I hope to have more news from the world of heraldry in Serbia.
What will gladly share with you.
Serbian Heraldry
- goran zajic
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Re: Serbian Heraldry
God save, God feeds,
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
- goran zajic
- Posts: 64
- Joined: 16 Jul 2012, 10:08
- Location: Serbia
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Re: Serbian Heraldry
College of Economics and Administration in Belgrade
Heraldic artist Nebojsa Dikic
Heraldic artist Nebojsa Dikic
God save, God feeds,
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
- Ton de Witte
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- Location: The Netherlands
- Arthur Radburn
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- Joined: 11 Jul 2012, 09:56
Re: Serbian Heraldry
A very nice design. The ward of the key appears to be Cyrillic letters : what do they mean?
Regards
Arthur Radburn
Arthur Radburn
- Chris Green
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Re: Serbian Heraldry
The ward of the key appears to be Cyrillic letters
I don't think so - but my last wrestling with the cyrillic alphabet was admittedly 25 years ago!
Chris Green
IAAH President
Bertilak de Hautdesert
IAAH President
Bertilak de Hautdesert
- Edward Hillenbrand
- Posts: 202
- Joined: 10 Sep 2012, 01:42
- Location: Catskill Mountains, New York, United States
Re: Serbian Heraldry
With Yugoslavia broken up into the original governmental land masses, which country are these Royals from? I understand there is a Royalist movement in many of the former Soviet countries, are these movements and the current governments looking to set up a constitutional monarchy or be more like Germany where there appears to be a nod to their former status but not much more presently?
Ed Hillenbrand
"Tempus Fugit, Memento Mori"
Armorial Register - International Register of Arm
"Tempus Fugit, Memento Mori"
Armorial Register - International Register of Arm
- goran zajic
- Posts: 64
- Joined: 16 Jul 2012, 10:08
- Location: Serbia
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Re: Serbian Heraldry
Arthur Radburn wrote:A very nice design. The ward of the key appears to be Cyrillic letters : what do they mean?
This is not the Cyrillic alphabet, but Latin letters R and B.
This school used to be called "R & B College" (Accounting and Exchange).
God save, God feeds,
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
- goran zajic
- Posts: 64
- Joined: 16 Jul 2012, 10:08
- Location: Serbia
- Contact:
Re: Serbian Heraldry
Edward Hillenbrand wrote:With Yugoslavia broken up into the original governmental land masses, which country are these Royals from? I understand there is a Royalist movement in many of the former Soviet countries, are these movements and the current governments looking to set up a constitutional monarchy or be more like Germany where there appears to be a nod to their former status but not much more presently?
I do not understand what you mean?
God save, God feeds,
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
Serbian King, Serbian nation!
-
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- Location: United Kingdom
Re: Serbian Heraldry
Edward Hillenbrand wrote:With Yugoslavia broken up into the original governmental land masses, which country are these Royals from? I understand there is a Royalist movement in many of the former Soviet countries, are these movements and the current governments looking to set up a constitutional monarchy or be more like Germany where there appears to be a nod to their former status but not much more presently?
The former Yugoslavian Royal family was originally the Serbian one-it became the Yugoslav one in 1918 when Serbia unified with the short-lived Croat and Slovene State that had replaced the Austrian Habsburg Crownlands of Bosnia and the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia. After Yugoslavia broke up into its constituent nations, the former Yugoslav Royal family renamed itself 'of Serbia' around 2006; and the members of the family had their Arms altered to remove any reference to Croatia or Slovenia, as they did before.
The Royalist movement in Serbia, thought there are other Balkan nations that have monarchist movements, is unusually strong, probably because the Karadjordjevic family is ultimately of Serbian origin and its founder-Djordje Petrovic, a Serb national hero-was of ordinary peasant stock.
- Arthur Radburn
- Posts: 1331
- Joined: 11 Jul 2012, 09:56
Re: Serbian Heraldry
goran zajic wrote:Arthur Radburn wrote:A very nice design. The ward of the key appears to be Cyrillic letters : what do they mean?
This is not the Cyrillic alphabet, but Latin letters R and B.
This school used to be called "R & B College" (Accounting and Exchange).
Thank you.
Regards
Arthur Radburn
Arthur Radburn
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