After about 400 years of Ottoman rule, the city was liberated in 1878 and became part of the Principality of Serbia, though not without great bloodshed—remnants of which can be found throughout the city. Today, Niš is one of the most important economic centers in Serbia, especially in the electronics, mechanical engineering, textile, and tobacco industries. Constantine the Great Airport is Niš's international airport. The city is also the seat of the University of Niš, the Eparchy of Niš and the Command of Serbian Army.
In 2013, the city was host to the celebration of 1700 years of Constantine's Edict of Milan.[9]
Name
Niš was known as Нишь[10] or Ньшь[11] (Nyšь) in Old Serbian and Old Bulgarian. Nāissus is the Ancient name of the city.[12] Naissus is itself probably a derivative of the older *Nāviskos, from *Nāvia ("trough valley"), the Celtic name of the Nišava River, which flows through the city. In historical sources, the town is mentioned as Naissus, Ναϊσσός, Naessus, urbs Naisitana, Нишь, Ньшь, Nisso and Nix.[11]
Niš evolved from the toponym attested in Ancient Greek as ΝΑΙΣΣΟΣ (Naissos) achieving its present form via phonetic changes in Proto-Albanian and thereafter the placename entered Slavic.[13][14][15][16][17]Nish might indicate that Proto-Albanian was spoken in the region in pre-Slavic antiquity.[18] According to Ismajli (2015), when this settlement happened is a matter of debate, as Proto-Albanians might have moved relatively late in antiquity in the area which might have been an eastern expansion of Proto-Albanian settlement as no other toponyms known in antiquity in the area presuppose an Albanian development.[19] It cannot be ruled out however that the development of Nish < Naiss- may also represent a regional development in late antiquity Balkans which, while closely related to Albanian (i.e. characterized by the same phonetic system), may not be identical with it.[20] Attempts have been made to explain the place name in various ways as "a purely Slavic development", such as by Serbian linguist Aleksandar Loma,[21][22] however, Austrian linguist Joachim Matzinger, who maintains the Albanian transmission of Naiss > Niš, states that "a discussion with historical South Slavic linguistics is an urgent desideratum".[21]
The first settlement on the site of today's Niš may have been founded by the Celts at the end of the 3rd century BC.[12][23] There is very little archaeological evidence however which can be used to reconstruct a pre-Roman history of Niš.[24] During the Roman era, the city of Naissus became a large urban center.[12] During the Roman conquest of the Balkans, between 168 and 75 BC, the city was used as a base of operations. Naissus was first mentioned in Roman documents near the beginning of the 2nd century CE, and was considered a place worthy of note in the Geography of Ptolemy of Alexandria.[citation needed]
The Romans occupied the town during the Dardanian campaign (75–73 BC), and set up a legionary camp in the city.[25] The city, called refugia and vici in pre-Roman relation, as a result of its strategic position (the Thracians were based to the south[25]) developed as an important garrison and market town in the province of Moesia Superior.[26] In 169 AD, Naissus was established as a municipium and from Diocletian onwards it belonged to the province of Dardania.[12] In 272, the future Emperor Constantine the Great was born in Naissus. Constantine created the Dacia Mediterranea province, of which Naissus was the capital, which also included Remesiana on the Via Militaris and the towns of Pautalia and Germania. He lived in Naissus briefly from 316 to 322.[27]
The city was of great importance for the Constantinian dynasty. It is the birthplace of Constantine the Great who turned it from a middle-sized town to a large city with many public buildings. The city flourished greatly in the Constantinian period. A bronze bust of Constantine decorated city. It was his temporary residence and the city where he promulgated many laws, preserved in the Theodosian code. In Constantinian narratives, Naissus was the city where the usurper Vetranio abdicated to Constantius II after a powerful speech he gave to the rebel armies. Julian, the last Constantinian emperor, used Naissus, which had arms factories, as his base in the civil war and recruited Illyrians and others as soldiers for his campaign.[28]
In 364 AD, the imperial Villa Mediana 3 km (2 mi) was the site where emperors Valentinian and Valens met and divided the Roman Empire into halves which they would rule as co-emperors.[29]
It was besieged by the Huns in 441 and devastated in 448, and again in 480 when the partially-rebuilt town was demolished by the Barbarians. Byzantine Emperor Justinian I restored the town but it was destroyed by the Avars once again. The Slavs, in their campaign against Byzantium, conquered Niš and settled here in 540.
Middle Ages
In 805, the town and its surroundings were taken by Bulgarian Emperor Krum.[30] In the 11th century Byzantium reclaimed control over Naissus and the surrounding area.
King Solomon of Hungary and Prince Géza marched along the valley of the river Great Morava as far as Niš. The Hungarians seized the Byzantine city without any resistance in 1072.[31] During the People's Crusade, on 3 July 1096, Peter the Hermit clashed with Byzantine forces at Naissus. Manuel I fortified the town, but under his successor Andronikos I it was seized by the Hungarian king Béla III. Byzantine control was eventually reestablished, but in 1185 it fell under Serbian control. By 1188, Niš became the capital of Serbian king Stefan Nemanja.[32] On 27 July 1189, Nemanja received German emperor Frederick Barbarossa and his 100,000 crusaders at Niš.[33] Niš is mentioned in descriptions of Serbia under Vukan in 1202, highlighting its special status.[34] In 1203, Kaloyan of Bulgaria annexed Niš.[35]Stefan Nemanjić later regained the region.
Ottoman period
The fall of the Serbian Empire, which was conquered by Ottoman Sultan Murad I in 1385, decided the fate of Niš as well. After a 25-day-long siege the city fell to the Ottomans. It was returned to Serbian rule in 1443. Niš again fell under Ottoman rule in 1448, and remained thusly for 241 years. During Ottoman rule Niš was a seat of the empire's military and civil administration. A Silesian traveler stated in 1596 that the route from Sofia to Niš was littered with corpses and described the gates of Niš as bedecked with the freshly-severed heads of poor Bulgarian peasants.[36] In 1689, Niš was seized by the Austrian army during the Great Turkish War, but the Ottomans regained it in 1690. In 1737, Niš was again seized by the Austrians, who attempted to rebuild the fortifications around the city. The same year, the Ottomans reclaimed the city without resistance. The existing fortification is of Ottoman Turkish origin, dating from the first decades of the 18th century (1719–1723). It is well known as one of the most significant and best preserved monuments of this kind in the mid-Balkans. The Fortress was erected on the site of earlier fortifications – the ancient Roman, Byzantine, and later yet Medieval forts.[37]
During the First Serbian uprising in 1809, Serbian revolutionaries attempted to liberate Niš in the Battle of Čegar. After the defeat of the Serbian forces, the Ottoman commander of Niš ordered the heads of the slain Serbs mounted on a tower to serve as a warning. The structure became known as Skull Tower (Serbian: Ćele Kula).[38] In 1821, the Ottomans arrested the Bishop of Niš, Milentija, as well as 200 Serbian patriots, on charges of preparing an uprising in the Niš area in support of the Greek War of Independence. On June 13 of that year, Bishop Milentija and other Serbian leaders were hanged in public.
In the 19th century Niš was an important town, but populated by Bulgarians in the 19th century, when the Niš rebellion broke out in 1841.[39] According to Ottoman statistics during the Tanzimat the population of Sanjak of Niš was treated as Bulgarian,[40] and according to French travelers such as Jérôme-Adolphe Blanqui and Ami Boue in 1837/1841. According to all authors between 1840 and 1872 the delineation between Bulgarians and Serbs is undisputed and ran north of Nis,[41] although one author Cyprien Robert claims that half of the population of the town was made up by Serbians.[42] Serbian cartographers of the time (such as Dimitrije Davidović in 1828 and Milan Savić in 1878) also accepted South Morava river as such delineation and added Niš outside the borders of the Serbian people.[41][43] In 1862 some Muslim families from Belgrade and Smederevo settled in Nis due to the forced displacement of Muslims in the Principality of Serbia.[44] The urban population of Niš consisted of 17,107 Christian and 4,291 Muslim males, with total number of 3,500 Serbian houses and 2,000 Muslim houses. Muslim population of Niš consisted mainly of Turks, of which a part were of Albanian origin, and the rest were Muslim Albanians and Muslim Romani.[45][46]
Niš was finally taken by the Serbian Army during the Serbo–Ottoman War of 1876–1878. The battle for the liberation of Niš started on 29 December 1877, and the Serbian Army entered Niš on 11 January 1878, and it became a part of Serbia. The Albanian quarter was burned and some of the town's Muslim population, which the majority were Albanians, were forced to flee to the Ottoman vilayet of Kosovo, resettling in Pristina, while others went to Skopje.[49][45][50][46] The descendants of the Albanians that resettled in parts of now Kosovo, are now known as Muhaxhir.[51] The number of remaining Muslims counted were 1,168, with many being Muslim Romani, out of the pre-war ca. 8,500.[52][46] The Albanian bazaar in Niš was destroyed. 12 out of 15 mosques and about 1,300 out of 4,000 houses were torn down, while the rest of the Muslim houses were sold at discounted prices. The destruction of buildings owned by Muslims, Jews and recalcitrant Christians was followed by the widening of streets and other measures to "modernise" the town and weaken its Ottoman outlook. Albanian traders who wanted to stay were subjected to a targeted campaign of murder. The Serbian authorities subjected the Jewish community to extortion of money, arbitrary arrests, confiscation of property, forced labour and desecration of graves.[53] The demographics of Niš underwent change whereby Serbs who formed half the urban population prior to 1878 became 80 percent in 1884.[54][53]
Independent Serbia
In the following years, the city saw rapid development. The city library was founded in 1879 and the famous Serbian writer Stevan Sremac, a native of Niš, was its first clerk.[55][56] The first hotel, Europe, was built in 1879; shortly after the first district hospital[57] and the first bank started operating in 1881.[58] In 1878, the first Grammar School (Gimnazija),[59] in 1882 the Teacher Training College, and in 1894, the Girls' College were founded in Niš.[58] The City Hall was built from 1882 to 1887.
In 1883, Kosta Čendaš established the first printing house. In 1884, the first newspaper in the city Niški Vesnik was started.[58] In 1884, Jovan Apel built a brewery.[60] A railway line to Niš was built in 1884, as well as the city's railway station; on 8 August 1884, the first train arrived from Belgrade.[citation needed] In 1885, Niš became the last station of the Orient Express, until the railroad was built between Niš and Sofia in 1888. In 1887, the Niš Theatre Sinđelić was built.[58]
In 1897 Mita Ristić founded the Nitex textile factory.[58] In 1905 the female painter Nadežda Petrović established the Sićevo art colony.[58] The first film was screened in 1897, and the first permanent cinema started operating in 1906.[58] The hydroelectric dam in Sićevo Gorge on the Nišava was built in 1908;[58] at the time, it was the largest in Serbia. The airfield was built in 1912 on the Trupale field, and the first aeroplane arrived on 29 December 1912. The city's museum was founded in 1913.[citation needed]
During the First Balkan War, Niš was the seat of The Main Headquarters of the Serbian Army, which led military operations against the Ottoman Empire. In World War I, Niš was the wartime capital of Serbia, hosting the Government and the National Assembly, until Central Powers conquered Serbia in November 1915, when the city was ceded to Bulgaria.[58] After the breakthrough of the Salonika front, the First Serbian Army commanded by general Petar Bojović liberated Niš on 12 October 1918.[61]
During the age and breakup of Yugoslavia
In the first few years after the war, Niš was recovering from the damage. In 1921, Niš became the centre of the Region (oblast), governed by a grand-župan, appointed by royal decree. From 1929 to 1941, Niš was the capital of the Morava Banovina of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The tram system in Niš started to run in November 1930. The national airline Aeroput included Niš as a regular destination for the route Belgrade—Niš—Skopje—Thessaloniki in 1930. During the time of German occupation in World War II, the first Nazi Crveni Krst concentration camp in Yugoslavia was in Niš. About 30,000 people passed through this camp, of whom over 10,000 were shot on nearby Bubanj hill. On 12 February 1942, 147 prisoners staged a mass escape. In 1944, the city was heavily bombed by the Allies.[62] In September 1943, the Germans established the Dulag 413 transit camp for Italian Military Internees in the city.[63]
On 14 October 1944, after a long and exhausting battle, the 7th German SS Division 'Prinz Eugen' was defeated and Niš was liberated by Bulgarian Army,[64][65][66] and Partisans. The city was also the site of a unique and accidental friendly fireair war on November 7, 1944 between the air forces of the United States and Soviet Union. On 23 June 1948, Niš was the site of a catastrophic flood during which the Nišava river's water level raised by an unprecedented 5.5 meters.[67]
After World War II, the University of Niš was founded on 15 June 1965.
Over the course of the 1999 NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, Niš was subject to airstrikes on 40 occasions.[68] On 7 May 1999, the city was the site of a NATOcluster bomb raid which killed 16 civilians.[68] By the end of the NATO bombing campaign, a total of 56 people in Niš had been killed from airstrikes.[68]
The road running from the North, from Western and Central Europe and Belgrade down to the Morava River valley, forks into two major lines at Niš: the southern line, leading to Thessalonica and Athens, and the eastern one leading towards Sofia and Istanbul.[citation needed]
Niš is situated at the 43°19' latitude north and 21°54' longitude east, in the Nišava valley, near the spot where it joins the South Morava. The main city square, the city's central part, is at 194 m (636 ft) above sea level. The highest point in the city area is "Sokolov kamen" (Falcon's rock) on the Suva Planina (Dry Mountain) (1,523 m (4,997 ft)) while the lowest spot is at Trupale, near the mouth of the Nišava (173 m (568 ft)). The city covers 596.71 square kilometres (230 sq mi) of five municipalities. Below Niska Banja and Nis, under the ground is a natural source of hot water, unique potential of clean and renewable geothermal energy at the surface of up to 65 square kilometers. According to some sources, the natural reservoir is at a depth of 500 to 800 meters, and the estimated capacity is about 400 million cubic meters of thermal mineral water.[70]
Climate
Niš has a humid subtropical climate, but with continental influences. Average annual temperature in the area of Niš is 12.4 °C (54.3 °F). July is the warmest month of the year, with an average of 23.1 °C (73.6 °F). The coldest month is January, averaging at 0.9 °C (33.6 °F). The average of the annual rainfall is 613.8 mm (24.17 in). The average barometer value is 992.74 mb. On average, there are 134 days with rain and snow cover lasts for 41 days.
Average temperatures in Niš are rising and they are about 1 °C higher in last 15 years than in period from 1991 to 2020. Number of snow days and days with frost is decreasing, since January is the only month with average lows below 0 °C.[citation needed]
According to the final results from the 2022 census, the population of city proper of Niš was 182,797,[3] while its administrative area had a population of 260,237.[3]
The city of Niš has 87,975 households with 2,96 members on average, while the number of homes is 119,196.[77]
The composition of population by sex and average age:[78]
Male – 126,645 (40.90 years) and
Female – 133,592 (42.81 years).
A total of 120,562 citizens (older than 15 years) have secondary education (53.81%), while the 51,471 citizens have higher education (23.0%). Of those with higher education, 34,409 (15.4%) have university education.[79]
The city of Niš consists of five municipalities. The first four municipalities are in the urban area of Niš, while Niška Banja is a suburban municipality. Before 2002, the city of Niš had only two municipalities, one of them named "Niš" and another named "Niška Banja".
The city of Niš is the administrative, industrial, commercial, financial and cultural center of the south-eastern part of Republic of Serbia. The position of Niš is strategically important, at the intersection of European highway and railway networks connecting Europe with Asia. Niš is easily accessible, having an airport – Niš Constantine the Great Airport and being a point of intersection of numerous railroad and highway lines.
It is in Niš that the trunk road running from the north down the Morava River valley forks into two major lines:
and the east one, running along the Nišava and the Marica, leading towards Sofia and Istanbul, and further on, towards the Near East.
These roads have been widely known from ancient times, because they represented the beaten tracks along which peoples, goods and armies moved. Known as 'Via Militaris' in Roman and Byzantine periods, or 'Constantinople road' in Middle Ages, these roads still represent major European traffic arteries. Niš thus stands at a point of intersection of the roads connecting Asia Minor to Europe, and the Black Sea to the Mediterranean. Nis had been a relatively developed city in the former Yugoslavia. In 1981, its GDP per capita was 110% of the Yugoslav average.[81]
The following table gives a preview of total number of registered people employed in legal entities per their core activity (as of 2022):[83]
Activity
Total
Agriculture, forestry and fishing
184
Mining and quarrying
44
Manufacturing
23,556
Electricity, gas, steam and air conditioning supply
977
Water supply; sewerage, waste management and remediation activities
2,149
Construction
3,394
Wholesale and retail trade, repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles
14,604
Transportation and storage
5,183
Accommodation and food services
3,560
Information and communication
4,992
Financial and insurance activities
1,539
Real estate activities
319
Professional, scientific and technical activities
4,286
Administrative and support service activities
2,393
Public administration and defense; compulsory social security
3,974
Education
7,478
Human health and social work activities
7,993
Arts, entertainment and recreation
1,382
Other service activities
1,714
Individual agricultural workers
65
Total
89,785
Companies
Niš is one of the most important industrial centers in Serbia, well known for its tobacco, electronics, construction, mechanical-engineering, textile, nonferrous-metal, food-processing and rubber-goods industries.
Among the manufacturing companies which had a huge impact during the second half of the 20th century on Niš's development are: EI Niš (electronics industry), Mechanical Industry Niš, "Građevinar" (construction company), Niš Tobacco Factory, "Nitex – Niš" (textile industry), "Niš Brewery" (beverages) and "Žitopek" (bakery). Other prominent companies which went bankrupt during the 1990s and 2000s are: "Vulkan" (rubber-goods manufacturer), "NISSAL" (nonferrous-metal industry).
Niš is strategically between the Morava river valley in North and the Vardar river valley in the south, on the main route between Greece and Central Europe. In the Niš area, this major transportation and communication route is linked with the natural corridor formed by the Nišava river valley, which runs Eastwards in the direction of Sofia and Istanbul. The city has been a passing station for the Orient Express.
The first highways date back to the 1950s when Niš was linked with capital Belgrade through the Brotherhood and Unity Highway, the first in Southeastern Europe.
Historically, because of its location, the city had always great importance in the region. The first to take advantage of it was the Roman Empire that built the important road Via Militaris, linking the city with Singidunum (current Belgrade) to the North and Constantinople (current Istanbul) to the southeast. Nowadays, the city is connected by the highway E75 with Belgrade and Central Europe in north, and Skopje, Thessaloniki and Athens in the south. The road E80 connects Niš with Sofia, Istanbul towards the Middle East, and Pristina, Montenegro and the Adriatic Sea to the West. The road E771 connects the city with Zaječar, Kladovo and Drobeta-Turnu Severin in Romania.
The city is also a major regional railway junction linking Serbia to Sofia and Istanbul.
The Niš Constantine the Great Airport is the second most important airport in Serbia. The first airfield serving the city of Niš was established in 1910, near the village of Donje Međurovo. In the 1930s then-national airline company Aeroput used the airport for civil service. In 1935 Aeroput included a stop in Niš in its route linking Belgrade with Skoplje.[86]
The city public transportation consists nowadays of 13 bus lines. A tram system existed in Niš between 1930 and 1958.[87]Niš Bus Station is the city's largest and main bus station which offers both local urban and intercity transport to international destinations. The largest intercity bus carrier based in the city is Niš-Ekspres, which operates to various cities and villages in Serbia, Montenegro, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.[citation needed]
From 1981 Niš is the host of Nišville International Jazz music festival which begins in mid-August and lasts for 4 days. Galija, Kerber and Eyot are considered the most notable music bands to have originated from Niš. Other notable Niš music acts include Daltoni, Dobri Isak, Lutajuća Srca, Mama Rock, Hazari, Novembar, Trivalia and others.
Bubanj – Monument to fallen Yugoslav World War II fighters, forming the shape of three clenched fists. The place where 10,000 civilian hostages from Niš and south Serbia were brutally murdered by German Nazis.
Kalča, City passage and Gorča – Trade centers situated in Milana Obrenovića Street.
Memorial Chapel in the memory of NATObombing victims – The chapel was built by local authorities while the monument was built by the State government in 1999. They are situated in Sumatovacka street near Niš Fortress.
Niš Fortress – The remaining fortification was built by the Turks, and dates from the first decades of the 18th century (1719–23). It is situated in the city center.
The fortress-cafes – They are situated near Stambol gate (the main gate of the fortress).
Niška Banja (Niš spa) – A very popular spa during the summer season. It is 10 km (6 mi) from city center on the road leading to Sofia, in the bottom of Suva Planina Mountain.
Tinkers Alley – An old urban downtown zone in today's Kopitareva Street, built in the first half of the 18th century. It was a street full of tinkers and other craftsmen, but today it is packed with cafes and restaurants.
Skull Tower (Ćele Kula) – A monument to the Serbian revolutionaries (1804–13); a tower made out of skulls of Serbian uprisers, killed and decapitated by the Ottomans. It is situated on Zoran Đinđić Boulevard, on the old Constantinople road leading to Sofia.
Sultans Trail Long-distance hiking and biking route from Vienna to İstanbul runs through Niš.
Architecture and monuments
Buildings in Niš are constantly being built. Niš is the second city in Serbia after Belgrade by number of high-rises.[citation needed]The Ambassador Hotel is one of the tallest buildings in Niš, but there are also other buildings like TV5 Tower.
The biggest stadium in Niš is the Stadion Čair, with a total seating-capacity of 18,151 after renovations.[88] The stadium is part of the Čair Sports Complex that also includes an indoor swimming pool and an indoor arena. Niš was one of four towns which hosting the 2012 European Men's Handball Championship.
Notable residents
The people listed below were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with the city of Niš, and its surrounding metropolitan area.
Constantius I, Roman Emperor, father of Constantine I
Constantine I, the great, (Flavius Valerius Aurelius Constantinus) – ruled 306 to 337
Stevan Sremac (1855–1906), writer, came to Niš shortly after its liberation from the Turkish rule; wrote about life in old Niš (Ivkova slava, Zona Zamfirova).
Georgios Sinas (Greek: Γεώργιος Σίνας, German: Georg Sina; 20 November 1783 – 18 May 1856) was an Austrian-Greek entrepreneur and banker. He became a national benefactor of Greece, he was born in Niš.
Diplomatic missions
The city of Niš, after Belgrade, has the largest diplomatic corps in Serbia. Bulgaria has General Consulate in Niš. Until 2010, there was also a Consulate General of Greece.[89] Diplomatic agreements were given to five prominent citizens of Niš, who acquired the title of honorary consul. The United Kingdom, Hungary, France, Slovakia and Austria have chosen Nis as their honorary consuls, appreciating their commitment and contribution to strengthening ties and cooperation in various fields with these countries.[90]
^Данчо Господинов и кол. (2003) История на града Лом и Ломска околия. Изток-Запад, ISBN9789548945691, стр. 387.
^ abMišić, Siniša, ed. (2010). Leksikon gradova i trgova srednjovekovnih srpskih zemalja — prema pisanim izvorima [Lexicon of towns and market places in the medieval Serbian lands — according to written sources]. Belgrade: Zavod. p. 188.
^Rusakov, Alexander (2017). "Albanian". In Kapović, Mate; Giacalone Ramat, Anna; Ramat, Paolo (eds.). The Indo-European Languages. Routledge. p. 556. ISBN9781317391531.
The contemporary form of the name of ancient Naissos, an important place in Dardania which is now called Niš, is best explained with the help of the historical phonetics of the Albanian language. For more see: Vladimir I. Georgiev (1981) Introduction to the History of the Indo-European Languages. Publishing House of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, p. 142, ISBN9535172611.
Hamp, Eric P. "Albanian" p. 1663 in Part 2, The study of languages, edited by Einar Haugen, Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Mouton, 2019, pp. 1626-1692. https://doi.org/10.1515/9783111684970-016
^Ismajli, Rexhep (2015). Eqrem Basha (ed.). Studime për historinë e shqipes në kontekst ballkanik [Studies on the History of Albanian in the Balkan context] (PDF) (in Albanian). Prishtinë: Kosova Academy of Sciences and Arts, special editions CLII, Section of Linguistics and Literature. pp. 109, 263.
^ abMatzinger, Joachim (2016). "Die albanische Autochthoniehypothese aus der Sicht der Sprachwissenschaft": "Es wird versucht, den Ortsnamen auf verschiedene Weise auch als rein slawische Entwicklung zu erklären, siehe Aleksandar LOMA [...] Das letzte Wort ist hier noch nicht gesprochen, eine Diskussion mit der historischen südslawischen Linguistik ist ein dringendes Desiderat!", p. 14
^Лома, Александар (2003). "Откуде Ниш?". Ниш и Византија, зборник радова I (in Serbian): 15–21. Образовани људи знају да је Ниш пословењен облик античког имена града Naissus (као што се Видин своди преко средњовековног облика Бдињ на антички Bononia), дакле да је посреди предсловенски топоним. (transl. Educated individuals know that Niš is a Slavicized form of the city's ancient name Naissus (just as Vidin resolves – through the medieval form Bdin – to the ancient name Bononia), and hence that is a pre-Slavic toponym.)
^"Nis". Britannica.com. Retrieved 18 February 2013.
^Petrović, Vladimir (2007). Дарданија у римским итинерарима / Dardanie dans les itinéraires romaines. SANU.
^"NİŞ". TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi (in Turkish). Retrieved 8 December 2023.
^Vucinich, Wayne S. (1982). "The Serbian Insurgents and the Russo-Turkish War of 1809–1812". In Vucinich, Wayne S. (ed.). First Serbian Uprising, 1804–1813. New York City: Columbia University Press. p. 141. ISBN978-0-930888-15-2.
^Pinson, Mark (May 1975). "Ottoman Bulgaria in the First Tanzimat Period: The Revolts in Nish (1841) and Vidin (1850)". Middle Eastern Studies. 11 (2): 103–146. doi:10.1080/00263207508700291. JSTOR4282564.
^ abJagodić, Miloš (1998). "The Emigration of Muslims from the New Serbian Regions 1877/1878". Balkanologie. 2 (2). doi:10.4000/balkanologie.265. S2CID140637086. para. 6. "According to the information about the language spoken among the Muslims in the cities, we can see of which nationality they were. So, the Muslim population of Niš and Pirot consisted mostly of Turks; para. 11. "The Turks have been mostly city dwellers. It is certain, however, that part of them was of Albanian origin, because of the well-known fact that the Albanians have been very easily assimilated with Turks in the cities."; para. 23, 30, 49.
^ abcGeniş, Şerife; Maynard, Kelly Lynne (2009). "Formation of a Diasporic Community: The history of migration and resettlement of Muslim Albanians in the Black Sea Region of Turkey". Middle Eastern Studies. 45 (4): 556. doi:10.1080/00263200903009619. S2CID143742189. "that the Muslim Albanians of Nish were forced to leave in 1878, and that at that time most of these Nishan Albanians migrated south into Kosovo, although some went to Skopje in Macedonia."
^Ágoston, Gábor; Masters, Bruce Alan (2009). Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire: Facts on File library of world history. Infobase Publishing. p. 104. ISBN978-1438110257.
^Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire; Gabor Agoston, Bruce Alan Masters; 2009, p. 104
^Judah, Tim (2008). Kosovo: What everyone needs to know. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 35. ISBN9780199704040. "This was the year that saw Serbia expanding southward and taking Nis. The Albanian quarter was burned and Albanians from the surrounding villages forced to flee."
^Pllana, Emin (1985). "Les raisons de la manière de l'exode des refugies albanais du territoire du sandjak de Nish a Kosove (1878–1878) [The reasons for the manner of the exodus of Albanian refugees from the territory of the Sanjak of Nish to Kosovo (1878–1878)] ". Studia Albanica. 1: 189–190.
^ abHoare, M.A. (2024). Serbia: A Modern History. Hurst Publishers. p. 224.
^Stefanović, Djordje (2005). "Seeing the Albanians through Serbian eyes: The Inventors of the Tradition of Intolerance and their Critics, 1804–1939". European History Quarterly. 35 (3): 465–492. doi:10.1177/0265691405054219. hdl:2440/124622. S2CID144497487. "Prior to 1878, the Serbs comprised not more than one half of the population of Nis, the largest city in the region; by 1884 the Serbian share rose to 80 per cent."
^Megargee, Geoffrey P.; Overmans, Rüdiger; Vogt, Wolfgang (2022). The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos 1933–1945. Volume IV. Indiana University Press, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. p. 122. ISBN978-0-253-06089-1.
^Christopher Chant. The Encyclopedia of Codenames of World War II (Routledge Revivals; 2013); ISBN1134647875, p. 209.
^Elisabeth Barker et al., British Political and Military Strategy in Central, Eastern and Southern Europe in 1944, Springer (1988); ISBN1349193798, p. 249.
^Jozo Tomasevich. War and Revolution in Yugoslavia: 1941–1945, Volume 2, Stanford University Press (2001); ISBN0804779244, p. 156.
Eragrostis pectinacea TaksonomiDivisiTracheophytaSubdivisiSpermatophytesKladAngiospermaeKladmonocotsKladcommelinidsOrdoPoalesFamiliPoaceaeSubfamiliChloridoideaeTribusEragrostideaeGenusEragrostisSpesiesEragrostis pectinacea Nees, 1841 Tata namaBasionimPoa pectinacea (en) lbs Eragrostis pectinacea adalah sebuah spesies rumput yang dikenal karena nama umum tufted lovegrass. Tumbuhan tersebut berasal dari benua Amerika, tersebar dari Kanada sampai Argentina. Taksonomi Eragrostis pectinacea mula-m...
Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Januari 2023. Hideto adalah nama Jepang. Tokoh-tokoh dengan nama Jepang ini antara lain: Pemain sepak bola Jepang Hideto Doi Hideto Inoue Hideto Saito Hideto Suzuki Hideto Takahashi Halaman-halaman lainnya Semua halaman dengan Hideto Semua halaman dengan judul ...
Часть серии статей о Холокосте Идеология и политика Расовая гигиена · Расовый антисемитизм · Нацистская расовая политика · Нюрнбергские расовые законы Шоа Лагеря смерти Белжец · Дахау · Майданек · Малый Тростенец · Маутхаузен ·&...
2016 book by Taner Akcam First edition (publ. İletişim Yayıncılık) Killing Orders: Talat Pasha's Telegrams and the Armenian Genocide (Turkish: Naim Efendi'nin Hatıratı ve Talat Paşa Telgrafları: Krikor Gergeryan Arşivi Memoir of Naim Efendi and Talat Pasha Telegrams: Krikor Gergeryan Archive) is a 2016 book from Taner Akcam about the veracity of the primary source evidence of the Armenian genocide, particularly telegrams sent by Talaat Pasha. He addresses dismissal of the authentici...
Päijät-Häme Päijänne-TavastlandTavastia PäijänneRegionRegion Päijät-HämePäijät-Hämeen maakuntacode: fi is deprecated (Finlandia)Landskapet Päijänne-Tavastlandcode: sv is deprecated (Swedia) BenderaLambang kebesaranPäijät-Häme di peta FinlandiaNegaraFinlandiaProvinsi historisTavastiaIbukotaLahtiLuas • Total6.256,66 km2 (2,415,71 sq mi) • Luas daratan5.126,11 km2 (1,979,20 sq mi)Populasi (2019)&...
National hospital of East Timor Hospital in Dili, East TimorGuido Valadares National HospitalHospital Nacional Guido Valadares (Portuguese)Óspital Nasionál Guido Valadares (Tetum)Emergency ward of the hospitalGeographyLocationAvenida Dom Martinho Lopes [de], Culu Hun [de], Cristo Rei, Dili, East TimorCoordinates8°33′21″S 125°35′35″E / 8.55585°S 125.593025°E / -8.55585; 125.593025OrganisationTypeGeneralServicesBeds260–...
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This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these template messages) This article contains content that is written like an advertisement. Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links, and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view. (June 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) This article relies excessively on references t...
American actor (1913–1996) This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: William Prince actor – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) William PrincePrince in Young Doctor Malone, 1962BornWilliam Leroy Prince(1913-01-26)January 2...
For Paulo de Almeida, forward who have played for CR Flamengo, see Paulinho (footballer, born 1933). Brazilian footballer In this Portuguese name, the first or maternal family name is de Almeida and the second or paternal family name is Ribeiro. Paulinho de Almeida Personal informationFull name Paulo de Almeida RibeiroDate of birth (1932-04-15)15 April 1932Place of birth Porto Alegre, BrazilDate of death 11 June 2007(2007-06-11) (aged 75)Position(s) DefenderSenior career*Years Team A...
Swedish actor (born 1951) Stellan SkarsgårdSkarsgård in 2017BornStellan John Skarsgård[1] (1951-06-13) 13 June 1951 (age 72)[1]Gothenburg, SwedenOccupationActorYears active1968–presentSpouses My Skarsgård (m. 1975; div. 2007) Megan Everett (m. 2009)Children8, including Alexander, Gustaf, Bill and Valter Stellan John Skarsgård (/ˈstɛlən ˈskɑːrsɡɑːrd/, Swedish: ...
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The following list sorts all the cities in the Pakistani province of Punjab with a population of more than 100,000 according to the 2017 Census. As of 15 March 2017, 58 cities fulfill this criterion and are listed here. This list refers only to the population of individual cities, municipalities and towns within their defined limits, which does not include other municipalities or suburban areas within Urban agglomerations. List Jallah JeemLahore Faisalabad Rawalpindi Gujranwala Multan Sargod...
Tramlink tram stop in London, EnglandFor other places with the same name, see Church Street Station (disambiguation). Church StreetGeneral informationLocationChurch Street,London Borough of CroydonUnited KingdomOperated byTramlinkPlatforms1ConstructionAccessibleYesOther informationFare zoneLondon fare zones 3, 4, 5 and 6HistoryOpened2000Passengers2009–100.855 million total boardings and alightings[1]2010–110.968 million total boardings and alightings[2] Church St...
Italian cyclist This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: Dario Andriotto – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (August 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Dario Andr...
Historic church in Wisconsin, United States United States historic placeFirst Unitarian Society Meeting HouseU.S. National Register of Historic PlacesU.S. National Historic Landmark First Unitarian Meeting HouseShow map of WisconsinShow map of the United StatesInteractive map showing the First Unitarian Society Meeting House’s locationLocation900 University Bay Dr.,Shorewood Hills, WisconsinCoordinates43°4′33.2″N 89°26′6.65″W / 43.075889°N 89.4351806°W / ...
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Boryaceae Borya scirpoidea Klasifikasi ilmiah Kerajaan: Plantae (tanpa takson): Tracheophyta (tanpa takson): Angiospermae (tanpa takson): Monokotil Ordo: Asparagales Famili: Boryaceae Genera Lihat teks Boryaceae adalah salah satu suku anggota tumbuhan berbunga. Menurut Sistem klasifikasi APG II suku ini dimasukkan ke dalam bangsa Asparagales, klad Monokotil. Wikimedia Commons memiliki media mengenai Boryaceae. Pengidentifikasi takson Wikidata: Q894305 Wikispecies: Boryaceae APNI: 214563 BOLD...
English county cricket club This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Somerset County Cricket Club – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (July 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message) Cricket team Somerset County Cricket ClubOne Day nameSomersetPersonnelCaptainLewis GregoryOne Day capt...