrade, including the eponymous site of Starčevo. The Starčevo culture was succeeded by the Vinča culture (5500–4500 BC), a more sophisticated farming culture that grew out of the earlier Starčevo settlements and also named for a site in the Belgrade region (Vinča-Belo Brdo). The Vinča culture is known for its very large settlements, one of the earliest settlements by continuous habitation and some of the largest in prehistoric Europe.[19] Also associated with the Vinča culture are anthropomorphic figurines such as the Lady of Vinča, the earliest known copper metallurgy in Europe,[20] and a proto-writing form developed prior to the Sumerians and Minoans known as the Old European script, which dates back to around 5300 BC.[21] Within the city proper, on Cetinjska Street, a skull of a Paleolithic human dated to before 5000 BC was discovered in 1890.[22]

Antiquity

Evidence of early knowledge about Belgrade's geographical location comes from a variety of ancient myths and legends. The ridge overlooking the confluence of the Sava and Danube rivers, for example, has been identified as one of the places in the story of Jason and the Argonauts.[23][24] In the time of antiquity, too, the area was populated by Paleo-Balkan tribes, including the Thracians and the Dacians, who ruled much of Belgrade's surroundings.[25] Specifically, Belgrade was at one point inhabited by the Thraco-Dacian tribe Singi;[11] following Celtic invasion in 279 BC, the Scordisci wrested the city from their hands, naming it Singidūn (d|ūn, fortress).[11] In 34–33 BC, the Roman army reached Belgrade. It became the romanised Singidunum in the 1st century AD and, by the mid-2nd century, the city was proclaimed a municipium by the Roman authorities, evolving into a full-fledged colonia (the highest city class) by the end of the century.[12] While the first Christian Emperor of RomeConstantine I, also known as Constantine the Great[26]—was born in the territory of Naissus to the city's south, Roman Christianity's champion, Flavius Iovianus (Jovian), was born in Singidunum.[27] Jovian reestablished Christianity as the official religion of the Roman Empire, ending the brief revival of traditional Roman religions under his predecessor Julian the Apostate. In 395 AD, the site passed to the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire.[28] Across the Sava from Singidunum was the Celtic city of Taurunum (Zemun); the two were connected with a bridge throughout Roman and Byzantine times.[29]

Middle Ages

In 442, the area was ravaged by Attila the Hun.[30] In 471, it was taken by Theodoric the Great, king of the Ostrogoths, who continued into Italy.[31] As the Ostrogoths left, another Germanic tribe, the Gepids, invaded the city. In 539, it was retaken by the Byzantines.[32] In 577, some 100,000 Slavs poured into Thrace and Illyricum, pillaging cities and more permanently settling the region.[33] The Avars, under Bayan I, conquered the whole region and its new Slavic population by 582.[34] Following Byzantine reconquest, the Byzantine chronicle De Administrando Imperio mentions the White Serbs, who had stopped in Belgrade on their way back home, asking the strategos for lands; they received provinces in the west, towards the Adriatic, which they would rule as subjects to Heraclius (610–641).[35] In 829, Khan Omurtag was able to add Singidunum and its environs to the First Bulgarian Empire.[36][37] The first record of the name Belograd appeared on April, 16th, 878, in a Papal missive[38] to Bulgarian ruler Boris I. This name would appear in several variants: Alba Bulgarica in Latin, Griechisch Weissenburg in High German, Nándorfehérvár in Hungarian, and Castelbianco in Venetian, among other names, all variations of 'white fortress'. For about four centuries, the city would become a battleground between the Byzantine Empire, the medieval Kingdom of Hungary, and the Bulgarian Empire.[39] Basil II (976–1025) installed a garrison in Belgrade.[40] The city hosted the armies of the First and the Second Crusade,[41] but, while passing through during the Third Crusade, Frederick Barbarossa and his 190,000 crusaders saw Belgrade in ruins.[42] King Stefan Dragutin (r. 1276–1282) received Belgrade from his father-in-law, Stephen V of Hungary, in 1284, and it served as the capital of the Kingdom of Syrmia, a vassal state to the Kingdom of Hungary. Dragutin (Hungarian: Dragutin István) is regarded as the first Serbian king to rule over Belgrade.[43]

Following the battles of Maritsa (1371) and Kosovo field (1389), Moravian Serbia, to Belgrade's south, began to fall to the Ottoman Empire.[44][45]

The northern regions of what is now Serbia persisted as the Serbian Despotate, with Belgrade as its capital. The city flourished under Stefan Lazarević, the son of Serbian prince Lazar Hrebeljanović. Lazarević built a castle with a citadel and towers, of which only the Despot's tower and the west wall remain. He also refortified the city's ancient walls, allowing the Despotate to resist Ottoman conquest for almost 70 years. During this time, Belgrade was a haven for many Balkan peoples fleeing Ottoman rule, and is thought to have had a population ranging between 40,000 and 50,000 people.[43]

In 1427, Stefan's successor Đurađ Branković, returning Belgrade to the Hungarian king, made Smederevo his new capital. Even though the Ottomans had captured most of the Serbian Despotate, Belgrade, known as Nándorfehérvár in Hungarian, was unsuccessfully besieged in 1440[41] and 1456.[46] As the city presented an obstacle to the Ottoman advance into Hungary and further, over 100,000 Ottoman soldiers[47] besieged it in 1456, in which the Christian army led by the Hungarian General John Hunyadi successfully defended it.[48] The noon bell ordered by Pope Callixtus III commemorates the victory throughout the Christian world to this day.[41][49]

Ottoman rule and Austrian invasions

 
Belgrade in 1684

Seven decades after the initial siege, on 28 August 1521, the fort was finally captured by Suleiman the Magnificent with 250,000 Turkish soldiers and over 100 ships. Subsequently, most of the city was razed to the ground and its entire Orthodox Christian population was deported to Istanbul[41][50] to an area that has since become known as the Belgrade forest.[51] Belgrade was made the seat of the Pashalik of Belgrade (also known as the Sanjak of Smederevo), and quickly became the second largest Ottoman town in Europe at over 100,000 people, surpassed only by Constantinople.[47] Ottoman rule introduced Ottoman architecture, including numerous mosques, and the city was resurrected—now by Oriental influences.[52] In 1594, a major Serb rebellion was crushed by the Ottomans. In retribution, Grand Vizier Sinan Pasha ordered the relics of Saint Sava to be publicly torched on the Vračar plateau; in the 20th century, the church of Saint Sava was built to commemorate this event.[53]

Occupied by the Habsburgs three times (1688–1690, 1717–1739, 1789–1791), headed by the Holy Roman Princes Maximilian of Bavaria and Eugene of Savoy,[54] and field marshal Baron Ernst Gideon von Laudon, respectively, Belgrade was quickly recaptured by the Ottomans and substantially razed each time.[52] During this period, the city was affected by the two Great Serbian Migrations, in which hundreds of thousands of Serbs, led by two Serbian Patriarchs, retreated together with the Austrian soldiers into the Habsburg Empire, settling in today's Vojvodina and Slavonia.[55]

Principality and Kingdom of Serbia

 
View of Belgrade in 1890

At the beginning of the 19th century, Belgrade was predominantly inhabited by a Muslim population. Traces of Ottoman rule and architecture—such as mosques and bazaars, were to remain a prominent part of Belgrade's townscape into the 19th century; several decades, even, after Serbia was granted autonomy from the Ottoman Empire.[56]

During the First Serbian Uprising, Serbian revolutionaries held the city from 8 January 1807 until 1813, when it was retaken by the Ottomans.[57] After the Second Serbian Uprising in 1815, Serbia achieved some sort of sovereignty, which was formally recognised by the Porte in 1830.[58]

The development of Belgrade architecture after 1815 can be divided into four periods. In the first phase, which lasted from 1815 to 1835, the dominant architectural style was still of a Balkan character, with substantial Ottoman influence. At the same time, an interest in joining the European mainstream allowed Central and Western European architecture to flourish. Between 1835 and 1850, the amount of neoclassicist and baroque buildings south of the Austrian border rose considerably, exemplified by St Michael's Cathedral (Serbian: Saborna crkva), completed in 1840. Between 1850 and 1875, new architecture was characterised by a turn towards the newly popular Romanticism, along with older European architectural styles. Typical of Central European cities in the last quarter of the 19th century, the fourth phase was characterised by an eclecticist style based on the Renaissance and Baroque periods.[59]

 
View of Belgrade between 1890 and 1900.

In 1841, Prince Mihailo Obrenović moved the capital of the Principality of Serbia from Kragujevac to Belgrade.[60][61] During his first reign (1815–1839), Prince Miloš Obrenović pursued expansion of the city's population through the addition of new settlements, aiming and succeeding to make Belgrade the centre of the Principality's administrative, military and cultural institutions. His project of creating a new market space (the Abadžijska čaršija), however, was less successful; trade continued to be conducted in the centuries-old Donja čaršija and Gornja čaršija. Still, new construction projects were typical for the Christian quarters as the older Muslim quarters declined; from Serbia's autonomy until 1863, the number of Belgrade quarters even decreased, mainly as a consequence of the gradual disappearance of the city's Muslim population. An Ottoman city map from 1863 counts only 9 Muslim quarters (mahalas). The names of only five such neighbourhoods are known today: Ali-pašina, Reis-efendijina, Jahja-pašina, Bajram-begova, and Laz Hadži-Mahmudova.[62] Following the Čukur Fountain incident, Belgrade was bombed by the Ottomans.[63]

On 18 April 1867, the Ottoman government ordered the Ottoman garrison, which had been since 1826 the last representation of Ottoman suzerainty in Serbia, withdrawn from Kalemegdan. The forlorn Porte's only stipulation was that the Ottoman flag continue to fly over the fortress alongside the Serbian one. Serbia's de facto independence dates from this event.[64] In the following years, urban planner Emilijan Josimović had a significant influence on Belgrade. He conceptualised a regulation plan for the city in 1867, in which he proposed the replacement of the town's crooked streets with a grid plan. Of great importance also was the construction of independent Serbian political and cultural institutions, as well as the city's now-plentiful parks. Pointing to Josimović's work, Serbian scholars have noted an important break with Ottoman traditions. However, Istanbul—the capital city of the state to which Belgrade and Serbia de jure still belonged—underwent similar changes.[65]

 
Belgrade postcard from 1931[66] showing: Stari dvor, Terazije, Kneza Miloša Street, Kalemegdan and Old Post Office

In May 1868, knez Mihailo was assassinated with his cousin Anka Konstantinović while riding in a carriage in his country residence.[67]

With the Principality's full independence in 1878 and its transformation into the Kingdom of Serbia in 1882, Belgrade once again became a key city in the Balkans, and developed rapidly.[57][68] Nevertheless, conditions in Serbia remained those of an overwhelmingly agrarian country, even with the opening of a railway to Niš, Serbia's second city. In 1900, the capital had only 70,000 inhabitants[69] (at the time Serbia numbered 2.5 million). Still, by 1905, the population had grown to more than 80,000 and, by the outbreak of World War I in 1914, it had surpassed the 100,000 citizens, disregarding Zemun, which still belonged to Austria-Hungary.[70]

The first-ever projection of motion pictures in the Balkans and Central Europe was held in Belgrade in June 1896 by André Carr, a representative of the Lumière brothers. He shot the first motion pictures of Belgrade in the next year; however, they have not been preserved.[71] The first permanent cinema was opened in 1909 in Belgrade.[72]

World War I: German-Austrian invasion

The First World War began on 28 July 1914 when Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia. Most of the subsequent Balkan offensives occurred near Belgrade. Austro-Hungarian monitors shelled Belgrade on 29 July 1914, and it was taken by the Austro-Hungarian Army under General Oskar Potiorek on 30 November. On 15 December, it was re-taken by Serbian troops under Marshal Radomir Putnik. After a prolonged battle which destroyed much of the city, starting on 6 October 1915, Belgrade fell to German and Austro-Hungarian troops commanded by Field Marshal August von Mackensen on 9 October of the same year. The city was liberated by Serbian and French troops on 1 November 1918, under the command of Marshal Louis Franchet d'Espèrey of France and Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia. Belgrade, decimated as a front-line city, lost the title of largest city in the Kingdom to Subotica for some time.[73]

Kingdom of Yugoslavia

 
Theatre square (today Republic Square) in 1934

After the war, Belgrade became the capital of the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929. The Kingdom was split into banovinas and Belgrade, together with Zemun and Pančevo, formed a separate administrative unit.[74]

During this period, the city experienced fast growth and significant modernisation. Belgrade's population grew to 239,000 by 1931 (with the inclusion of Zemun), and to 320,000 by 1940. The population growth rate between 1921 and 1948 averaged 4.08% a year.[75]

In 1927, Belgrade's first airport opened, and in 1929, its first radio station began broadcasting. The Pančevo Bridge, which crosses the Danube, was opened in 1935,[76] while King Alexander Bridge over the Sava was opened in 1934. On 3 September 1939 the first Belgrade Grand Prix, the last Grand Prix motor racing race before the outbreak of World War II, was held around the Belgrade Fortress and was followed by 80,000 spectators.[77] The winner was Tazio Nuvolari.[78]

World War II: German invasion

On 25 March 1941, the government of regent Crown Prince Paul signed the Tripartite Pact, joining the Axis powers in an effort to stay out of the Second World War and keep Yugoslavia neutral during the conflict. This was immediately followed by mass protests in Belgrade and a military coup d'état led by Air Force commander General Dušan Simović, who proclaimed King Peter II to be of age to rule the realm. As a result, the city was heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe on 6 April 1941, killing up to 2,274 people.[79][80][81] Yugoslavia was then invaded by German, Italian, Hungarian, and Bulgarian forces. Belgrade was captured by subterfuge, with six German soldiers led by their officer Fritz Klingenberg feigning threatening size, forcing the city to capitulate.[82] Belgrade was more directly occupied by the German Army in the same month and became the seat of the puppet Nedić regime, headed by its namesake general.[83] Some of today's parts of Belgrade were incorporated in the Independent State of Croatia in occupied Yugoslavia, another puppet state, where Ustashe regime carried out the Genocide of Serbs.[84]

 
Belgrade citizens celebrating the Red Army 3rd Ukrainian Front as liberators from the German occupation troops, 20 October 1944.

During the summer and fall of 1941, in reprisal for guerrilla attacks, the Germans carried out several massacres of Belgrade citizens; in particular, members of the Jewish community were subject to mass shootings at the order of General Franz Böhme, the German Military Governor of Serbia. Böhme rigorously enforced the rule that for every German killed, 100 Serbs or Jews would be shot.[85] Belgrade became the first city in Europe to be declared by the Nazi occupation forces to be Judenfrei.[86] The resistance movement in Belgrade was led by Major Žarko Todorović from 1941 until his arrest in 1943.[87]

Just like Rotterdam, which was devastated twice by both German and Allied bombing, Belgrade was bombed once more during World War II, this time by the Allies on 16 April 1944, killing at least 1,100 people. This bombing fell on the Orthodox Christian Easter.[88] Most of the city remained under German occupation until 20 October 1944, when it was liberated by the Red Army and the Communist Yugoslav Partisans.

On 29 November 1945, Marshal Josip Broz Tito proclaimed the Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia in Belgrade (later renamed to Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia on 7 April 1963).[89]

Socialist Yugoslavia

When the war ended, the city was left with 11,500 demolished housing units.[90] During the post-war period, Belgrade grew rapidly as the capital of the renewed Yugoslavia, developing as a major industrial centre.[68]

In 1948, construction of New Belgrade started. In 1958, Belgrade's first television station began broadcasting. In 1961, Belgrade hosted the first and founding conference of the Non-Aligned Movement under Tito's chairmanship.[91] In 1962, Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport was built. In 1968, major student protests led to several street clashes between students and the police.[92]

 
Former Ministry of Defence building damaged in the 1999 NATO bombing.

In 1972, Belgrade faced smallpox outbreak, the last major outbreak of smallpox in Europe since World War II.[93] Between October 1977 and March 1978, the city hosted the first major gathering of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe with the aim of implementing the Helsinki Accords from, while in 1980 Belgrade hosted the UNESCO General Conference.[94] Josip Broz Tito died in May 1980 and his funeral in Belgrade was attended by high officials and state delegations from 128 of the 154 members of the United Nations from all over the world, based on which it became one of the largest funerals in history.[95]

Breakup of Yugoslavia

On 9 March 1991, massive demonstrations led by Vuk Drašković were held in the city against Slobodan Milošević.[96] According to various media outlets, there were between 100,000 and 150,000 people on the streets.[97] Two people were killed, 203 were injured and 108 were arrested during the protests, and later that day tanks were deployed onto the streets to restore order.[98] Many anti-war protests were held in Belgrade, with the largest protests being dedicated to solidarity with the victims from the besieged Sarajevo.[99][100] Further anti-government protests were held in Belgrade from November 1996 to February 1997 against the same government after alleged electoral fraud in local elections.[101] These protests brought Zoran Đinđić to power, the first mayor of Belgrade since World War II who did not belong to the League of Communists of Yugoslavia or its later offshoot, the Socialist Party of Serbia.[102]

In 1999, during the Kosovo War, NATO bombings caused severe damage to the city. Among the sites bombed were various ministry buildings, the RTS building, hospitals, Hotel Jugoslavija, the Central Committee building, Avala Tower, and the Chinese embassy.[103] Approximately 2,000 civilians were killed as a result of the NATO bombings.[104] After the Yugoslav Wars, Serbia became home to the highest number of refugees and internally displaced persons in Europe, with more than a third of these refugees having settled in Belgrade.[105][106][107][108]

After the 2000 presidential elections, Belgrade was the site of major public protests, with over half a million people taking part. These demonstrations resulted in the ousting of president Milošević as a part of the Otpor movement.[109][110]

Development

 
Panoramic view of Belgrade and Belgrade Waterfront under construction, 2022.

In 2014, Belgrade Waterfront, an urban renewal project, was initiated by the Government of Serbia and its Emirati partner, Eagle Hills Properties. Around €3.5 billion was to be jointly invested by the Serbian government and their Emirati partners.[111][needs update] The project includes office and luxury apartment buildings, five-star hotels, a shopping mall and the envisioned 'Belgrade Tower'. The project is, however, quite controversial—there are a number of uncertainties regarding its funding, necessity, and its architecture's arguable lack of harmony with the rest of the city.[112]

In addition to Belgrade Waterfront, the city is under rapid development and reconstruction, especially in the area of Novi Beograd, where (as of 2020) apartment and office buildings were under construction to support the burgeoning Belgrade IT sector, now one of Serbia's largest economic players. In September 2020, there were around 2000 active construction sites in Belgrade.[113]

Geography

Topography

 
The confluence of the Sava into the Danube at Belgrade. Pictured from Kalemegdan Fortress.

Belgrade lies 116.75 m (383.0 ft) above sea level and is located at the confluence of the Danube and Sava rivers.[14] The historical core of Belgrade, Kalemegdan, lies on the right banks of both rivers. Since the 19th century, the city has been expanding to the south and east; after World War II, New Belgrade was built on the left bank of the Sava river, connecting Belgrade with Zemun. Smaller, chiefly residential communities across the Danube, like Krnjača, Kotež and Borča, also merged with the city, while Pančevo, a heavily industrialised satellite city, remains separate. The city has an urban area of 360 km2 (140 sq mi), while together with its metropolitan area it covers 3,223 km2 (1,244 sq mi).[11]

On the right bank of the Sava, central Belgrade has a hilly terrain, while the highest point of Belgrade proper is Torlak hill at 303 m (994 ft). The mountains of Avala (511 m (1,677 ft)) and Kosmaj (628 m (2,060 ft)) lie south of the city. Across the Sava and Danube, the land is mostly flat, consisting of alluvial plains and loessial plateaus.[114]

 
Panoramic view of Belgrade city center seen from the Sava river

One of the characteristics of the city terrain is mass wasting. On the territory covered by the General Urban Plan there are 1,155 recorded mass wasting points, out of which 602 are active and 248 are labeled as 'high risk'. They cover almost 30% of the city territory and include several types of mass wasting. Downhill creeps are located on the slopes above the rivers, mostly on the clay or loam soils, inclined between 7 and 20%. The most critical ones are in Karaburma, Zvezdara, Višnjica, Vinča and Ritopek, in the Danube valley, and Umka, and especially its neighbourhood of Duboko, in the Sava valley. They have moving and dormant phases, and some of them have been recorded for centuries. Less active downhill creep areas include the entire Terazije slope above the Sava (Kalemegdan, Savamala), which can be seen by the inclination of the Pobednik monument and the tower of the Cathedral Church, and the Voždovac section, between Banjica and Autokomanda.

Landslides encompass smaller areas, develop on the steep cliffs, sometimes being inclined up to 90%. They are mostly located in the artificial loess hills of Zemun: Gardoš, Ćukovac and Kalvarija.

However, the majority of the land movement in Belgrade, some 90%, is triggered by the construction works and faulty water supply system (burst pipes, etc.). The neighbourhood of Mirijevo is considered to be the most successful project of fixing the problem. During the construction of the neighbourhood from the 1970s, the terrain was systematically improved and the movement of the land is today completely halted.[115][116]

Climate

Under the Köppen climate classification, Belgrade has a humid subtropical climate (Cfa) bordering on a humid continental climate (Dfa) with four seasons and uniformly spread precipitation. Monthly averages range from 1.4 °C (34.5 °F) in January to 23.0 °C (73.4 °F) in July, with an annual mean of 12.5 °C (54.5 °F). There are, on average, 31 days a year when the temperature is above 30 °C (86 °F), and 95 days when the temperature is above 25 °C (77 °F). Belgrade receives about 691 mm (27 in) of precipitation a year, with late spring being wettest. The average annual number of sunny hours is 2,112.

The highest officially recorded temperature in Belgrade was 43.6 °C (110.5 °F) on 24 July 2007,[117] while on the other end, the lowest temperature was −26.2 °C (−15 °F) on 10 January 1893.[118]

Climate data for Belgrade (1991–2020, extremes 1936–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 20.7
(69.3)
23.9
(75.0)
30.0
(86.0)
32.4
(90.3)
34.9
(94.8)
37.4
(99.3)
43.6
(110.5)
40.0
(104.0)
41.8
(107.2)
33.7
(92.7)
28.4
(83.1)
22.6
(72.7)
43.6
(110.5)
Average high °C (°F) 5.2
(41.4)
7.8
(46.0)
13.1
(55.6)
18.9
(66.0)
23.6
(74.5)
27.1
(80.8)
29.3
(84.7)
29.7
(85.5)
24.3
(75.7)
18.7
(65.7)
12.2
(54.0)
6.1
(43.0)
18.0
(64.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 1.9
(35.4)
3.8
(38.8)
8.3
(46.9)
13.6
(56.5)
18.2
(64.8)
21.9
(71.4)
23.8
(74.8)
23.8
(74.8)
18.5
(65.3)
13.3
(55.9)
8.1
(46.6)
3.0
(37.4)
13.0
(55.4)
Average low °C (°F) −0.7
(30.7)
0.6
(33.1)
4.2
(39.6)
8.8
(47.8)
13.2
(55.8)
16.7
(62.1)
18.4
(65.1)
18.5
(65.3)
14.1
(57.4)
9.4
(48.9)
5.1
(41.2)
0.5
(32.9)
9.1
(48.4)
Record low °C (°F) −24.5
(−12.1)
−20.5
(−4.9)
−12.4
(9.7)
−3.4
(25.9)
0.4
(32.7)
4.6
(40.3)
8.3
(46.9)
6.7
(44.1)
0.6
(33.1)
−6.9
(19.6)
−8.3
(17.1)
−15.8
(3.6)
−24.5
(−12.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 47.9
(1.89)
43.5
(1.71)
48.7
(1.92)
51.5
(2.03)
72.3
(2.85)
95.6
(3.76)
66.5
(2.62)
55.1
(2.17)
58.6
(2.31)
54.8
(2.16)
49.6
(1.95)
54.8
(2.16)
698.9
(27.52)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 13.5 12.3 11.3 12.4 13.5 12.2 10.0 8.4 9.5 10.5 10.8 13.8 138.2
Average snowy days 9.7 7.3 4.2 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 3.0 7.8 32.8
Average relative humidity (%) 77.9 71.4 62.7 59.9 61.9 62.5 59.8 59.5 65.8 71.4 75.1 79.5 67.3
Mean monthly sunshine hours 70.7 96.2 146.7 186.7 224.7 253.9 278.8 262.6 192.6 155.0 92.1 60.3 2,020.3
Average ultraviolet index 1 2 3 5 7 8 8 7 5 3 2 1 4
Source 1: Republic Hydrometeorological Service of Serbia[119]
Source 2: Weather Atlas (UV),[120] Meteo Climat (record highs and lows)[121]
Climate data for Belgrade (2010-2022)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 5.5
(41.9)
8.8
(47.8)
13.3
(55.9)
19.1
(66.4)
23.1
(73.6)
27.8
(82.0)
30.2
(86.4)
30.5
(86.9)
25.2
(77.4)
18.9
(66.0)
13.0
(55.4)
7.0
(44.6)
18.5
(65.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 2.8
(37.0)
5.5
(41.9)
9.1
(48.4)
14.2
(57.6)
18.3
(64.9)
22.9
(73.2)
24.8
(76.6)
25.0
(77.0)
20.2
(68.4)
14.5
(58.1)
9.8
(49.6)
4.6
(40.3)
14.3
(57.8)
Average low °C (°F) 0.1
(32.2)
2.2
(36.0)
4.9
(40.8)
9.3
(48.7)
13.5
(56.3)
17.8
(64.0)
19.5
(67.1)
19.4
(66.9)
15.2
(59.4)
10.1
(50.2)
6.5
(43.7)
2.1
(35.8)
10.0
(50.1)
Source: weatheronline.co.uk [122]

Administration

Belgrade is a separate territorial unit in Serbia, with its own autonomous city authority.[15] The Assembly of the City of Belgrade has 110 members, elected on four-year terms.[123] A 13-member City Council, elected by the Assembly and presided over by the mayor and his deputy, has the control and supervision of the city administration,[124] which manages day-to-day administrative affairs. It is divided into 14 Secretariats, each having a specific portfolio such as traffic or health care, and several professional services, agencies and institutes.[125]

The 2022 Belgrade City Assembly election was won by the Serbian Progressive Party, which formed a ruling coalition with the Socialist Party of Serbia. Between 2004 and 2013, the Democratic Party was in power.[126] Due to the importance of Belgrade in political and economic life of Serbia, the office of city's mayor is often described as the third most important office in the state, after the President of the Government and the President of the Republic.[127][128][129]

As the capital city, Belgrade is seat of all Serbian state authorities – executive, legislative, judiciary, and the headquarters of almost all national political parties as well as 75 diplomatic missions.[130] This includes the National Assembly, the Presidency, the Government of Serbia and all the ministries, Supreme Court of Cassation and the Constitutional Court.

Municipalities

 
The City Hall (Old Palace) – Office of the mayor

The city is divided into 17 municipalities.[131] Previously, they were classified into 10 urban (lying completely or partially within borders of the city proper) and 7 suburban municipalities, whose centres are smaller towns.[132] With the new 2010 City statute, they were all given equal status, with the proviso that suburban ones (except Surčin) have certain autonomous powers, chiefly related with construction, infrastructure and public utilities.[131]

Most of the municipalities are situated on the southern side of the Danube and Sava rivers, in the Šumadija region. Three municipalities (Zemun, Novi Beograd, and Surčin), are on the northern bank of the Sava in the Syrmia region and the municipality of Palilula, spanning the Danube, is in both the Šumadija and Banat regions.

 
Municipalities of Belgrade map
Municipality Classification Area (km2) Population (2021) Population density (per km2)
Barajevo suburban 213 26,604 125
Čukarica urban 156 176,092 1,129
Grocka suburban 289 83,435 289
Lazarevac suburban 384 55,513 145
Mladenovac suburban 339 49,020 145
Novi Beograd urban 41 209,812 5,117
Obrenovac suburban 411 69,376 169
Palilula urban 451 182,672 405
Rakovica urban 31 104,921 3,385
Savski Venac urban 14 36,431 2,602
Sopot suburban 271 19,246 71
Stari Grad urban 5 44,712 8,942
Surčin urban 285 45,595 160
Voždovac urban 148 175,075 1,182
Vračar urban 3 55,768 18,589
Zemun urban 154 179,368 1,164
Zvezdara urban 32 171,923 5,372
Total 3,227 1,685,563 522

Demographics

 
Belgrade oblast population pyramid in 2021
 
Ascension Day the Patron Saint-day (slava) of the capital is traditionally celebrated the fortieth day of Easter and always on Thursday and Belgrade chose this day as its Day in memory of 1403 year, when the Despot Stefan Lazarević proclaimed Belgrade the capital of Serbia

According to the 2011 census, the city has a population of 1,166,763, while the urban area of Belgrade (with adjacent urban settlements of Borča, Ovča, and Surčin included) has 1,233,796 inhabitants, and the population of the metropolitan area (the administrative area of the City of Belgrade) stands at 1,659,440 people.

Belgrade is home to many ethnicities from across the former Yugoslavia and the wider Balkans region. The main ethnic groups are: Serbs (1,505,448), Roma (27,325), Montenegrins (9,902), Yugoslavs (8,061), Croats (7,752), Macedonians (6,970), and ethnic Muslims (3,996).[133] Many people came to the city as economic migrants from smaller towns and the countryside, while tens of thousands arrived as refugees from Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Kosovo, as a result of the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s.[134]

Between 10,000 and 20,000[135] Chinese people are estimated to live in Belgrade and, since their arrival in the mid-1990s, Block 70 in New Belgrade has been known colloquially as the Chinese quarter.[136][137] Many Middle Easterners, mainly from Syria, Iran, Jordan and Iraq, arrived in order to pursue their studies during the 1970s and 1980s, and have remained in the city.[138] Throughout the 19th and early 20th century, small communities of Aromanians, Czechs, Greeks, Germans, Hungarians, Jews, Turks, Armenians and Russian White émigrés also existed in Belgrade. There are two suburban settlements with significant minority population today: Ovča and the village of Boljevci, both with about one quarter of their population being Romanians and Slovaks, respectively.

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
142650,000[139]—    
1683100,000[139]+0.27%
180025,000[140]−1.18%
185015,000[140]−1.02%
186022,000[140]+3.90%
187527,000[140]+1.37%
188036,000[140]+5.92%
189054,000[140]+4.14%
190069,000[140]+2.48%
191089,000[140]+2.58%
1921111,739+2.09%
1931238,775+7.89%
1948397,911+3.05%
1953477,982+3.73%
1961657,362+4.06%
1971899,094+3.18%
19811,087,915+1.92%
19911,133,146+0.41%
20021,119,642−0.11%
20111,166,763+0.46%
Settlements Population
[141]
Belgrade 1,166,763
Borča 46,086
Grocka 26,904
Lazarevac 26,006
Obrenovac 25,429
Mladenovac 23,609
Sremčica 21,001
Surčin 18,205
Ripanj 11,088
Ugrinovci 10,807
Leštane 10,473

Although there are several historic religious communities in Belgrade, the religious makeup of the city is relatively homogeneous. The Serbian Orthodox community is by far the largest, with 1,475,168 adherents. There are also 31,914 Muslims, 13,720 Roman Catholics, and 3,128 Protestants.

There once was a significant Jewish community in Belgrade but, following the World War II Nazi occupation of the city and subsequent Jewish emigration, their numbers have fallen from over 10,000 to just 295.[142] Belgrade also used to have one of the largest Buddhist colonies in Europe outside Russia when some 400 mostly Buddhist Kalmyks settled on the outskirts of Belgrade following the Russian Civil War. The first Buddhist temple in Europe was built in Belgrade in 1929. Most of them moved away after the World War II and their temple, Belgrade pagoda, was abandoned, claimed by the new Communist regime and eventually demolished.[143]

Economy

 
Serbian Railways headquarters in Belgrade

Belgrade is the financial centre of Serbia and Southeast Europe, with a total of 17×10^6 m2 (180×10^6 sq ft) of office space.[144] It is also home to the country's Central Bank. 750,550 people are employed (July 2020)[145] in 120,286 companies,[146] 76,307 enterprises and 50,000 shops.[145][147] The City of Belgrade itself owns 267,147 m2 (2,875,550 sq ft) of rentable office space.[148] As of 2019, Belgrade contained 31.4% of Serbia's employed population and generated over 40.4% of its GDP.[149][150] The city's nominal GDP in 2014 was estimated at US$16.97 billion, amounting to 859,329 RSD ($10,086) per capita.[151] City GDP in 2019 at purchasing power parity was estimated at $52.1bn USD, which was $32,572 per capita in terms of purchasing power parity.[152]

New Belgrade is the country's Central business district and one of Southeastern Europe's financial centres. It offers a range of facilities, such as hotels, congress halls (e.g. Sava Centar), Class A and B office buildings, and business parks (e.g. Airport City Belgrade). Over 1.2×10^6 m2 (13×10^6 sq ft) of land is under construction in New Belgrade, with the value of planned construction over the next three years estimated at over 1.5 billion euros. The Belgrade Stock Exchange is also located in New Belgrade, and has a market capitalisation of €6.5 billion (US$7.1 billion).

With 6,924 companies in the IT sector (according to 2013 data), Belgrade is one of the foremost information technology hubs in Southeast Europe.[146] Microsoft's Development Center Serbia, located in Belgrade, was, at the time of its establishment, the fifth such programme on the globe.[153] Many global IT companies choose Belgrade as their European or regional centre of operations, such as Asus,[154] Intel,[155] Dell,[156] Huawei, Nutanix,[157] NCR etc.[158] The most famous Belgrade IT startups, among others, are Nordeus, ComTrade Group, MicroE, FishingBooker, and Endava. IT facilities in the city include the Mihajlo Pupin Institute and the ILR,[159] as well as the brand-new IT Park Zvezdara.[160] Many prominent IT innovators began their careers in Belgrade, including Voja Antonić and Veselin Jevrosimović.

In December 2021, the average Belgrade monthly net salary stood at 94,463 RSD ($946) in net terms, with the gross equivalent at 128,509 RSD ($1288), while in New Belgrade CBD is Euros 1,059.[161] 88% of the city's households owned a computer, 89% had a broadband internet connection and 93% had pay television services.[162]

According to Cushman & Wakefield, Knez Mihajlova street is 36th most expensive retail street in the world in terms of renting commercial space.[163]

Culture

 
Republic Square, Left: National Museum of Serbia – Centre: Hotel Marriott Belgrade – Right: National Theatre.
 
The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, national learned society founded in 1841

According to the BBC, Belgrade is one of the five most creative cities in the world.[164] Belgrade hosts many annual international cultural events, including the Film Festival, Theatre Festival, Summer Festival, BEMUS, Belgrade Early Music Festival, Book Fair, Belgrade Choir Festival, Eurovision Song Contest 2008, and the Beer Fest.[165] In 2022 Belgrade was also home to the Europride event, even though the president Aleksandar Vučić tried to cancel it.[166] The Nobel Prize winning author Ivo Andrić wrote his most famous work, The Bridge on the Drina, in Belgrade.[167] Other prominent Belgrade authors include Branislav Nušić, Miloš Crnjanski, Borislav Pekić, Milorad Pavić and Meša Selimović.[168][169][170] The most internationally prominent artists from Belgrade are Charles Simic, Marina Abramović and Milovan Destil Marković.

Most of Serbia's film industry is based in Belgrade. FEST is an annual film festival that held since 1971, and, through 2013, had been attended by four million people and had presented almost 4,000 films.[171]

The city was one of the main centres of the Yugoslav new wave in the 1980s: VIS Idoli, Ekatarina Velika, Šarlo Akrobata and Električni Orgazam were all from Belgrade. Other notable Belgrade rock acts include Riblja Čorba, Bajaga i Instruktori and Partibrejkers.[172][173] Today, it is the centre of the Serbian hip hop scene, with acts such as Beogradski Sindikat, Bad Copy, Škabo, Marčelo, and most of the Bassivity Music stable hailing from or living in the city.[174][175] There are numerous theatres, the most prominent of which are National Theatre, Theatre on Terazije, Yugoslav Drama Theatre, Zvezdara Theatre, and Atelier 212. The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts is also based in Belgrade, as well as the National Library of Serbia. Other major libraries include the Belgrade City Library and the Belgrade University Library. Belgrade's two opera houses are: National Theatre and Madlenianum Opera House.[176][177] Following the victory of Serbia's representative Marija Šerifović at the Eurovision Song Contest 2007, Belgrade hosted the Contest in 2008.[178]

There is more than 1650 public sculptures on the territory of Belgrade.[179][180]

Museums

The most prominent museum in Belgrade is the National Museum, founded in 1844 and reconstructed from 2003 until June 2018. The museum houses a collection of more than 400,000 exhibits (over 5600 paintings and 8400 drawings and prints, including many foreign masters like Bosch, Juan de Flandes, Titian, Tintoretto, Rubens, Cézanne, G.B. Tiepolo, Renoir, Monet, Lautrec, Matisse, Picasso, Gauguin, Chagall, Van Gogh, Mondrian etc.) and also the famous Miroslav's Gospel.[181] The Ethnographic Museum, established in 1901, contains more than 150,000 items showcasing the rural and urban culture of the Balkans, particularly the countries of former Yugoslavia.[182]

The Museum of Contemporary Art was the first contemporary art museum in Yugoslavia and one of the first museums of this type in the world.[183] Following its foundation in 1965, has amassed a collection of more than 8,000 works from art produced across the former Yugoslavia.[184] The museum was closed in 2007, but has since been reopened in 2017 to focus on the modern as well as on the Yugoslav art scenes.[185] Artist Marina Abramović, who was born in Belgrade, held an exhibition in the Museum of Contemporary Art, which the New York Times described as one of the most important cultural happenings in the world in 2019.[186][187] The exhibition was seen by almost 100,000 visitors. Marina Abramović made a stage speech and performance in front of 20,000 people.[188] In the heart of Belgrade you can also find the Museum of Applied Arts, a museum that has been awarded for the Institution of the Year 2016 by ICOM.[189]

The Military Museum, established in 1878 in Kalemegdan, houses a wide range of more than 25,000 military objects dating from the prehistoric to the medieval to the modern eras. Notable items include Turkish and oriental arms, national banners, and Yugoslav Partisan regalia.[190][191]

The Museum of Aviation in Belgrade located near Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport has more than 200 aircraft, of which about 50 are on display, and a few of which are the only surviving examples of their type, such as the Fiat G.50. This museum also displays parts of shot down US and NATO aircraft, such as the F-117 and F-16.[192]

The Nikola Tesla Museum, founded in 1952, preserves the personal items of Nikola Tesla, the inventor after whom the Tesla unit was named. It holds around 160,000 original documents and around 5,700 personal other items including his urn.[193] The last of the major Belgrade museums is the Museum of Vuk and Dositej, which showcases the lives, work and legacy of Vuk Stefanović Karadžić and Dositej Obradović, the 19th century reformer of the Serbian literary language and the first Serbian Minister of Education, respectively.[194] Belgrade also houses the Museum of African Art, founded in 1977, which has a large collection of art from West Africa.[195]

With around 95,000 copies of national and international films, the Yugoslav Film Archive is the largest in the region and among the 10 largest archives in the world.[196] The institution also operates the Museum of Yugoslav Film Archive, with movie theatre and exhibition hall. The archive's long-standing storage problems were finally solved in 2007, when a new modern depository was opened.[197] The Yugoslav Film Archive also exhibits original Charlie Chaplin's stick and one of the first movies by Auguste and Louis Lumière.[198] The Belgrade City Museum moved into a new building in downtown in 2006.[199] The museum hosts a range of collections covering the history of urban life since prehistory.[200]

The Museum of Yugoslav History has collections from the Yugoslav era. Beside paintings, the most valuable are Moon rocks donated by Apollo 11 crew Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins while visiting Belgrade in 1969 and from mission Apollo 17 donated by Richard Nixon in 1971.[201] Museum also houses Joseph Stalin's sabre with 260 brilliants and diamonds, donated by Stalin himself.[202]Museum of Science and Technology moved to the building of the first city's power plant in Dorćol in 2005.[203]

Architecture

Belgrade has wildly varying architecture, from the centre of Zemun, typical of a Central European town,[204] to the more modern architecture and spacious layout of New Belgrade. The oldest architecture is found in Kalemegdan Park. Outside of Kalemegdan, the oldest buildings date only from the 18th century, due to its geographic position and frequent wars and destructions.[205]

 
Bežanija blocks in New Belgrade, large purpose-built housing estates.

The oldest public structure in Belgrade is a nondescript Turkish türbe, while the oldest house is a modest clay house on Dorćol, from late 18th century.[206] Western influence began in the 19th century, when the city completely transformed from an oriental town to the contemporary architecture of the time, with influences from neoclassicism, romanticism, and academic art. Serbian architects took over the development from the foreign builders in the late 19th century, producing the National Theatre, Old Palace, Cathedral Church and later, in the early 20th century, the National Assembly and National Museum, influenced by art nouveau.[205] Elements of Serbo-Byzantine Revival are present in buildings such as House of Vuk's Foundation, old Post Office in Kosovska street, and sacral architecture, such as St. Mark's Church (based on the Gračanica monastery), and the Temple of Saint Sava.[205]

In the socialist period, housing was built quickly and cheaply for the huge influx of people fleeing the countryside following World War II, sometimes resulting in the brutalist architecture of the blokovi ('blocks') of New Belgrade; a socrealism trend briefly ruled, resulting in buildings like the Trade Union Hall.[205] However, in the mid-1950s, modernist trends took over, and still dominate the Belgrade architecture.[205] Belgrade has the second oldest sewer system in Europe.[207] The Clinical Centre of Serbia spreads over 34 hectares and consists of about 50 buildings, while also has 3,150 beds considered to be the highest number in Europe,[208] and among highest in the world.[209]

Tourism

Lying on the main artery connecting Europe and Asia, as well as, eventually, the Orient Express, Belgrade has been a popular place for travellers through the centuries. In 1843, on Dubrovačka Street (today Kralj Petar Street ), Serbia's knez Mihailo Obrenović built a large edifice which became the first hotel in Belgrade: Kod jelena ('at the deer's'), in the neighbourhood of Kosančićev Venac. Many criticised the move at the time due to the cost and the size of the building, and it soon became the gathering point of the Principality's wealthiest citizens. Colloquially, the building was also referred to as the staro zdanje, or the 'old edifice'. It remained a hotel until 1903 before being demolished in 1938.[210][211] After the staro zdanje, numerous hotels were built in the second half of the 19th century: Nacional and Grand, also in Kosančićev Venac, Srpski Kralj, Srpska Kruna, Grčka Kraljica near Kalemegdan, Balkan and Pariz in Terazije, London, etc.[212]

As Belgrade became connected via steamboats and railway (after 1884), the number of visitors grew and new hotels were open with the ever luxurious commodities. In Savamala, the hotels Bosna and Bristol were opened. Other hotels included Solun and Orient, which was built near the Financial Park. Tourists which arrived by the Orient Express mostly stayed at the Petrograd Hotel in Wilson Square. Hotel Srpski Kralj, at the corner of Uzun Mirkova and Pariska Street was considered the best hotel in Belgrade during the Interbellum. It was destroyed during World War II.[212]

The historic areas and buildings of Belgrade are among the city's premier attractions. They include Skadarlija, the National Museum and adjacent National Theatre, Zemun, Nikola Pašić Square, Terazije, Students' Square, the Kalemegdan Fortress, Knez Mihailova Street, the Parliament, the Church of Saint Sava, and the Old Palace. On top of this, there are many parks, monuments, museums, cafés, restaurants and shops on both sides of the river. The hilltop Avala Monument and Avala Tower offer views over the city. According to The Guardian, Dorcol is the one of top ten coolest suburbs and in Europe.[213]

Elite neighbourhood of Dedinje is situated near the Topčider and Košutnjak parks. The Beli dvor (White Palace), house of royal family Karađorđević, is open for visitors. The palace has many valuable artworks.[214] Nearby, Josip Broz Tito's mausoleum, called The House of Flowers, documents the life of the former Yugoslav president.

Ada Ciganlija is a former island on the Sava River, and Belgrade's biggest sports and recreational complex. Today it is connected with the right bank of the Sava via two causeways, creating an artificial lake. It is the most popular destination for Belgraders during the city's hot summers. There are 7 km (4 mi) of long beaches and sports facilities for various sports including golf, football, basketball, volleyball, rugby union, baseball, and tennis.[215] During summer there are between 200,000 and 300,000 bathers daily.[216]

 
Skadarlija, the city's old bohemian neighbourhood

Extreme sports are available, such as bungee jumping, water skiing, and paintballing.[215][217] There are numerous tracks on the island, where it is possible to ride a bike, go for a walk, or go jogging.[215][217] Apart from Ada, Belgrade has total of 16 islands[218] on the rivers, many still unused. Among them, the Great War Island, at the confluence of Sava, stands out as an oasis of unshattered wildlife (especially birds).[219] These areas, along with nearby Small War Island, are protected by the city's government as a nature preserve.[220] There are 37 protected natural resources in the Belgrade urban area, among which eight are geo-heritage sites, i.e. Straževica profile, Mašin Majdan-Topčider, Profile at the Kalemegdan Fortress, Abandoned quarry in Barajevo, Karagača valley, Artesian well in Ovča, Kapela loess profile, and Lake in Sremčica. Other 29 places are biodiversity sites.[221]

Tourist income in 2016 amounted to nearly one billion euros;[222] with a visit of almost a million registered tourists.[223] Of those, in 2019 more than 100,000 tourists arrived by 742 river cruisers.[223][224] Average annual growth is between 13% and 14%.[223]

As of 2018, there are three officially designated camp grounds in Belgrade. The oldest one is located in Batajnica, along the Batajnica Road. Named "Dunav", it is one of the most visited campsites in the country. Second one is situated within the complex of the ethno-household "Zornić's House" in the village of Baćevac, while the third is located in Ripanj, on the slopes of the Avala mountain. In 2017 some 15,000 overnights were recorded in camps.[225]

Belgrade is a common stop on the Rivers Route, European cycling route known as "Danube Bike Trail" in Serbia as well as on the Sultans Trail, a long-distance hiking footpath between Vienna and Istanbul.

Nightlife

Belgrade has a reputation for vibrant nightlife; many clubs that are open until dawn can be found throughout the city.[226] The most recognisable nightlife features of Belgrade are the barges (splav) spread along the banks of the Sava and Danube Rivers.[227][228][229]

 
Belgrade nightlife

Many weekend visitors—particularly from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Slovenia—prefer Belgrade nightlife to that of their own capitals due to its perceived friendly atmosphere, plentiful clubs and bars, cheap drinks, lack of significant language barriers, and a lack of night life regulation.[230][231] One of the most famous sites for alternative cultural happenings in the city is the SKC (Student Cultural Centre), located right across from Belgrade's highrise landmark, the Belgrade Palace tower. Concerts featuring famous local and foreign bands are often held at the centre. SKC is also the site of various art exhibitions, as well as public debates and discussions.[232]

A more traditional Serbian nightlife experience, accompanied by traditional music known as Starogradska (roughly translated as Old Town Music), typical of northern Serbia's urban environments, is most prominent in Skadarlija, the city's old bohemian neighbourhood where the poets and artists of Belgrade gathered in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Skadar Street (the centre of Skadarlija) and the surrounding neighbourhood are lined with some of Belgrade's best and oldest traditional restaurants (called kafanas in Serbian), which date back to that period.[233] At one end of the neighbourhood stands Belgrade's oldest beer brewery, founded in the first half of the 19th century.[234] One of the city's oldest kafanas is the Znak pitanja ('?').[235]

The Times reported that Europe's best nightlife can be found in Belgrade.[236] In the Lonely Planet 1000 Ultimate Experiences guide of 2009, Belgrade was placed at the 1st spot among the top 10 party cities in the world.[237]

Sport and recreation

There are approximately one-thousand sports facilities in Belgrade, many of which are capable of serving all levels of sporting events.[238]

Ada Ciganlija island, lake and beaches are one of the most important recreational areas in the city. With total of 8 km beaches, with lot of bars, caffe's, restaurants and sport facilities, Ada Ciganlija attracts many visitors especially in summertime.

Košutnjak park forest with numerous running and bike trails, sport facilities for all sports with indoor and outdoor pools is also very popular. Located only 2 km from Ada Ciganlija.

During the 60s and 70s Belgrade held a number of major international events such as the first ever World Aquatics Championships in 1973, 1976 European Football Championship and 1973 European Cup Final, European Athletics Championships in 1962 and European Indoor Games in 1969, European Basketball Championships in 1961 and 1975, European Volleyball Championship for men and women in 1975 and World Amateur Boxing Championships in 1978.

Since the early 2000s Belgrade again hosts major sporting events nearly every year. Some of these include EuroBasket 2005, European Handball Championship (men's and women's) in 2012, World Handball Championship for women in 2013, European Volleyball Championships for men in 2005 for men and 2011 for women, the 2006 and 2016 European Water Polo Championship, the European Youth Olympic Festival 2007 and the 2009 Summer Universiade.[239] More recently, Belgrade hosted European Athletics Indoor Championships in 2017 and the basketball EuroLeague Final Four tournaments in 2018 and 2022. Global and continental championships in other sports such as tennis, futsal, judo, karate, wrestling, rowing, kickboxing, table tennis, and chess have also been held in recent years.

The city is home to Serbia's two biggest and most successful football clubs, Red Star Belgrade and Partizan Belgrade. Red Star won the UEFA Champions League (European Cup) in 1991, and Partizan was runner-up in 1966. The two major stadiums in Belgrade are the Marakana (Red Star Stadium) and the Partizan Stadium.[240] The Eternal derby is between Red Star and Partizan.

Štark Arena with capacity of 19,384 spectators is one of the largest indoor arenas in Europe.[241] It is used for major sporting events and large concerts. In May 2008 it was the venue for the 53rd Eurovision Song Contest.[242] The Aleksandar Nikolić Hall is the main venue of basketball clubs KK Partizan, European champion of 1992, and KK Crvena zvezda.[243][244]

In recent years, Belgrade has also given rise to several world-class tennis players such as Ana Ivanovic, Jelena Janković and Novak Djokovic. Ivanovic and Djokovic are the first female and male Belgraders, respectively, to win Grand Slam singles titles and been ATP number 1 with Jelena Janković. The Serbian national team won the 2010 Davis Cup, beating the French team in the finals played in the Belgrade Arena.[245]

Belgrade Marathon is held annually since 1988. Belgrade was a candidate to host 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympic Games.

Fashion and design

Since 1996,[246] semiannual (autumn/winter and spring/summer seasons) fashion weeks are held citywide. Numerous Serbian and foreign designers and fashion brands have their shows during Belgrade Fashion Week. The festival, which collaborates with London Fashion Week, has helped launch the international careers of local talents such as George Styler and Ana Ljubinković. British fashion designer Roksanda Ilincic, who was born in the city, also frequently presents her runway shows in Belgrade.

In addition to fashion, there are two major design shows held in Belgrade every year which attract international architects and industrial designers such as Karim Rashid, Daniel Libeskind, Patricia Urquiola, and Konstantin Grcic. Both the Mikser Festival and Belgrade Design Week feature lectures, exhibits and competitions. Furthermore, international designers like Sacha Lakic, Ana Kraš, Bojana Sentaler, and Marek Djordjevic are originally from Belgrade.

Media

Belgrade is the most important media hub in Serbia. The city is home to the main headquarters of the national broadcaster Radio Television Serbia (RTS), which is a public service broadcaster.[247] The most popular commercial broadcaster is RTV Pink, a Serbian media multinational, known for its popular entertainment programmes. One of the most popular commercial broadcasters is B92, another media company, which has its own TV station, radio station, and music and book publishing arms, as well as the most popular website on the Serbian internet.[248][249] Other TV stations broadcasting from Belgrade include 1Prva (formerly Fox televizija), Nova, N1 and others which only cover the greater Belgrade municipal area, such as Studio B.

High-circulation daily newspapers published in Belgrade include Politika, Blic, Alo!, Kurir and Danas. There are two sporting dailies, Sportski žurnal and Sport, and one economic daily, Privredni pregled. A new free distribution daily, 24 sata, was founded in the autumn of 2006. Also, Serbian editions of licensed magazines such as Harper's Bazaar, Elle, Cosmopolitan, National Geographic, Men's Health, Grazia and others have their headquarters in the city.

Education

Belgrade has two state universities and several private institutions of higher education. The University of Belgrade, founded in 1808 as a grande école, is the oldest institution of higher learning in Serbia.[250] Having developed with much of the rest of the city in the 19th century, several university buildings are recognised as forming a constituent part of Belgrade's architecture and cultural heritage. With enrolment numbers of nearly 90,000 students, the university is one of Europe's largest.[251]

The city is also home to 195 primary (elementary) schools and 85 secondary schools. The primary school system has 162 regular schools, 14 special schools, 15 art schools, and 4 adult schools, while the secondary school system has 51 vocational schools, 21 gymnasiums, 8 art schools and 5 special schools. The 230,000 pupils are managed by 22,000 employees in over 500 buildings, covering around 1.1×10^6 m2 (12×10^6 sq ft).[252]

Transportation

 
The city at 1:48 AM CEST on July 5, 2022; taken from the International Space Station

Belgrade has an extensive public transport system consisting of buses (118 urban lines and more than 300 suburban lines), trams (12 lines), trolleybuses (8 lines) and S-Train BG Voz (6 lines).[253][254] Buses, trolleybuses and trams are run by GSP Beograd and SP Lasta in cooperation with private companies on some bus routes. The S-train network, BG Voz, run by city government in cooperation with Serbian Railways, is a part of the integrated transport system, and has three lines (Batajnica-Ovča and Ovča-Resnik and Belgrade centre-Mladenovac), with more announced.[255][256] The BusPlus ticketing system based on contactless smart cards began operating in February 2012. Daily connections link the capital to other towns in Serbia and many other European destinations through the city's central bus station.

Beovoz was the suburban/commuter railway network that provided mass-transit services in the city, similar to Paris's RER and Toronto's GO Transit. The main usage of system was to connect the suburbs with the city centre. Beovoz was operated by Serbian Railways.[257] However, this system was abolished back in 2013, mostly due to introduction of more efficient BG Voz. Belgrade is one of the last big European capitals and cities with over a million people to have no metro or subway or other rapid transit system. As of November 2021, Belgrade Metro is currently under construction, which will have 2 lines. The first line is expected to be operational by August 2028.[258][259]

 
  Section A (Batajnica-Dobanovci)
  Section B (Dobanovci-Bubanj Potok)
  Section C (Bubanj Potok-Pančevo)

The new Belgrade Centre railway station is the hub for almost all the national and international trains.

The high-speed rail that connects Belgrade with Novi Sad started its service at 19 March 2022.[260] The extension towards Subotica and Budapest is under construction,[261] and there are plans for southwards extension towards Niš and North Macedonia.[262]

The city is placed along the Pan-European corridors X and VII.[10] The motorway system provides for easy access to Novi Sad and Budapest to the north, Niš to the south, and Zagreb to the west. Expressway is also toward Pančevo and new Expressway construction toward Obrenovac (Montenegro) is scheduled for March 2017. Belgrade bypass is connecting the E70 and E75 motorways and is under construction.[263]

Situated at the confluence of two major rivers, the Danube and the Sava, Belgrade has 11 bridges, the most important of which are Branko's bridge, the Ada Bridge, Pupin Bridge and the Gazela Bridge, the last two of which connect the core of the city to New Belgrade. In addition, an 'inner magistral semi-ring' is almost done and include a new Ada Bridge across the Sava river and a new Pupin Bridge across Danube river, which eased commuting within the city and unload the Gazela and Branko's bridge traffic.[264]

The Port of Belgrade is on the Danube, and allows the city to receive goods by river.[265] The city is also served by Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport, 12 km (7.5 mi) west of the city centre, near Surčin. At its peak in 1986, almost 3 million passengers travelled through the airport, though that number dwindled to a trickle in the 1990s.[266] Following renewed growth in 2000, the number of passengers reached approximately 2 million in 2004 and 2005,[267] over 2.6 million passengers in 2008,[268] reaching over 3 million passengers.[269] A record with over 4 million passengers was broken in 2014, when Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport became the second fastest growing major airport in Europe.[270] The numbers continued to grow steadily and the all-time peak of over 6 million passengers was reached in 2019.[271]

International cooperation and honors

 
Because of the heroic strength of its defenders, French marshal Louis Franchet d'Espèrey decorated Belgrade with the Legion of Honor in 1920.

List of Belgrade's sister and twin cities:[272]

Other friendships and cooperations, protocols, memorandums:[272]

  •   Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, since 2018, Memorandum of Understanding on Cooperation
  •   Rabat, Morocco, since 2017, Partnership and Cooperation Agreement
  •   Seoul, South Korea, since 2017, Memorandum of Understanding on Friendly Exchanges and Cooperation
  •   Astana, Kazakhstan, since 2016, Agreement on Cooperation[281]
  •   Tehran, Iran, since 2016, Agreement on Cooperation[282]
  •   Corfu, Greece, since 2010, Protocol on Cooperation
  •   Shenzhen, China, since 2009, Agreement on Cooperation[283]
  •   Zagreb, Croatia, since 2003, Letter of Intent
  •   Kyiv, Ukraine, since 2002, Agreement on Cooperation
  •   Algiers, Algeria, since 1991 declaration of mutual interests
  •   Tel Aviv, Israel, since 1990, Agreement on Cooperation
  •   Bucharest, Romania, since 1999, Agreement on Cooperation
  •   Beijing, China, since 1980, Agreement on Cooperation[284]
  •   Rome, Italy, since 1971, Agreement on Friendship and Cooperation
  •   Athens, Greece, since 1966, Agreement on Friendship and Cooperation

Some of the city's municipalities are also twinned to small cities or districts of other big cities; for details see their respective articles.

Belgrade has received various domestic and international honours, including the French Légion d'honneur (proclaimed 21 December 1920; Belgrade is one of four cities outside France, alongside Liège, Luxembourg and Volgograd, to receive this honour), the Czechoslovak War Cross (awarded 8 October 1925), the Yugoslavian Order of the Karađorđe's Star (awarded 18 May 1939) and the Yugoslavian Order of the People's Hero (proclaimed on 20 October 1974, the 30th anniversary of the overthrow of Nazi German occupation during World War II).[285] All of these decorations were received for the war efforts during World War I and World War II.[286] In 2006, Financial Times' magazine Foreign Direct Investment awarded Belgrade the title of City of the Future of Southern Europe.[287][288]

See also

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belgrade, other, uses, disambiguation, grayd, grayd, note, serbian, Београд, beograd, white, city, pronounced, beǒɡrad, listen, names, other, languages, capital, largest, city, serbia, located, confluence, sava, danube, rivers, crossroads, pannonian, plain, ba. For other uses see Belgrade disambiguation Belgrade b ɛ l ˈ ɡ r eɪ d bel GRAYD ˈ b ɛ l ɡ r eɪ d BEL grayd note 1 Serbian Beograd Beograd lit White City pronounced beǒɡrad listen names in other languages is the capital and largest city of Serbia It is located at the confluence of the Sava and Danube rivers and at the crossroads of the Pannonian Plain and the Balkan Peninsula 10 The population of the Belgrade metropolitan area is 1 681 405 according to the 2022 census 4 It is the third most populated of all cities on the Danube river Belgrade BeogradBeogradCapital cityGrad BeogradGrad Beograd City of BelgradeFrom top Panorama of Belgrade House of the National Assembly New Palace Avala Tower Usce Tower Gardos Tower Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts building Church of Saint Sava Belgrade Fortress Monument to the Unknown HeroFlagCoat of armsAnthem Himna Beogradu Himna Beogradu Hymn to Belgrade BelgradeLocation within SerbiaShow map of SerbiaBelgradeLocation within EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 44 49 04 N 20 27 25 E 44 81778 N 20 45694 E 44 81778 20 45694 Coordinates 44 49 04 N 20 27 25 E 44 81778 N 20 45694 E 44 81778 20 45694Country SerbiaDistrictBelgradeMunicipalities17EstablishmentPrior to 279 B C Singidunum 2 Government BodyCity Assembly of Belgrade MayorAleksandar Sapic SNS Deputy MayorVesna Vidovic SNS Ruling partiesSNS SPSArea 3 Capital city359 9 km2 139 0 sq mi Urban1 035 km2 400 sq mi Metro3 222 6 km2 1 244 3 sq mi Elevation 6 117 m 384 ft Population 2022 Capital city1 197 714 1 Density3 328 km2 8 620 sq mi Urban1 383 875 5 Urban density1 337 km2 3 460 sq mi Metro1 681 405 4 Metro density522 km2 1 350 sq mi Demonym s Belgradian en Beograđanin m Beograđanka f sr Time zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code11000Area code 381 0 11ISO 3166 codeRS 00Vehicle registrationBGHDI 2019 0 834 7 very highWebsitebeograd rsBelgrade is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in Europe and the world One of the most important prehistoric cultures of Europe the Vinca culture evolved within the Belgrade area in the 6th millennium BC In antiquity Thraco Dacians inhabited the region and after 279 BC Celts settled the city naming it Singidun 11 It was conquered by the Romans under the reign of Augustus and awarded Roman city rights in the mid 2nd century 12 It was settled by the Slavs in the 520s and changed hands several times between the Byzantine Empire the Frankish Empire the Bulgarian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary before it became the seat of the Serbian king Stefan Dragutin in 1284 Belgrade served as capital of the Serbian Despotate during the reign of Stefan Lazarevic and then his successor Đurađ Brankovic returned it to the Hungarian king in 1427 Noon bells in support of the Hungarian army against the Ottoman Empire during the siege in 1456 have remained a widespread church tradition to this day In 1521 Belgrade was conquered by the Ottomans and became the seat of the Sanjak of Smederevo 13 It frequently passed from Ottoman to Habsburg rule which saw the destruction of most of the city during the Ottoman Habsburg wars Following the Serbian Revolution Belgrade was once again named the capital of Serbia in 1841 Northern Belgrade remained the southernmost Habsburg post until 1918 when it was attached to the city due to former Austro Hungarian territories becoming part of the new Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes after World War I Belgrade was the capital of Yugoslavia from its creation in 1918 to its dissolution in 2006 note 2 In a fatally strategic position the city has been battled over in 115 wars and razed 44 times being bombed five times and besieged many times 14 Being Serbia s primate city Belgrade has special administrative status within Serbia 15 It is the seat of the central government administrative bodies and government ministries as well as home of almost all of the largest Serbian companies media and scientific institutions Belgrade is classified as a Beta Global City 16 The city is home to the Clinical Centre of Serbia one of the hospital complexes with the largest capacity in the world the Church of Saint Sava one of the largest Orthodox church buildings and the Stark Arena one of the largest capacity indoor arenas in Europe Belgrade hosted major international events such as the Danube River Conference of 1948 the first Non Aligned Movement Summit 1961 the first major gathering of the OSCE 1977 1978 the Eurovision Song Contest 2008 as well as sports events such as the first FINA World Aquatics Championships 1973 UEFA Euro 1976 Summer Universiade 2009 and EuroBasket three times 1961 1975 2005 Contents 1 History 1 1 Prehistory 1 2 Antiquity 1 3 Middle Ages 1 4 Ottoman rule and Austrian invasions 1 5 Principality and Kingdom of Serbia 1 6 World War I German Austrian invasion 1 7 Kingdom of Yugoslavia 1 8 World War II German invasion 1 9 Socialist Yugoslavia 1 10 Breakup of Yugoslavia 1 11 Development 2 Geography 2 1 Topography 2 2 Climate 3 Administration 3 1 Municipalities 4 Demographics 5 Economy 6 Culture 6 1 Museums 6 2 Architecture 6 3 Tourism 6 4 Nightlife 6 5 Sport and recreation 6 6 Fashion and design 7 Media 8 Education 9 Transportation 10 International cooperation and honors 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Informational notes 13 Sources 14 External linksHistory EditMain articles History of Belgrade and Timeline of Belgrade history Prehistory Edit See also Prehistoric sites in Serbia and Prehistory of Southeastern Europe Vinca culture figurine 4000 4500 BC Chipped stone tools found in Zemun show that the area around Belgrade was inhabited by nomadic foragers in the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic eras Some of these tools are of Mousterian industry belonging to Neanderthals rather than modern humans Aurignacian and Gravettian tools have also been discovered near the area indicating some settlement between 50 000 and 20 000 years ago 17 Belgrade Fortress built during a long period of time from the 2nd to the 18th century located on the confluence of the two rivers Sava and Danube The first farming people to settle in the region are associated with the Neolithic Starcevo culture which flourished between 6200 and 5200 BC 18 There are several Starcevo sites in and around Belgrade including the eponymous site of Starcevo The Starcevo culture was succeeded by the Vinca culture 5500 4500 BC a more sophisticated farming culture that grew out of the earlier Starcevo settlements and also named for a site in the Belgrade region Vinca Belo Brdo The Vinca culture is known for its very large settlements one of the earliest settlements by continuous habitation and some of the largest in prehistoric Europe 19 Also associated with the Vinca culture are anthropomorphic figurines such as the Lady of Vinca the earliest known copper metallurgy in Europe 20 and a proto writing form developed prior to the Sumerians and Minoans known as the Old European script which dates back to around 5300 BC 21 Within the city proper on Cetinjska Street a skull of a Paleolithic human dated to before 5000 BC was discovered in 1890 22 Antiquity Edit See also Serbia in the Roman era Evidence of early knowledge about Belgrade s geographical location comes from a variety of ancient myths and legends The ridge overlooking the confluence of the Sava and Danube rivers for example has been identified as one of the places in the story of Jason and the Argonauts 23 24 In the time of antiquity too the area was populated by Paleo Balkan tribes including the Thracians and the Dacians who ruled much of Belgrade s surroundings 25 Specifically Belgrade was at one point inhabited by the Thraco Dacian tribe Singi 11 following Celtic invasion in 279 BC the Scordisci wrested the city from their hands naming it Singidun d un fortress 11 In 34 33 BC the Roman army reached Belgrade It became the romanised Singidunum in the 1st century AD and by the mid 2nd century the city was proclaimed a municipium by the Roman authorities evolving into a full fledged colonia the highest city class by the end of the century 12 While the first Christian Emperor of Rome Constantine I also known as Constantine the Great 26 was born in the territory of Naissus to the city s south Roman Christianity s champion Flavius Iovianus Jovian was born in Singidunum 27 Jovian reestablished Christianity as the official religion of the Roman Empire ending the brief revival of traditional Roman religions under his predecessor Julian the Apostate In 395 AD the site passed to the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Empire 28 Across the Sava from Singidunum was the Celtic city of Taurunum Zemun the two were connected with a bridge throughout Roman and Byzantine times 29 Middle Ages Edit See also Serbia in the Middle Ages Conquest of Belgrade 1521 Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent laid siege to the Belgrade Fortress In 442 the area was ravaged by Attila the Hun 30 In 471 it was taken by Theodoric the Great king of the Ostrogoths who continued into Italy 31 As the Ostrogoths left another Germanic tribe the Gepids invaded the city In 539 it was retaken by the Byzantines 32 In 577 some 100 000 Slavs poured into Thrace and Illyricum pillaging cities and more permanently settling the region 33 The Avars under Bayan I conquered the whole region and its new Slavic population by 582 34 Following Byzantine reconquest the Byzantine chronicle De Administrando Imperio mentions the White Serbs who had stopped in Belgrade on their way back home asking the strategos for lands they received provinces in the west towards the Adriatic which they would rule as subjects to Heraclius 610 641 35 In 829 Khan Omurtag was able to add Singidunum and its environs to the First Bulgarian Empire 36 37 The first record of the name Belograd appeared on April 16th 878 in a Papal missive 38 to Bulgarian ruler Boris I This name would appear in several variants Alba Bulgarica in Latin Griechisch Weissenburg in High German Nandorfehervar in Hungarian and Castelbianco in Venetian among other names all variations of white fortress For about four centuries the city would become a battleground between the Byzantine Empire the medieval Kingdom of Hungary and the Bulgarian Empire 39 Basil II 976 1025 installed a garrison in Belgrade 40 The city hosted the armies of the First and the Second Crusade 41 but while passing through during the Third Crusade Frederick Barbarossa and his 190 000 crusaders saw Belgrade in ruins 42 King Stefan Dragutin r 1276 1282 received Belgrade from his father in law Stephen V of Hungary in 1284 and it served as the capital of the Kingdom of Syrmia a vassal state to the Kingdom of Hungary Dragutin Hungarian Dragutin Istvan is regarded as the first Serbian king to rule over Belgrade 43 Following the battles of Maritsa 1371 and Kosovo field 1389 Moravian Serbia to Belgrade s south began to fall to the Ottoman Empire 44 45 The northern regions of what is now Serbia persisted as the Serbian Despotate with Belgrade as its capital The city flourished under Stefan Lazarevic the son of Serbian prince Lazar Hrebeljanovic Lazarevic built a castle with a citadel and towers of which only the Despot s tower and the west wall remain He also refortified the city s ancient walls allowing the Despotate to resist Ottoman conquest for almost 70 years During this time Belgrade was a haven for many Balkan peoples fleeing Ottoman rule and is thought to have had a population ranging between 40 000 and 50 000 people 43 In 1427 Stefan s successor Đurađ Brankovic returning Belgrade to the Hungarian king made Smederevo his new capital Even though the Ottomans had captured most of the Serbian Despotate Belgrade known as Nandorfehervar in Hungarian was unsuccessfully besieged in 1440 41 and 1456 46 As the city presented an obstacle to the Ottoman advance into Hungary and further over 100 000 Ottoman soldiers 47 besieged it in 1456 in which the Christian army led by the Hungarian General John Hunyadi successfully defended it 48 The noon bell ordered by Pope Callixtus III commemorates the victory throughout the Christian world to this day 41 49 Ottoman rule and Austrian invasions Edit See also History of Ottoman Serbia and Ottoman Habsburg wars Belgrade in 1684 Seven decades after the initial siege on 28 August 1521 the fort was finally captured by Suleiman the Magnificent with 250 000 Turkish soldiers and over 100 ships Subsequently most of the city was razed to the ground and its entire Orthodox Christian population was deported to Istanbul 41 50 to an area that has since become known as the Belgrade forest 51 Belgrade was made the seat of the Pashalik of Belgrade also known as the Sanjak of Smederevo and quickly became the second largest Ottoman town in Europe at over 100 000 people surpassed only by Constantinople 47 Ottoman rule introduced Ottoman architecture including numerous mosques and the city was resurrected now by Oriental influences 52 In 1594 a major Serb rebellion was crushed by the Ottomans In retribution Grand Vizier Sinan Pasha ordered the relics of Saint Sava to be publicly torched on the Vracar plateau in the 20th century the church of Saint Sava was built to commemorate this event 53 Occupied by the Habsburgs three times 1688 1690 1717 1739 1789 1791 headed by the Holy Roman Princes Maximilian of Bavaria and Eugene of Savoy 54 and field marshal Baron Ernst Gideon von Laudon respectively Belgrade was quickly recaptured by the Ottomans and substantially razed each time 52 During this period the city was affected by the two Great Serbian Migrations in which hundreds of thousands of Serbs led by two Serbian Patriarchs retreated together with the Austrian soldiers into the Habsburg Empire settling in today s Vojvodina and Slavonia 55 Principality and Kingdom of Serbia Edit See also Principality of Serbia and Kingdom of Serbia View of Belgrade in 1890 At the beginning of the 19th century Belgrade was predominantly inhabited by a Muslim population Traces of Ottoman rule and architecture such as mosques and bazaars were to remain a prominent part of Belgrade s townscape into the 19th century several decades even after Serbia was granted autonomy from the Ottoman Empire 56 During the First Serbian Uprising Serbian revolutionaries held the city from 8 January 1807 until 1813 when it was retaken by the Ottomans 57 After the Second Serbian Uprising in 1815 Serbia achieved some sort of sovereignty which was formally recognised by the Porte in 1830 58 The development of Belgrade architecture after 1815 can be divided into four periods In the first phase which lasted from 1815 to 1835 the dominant architectural style was still of a Balkan character with substantial Ottoman influence At the same time an interest in joining the European mainstream allowed Central and Western European architecture to flourish Between 1835 and 1850 the amount of neoclassicist and baroque buildings south of the Austrian border rose considerably exemplified by St Michael s Cathedral Serbian Saborna crkva completed in 1840 Between 1850 and 1875 new architecture was characterised by a turn towards the newly popular Romanticism along with older European architectural styles Typical of Central European cities in the last quarter of the 19th century the fourth phase was characterised by an eclecticist style based on the Renaissance and Baroque periods 59 View of Belgrade between 1890 and 1900 In 1841 Prince Mihailo Obrenovic moved the capital of the Principality of Serbia from Kragujevac to Belgrade 60 61 During his first reign 1815 1839 Prince Milos Obrenovic pursued expansion of the city s population through the addition of new settlements aiming and succeeding to make Belgrade the centre of the Principality s administrative military and cultural institutions His project of creating a new market space the Abadzijska carsija however was less successful trade continued to be conducted in the centuries old Donja carsija and Gornja carsija Still new construction projects were typical for the Christian quarters as the older Muslim quarters declined from Serbia s autonomy until 1863 the number of Belgrade quarters even decreased mainly as a consequence of the gradual disappearance of the city s Muslim population An Ottoman city map from 1863 counts only 9 Muslim quarters mahalas The names of only five such neighbourhoods are known today Ali pasina Reis efendijina Jahja pasina Bajram begova and Laz Hadzi Mahmudova 62 Following the Cukur Fountain incident Belgrade was bombed by the Ottomans 63 On 18 April 1867 the Ottoman government ordered the Ottoman garrison which had been since 1826 the last representation of Ottoman suzerainty in Serbia withdrawn from Kalemegdan The forlorn Porte s only stipulation was that the Ottoman flag continue to fly over the fortress alongside the Serbian one Serbia s de facto independence dates from this event 64 In the following years urban planner Emilijan Josimovic had a significant influence on Belgrade He conceptualised a regulation plan for the city in 1867 in which he proposed the replacement of the town s crooked streets with a grid plan Of great importance also was the construction of independent Serbian political and cultural institutions as well as the city s now plentiful parks Pointing to Josimovic s work Serbian scholars have noted an important break with Ottoman traditions However Istanbul the capital city of the state to which Belgrade and Serbia de jure still belonged underwent similar changes 65 Belgrade postcard from 1931 66 showing Stari dvor Terazije Kneza Milosa Street Kalemegdan and Old Post Office In May 1868 knez Mihailo was assassinated with his cousin Anka Konstantinovic while riding in a carriage in his country residence 67 With the Principality s full independence in 1878 and its transformation into the Kingdom of Serbia in 1882 Belgrade once again became a key city in the Balkans and developed rapidly 57 68 Nevertheless conditions in Serbia remained those of an overwhelmingly agrarian country even with the opening of a railway to Nis Serbia s second city In 1900 the capital had only 70 000 inhabitants 69 at the time Serbia numbered 2 5 million Still by 1905 the population had grown to more than 80 000 and by the outbreak of World War I in 1914 it had surpassed the 100 000 citizens disregarding Zemun which still belonged to Austria Hungary 70 The first ever projection of motion pictures in the Balkans and Central Europe was held in Belgrade in June 1896 by Andre Carr a representative of the Lumiere brothers He shot the first motion pictures of Belgrade in the next year however they have not been preserved 71 The first permanent cinema was opened in 1909 in Belgrade 72 World War I German Austrian invasion Edit Memorial Ossuary to the Defenders of Belgrade 1914 1918 The First World War began on 28 July 1914 when Austria Hungary declared war on Serbia Most of the subsequent Balkan offensives occurred near Belgrade Austro Hungarian monitors shelled Belgrade on 29 July 1914 and it was taken by the Austro Hungarian Army under General Oskar Potiorek on 30 November On 15 December it was re taken by Serbian troops under Marshal Radomir Putnik After a prolonged battle which destroyed much of the city starting on 6 October 1915 Belgrade fell to German and Austro Hungarian troops commanded by Field Marshal August von Mackensen on 9 October of the same year The city was liberated by Serbian and French troops on 1 November 1918 under the command of Marshal Louis Franchet d Esperey of France and Crown Prince Alexander of Serbia Belgrade decimated as a front line city lost the title of largest city in the Kingdom to Subotica for some time 73 Kingdom of Yugoslavia Edit Theatre square today Republic Square in 1934 After the war Belgrade became the capital of the new Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes renamed the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in 1929 The Kingdom was split into banovinas and Belgrade together with Zemun and Pancevo formed a separate administrative unit 74 During this period the city experienced fast growth and significant modernisation Belgrade s population grew to 239 000 by 1931 with the inclusion of Zemun and to 320 000 by 1940 The population growth rate between 1921 and 1948 averaged 4 08 a year 75 In 1927 Belgrade s first airport opened and in 1929 its first radio station began broadcasting The Pancevo Bridge which crosses the Danube was opened in 1935 76 while King Alexander Bridge over the Sava was opened in 1934 On 3 September 1939 the first Belgrade Grand Prix the last Grand Prix motor racing race before the outbreak of World War II was held around the Belgrade Fortress and was followed by 80 000 spectators 77 The winner was Tazio Nuvolari 78 World War II German invasion Edit On 25 March 1941 the government of regent Crown Prince Paul signed the Tripartite Pact joining the Axis powers in an effort to stay out of the Second World War and keep Yugoslavia neutral during the conflict This was immediately followed by mass protests in Belgrade and a military coup d etat led by Air Force commander General Dusan Simovic who proclaimed King Peter II to be of age to rule the realm As a result the city was heavily bombed by the Luftwaffe on 6 April 1941 killing up to 2 274 people 79 80 81 Yugoslavia was then invaded by German Italian Hungarian and Bulgarian forces Belgrade was captured by subterfuge with six German soldiers led by their officer Fritz Klingenberg feigning threatening size forcing the city to capitulate 82 Belgrade was more directly occupied by the German Army in the same month and became the seat of the puppet Nedic regime headed by its namesake general 83 Some of today s parts of Belgrade were incorporated in the Independent State of Croatia in occupied Yugoslavia another puppet state where Ustashe regime carried out the Genocide of Serbs 84 Belgrade citizens celebrating the Red Army 3rd Ukrainian Front as liberators from the German occupation troops 20 October 1944 During the summer and fall of 1941 in reprisal for guerrilla attacks the Germans carried out several massacres of Belgrade citizens in particular members of the Jewish community were subject to mass shootings at the order of General Franz Bohme the German Military Governor of Serbia Bohme rigorously enforced the rule that for every German killed 100 Serbs or Jews would be shot 85 Belgrade became the first city in Europe to be declared by the Nazi occupation forces to be Judenfrei 86 The resistance movement in Belgrade was led by Major Zarko Todorovic from 1941 until his arrest in 1943 87 Just like Rotterdam which was devastated twice by both German and Allied bombing Belgrade was bombed once more during World War II this time by the Allies on 16 April 1944 killing at least 1 100 people This bombing fell on the Orthodox Christian Easter 88 Most of the city remained under German occupation until 20 October 1944 when it was liberated by the Red Army and the Communist Yugoslav Partisans On 29 November 1945 Marshal Josip Broz Tito proclaimed the Federal People s Republic of Yugoslavia in Belgrade later renamed to Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia on 7 April 1963 89 Socialist Yugoslavia Edit When the war ended the city was left with 11 500 demolished housing units 90 During the post war period Belgrade grew rapidly as the capital of the renewed Yugoslavia developing as a major industrial centre 68 In 1948 construction of New Belgrade started In 1958 Belgrade s first television station began broadcasting In 1961 Belgrade hosted the first and founding conference of the Non Aligned Movement under Tito s chairmanship 91 In 1962 Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport was built In 1968 major student protests led to several street clashes between students and the police 92 Former Ministry of Defence building damaged in the 1999 NATO bombing In 1972 Belgrade faced smallpox outbreak the last major outbreak of smallpox in Europe since World War II 93 Between October 1977 and March 1978 the city hosted the first major gathering of the Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe with the aim of implementing the Helsinki Accords from while in 1980 Belgrade hosted the UNESCO General Conference 94 Josip Broz Tito died in May 1980 and his funeral in Belgrade was attended by high officials and state delegations from 128 of the 154 members of the United Nations from all over the world based on which it became one of the largest funerals in history 95 Breakup of Yugoslavia Edit On 9 March 1991 massive demonstrations led by Vuk Draskovic were held in the city against Slobodan Milosevic 96 According to various media outlets there were between 100 000 and 150 000 people on the streets 97 Two people were killed 203 were injured and 108 were arrested during the protests and later that day tanks were deployed onto the streets to restore order 98 Many anti war protests were held in Belgrade with the largest protests being dedicated to solidarity with the victims from the besieged Sarajevo 99 100 Further anti government protests were held in Belgrade from November 1996 to February 1997 against the same government after alleged electoral fraud in local elections 101 These protests brought Zoran Đinđic to power the first mayor of Belgrade since World War II who did not belong to the League of Communists of Yugoslavia or its later offshoot the Socialist Party of Serbia 102 In 1999 during the Kosovo War NATO bombings caused severe damage to the city Among the sites bombed were various ministry buildings the RTS building hospitals Hotel Jugoslavija the Central Committee building Avala Tower and the Chinese embassy 103 Approximately 2 000 civilians were killed as a result of the NATO bombings 104 After the Yugoslav Wars Serbia became home to the highest number of refugees and internally displaced persons in Europe with more than a third of these refugees having settled in Belgrade 105 106 107 108 After the 2000 presidential elections Belgrade was the site of major public protests with over half a million people taking part These demonstrations resulted in the ousting of president Milosevic as a part of the Otpor movement 109 110 Development Edit Panoramic view of Belgrade and Belgrade Waterfront under construction 2022 In 2014 Belgrade Waterfront an urban renewal project was initiated by the Government of Serbia and its Emirati partner Eagle Hills Properties Around 3 5 billion was to be jointly invested by the Serbian government and their Emirati partners 111 needs update The project includes office and luxury apartment buildings five star hotels a shopping mall and the envisioned Belgrade Tower The project is however quite controversial there are a number of uncertainties regarding its funding necessity and its architecture s arguable lack of harmony with the rest of the city 112 In addition to Belgrade Waterfront the city is under rapid development and reconstruction especially in the area of Novi Beograd where as of 2020 apartment and office buildings were under construction to support the burgeoning Belgrade IT sector now one of Serbia s largest economic players In September 2020 there were around 2000 active construction sites in Belgrade 113 Geography EditTopography Edit The confluence of the Sava into the Danube at Belgrade Pictured from Kalemegdan Fortress Belgrade lies 116 75 m 383 0 ft above sea level and is located at the confluence of the Danube and Sava rivers 14 The historical core of Belgrade Kalemegdan lies on the right banks of both rivers Since the 19th century the city has been expanding to the south and east after World War II New Belgrade was built on the left bank of the Sava river connecting Belgrade with Zemun Smaller chiefly residential communities across the Danube like Krnjaca Kotez and Borca also merged with the city while Pancevo a heavily industrialised satellite city remains separate The city has an urban area of 360 km2 140 sq mi while together with its metropolitan area it covers 3 223 km2 1 244 sq mi 11 On the right bank of the Sava central Belgrade has a hilly terrain while the highest point of Belgrade proper is Torlak hill at 303 m 994 ft The mountains of Avala 511 m 1 677 ft and Kosmaj 628 m 2 060 ft lie south of the city Across the Sava and Danube the land is mostly flat consisting of alluvial plains and loessial plateaus 114 Panoramic view of Belgrade city center seen from the Sava river One of the characteristics of the city terrain is mass wasting On the territory covered by the General Urban Plan there are 1 155 recorded mass wasting points out of which 602 are active and 248 are labeled as high risk They cover almost 30 of the city territory and include several types of mass wasting Downhill creeps are located on the slopes above the rivers mostly on the clay or loam soils inclined between 7 and 20 The most critical ones are in Karaburma Zvezdara Visnjica Vinca and Ritopek in the Danube valley and Umka and especially its neighbourhood of Duboko in the Sava valley They have moving and dormant phases and some of them have been recorded for centuries Less active downhill creep areas include the entire Terazije slope above the Sava Kalemegdan Savamala which can be seen by the inclination of the Pobednik monument and the tower of the Cathedral Church and the Vozdovac section between Banjica and Autokomanda Landslides encompass smaller areas develop on the steep cliffs sometimes being inclined up to 90 They are mostly located in the artificial loess hills of Zemun Gardos Cukovac and Kalvarija However the majority of the land movement in Belgrade some 90 is triggered by the construction works and faulty water supply system burst pipes etc The neighbourhood of Mirijevo is considered to be the most successful project of fixing the problem During the construction of the neighbourhood from the 1970s the terrain was systematically improved and the movement of the land is today completely halted 115 116 Climate Edit Monument to the Unknown Hero on the mountain Avala Under the Koppen climate classification Belgrade has a humid subtropical climate Cfa bordering on a humid continental climate Dfa with four seasons and uniformly spread precipitation Monthly averages range from 1 4 C 34 5 F in January to 23 0 C 73 4 F in July with an annual mean of 12 5 C 54 5 F There are on average 31 days a year when the temperature is above 30 C 86 F and 95 days when the temperature is above 25 C 77 F Belgrade receives about 691 mm 27 in of precipitation a year with late spring being wettest The average annual number of sunny hours is 2 112 The highest officially recorded temperature in Belgrade was 43 6 C 110 5 F on 24 July 2007 117 while on the other end the lowest temperature was 26 2 C 15 F on 10 January 1893 118 Climate data for Belgrade 1991 2020 extremes 1936 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 20 7 69 3 23 9 75 0 30 0 86 0 32 4 90 3 34 9 94 8 37 4 99 3 43 6 110 5 40 0 104 0 41 8 107 2 33 7 92 7 28 4 83 1 22 6 72 7 43 6 110 5 Average high C F 5 2 41 4 7 8 46 0 13 1 55 6 18 9 66 0 23 6 74 5 27 1 80 8 29 3 84 7 29 7 85 5 24 3 75 7 18 7 65 7 12 2 54 0 6 1 43 0 18 0 64 4 Daily mean C F 1 9 35 4 3 8 38 8 8 3 46 9 13 6 56 5 18 2 64 8 21 9 71 4 23 8 74 8 23 8 74 8 18 5 65 3 13 3 55 9 8 1 46 6 3 0 37 4 13 0 55 4 Average low C F 0 7 30 7 0 6 33 1 4 2 39 6 8 8 47 8 13 2 55 8 16 7 62 1 18 4 65 1 18 5 65 3 14 1 57 4 9 4 48 9 5 1 41 2 0 5 32 9 9 1 48 4 Record low C F 24 5 12 1 20 5 4 9 12 4 9 7 3 4 25 9 0 4 32 7 4 6 40 3 8 3 46 9 6 7 44 1 0 6 33 1 6 9 19 6 8 3 17 1 15 8 3 6 24 5 12 1 Average precipitation mm inches 47 9 1 89 43 5 1 71 48 7 1 92 51 5 2 03 72 3 2 85 95 6 3 76 66 5 2 62 55 1 2 17 58 6 2 31 54 8 2 16 49 6 1 95 54 8 2 16 698 9 27 52 Average precipitation days 0 1 mm 13 5 12 3 11 3 12 4 13 5 12 2 10 0 8 4 9 5 10 5 10 8 13 8 138 2Average snowy days 9 7 7 3 4 2 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 7 8 32 8Average relative humidity 77 9 71 4 62 7 59 9 61 9 62 5 59 8 59 5 65 8 71 4 75 1 79 5 67 3Mean monthly sunshine hours 70 7 96 2 146 7 186 7 224 7 253 9 278 8 262 6 192 6 155 0 92 1 60 3 2 020 3Average ultraviolet index 1 2 3 5 7 8 8 7 5 3 2 1 4Source 1 Republic Hydrometeorological Service of Serbia 119 Source 2 Weather Atlas UV 120 Meteo Climat record highs and lows 121 Climate data for Belgrade 2010 2022 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 5 5 41 9 8 8 47 8 13 3 55 9 19 1 66 4 23 1 73 6 27 8 82 0 30 2 86 4 30 5 86 9 25 2 77 4 18 9 66 0 13 0 55 4 7 0 44 6 18 5 65 4 Daily mean C F 2 8 37 0 5 5 41 9 9 1 48 4 14 2 57 6 18 3 64 9 22 9 73 2 24 8 76 6 25 0 77 0 20 2 68 4 14 5 58 1 9 8 49 6 4 6 40 3 14 3 57 8 Average low C F 0 1 32 2 2 2 36 0 4 9 40 8 9 3 48 7 13 5 56 3 17 8 64 0 19 5 67 1 19 4 66 9 15 2 59 4 10 1 50 2 6 5 43 7 2 1 35 8 10 0 50 1 Source weatheronline co uk 122 Administration EditSee also Mayor of Belgrade House of the National Assembly of the Republic of Serbia Belgrade is a separate territorial unit in Serbia with its own autonomous city authority 15 The Assembly of the City of Belgrade has 110 members elected on four year terms 123 A 13 member City Council elected by the Assembly and presided over by the mayor and his deputy has the control and supervision of the city administration 124 which manages day to day administrative affairs It is divided into 14 Secretariats each having a specific portfolio such as traffic or health care and several professional services agencies and institutes 125 The 2022 Belgrade City Assembly election was won by the Serbian Progressive Party which formed a ruling coalition with the Socialist Party of Serbia Between 2004 and 2013 the Democratic Party was in power 126 Due to the importance of Belgrade in political and economic life of Serbia the office of city s mayor is often described as the third most important office in the state after the President of the Government and the President of the Republic 127 128 129 As the capital city Belgrade is seat of all Serbian state authorities executive legislative judiciary and the headquarters of almost all national political parties as well as 75 diplomatic missions 130 This includes the National Assembly the Presidency the Government of Serbia and all the ministries Supreme Court of Cassation and the Constitutional Court Municipalities Edit See also Subdivisions of Belgrade The City Hall Old Palace Office of the mayor The city is divided into 17 municipalities 131 Previously they were classified into 10 urban lying completely or partially within borders of the city proper and 7 suburban municipalities whose centres are smaller towns 132 With the new 2010 City statute they were all given equal status with the proviso that suburban ones except Surcin have certain autonomous powers chiefly related with construction infrastructure and public utilities 131 Most of the municipalities are situated on the southern side of the Danube and Sava rivers in the Sumadija region Three municipalities Zemun Novi Beograd and Surcin are on the northern bank of the Sava in the Syrmia region and the municipality of Palilula spanning the Danube is in both the Sumadija and Banat regions Municipalities of Belgrade map Municipality Classification Area km2 Population 2021 Population density per km2 Barajevo suburban 213 26 604 125Cukarica urban 156 176 092 1 129Grocka suburban 289 83 435 289Lazarevac suburban 384 55 513 145Mladenovac suburban 339 49 020 145Novi Beograd urban 41 209 812 5 117Obrenovac suburban 411 69 376 169Palilula urban 451 182 672 405Rakovica urban 31 104 921 3 385Savski Venac urban 14 36 431 2 602Sopot suburban 271 19 246 71Stari Grad urban 5 44 712 8 942Surcin urban 285 45 595 160Vozdovac urban 148 175 075 1 182Vracar urban 3 55 768 18 589Zemun urban 154 179 368 1 164Zvezdara urban 32 171 923 5 372Total 3 227 1 685 563 522Demographics EditMain articles Demographics of Belgrade and Demographic history of Belgrade Belgrade oblast population pyramid in 2021 Ascension Day the Patron Saint day slava of the capital is traditionally celebrated the fortieth day of Easter and always on Thursday and Belgrade chose this day as its Day in memory of 1403 year when the Despot Stefan Lazarevic proclaimed Belgrade the capital of Serbia According to the 2011 census the city has a population of 1 166 763 while the urban area of Belgrade with adjacent urban settlements of Borca Ovca and Surcin included has 1 233 796 inhabitants and the population of the metropolitan area the administrative area of the City of Belgrade stands at 1 659 440 people Belgrade is home to many ethnicities from across the former Yugoslavia and the wider Balkans region The main ethnic groups are Serbs 1 505 448 Roma 27 325 Montenegrins 9 902 Yugoslavs 8 061 Croats 7 752 Macedonians 6 970 and ethnic Muslims 3 996 133 Many people came to the city as economic migrants from smaller towns and the countryside while tens of thousands arrived as refugees from Croatia Bosnia Herzegovina and Kosovo as a result of the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s 134 Between 10 000 and 20 000 135 Chinese people are estimated to live in Belgrade and since their arrival in the mid 1990s Block 70 in New Belgrade has been known colloquially as the Chinese quarter 136 137 Many Middle Easterners mainly from Syria Iran Jordan and Iraq arrived in order to pursue their studies during the 1970s and 1980s and have remained in the city 138 Throughout the 19th and early 20th century small communities of Aromanians Czechs Greeks Germans Hungarians Jews Turks Armenians and Russian White emigres also existed in Belgrade There are two suburban settlements with significant minority population today Ovca and the village of Boljevci both with about one quarter of their population being Romanians and Slovaks respectively Historical populationYearPop p a 142650 000 139 1683100 000 139 0 27 180025 000 140 1 18 185015 000 140 1 02 186022 000 140 3 90 187527 000 140 1 37 188036 000 140 5 92 189054 000 140 4 14 190069 000 140 2 48 191089 000 140 2 58 1921111 739 2 09 1931238 775 7 89 1948397 911 3 05 1953477 982 3 73 1961657 362 4 06 1971899 094 3 18 19811 087 915 1 92 19911 133 146 0 41 20021 119 642 0 11 20111 166 763 0 46 Settlements Population 141 Belgrade 1 166 763Borca 46 086Grocka 26 904Lazarevac 26 006Obrenovac 25 429Mladenovac 23 609Sremcica 21 001Surcin 18 205Ripanj 11 088Ugrinovci 10 807Lestane 10 473Although there are several historic religious communities in Belgrade the religious makeup of the city is relatively homogeneous The Serbian Orthodox community is by far the largest with 1 475 168 adherents There are also 31 914 Muslims 13 720 Roman Catholics and 3 128 Protestants There once was a significant Jewish community in Belgrade but following the World War II Nazi occupation of the city and subsequent Jewish emigration their numbers have fallen from over 10 000 to just 295 142 Belgrade also used to have one of the largest Buddhist colonies in Europe outside Russia when some 400 mostly Buddhist Kalmyks settled on the outskirts of Belgrade following the Russian Civil War The first Buddhist temple in Europe was built in Belgrade in 1929 Most of them moved away after the World War II and their temple Belgrade pagoda was abandoned claimed by the new Communist regime and eventually demolished 143 Economy EditMain article Economy of Belgrade See also Belgrade IT sector and Architectural projects in Belgrade Serbian Railways headquarters in Belgrade Belgrade is the financial centre of Serbia and Southeast Europe with a total of 17 10 6 m2 180 10 6 sq ft of office space 144 It is also home to the country s Central Bank 750 550 people are employed July 2020 145 in 120 286 companies 146 76 307 enterprises and 50 000 shops 145 147 The City of Belgrade itself owns 267 147 m2 2 875 550 sq ft of rentable office space 148 As of 2019 Belgrade contained 31 4 of Serbia s employed population and generated over 40 4 of its GDP 149 150 The city s nominal GDP in 2014 was estimated at US 16 97 billion amounting to 859 329 RSD 10 086 per capita 151 City GDP in 2019 at purchasing power parity was estimated at 52 1bn USD which was 32 572 per capita in terms of purchasing power parity 152 New Belgrade is the country s Central business district and one of Southeastern Europe s financial centres It offers a range of facilities such as hotels congress halls e g Sava Centar Class A and B office buildings and business parks e g Airport City Belgrade Over 1 2 10 6 m2 13 10 6 sq ft of land is under construction in New Belgrade with the value of planned construction over the next three years estimated at over 1 5 billion euros The Belgrade Stock Exchange is also located in New Belgrade and has a market capitalisation of 6 5 billion US 7 1 billion With 6 924 companies in the IT sector according to 2013 data update Belgrade is one of the foremost information technology hubs in Southeast Europe 146 Microsoft s Development Center Serbia located in Belgrade was at the time of its establishment the fifth such programme on the globe 153 Many global IT companies choose Belgrade as their European or regional centre of operations such as Asus 154 Intel 155 Dell 156 Huawei Nutanix 157 NCR etc 158 The most famous Belgrade IT startups among others are Nordeus ComTrade Group MicroE FishingBooker and Endava IT facilities in the city include the Mihajlo Pupin Institute and the ILR 159 as well as the brand new IT Park Zvezdara 160 Many prominent IT innovators began their careers in Belgrade including Voja Antonic and Veselin Jevrosimovic In December 2021 the average Belgrade monthly net salary stood at 94 463 RSD 946 in net terms with the gross equivalent at 128 509 RSD 1288 while in New Belgrade CBD is Euros 1 059 161 88 of the city s households owned a computer 89 had a broadband internet connection and 93 had pay television services 162 According to Cushman amp Wakefield Knez Mihajlova street is 36th most expensive retail street in the world in terms of renting commercial space 163 Culture EditMain article Culture of Belgrade Republic Square Left National Museum of Serbia Centre Hotel Marriott Belgrade Right National Theatre The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts national learned society founded in 1841 According to the BBC Belgrade is one of the five most creative cities in the world 164 Belgrade hosts many annual international cultural events including the Film Festival Theatre Festival Summer Festival BEMUS Belgrade Early Music Festival Book Fair Belgrade Choir Festival Eurovision Song Contest 2008 and the Beer Fest 165 In 2022 Belgrade was also home to the Europride event even though the president Aleksandar Vucic tried to cancel it 166 The Nobel Prize winning author Ivo Andric wrote his most famous work The Bridge on the Drina in Belgrade 167 Other prominent Belgrade authors include Branislav Nusic Milos Crnjanski Borislav Pekic Milorad Pavic and Mesa Selimovic 168 169 170 The most internationally prominent artists from Belgrade are Charles Simic Marina Abramovic and Milovan Destil Markovic Most of Serbia s film industry is based in Belgrade FEST is an annual film festival that held since 1971 and through 2013 had been attended by four million people and had presented almost 4 000 films 171 The city was one of the main centres of the Yugoslav new wave in the 1980s VIS Idoli Ekatarina Velika Sarlo Akrobata and Elektricni Orgazam were all from Belgrade Other notable Belgrade rock acts include Riblja Corba Bajaga i Instruktori and Partibrejkers 172 173 Today it is the centre of the Serbian hip hop scene with acts such as Beogradski Sindikat Bad Copy Skabo Marcelo and most of the Bassivity Music stable hailing from or living in the city 174 175 There are numerous theatres the most prominent of which are National Theatre Theatre on Terazije Yugoslav Drama Theatre Zvezdara Theatre and Atelier 212 The Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts is also based in Belgrade as well as the National Library of Serbia Other major libraries include the Belgrade City Library and the Belgrade University Library Belgrade s two opera houses are National Theatre and Madlenianum Opera House 176 177 Following the victory of Serbia s representative Marija Serifovic at the Eurovision Song Contest 2007 Belgrade hosted the Contest in 2008 178 There is more than 1650 public sculptures on the territory of Belgrade 179 180 Museums Edit See also List of museums in Belgrade National Museum of Serbia Museum of Contemporary Art The most prominent museum in Belgrade is the National Museum founded in 1844 and reconstructed from 2003 until June 2018 The museum houses a collection of more than 400 000 exhibits over 5600 paintings and 8400 drawings and prints including many foreign masters like Bosch Juan de Flandes Titian Tintoretto Rubens Cezanne G B Tiepolo Renoir Monet Lautrec Matisse Picasso Gauguin Chagall Van Gogh Mondrian etc and also the famous Miroslav s Gospel 181 The Ethnographic Museum established in 1901 contains more than 150 000 items showcasing the rural and urban culture of the Balkans particularly the countries of former Yugoslavia 182 The Museum of Contemporary Art was the first contemporary art museum in Yugoslavia and one of the first museums of this type in the world 183 Following its foundation in 1965 has amassed a collection of more than 8 000 works from art produced across the former Yugoslavia 184 The museum was closed in 2007 but has since been reopened in 2017 to focus on the modern as well as on the Yugoslav art scenes 185 Artist Marina Abramovic who was born in Belgrade held an exhibition in the Museum of Contemporary Art which the New York Times described as one of the most important cultural happenings in the world in 2019 186 187 The exhibition was seen by almost 100 000 visitors Marina Abramovic made a stage speech and performance in front of 20 000 people 188 In the heart of Belgrade you can also find the Museum of Applied Arts a museum that has been awarded for the Institution of the Year 2016 by ICOM 189 The Military Museum established in 1878 in Kalemegdan houses a wide range of more than 25 000 military objects dating from the prehistoric to the medieval to the modern eras Notable items include Turkish and oriental arms national banners and Yugoslav Partisan regalia 190 191 The Museum of Aviation in Belgrade located near Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport has more than 200 aircraft of which about 50 are on display and a few of which are the only surviving examples of their type such as the Fiat G 50 This museum also displays parts of shot down US and NATO aircraft such as the F 117 and F 16 192 The Nikola Tesla Museum founded in 1952 preserves the personal items of Nikola Tesla the inventor after whom the Tesla unit was named It holds around 160 000 original documents and around 5 700 personal other items including his urn 193 The last of the major Belgrade museums is the Museum of Vuk and Dositej which showcases the lives work and legacy of Vuk Stefanovic Karadzic and Dositej Obradovic the 19th century reformer of the Serbian literary language and the first Serbian Minister of Education respectively 194 Belgrade also houses the Museum of African Art founded in 1977 which has a large collection of art from West Africa 195 With around 95 000 copies of national and international films the Yugoslav Film Archive is the largest in the region and among the 10 largest archives in the world 196 The institution also operates the Museum of Yugoslav Film Archive with movie theatre and exhibition hall The archive s long standing storage problems were finally solved in 2007 when a new modern depository was opened 197 The Yugoslav Film Archive also exhibits original Charlie Chaplin s stick and one of the first movies by Auguste and Louis Lumiere 198 The Belgrade City Museum moved into a new building in downtown in 2006 199 The museum hosts a range of collections covering the history of urban life since prehistory 200 The Museum of Yugoslav History has collections from the Yugoslav era Beside paintings the most valuable are Moon rocks donated by Apollo 11 crew Neil Armstrong Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins while visiting Belgrade in 1969 and from mission Apollo 17 donated by Richard Nixon in 1971 201 Museum also houses Joseph Stalin s sabre with 260 brilliants and diamonds donated by Stalin himself 202 Museum of Science and Technology moved to the building of the first city s power plant in Dorcol in 2005 203 Architecture Edit See also List of buildings in Belgrade List of streets and squares in Belgrade Bridges of Belgrade Architectural projects in Belgrade Religious architecture in Belgrade and Gates of Belgrade Saint Sava Cathedral Belgrade has wildly varying architecture from the centre of Zemun typical of a Central European town 204 to the more modern architecture and spacious layout of New Belgrade The oldest architecture is found in Kalemegdan Park Outside of Kalemegdan the oldest buildings date only from the 18th century due to its geographic position and frequent wars and destructions 205 Ruski car Tavern Bezanija blocks in New Belgrade large purpose built housing estates The oldest public structure in Belgrade is a nondescript Turkish turbe while the oldest house is a modest clay house on Dorcol from late 18th century 206 Western influence began in the 19th century when the city completely transformed from an oriental town to the contemporary architecture of the time with influences from neoclassicism romanticism and academic art Serbian architects took over the development from the foreign builders in the late 19th century producing the National Theatre Old Palace Cathedral Church and later in the early 20th century the National Assembly and National Museum influenced by art nouveau 205 Elements of Serbo Byzantine Revival are present in buildings such as House of Vuk s Foundation old Post Office in Kosovska street and sacral architecture such as St Mark s Church based on the Gracanica monastery and the Temple of Saint Sava 205 In the socialist period housing was built quickly and cheaply for the huge influx of people fleeing the countryside following World War II sometimes resulting in the brutalist architecture of the blokovi blocks of New Belgrade a socrealism trend briefly ruled resulting in buildings like the Trade Union Hall 205 However in the mid 1950s modernist trends took over and still dominate the Belgrade architecture 205 Belgrade has the second oldest sewer system in Europe 207 The Clinical Centre of Serbia spreads over 34 hectares and consists of about 50 buildings while also has 3 150 beds considered to be the highest number in Europe 208 and among highest in the world 209 Tourism Edit See also Tourism in Serbia Lying on the main artery connecting Europe and Asia as well as eventually the Orient Express Belgrade has been a popular place for travellers through the centuries In 1843 on Dubrovacka Street today Kralj Petar Street Serbia s knez Mihailo Obrenovic built a large edifice which became the first hotel in Belgrade Kod jelena at the deer s in the neighbourhood of Kosancicev Venac Many criticised the move at the time due to the cost and the size of the building and it soon became the gathering point of the Principality s wealthiest citizens Colloquially the building was also referred to as the staro zdanje or the old edifice It remained a hotel until 1903 before being demolished in 1938 210 211 After the staro zdanje numerous hotels were built in the second half of the 19th century Nacional and Grand also in Kosancicev Venac Srpski Kralj Srpska Kruna Grcka Kraljica near Kalemegdan Balkan and Pariz in Terazije London etc 212 Jevremovac Botanical Garden As Belgrade became connected via steamboats and railway after 1884 the number of visitors grew and new hotels were open with the ever luxurious commodities In Savamala the hotels Bosna and Bristol were opened Other hotels included Solun and Orient which was built near the Financial Park Tourists which arrived by the Orient Express mostly stayed at the Petrograd Hotel in Wilson Square Hotel Srpski Kralj at the corner of Uzun Mirkova and Pariska Street was considered the best hotel in Belgrade during the Interbellum It was destroyed during World War II 212 The historic areas and buildings of Belgrade are among the city s premier attractions They include Skadarlija the National Museum and adjacent National Theatre Zemun Nikola Pasic Square Terazije Students Square the Kalemegdan Fortress Knez Mihailova Street the Parliament the Church of Saint Sava and the Old Palace On top of this there are many parks monuments museums cafes restaurants and shops on both sides of the river The hilltop Avala Monument and Avala Tower offer views over the city According to The Guardian Dorcol is the one of top ten coolest suburbs and in Europe 213 Royal Compound Elite neighbourhood of Dedinje is situated near the Topcider and Kosutnjak parks The Beli dvor White Palace house of royal family Karađorđevic is open for visitors The palace has many valuable artworks 214 Nearby Josip Broz Tito s mausoleum called The House of Flowers documents the life of the former Yugoslav president Ada Ciganlija is a former island on the Sava River and Belgrade s biggest sports and recreational complex Today it is connected with the right bank of the Sava via two causeways creating an artificial lake It is the most popular destination for Belgraders during the city s hot summers There are 7 km 4 mi of long beaches and sports facilities for various sports including golf football basketball volleyball rugby union baseball and tennis 215 During summer there are between 200 000 and 300 000 bathers daily 216 Skadarlija the city s old bohemian neighbourhood Extreme sports are available such as bungee jumping water skiing and paintballing 215 217 There are numerous tracks on the island where it is possible to ride a bike go for a walk or go jogging 215 217 Apart from Ada Belgrade has total of 16 islands 218 on the rivers many still unused Among them the Great War Island at the confluence of Sava stands out as an oasis of unshattered wildlife especially birds 219 These areas along with nearby Small War Island are protected by the city s government as a nature preserve 220 There are 37 protected natural resources in the Belgrade urban area among which eight are geo heritage sites i e Strazevica profile Masin Majdan Topcider Profile at the Kalemegdan Fortress Abandoned quarry in Barajevo Karagaca valley Artesian well in Ovca Kapela loess profile and Lake in Sremcica Other 29 places are biodiversity sites 221 Tourist income in 2016 amounted to nearly one billion euros 222 with a visit of almost a million registered tourists 223 Of those in 2019 more than 100 000 tourists arrived by 742 river cruisers 223 224 Average annual growth is between 13 and 14 223 As of 2018 there are three officially designated camp grounds in Belgrade The oldest one is located in Batajnica along the Batajnica Road Named Dunav it is one of the most visited campsites in the country Second one is situated within the complex of the ethno household Zornic s House in the village of Bacevac while the third is located in Ripanj on the slopes of the Avala mountain In 2017 some 15 000 overnights were recorded in camps 225 Belgrade is a common stop on the Rivers Route European cycling route known as Danube Bike Trail in Serbia as well as on the Sultans Trail a long distance hiking footpath between Vienna and Istanbul Nightlife Edit Main article Nightlife in Belgrade Belgrade has a reputation for vibrant nightlife many clubs that are open until dawn can be found throughout the city 226 The most recognisable nightlife features of Belgrade are the barges splav spread along the banks of the Sava and Danube Rivers 227 228 229 Belgrade nightlife Many weekend visitors particularly from Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia and Slovenia prefer Belgrade nightlife to that of their own capitals due to its perceived friendly atmosphere plentiful clubs and bars cheap drinks lack of significant language barriers and a lack of night life regulation 230 231 One of the most famous sites for alternative cultural happenings in the city is the SKC Student Cultural Centre located right across from Belgrade s highrise landmark the Belgrade Palace tower Concerts featuring famous local and foreign bands are often held at the centre SKC is also the site of various art exhibitions as well as public debates and discussions 232 A more traditional Serbian nightlife experience accompanied by traditional music known as Starogradska roughly translated as Old Town Music typical of northern Serbia s urban environments is most prominent in Skadarlija the city s old bohemian neighbourhood where the poets and artists of Belgrade gathered in the 19th and early 20th centuries Skadar Street the centre of Skadarlija and the surrounding neighbourhood are lined with some of Belgrade s best and oldest traditional restaurants called kafanas in Serbian which date back to that period 233 At one end of the neighbourhood stands Belgrade s oldest beer brewery founded in the first half of the 19th century 234 One of the city s oldest kafanas is the Znak pitanja 235 The Times reported that Europe s best nightlife can be found in Belgrade 236 In the Lonely Planet 1000 Ultimate Experiences guide of 2009 Belgrade was placed at the 1st spot among the top 10 party cities in the world 237 Sport and recreation Edit See also List of sporting events in Belgrade There are approximately one thousand sports facilities in Belgrade many of which are capable of serving all levels of sporting events 238 Ada Ciganlija island lake and beaches are one of the most important recreational areas in the city With total of 8 km beaches with lot of bars caffe s restaurants and sport facilities Ada Ciganlija attracts many visitors especially in summertime Kosutnjak park forest with numerous running and bike trails sport facilities for all sports with indoor and outdoor pools is also very popular Located only 2 km from Ada Ciganlija Rajko Mitic Stadium Ada Ciganlija Ada Ciganlija Stark Arena During the 60s and 70s Belgrade held a number of major international events such as the first ever World Aquatics Championships in 1973 1976 European Football Championship and 1973 European Cup Final European Athletics Championships in 1962 and European Indoor Games in 1969 European Basketball Championships in 1961 and 1975 European Volleyball Championship for men and women in 1975 and World Amateur Boxing Championships in 1978 Since the early 2000s Belgrade again hosts major sporting events nearly every year Some of these include EuroBasket 2005 European Handball Championship men s and women s in 2012 World Handball Championship for women in 2013 European Volleyball Championships for men in 2005 for men and 2011 for women the 2006 and 2016 European Water Polo Championship the European Youth Olympic Festival 2007 and the 2009 Summer Universiade 239 More recently Belgrade hosted European Athletics Indoor Championships in 2017 and the basketball EuroLeague Final Four tournaments in 2018 and 2022 Global and continental championships in other sports such as tennis futsal judo karate wrestling rowing kickboxing table tennis and chess have also been held in recent years The city is home to Serbia s two biggest and most successful football clubs Red Star Belgrade and Partizan Belgrade Red Star won the UEFA Champions League European Cup in 1991 and Partizan was runner up in 1966 The two major stadiums in Belgrade are the Marakana Red Star Stadium and the Partizan Stadium 240 The Eternal derby is between Red Star and Partizan Stark Arena with capacity of 19 384 spectators is one of the largest indoor arenas in Europe 241 It is used for major sporting events and large concerts In May 2008 it was the venue for the 53rd Eurovision Song Contest 242 The Aleksandar Nikolic Hall is the main venue of basketball clubs KK Partizan European champion of 1992 and KK Crvena zvezda 243 244 In recent years Belgrade has also given rise to several world class tennis players such as Ana Ivanovic Jelena Jankovic and Novak Djokovic Ivanovic and Djokovic are the first female and male Belgraders respectively to win Grand Slam singles titles and been ATP number 1 with Jelena Jankovic The Serbian national team won the 2010 Davis Cup beating the French team in the finals played in the Belgrade Arena 245 Belgrade Marathon is held annually since 1988 Belgrade was a candidate to host 1992 and 1996 Summer Olympic Games Fashion and design Edit Avala Tower Since 1996 246 semiannual autumn winter and spring summer seasons fashion weeks are held citywide Numerous Serbian and foreign designers and fashion brands have their shows during Belgrade Fashion Week The festival which collaborates with London Fashion Week has helped launch the international careers of local talents such as George Styler and Ana Ljubinkovic British fashion designer Roksanda Ilincic who was born in the city also frequently presents her runway shows in Belgrade In addition to fashion there are two major design shows held in Belgrade every year which attract international architects and industrial designers such as Karim Rashid Daniel Libeskind Patricia Urquiola and Konstantin Grcic Both the Mikser Festival and Belgrade Design Week feature lectures exhibits and competitions Furthermore international designers like Sacha Lakic Ana Kras Bojana Sentaler and Marek Djordjevic are originally from Belgrade Media EditSee also List of media organisations in Belgrade Belgrade is the most important media hub in Serbia The city is home to the main headquarters of the national broadcaster Radio Television Serbia RTS which is a public service broadcaster 247 The most popular commercial broadcaster is RTV Pink a Serbian media multinational known for its popular entertainment programmes One of the most popular commercial broadcasters is B92 another media company which has its own TV station radio station and music and book publishing arms as well as the most popular website on the Serbian internet 248 249 Other TV stations broadcasting from Belgrade include 1Prva formerly Fox televizija Nova N1 and others which only cover the greater Belgrade municipal area such as Studio B High circulation daily newspapers published in Belgrade include Politika Blic Alo Kurir and Danas There are two sporting dailies Sportski zurnal and Sport and one economic daily Privredni pregled A new free distribution daily 24 sata was founded in the autumn of 2006 Also Serbian editions of licensed magazines such as Harper s Bazaar Elle Cosmopolitan National Geographic Men s Health Grazia and others have their headquarters in the city Education EditSee also List of educational institutions in Belgrade Administration and governance building of the University of Belgrade Belgrade has two state universities and several private institutions of higher education The University of Belgrade founded in 1808 as a grande ecole is the oldest institution of higher learning in Serbia 250 Having developed with much of the rest of the city in the 19th century several university buildings are recognised as forming a constituent part of Belgrade s architecture and cultural heritage With enrolment numbers of nearly 90 000 students the university is one of Europe s largest 251 The city is also home to 195 primary elementary schools and 85 secondary schools The primary school system has 162 regular schools 14 special schools 15 art schools and 4 adult schools while the secondary school system has 51 vocational schools 21 gymnasiums 8 art schools and 5 special schools The 230 000 pupils are managed by 22 000 employees in over 500 buildings covering around 1 1 10 6 m2 12 10 6 sq ft 252 Transportation EditMain article Transport in Belgrade See also Trams in Belgrade and Bridges in Belgrade Belgrade Centre railway station The city at 1 48 AM CEST on July 5 2022 taken from the International Space Station Belgrade has an extensive public transport system consisting of buses 118 urban lines and more than 300 suburban lines trams 12 lines trolleybuses 8 lines and S Train BG Voz 6 lines 253 254 Buses trolleybuses and trams are run by GSP Beograd and SP Lasta in cooperation with private companies on some bus routes The S train network BG Voz run by city government in cooperation with Serbian Railways is a part of the integrated transport system and has three lines Batajnica Ovca and Ovca Resnik and Belgrade centre Mladenovac with more announced 255 256 The BusPlus ticketing system based on contactless smart cards began operating in February 2012 Daily connections link the capital to other towns in Serbia and many other European destinations through the city s central bus station Beovoz was the suburban commuter railway network that provided mass transit services in the city similar to Paris s RER and Toronto s GO Transit The main usage of system was to connect the suburbs with the city centre Beovoz was operated by Serbian Railways 257 However this system was abolished back in 2013 mostly due to introduction of more efficient BG Voz Belgrade is one of the last big European capitals and cities with over a million people to have no metro or subway or other rapid transit system As of November 2021 Belgrade Metro is currently under construction which will have 2 lines The first line is expected to be operational by August 2028 258 259 Mostar interchange Section A Batajnica Dobanovci Section B Dobanovci Bubanj Potok Section C Bubanj Potok Pancevo The new Belgrade Centre railway station is the hub for almost all the national and international trains The high speed rail that connects Belgrade with Novi Sad started its service at 19 March 2022 260 The extension towards Subotica and Budapest is under construction 261 and there are plans for southwards extension towards Nis and North Macedonia 262 The city is placed along the Pan European corridors X and VII 10 The motorway system provides for easy access to Novi Sad and Budapest to the north Nis to the south and Zagreb to the west Expressway is also toward Pancevo and new Expressway construction toward Obrenovac Montenegro is scheduled for March 2017 Belgrade bypass is connecting the E70 and E75 motorways and is under construction 263 Situated at the confluence of two major rivers the Danube and the Sava Belgrade has 11 bridges the most important of which are Branko s bridge the Ada Bridge Pupin Bridge and the Gazela Bridge the last two of which connect the core of the city to New Belgrade In addition an inner magistral semi ring is almost done and include a new Ada Bridge across the Sava river and a new Pupin Bridge across Danube river which eased commuting within the city and unload the Gazela and Branko s bridge traffic 264 The Port of Belgrade is on the Danube and allows the city to receive goods by river 265 The city is also served by Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport 12 km 7 5 mi west of the city centre near Surcin At its peak in 1986 almost 3 million passengers travelled through the airport though that number dwindled to a trickle in the 1990s 266 Following renewed growth in 2000 the number of passengers reached approximately 2 million in 2004 and 2005 267 over 2 6 million passengers in 2008 268 reaching over 3 million passengers 269 A record with over 4 million passengers was broken in 2014 when Belgrade Nikola Tesla Airport became the second fastest growing major airport in Europe 270 The numbers continued to grow steadily and the all time peak of over 6 million passengers was reached in 2019 271 International cooperation and honors EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Serbia Because of the heroic strength of its defenders French marshal Louis Franchet d Esperey decorated Belgrade with the Legion of Honor in 1920 List of Belgrade s sister and twin cities 272 Coventry UK since 1957 273 274 Chicago US since 2005 Ljubljana Slovenia since 2010 275 276 Skopje North Macedonia since 2012 277 278 Shanghai China since 2018 279 Banja Luka Bosnia and Herzegovina since 2020 280 Other friendships and cooperations protocols memorandums 272 Sarajevo Bosnia and Herzegovina since 2018 Memorandum of Understanding on Cooperation Rabat Morocco since 2017 Partnership and Cooperation Agreement Seoul South Korea since 2017 Memorandum of Understanding on Friendly Exchanges and Cooperation Astana Kazakhstan since 2016 Agreement on Cooperation 281 Tehran Iran since 2016 Agreement on Cooperation 282 Corfu Greece since 2010 Protocol on Cooperation Shenzhen China since 2009 Agreement on Cooperation 283 Zagreb Croatia since 2003 Letter of Intent Kyiv Ukraine since 2002 Agreement on Cooperation Algiers Algeria since 1991 declaration of mutual interests Tel Aviv Israel since 1990 Agreement on Cooperation Bucharest Romania since 1999 Agreement on Cooperation Beijing China since 1980 Agreement on Cooperation 284 Rome Italy since 1971 Agreement on Friendship and Cooperation Athens Greece since 1966 Agreement on Friendship and Cooperation Some of the city s municipalities are also twinned to small cities or districts of other big cities for details see their respective articles Belgrade has received various domestic and international honours including the French Legion d honneur proclaimed 21 December 1920 Belgrade is one of four cities outside France alongside Liege Luxembourg and Volgograd to receive this honour the Czechoslovak War Cross awarded 8 October 1925 the Yugoslavian Order of the Karađorđe s Star awarded 18 May 1939 and the Yugoslavian Order of the People s Hero proclaimed on 20 October 1974 the 30th anniversary of the overthrow of Nazi German occupation during World War II 285 All of these decorations were received for the war efforts during World War I and World War II 286 In 2006 Financial Times magazine Foreign Direct Investment awarded Belgrade the title of City of the Future of Southern Europe 287 288 See also EditList of 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