text
stringlengths 1
278k
|
---|
This is a list of foreign players that play or have played in the top league in football clubs from the territory of Serbia.
In this list are included the foreign players that:
Play or have played in the Serbian SuperLiga (from 2006 until nowadays), and in the clubs from the territory of Serbia in the First League of Serbia and Montenegro (including FR Yugoslavia, from 1992 until 2006) and in the Yugoslav First League (from 1923 until 1992).
Have been part of the club roster in the league.
Have not been capped for the Serbia national team or the Yugoslavia national team, except the ones that have been capped for other national teams, as well.
Have been born in Serbia and capped by a foreign national team. This includes players that have dual citizenship.
In this list are only indicated the top-level clubs. If a player has also played in some lower-level club in Serbia, those clubs are excluded, just as all the foreign players that have only played in lower leagues in Serbia.
Notes:
The players that played in clubs from Kosovo are only included if they played in a top league club within the Yugoslav or Serbian football league system.
The players from the countries that once made part of Yugoslavia (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, Montenegro and Slovenia) have inclusion criteria indicated in each section.
The years correspond to seasons, not calendar years, and represent the seasons that the player represented the club, not necessarily being all in the top league, but at least one. If only one year is indicated in parentheses, it means that the player has played only that half of season.
Players in bold are players that have at least one cap for their national team.
Teams in bold are the current team of that player.
Abkhazia
Shabat Logua – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2019–2020), Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Daur Kvekveskiri – Napredak Kruševac (2016–2017)
Albania
Mehmet Dragusha – Priština (1997–1998)
Besnik Hasi – Priština (1991–1992, 1993–1994)
Albert Stroni – Partizan (1992–1993)
Faton Xhemaili – Radnik Surdulica (2018–2019)
Algeria
Adda Djeziri – Vojvodina (2017–2018)
Angola
Alexander Christovão – Javor Ivanjica (2016–2017)
Antigua and Barbuda
Josh Parker – Red Star (2014–2016)
Argentina
Hernán Barcos – Red Star (2007–2008)
Guido Barreyro – Inđija (2010–2011)
Mauro Carabajal – Vojvodina (1998–1999)
Mateo García – Red Star (2019–2020)
Luis Ibáñez – Red Star (2015–2016)
Cristian Jeandet – Sartid Smederevo (1998–1999)
Hernán Marcos – Vojvodina (1998–1999)
Pablo Mouche – Red Star (2016–2017)
Pablo Ostrowski – Vojvodina (2007–2009)
Matías Porcari – Radnički Kragujevac (2013–2014)
Diego Suárez – OFK Beograd (2006–2007)
Alex Vigo – Red Star (2022–present)
Tomás Villoldo – OFK Beograd (2015–2016)
Armenia
Ognjen Čančarević – Radnički Kragujevac (2009–2014), OFK Beograd (2014–2016), Mladost Lučani (2015–(2016), Radnik Surdulica (2016–2018)
Hovhannes Grigoryan – Banat Zrenjanin (2006–2007)
Artur Yedigaryan – Proleter Novi Sad (2019–2020)
Australia
David Aceski – OFK Beograd (2001–2002)
Tomislav Arčaba – BSK Borča (2010–2012), OFK Beograd (2015–2017)
Eli Babalj – Red Star (2012–2013)
Branko Buljevic – OFK Beograd (1966–1968)
Matthew Byrne – Donji Srem (2011–2013)
Michael Curcija – Partizan (2000–2001)
Milos Degenek – Red Star (2018–2022, 2023–present)
Bobby Dragas – Red Star (2000–2001)
Milan Ivanović – Red Star (1978–1982, 1985–1986, 1988–1989), OFK Beograd (1982–1985), Radnički Niš (1986–1988)
Aleksandar Jovanović – Vojvodina (2007–2008), Hajduk Kula (2011–2012)
Andrew Marveggio – Mačva Šabac (2018–2019)
Dejan Pandurević – Zemun (2017–2018)
Milan Susak – Vojvodina (2002–2007)
Aleksandar Šušnjar – Novi Pazar (2023–2024)
Doug Utjesenovic – OFK Beograd (1967–1969)
Goran Zarić – Borac Čačak (1995–1996), Vojvodina (1996–1999), Čukarički Stankom (2002–2004)
Austria
Including the period of Austro-Hungary.
Aleksandar Dragović – Red Star (2021–present)
Grabliker – Budućnost Valjevo (193_–1940)
Otto Hofmann – Radnički Beograd (1921–192x)
Goran Kartalija – Vojvodina (1988–1991)
Aleksandar Kostić – Radnički Niš (2018–2019)
Robert Lang – Jugoslavija (1920–1921)
Saša Lazić – Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Franz Machek – RFK Bor (1941–1943)
Theodor Mantler – UTK Novi Sad (1918–192_)
Armin Mašović – Novi Pazar (2014–2015)
Kenan Muslimović – Novi Pazar (2016–2017)
Dejan Nešović – Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017)
Alexander Neufeld (Sándor Nemes) – BSK Beograd (1932–1933)
Dejan Obućina – Smederevo (2012–2013)
Roman Pany – Jedinstvo Beograd (1938–1939)
Aleksandar Popović – Vojvodina (2005–2009)
Alexander Schönbacher – BSK Beograd (191x–1914)
Srđan Spiridonović – Red Star (2020–2022)
Daniel Sudar – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Petar Zivkov – OFK Beograd (2013–2014)
Azerbaijan
Murad Hüseynov – Sloboda Užice (2013–2014)
Branimir Subašić – Železnik (1998–2002), Red Star (2008–2010), OFK Beograd (2015–2017)
Belarus
Including the period of Soviet Union.
Samuilo Suzina – BSK Belgrade (1924–1925)
Ilya Lukashevich – Proleter Novi Sad (2019–2020)
Belgium
Nathan de Medina – Partizan (2023–present)
Benin
Mattéo Ahlinvi – Čukarički (2023–present)
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Excluded the players that played before 1992 when Bosnia and Herzegovina became independent and counted as domestic.
Edin Ademović – Sloboda Užice (2009–2011), Novi Pazar (2011–2012), BSK Borča (2012–2013)
Admir Aganović – Partizan (2003–2004), Zemun (2006–2007), Mladost Lučani (2006–2008), Čukarički Stankom (2007–2009)
Almir Aganspahić – Novi Pazar (2020–2021), Čukarički (2021–2022, 2022–2023)
Esmir Ahmetović – Jagodina (2011–2012)
Zoran Amidžić – Hajduk Kula (1996–1998), Proleter Zrenjanin (1999–2000)
Mile Andrić – Sloboda Užice (1991–1994, 2001–2002)
Luka Asentić – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2018–2019)
Miloš Babić – Obilić (2000–2004)
Delimir Bajić – Sloboda Užice (2012–2013), Rad Beograd (2014–2015)
Miloš Bajić – OFK Beograd (2011)–2012), Napredak Kruševac (2011–2015), Mladost Lučani (2015–2016), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2017–2018)
Branimir Bajić – Partizan (2000–2007)
Haris Bešlija – Borac Čačak (2010–2011)´
Edin Biber – Radnik Surdulica (2020–2022)
Milorad Bilbija – OFK Kikinda (1993–1994)
Nemanja Bilbija – Vojvodina (2009–2013)
Sergej Bjelica - Voždovac (2022-present)
Nikola Bjeloš – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Ognjen Blagojević – BSK Borča (2011–2012)
Slaviša Bogdanović – Rad Beograd (2011–2012), Spartak Subotica (2012–2013)
Jadranko Bogičević – Red Star (2003–2005)
Andrej Bosnić – Čukarički (2020–2021)
Filip Božić – Mačva Šabac (2017–2021)
Igor Božić – Rad Beograd (2005–2009)
Mario Božić – Milicionar Beograd (2003–2004), Voždovac (2013–2014), Borac Čačak (2014–2015)
Bakir Brajlović – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Aleksandar Bratić – Hajduk Kula (1992–1993), Rad Beograd (1993–1996), Red Star (1996–1997), OFK Beograd (1997–1999, 2006–2007)
Aleksandar Brđanin – OFK Beograd (2001–2002)
Esad Brkić – Spartak Subotica (1997–1999)
Dženan Bureković – Vojvodina (2016–2018), Spartak Subotica (2022–2023)
Davor Cavrić – Banat Zrenjanin (2007–2012, 2013–2014), Hajduk Kula (2012–2013)
Borisav Cicović – OFK Beograd (2011–2012)
Zoran Čampara – Rad Beograd (1992–1995)
Novica Čomić – Mladost Apatin (2001–2005)
Muhidin Čoralić – Zemun (1990–1993)
Miroslav Čovilo – Inđija (2010–2011), Spartak Subotica (2010–2011), Hajduk Kula (2011–2012)
Marko Čubrilo – Radnik Surdulica (2017–2019)
Nebojša Ćorović – Spartak Subotica (1997–1999)
Đorđe Ćosić - Mladost GAT (2022-present)
Mehmed Ćosić - Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023)
Semir Dacić – Novi Pazar (2020–2021)
Nikola Damjanac – Partizan (1991–1993, 1994–1997, 1998–2000), OFK Beograd (1993–1994, 2001–2002, 2003–2005)
Dario Damjanović – Novi Pazar (2012)–2013), Jagodina (2012–2014), OFK Beograd (2015–2016)
Goran Dasović – Vojvodina (1995–1996)
Darko Dejanović – Rad Beograd (2014–2018)
Nikša Dimitrijević – Zvezdara (2001–2002)
Srđan Dobrić – BSK Borča (2010–2011)
Đurađ Dobrijević – Kolubara Lazarevac (2019–2020,2021–2022)
Dalibor Dragić – Vojvodina (1999–2000), Mladost Apatin (2006–(2007)
Goran Dragović – Radnički Beograd (2001–2002), Voždovac (2002–2008, 2013–2014), Javor Ivanjica (2008–2011)
Nemanja Dragutinović – Novi Pazar (2020–2021), Radnički Kragujevac (2021–2022)
Nenad Drljača – Vojvodina (1991–1993)
Feđa Dudić – Novi Pazar (2011–2012)
Filip Dujmović – Spartak Subotica (2019–2021), Radnički Niš (2021-2022)
Amer Dupovac – Borac Čačak (2017–2018)
Darko Đajić – Vojvodina (2009–2010)
Ognjen Đelmić – Rad Beograd (2006–2009), Vojvodina (2017–2018)
Boban Đerić – Javor Ivanjica (2017–2020)
Uroš Đerić – Radnički Niš (2013)–2014), Borac Čačak (2013–2015), Mladost Lučani (2015–2016), Napredak Kruševac (2017–2018)
Željko Đokić – Javor Ivanjica (2007–2009, 2009–2011), Novi Pazar (2014–2015)
Goran Đukić – Hajduk Kula (1993–1998), Milicionar Beograd (1998–2001), Red Star (2001–2002)
Aleksandar Đurašović – Spartak Subotica (1999–2000)
Saša Đuričić – Hajduk Kula (2000–2001)
Siniša Đurić – Zemun (1996–2001)
Predrag Erak – Zemun (2002–(2003)
Nikola Eskić – Napredak Kruševac (2016–2020), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–2021)
Marko Filipović – OFK Beograd (1998–1999, 2000–2002), Hajduk Beograd (1999–2000, 2004–2005)
Vladimir Gaćinović – Bečej (1991–1997)
Radovan Gajić – Proleter Zrenjanin (199_–199_), Obilić (1997–1998)
Aleksandar Galić – Vojvodina (2002–2003)
Mladen Galić – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2015–2017), TSC Bačka Topola (2017–2020), Proleter Novi Sad (2020–2021)
Miloš Galin – Rad Beograd (2008–2009)
Sahmir Garčević – Obilić (1997–1998)
Dragan Glogovac – Rad Beograd (1992–1995), Sartid Smederevo (1999–2002)
Stevo Glogovac – Zvezdara (1995–1997), Rad Beograd (1997–1999), Red Star (1999–2002), Zemun (2003–2006), FK Bežanija (2006–2007)
Ognjen Gnjatić – Rad Beograd (2012–2015)
Aleksej Golijanin – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Miljan Govedarica – Donji Srem (2013–2014)
Branko Grahovac – Borac Čačak (2007–2010)
Daniel Graovac – Vojvodina (2018–2019)
Vladan Grujić – Obilić (1999–2000), Red Star (2001–2002), Voźdovac (2015–2016)
Nebojša Gudelj – Partizan (1991–1994)
Elmin Hadžikadunić – Radnički Niš (2016–2017)
Ismar Hairlahović – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Haris Hajdarević – Radnik Surdulica (2023–present)
Faris Handžić – Novi Pazar (2021–2022)
Mersad Hankić – Čukarički Stankom (2004–(2005)
Nermin Haskić – Radnički Niš (2018–2020)
Dušan Hodžić - Radnik Surdulica (2021–2023)
Ante Hrkać – Mladost Lučani (2021–2022)
Faruk Hujdurović – OFK Beograd (1993–1994), Hajduk Kula (1995–1996)
Jovan Ilić – Proleter Novi Sad (2019–2022)
Đorđe Inđić – Zemun (1996–2001)
Bojan Jamina – OFK Beograd (2000–2001)
Nemanja Janičić – Napredak Kruševac (2011–2015), Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Petar Jelić – OFK Beograd (2007–2010), Novi Pazar (2013–2014), Rad Beograd (2014–2015)
Peđa Jerinić – Smederevo (2010–2012), Hajduk Kula (2012–2013)
Ognjen Jevtić – Obilić (–2003)
Igor Joksimović – Zemun (2006–2008)
Mladen Jovančić – Železnik (2000–2002, 2004–2005)
Vladimir Jovančić – Rad Beograd (2007–2011), Partizan (2011)–2012), Jagodina (2014–2015)
Aleksandar Jovanović – OFK Beograd (2005–2007), Hajduk Kula (2007–2011)
Miodrag Jovanović – BSK Borča (2011–2012)
Petar Jovanović – Sloboda Užice (2009–2011, 2022–2023), Radnički Niš (2013–2014), Voždovac (2015)–2016), Rad Beograd (2015–2016), Čukarički (2016–2017), Mladost Lučani (2017–2019, 2019–2021)
Đorđe Kamber – OFK Beograd (2002–2006)
Dragan Kavaz – Napredak Kruševac (1990–1993)
Dušan Kerkez – Radnički Obrenovac (2000–2002)
Nenad Kiso – Čukarički Stankom (2007–2011, 2018–2019), Zemun (2017–2018, 2019–2020)
Obren Kljajić – Voždovac (2022–2023)
Arsen Knežević – Rad Beograd (2018–2019)
Igor Kojić – Bežanija (2006–2007), Smederevo (2009–2010, 2012–2013)
Jovo Kojić – Novi Pazar (2020–2022)
Saša Kolunija – Bežanija (2005–2007, (2008)–2009, 2014–2015), Rad Beograd (2013–2014)
Nikola Kosanić – Mačva Šabac (2018–2019)
Aleksandar Kosorić – Partizan (2008–2009), Rad Beograd (2009–2011), Radnički Kragujevac (2011–2013), Radnički Niš (2013–2014)
Stefan Kovač – Čukarički (2018–present)
Goran Kovačević – Zemun (1992–1994)
Gojko Kozić – Mladost Apatin (2001–2002)
Damjan Krajišnik – Mladost Lučani (2019–2020), Metalac G.M. (2020–2022), Radnički Kragujevac (2022-2023), Železničar Pančevo (2023–present)
Rade Krunić – Donji Srem (2012–2014), Borac Čačak (2014–2015)
Simo Krunić – OFK Beograd (1992–1994), Čukarički Stankom (1996–1997)
Esad Kuhinja – Napredak Kruševac (1990–1994)
Luka Kukić - Novi Pazar (2021-2022)
Miloš Kuljanin – Borac Čačak (2008–2009)
Petar Kunić – Novi Pazar (2016–2017), Napredak Kruševac (2021–2022), Radnik Surdulica (2022-present)
Đorđe Kunovac – Bečej (1994–1995), Rad Beograd (1995–1998, 2001–2002)
Numan Kurdić – Novi Pazar (2020–2021, 2022–2023)
Nenad Kutlačić – Budućnost Banatski Dvor (2003–2004), Banat Zrenjanin (2005–2007)
Mićo Kuzmanović – Jagodina (2014–2015)
Nikola Lakić – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2019)
Miodrag Latinović – Loznica (199_–199_), Spartak Subotica (199_–1999)
Milivoje Lazić – Zemun (2018–2019)
Nemanja Lekanić – Sloboda Užice (2013–2014), Mačva Šabac (2015–2018)
Bojan Letić – Radnički Niš (2019–2020)
Marinko Mačkić – Mladost Lučani (2000–2003), Vojvodina (2003)–2004)
Bojan Magazin – Vojvodina (1998–1999)
Zoran Majstorović – Borac Čačak (1994–1996), Železnik (1997–2004)
Dejan Maksimović – Zemun (2018–2019)
Ajdin Maksumić – Sloboda Užice (2012–2013)
Darko Maletić – Partizan (2006–2008)
Marko Maletić – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021), Javor Ivanjica (2022–2023)
Luka Malić - Radnički Kragujevac (2022–2023)
Strahinja Manojlović - Mačva Šabac (2021-2022), Javor Ivanjica (2022-present)
Damjan Marčeta – Donji Srem (2012–2015)
Slavko Marić – Hajduk Beograd (2001–2006), Mladost Lučani (2006–2008, 2017–2018), Borac Čačak (2008–2011), Sloboda Užice (2011–2012), Radnički Kragujevac (2012–2014), Jagodina (2015–2016), Novi Pazar (2016–2017), Mačva Šabac (2018–2020)
Neven Marković – Rad Beograd (2005–2008), Mladost Lučani (2007–(2008)
Vlado Marković – OFK Beograd (2007–2008)
Njegoš Matić – Mladost Apatin (2001–2002)
Dragan Matković – Vojvodina (2017–2020)
Darjan Matović – Javor Ivanjica (2013–2014)
Darko Mavrak – Proleter Zrenjanin (1992–1993)
Marko Mazalica – Rad Beograd (2005–2007), Donji Srem (2014–2015)
Slobodan Mazić – Spartak Subotica (1999–2001, 2006–2007), OFK Beograd (2001–2002)
Miodrag Medan – Rad Beograd (1993–1994)
Miroslav Medan – Sloboda Užice (1995–1996)
Dragan Mićić – Red Star (1996–2000), Rad Beograd (2000–2002), Banat Zrenjanin (2002–2007)
Marko Mik – Mladost Lučani (2001–2002)
Borislav Mikić – Borac Čačak (1999–2000), Železnik (2002–2006), Voždovac (2006)–2007), Banat Zrenjanin (2006–2009)
Ninoslav Milenković – Mladost Lučani (1996–1998), Hajduk Kula (2001–(2002)
Zoran Milidrag – Spartak Subotica (1993–1995), Sartid Smederevo (199_–1998)
Nikola Milinković – Bečej (1991–1993)
Nenad Miljković – Vojvodina (1994–1995, 1996–1997, 1998–1999), Spartak Subotica (1997–1998), Red Star (1999–2001), Sartid Smederevo (2001–200_)
Milenko Milošević – Loznica (1996–1998), Red Star (1998–2000)
Miroslav Milutinović – Vojvodina (2006–2010), Hajduk Kula (2012–2013)
Zoran Milutinović – Voždovac (2017–2018)
Igor Mišan – OFK Beograd (2007–2010), Spartak Subotica (2010–2011), Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017)
Jovo Mišeljić – Radnički Niš (1992–1995, 2001–2003)
Nenad Mišković – Radnički Beograd (1993–1997), Proleter Zrenjanin (1998–1999), Partizan (1999–2004), Rad Beograd (2005–(2006), Mladost Apatin (2006–2007), Banat Zrenjanin (2007–2008)
Slaviša Mitrović – Bečej (1994–1996)
Marko Mitrušić – Metalac G.M. (2011–2012)
Siniša Mladenović – Radnik Surdulica (2016–2018), Zemun (2018–2019)
Aleksa Mrđa – Voždovac (2017–2018)
Marko Mrgud – OFK Beograd (2013–2014)
Momčilo Mrkaić – Zemun (2011–2013, 2018–2019), Javor Ivanjica (2017–2018, (2019)–2020), Vojvodina (2019–2022)
Dragan Mučibabić – Rad Beograd (1992–1993)
Mustafa Mujezinović - Novi Pazar (2021–2023)
Denis Mujkić – Novi Pazar (2012–2013)
Siniša Mulina – Bečej (1993–1996), Partizan (1996–1997), Milicionar Beograd (1997–2001), Vojvodina (2000–(2001)
Bojan Nastić – Vojvodina (2011–2016)
Nenad Nikić - Voždovac (2022–2023)
Nemanja Nikolić – Radnički Niš (2019–2020)
Staniša Nikolić – Vojvodina (2004–2005)
Stevo Nikolić – Obilić (2002–2005)
Vladimir Nosović – Hajduk Kula (2002–2003)
Nenad Novaković – Borac Čačak (2007–2009)
Slobo Novaković – Vojvodina (1997–1998)
Amer Osmanagić – OFK Beograd (2008–2009, 2011–2012), Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Branko Ostojić – Javor Ivanjica (2010–2013), Voždovac (2018–2019)
Ljubiša Pecelj – Kolubara Lazarevac (2019–2020,2021–2022), Metalac G.M. (2020–2021), Radnički Kragujevac (2022–present)
Milan Pecelj – Radnički Niš (1998–2000), Hajduk Kula (2000–2002)
Srđan Pecelj – Red Star (1992–1993, 1995–1996, 1997–1999), Čukarički Stankom (1996–1997, 1999–2000)
Nebojša Pejić – BSK Borča (2006–2011)
Bojan Petrić – Novi Pazar (2011)–2012)
Ognjen Petrović – Javor Ivanjica (2012–2013)
Todor Petrović – Voždovac (2014–2019), Radnički Niš (2020–2022), Javor Ivanjica (2023–present)
Zvonimir Petrović – Javor Ivanjica (2023–present)
Siniša Peulić – Hajduk Kula (199_–1995)
Miloš Pojić – Hajduk Kula (199_–1998)
Željko Polak – Milicionar Beograd (1998–1999), Radnički Beograd (1999–2000, 2001–2004), Bežanija (2004–2006, 2006–2008)
Dajan Ponjević - Bačka Bačka Palanka (2014-2021), Radnički Kragujevac (2022–2023)
Nikola Popara – Spartak Subotica (2012–2013), Vojvodina (2013–2014), Jagodina (2014–2015)
Ilija Prodanović – Bečej (1996–1997)
Dario Purić – OFK Beograd (2007–2008), Sloboda Užice (2012–2014)
Hakim Puteš – Bečej (1997–1999)
Bojan Puzigaća – Voždovac (2015–2017)
Darko Raca – Zemun (1997–1998)
Saša Raca – Mladost Apatin (1996–1998), Zemun (1998–2000, 2001–2002)
Čedomir Radić – Metalac G.M. (2016–2017)
Samir Radovac - Novi Pazar (2022–2023)
Slaviša Radović – Vojvodina (2014–2016), Voždovac (2016–2017)
Radoslav Radulović – Zemun (1995–1998, 2000–2002), Rad Beograd (2001–(2002)
Amar Rahmanović – Novi Pazar (2012–2013)
Dragan Rajović – Obilić (199_–), OFK Beograd (–2003)
Zoran Rajović – Vojvodina (1996–1999, 2000–2002), Hajduk Kula (2008–2009)
Sead Ramović – Novi Pazar (2011)–2012)
Admir Raščić – Novi Pazar (2011–2013)
Haris Redžepi – Novi Pazar (2012–2014)
Igor Remetić – Proleter Zrenjanin (199_–), Zemun (–2002)
Ševkija Resić – Novi Pazar (2020–2021)
Ilija Ristanić – Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010)
Predrag Ristanović - Novi Pazar (2022–present)
Ivan Ristić – Vojvodina (1997–2001), Rad Beograd (2001–2002)
Edin Rustemović – OFK Beograd (2012–2013), Radnik Surdulica (2022–2023)
Branislav Ružić – Mladost Lučani (2016–2017)
Damir Sadiković - Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023), Napredak Kruševac (2023–present)
Duško Sakan – Rad Beograd (2011–(2012)
Siniša Saničanin – Mladost Lučani (2015–2017), Vojvodina (2017-2021), Partizan (2021–present)
Stefan Santrač – TSC Bačka Topola (2020–2022)
Boris Savić – Rad Beograd (2009–2010)
Milan Savić – Čukarički (2019–2022), Mladost GAT (2022–2023)
Miljan Sekulović – Vojvodina (1991–1992), Borac Čačak (1995–2000)
Armin Smajić – OFK Kikinda (1987–1988, 1992–1993)
Milan Srećo – Partizan (2004–2005), Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2010)
Filip Sredojević – OFK Beograd (2014–2015)
Duško Stajić – Sloboda Užice (2012–2013)
Milan Stanivuković – Bečej (1996–1999)
Miroslav Stefanović – Rad Beograd (1990–1991), Zemun (1991–1992), Čukarički (1992–1993)
Miroslav Stevanović – Vojvodina (2010–2013)
Saša Stević – Borac Čačak (2001–2006), Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2010)
Nikola Stijaković – BSK Borča (2009–2011), Spartak Subotica (2011–2013)
Stefan Stojanović – IMT Beograd (2023–present)
Jovica Stokić – BSK Borča (2011–2012)
Nenad Studen – Partizan (1999–2000)
Boško Stupić – Novi Pazar (2015)–2016)
Aleksandar Subić – Partizan (2015–2016, 2018–2019), Radnički Niš (2017–2018)
Nemanja Supić – Železnik (2002–2004), Zemun (2005–2007), Javor Ivanjica (2008–2009, 2010–2011), Vojvodina (2011–2013), Novi Pazar (2013)–2014), Voždovac (2013–2015), Red Star (2015–2019)
Zoran Šaraba – Vojvodina (1990–1997), Budućnost Valjevo (1997–1998)
Miloš Šatara – Mladost Lučani (2015–2021)
Stefan Šavija – Vojvodina (2017–2021)
Ognjen Škorić – Donji Srem (2012–2013)
Nebojša Šodić – Hajduk Kula (2006–2008)
Neđo Šuka – Donji Srem (2013–2014)
Zoran Šupić – OFK Beograd (2002–2007), Bežanija (2006)–2007), Novi Pazar (2011)–2012), BSK Borča (2011–2012, 2013–2015)
Marko Šušnjar - TSC Bačka Topola (2021–2022, 2022–2023)
Bojan Tadić – OFK Beograd (2000–2002)
Izzy Tandir – Javor Ivanjica (2016–2017)
Dobrica Tegeltija – Vojvodina (2016–2019)
Amir Teljigović – Proleter Zrenjanin (1986–1992, 2000–2002), Vojvodina (1992–1994)
Danilo Teodorović - Voždovac (2022–present)
Borislav Terzić – Donji Srem (2012–2013), Sloboda Užice (2013–2014), Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2015), Voždovac (2015–2016), Javor Ivanjica (2016–2018), Zemun (2018–2019)
Pero Tešić – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2018–2019)
Mirko Todorović – Proleter Zrenjanin (199_–199_), Hajduk Beograd (1999–2000)
Kristijan Tojčić - Mačva Šabac (2021-2022), Javor Ivanjica (2022–present)
Jovica Toljagić – Čukarički Stankom (2001–2003)
Borislav Topić – BSK Borča (2006–2010), Novi Pazar (2012–2013)
Anid Travančić – Novi Pazar (2016)–2017), Radnički Niš (2016–2018)
Filip Trivan – Priština (1997–1999)
Vule Trivunović – Obilić (1999–2002, 2003–2004)
Bojan Trkulja – Obilić (200_–2002)
Stefan Udovičić – Čukarički Stankom (2010–2011), Radnički Kragujevac (2011–2012)
Nikola Valentić – OFK Beograd (2000–2002), Jagodina (2012–2013), Radnički Niš (2014–2015)
Dragan Vasić – Sartid Smederevo (1997–1998)
Aleksandar Vasiljević – Bežanija (2005–2008), Mladi Radnik (2008–2010), Jagodina (2010–2012), Hajduk Kula (2011–(2012), Novi Pazar (2012–2013), Donji Srem (2013)–2014), Voždovac (2013–(2014), Napredak Kruševac (2014)–2015)
Dražen Vasiljević – Borac Čačak (2004–2005)
Nikola Vasiljević – BSK Borča (2010–2011), Voždovac (2013–2014)
Zoran Vasiljević – Sloboda Užice (1992–1995), Loznica (199_–199_)
Predrag Videkanić – Hajduk Kula (2005–2006)
Aleksandar Vidović – Spartak Subotica (2019–2023)
Saša Vidović – Zemun (2003–2007, 2010–2011), Rad Beograd (2007–2010)
Predrag Vladić – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Aleksandar Vojnović – Radnički Niš (2023–present)
Darko Vojvodić – Loznica (1994–1995), Radnički Kragujevac (1995–1998), Sartid Smederevo (1998–2000), Milicionar Beograd (2000–2001)
Milorad Vranješ – Sloboda Užice (1994–1996)
Ognjen Vranješ – Red Star (2008–2009), Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010), Čukarički (2023–present)
Stojan Vranješ – Vojvodina (2012–2014)
Aleksandar Vrhovac – Spartak Subotica (1995–1998)
Jovan Vujanić – Sloboda Užice (2011)–2012)
Igor Vujanović – Borac Čačak (1995–1998), Obilić (1999)–2000), Železnik (2000–2001)
Slavko Vujić – Rad Beograd (1997–2001)
Filip Vujović – Rad Beograd (2015–2016)
Dragan Vukajlović – Zemun (2001–2002)
Svetozar Vukašinović – Proleter Zrenjanin (1999–2000)
Milenko Vukčević – Spartak Subotica (1992–1993)
Goran Vukliš – Vojvodina (2020–2022), Radnik Surdulica (2022–2023)
Dejan Vukomanović – BSK Borča (2011–2012, 2019–2020)
Aleksandar Vuković – Partizan (1999–2000), Milicionar Beograd (2000–2001)
Goran Zakarić – Partizan (2018–2019)
Almedin Ziljkić – Donji Srem (2014–2015), Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Damir Zlomislić – Vojvodina (2018–2019)
Milija Žižić – Javor Ivanjica (2002–2003)
Marko Žulj - Spartak Subotica (2021-2022)
Bosnian internationals that played in Serbian top league clubs only during Yugoslav period:
Elvir Bolić – Red Star (1991–1992)
Husref Musemić – Red Star (1985–1989)
Fahrudin Omerović – Partizan (1984–1992)
Admir Smajić – Partizan (1979–1988)
Nermin Šabić – Red Star (1991–1992)
Brazil
Adilson (Adilson dos Santos) – Red Star (1997–1998)
Adriano Strack (Adriano Guerra Strack) – Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Aílton (Aílton Gonçalves da Silva) – Red Star (2006–2007)
Anderson Costa (Anderson José de Jesús Costa) – Rad Beograd (2002–2003)
Anderson Marques (Anderson Marques de Oliveira) – Partizan (2011–2012)
Andrezinho (André Reinaldo de Souza Esposito) – Borac Čačak (2009–2010)
Bruno Matos (Bruno Oliveira de Matos) – Novi Pazar (2014–2015, 2015–(2016), Red Star (2015)–2016)
Cadú (Carlos Eduardo de Fiori Mendes) – Red Star (2009–2013)
Jonathan Cafú (Jonathan Renato Barbosa) – Red Star (2018–2019)
Caio (Caio Henrique Siqueira Sanchez) – Radnički Niš (2013–2014)
Cauê (Roberto Carvalho Cauê) – OFK Beograd (2009–2010)
Cléo (Cleverson Gabriel Cordova) – Red Star (2008–2009), Partizan (2009–2011)
Cristian (Cristian Daniel Dal Bello Fagundes) – Mladost GAT (2022–2023)
Edgar (Edgar Bruno da Silva) – Red Star (2008–2009)
Edison (Edison Alves do Amaral) – Radnički Kragujevac (2001–2002)
Edson Silva (Edson José da Silva) – Red Star (2015–2016)
Eduardo (Eduardo Ferreira Abdo Pacheco) – Partizan (2011–2013)
Eliomar (Eliomar Correia Silva) – Javor Ivanjica (2008–2012, 2015–2018,2021–present), Partizan (2012–2013), Mladost Lučani (2019–2020), Inđija (2020)–2021), Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Ely Thadeu (Ely Thadeu Bravin Rangel) – Red Star (2006–2007), Bežanija (2007–2008)
Emerson Brito (Emerson Rodrigues Brito) – Javor Ivanjica (2022–2023)
Endelson (Endelson Posipon Edu) – Sartid Smederevo (1997–1998)
Evandro (Evandro da Silva) – Proleter Novi Sad (2021–2022), Radnički Kragujevac (2022–2023)
Evandro Goebel – Red Star (2010–2012)
Everton Luiz (Everton Luiz Guimarães Bilher) – Partizan (2015–2018)
Fabinho Mauá (Fabio Moises Rosa) – OFK Beograd (2003–2004)
Fábio Silva (Fabio Carleandro da Silva) – Rad Beograd (2002–2005, 2006–2007), Red Star (2005)–2006), Hajduk Kula (2005–(2006), Napredak Kruševac (2007–2008)
Fabrício (Fabrício Silva Dornellas) – Partizan (2015–2016)
Richard Falcão aka Rei (Richard Amorim Falcão) – Novi Pazar (2014–2015)
Felipe Ferreira (Felipe de Figueiredo Ferreira) – Javor Ivanjica (2015–2016)
Ferreira (Josiesley Ferreira Rosa) – Red Star (2008–2009)
Fumaça (José Gomes Fumaça) – Red Star (1998–1999)
Gefferson Goulart (Gefferson da Silva Goulart) – Železnik (2003–2005)
Godoy (Rafael Godoy Pereira) – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2009)
Guiba (Guilherme Humberto da Silveira) – Red Star (1997–1998)
Matheus Índio (Matheus Salgueiro Pains) – Vojvodina (2023–present)
Jander (Jander Ribeiro Santana) – Red Star (2019–2020)
Jatobá (Carlos Roberto Jatobá) – Spartak Subotica (1990–1991)
Jean Carioca (Jean da Silva Duarte) – OFK Beograd (2002–2003)
Jeff Silva (Jefferson da Silva Nascimento) – Red Star (2008–2009)
Jefferson Batista (Jefferson Alexandre Batista) – Vojvodina (2008–2009)
João Paulo (João Paulo Santos de Oliveira Gomes) – Smederevo (2012–2013)
Juca (Juliano Roberto Antonello) – Partizan (2007–2009)
Leandro Montebeler (Leandro Rodrigues Montebeler) – Vojvodina (2008–2009), Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010)
Leandro Netto (Leandro Netto de Macedo) – OFK Beograd (2001–2004)
Leandro Pinto (Leandro Climaco Pinto) – Proleter Novi Sad (2018–2021), TSC Bačka Topola (2021–2022), Radnik Surdulica (2022-2023)
Leonardo (Leonardo da Silva Souza) – Partizan (2016–2017)
Lucas (Lucas Marques da Silva) – Smederevo (2012–2013)
Lucas Piasentin – Čukarički (2013–2017)
Marcinho (Marcio Teruel) – Jagodina (2012–2013)
Marcos (Marcos Fernando Souza Cilia) – OFK Beograd (2003–2004)
Marquinhos (Marco Antonio Carmo Anjos) – Spartak Subotica (1990–1991)
Mateus (Mateus Lima Cruz) – Borac Čačak (2017–2018)
Bruno Mezenga (Bruno Ferreira Mombra Rosa) – Red Star (2011–2012)
Osvaldo Monteiro – Spartak Subotica (1990–1991)
Gabriel Neves (Gabriel Vinicius Neves) – BSK Borča (2012–2013)
Vinícius Pacheco (Vinícius Pacheco dos Santos) – Red Star (2011–2012)
Picon (Fernando Picon da Silva) – OFK Beograd (2002–2003)
Marcelo Pletsch (Marcelo José Pletsch) – Vojvodina (2009–2010)
Rafael Carioca (Rafael Felipe Barreto) – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2010)
Renan (Renan Oliveira do Vale) – Smederevo (2009–2010)
Renan (Renan da Silva Alves) – Vojvodina (2017–2018)
Ricardinho (Ricardo Silva de Almeida) – Sloboda Užice (2010–2011)
Ricardinho (Ricardo Cavalcante Mendes) – Red Star (2017–2018)
Richard (Richard dos Santos de Almeida) – Čukarički (2022–2023)
Rivan (Rivanilton de França) – Rad Beograd (2001–2003), Hajduk Beograd (2002–(2003)
Ronaldo Viana (Ronaldo Aparecido Viana) – Železnik (2003–2005)
Rudison (Rudison Nogueira Ferreira) – Borac Čačak (2001–2002), OFK Beograd (2002–2003)
Matheus Saldanha (Matheus Bonifácio Saldanha Marinho) – Partizan (2023–present)
Pedro Sass Petrazzi – Borac Čačak (2015–2016)
Sávio (Sávio Oliveira do Vale) – Red Star (2009–2012)
Raúl Simplício – Sartid Smederevo (1997–1998)
Tai (Taianan Imbere Linhares Welker) – Napredak Kruševac (2014–2015)
Taigo (Taigo Vital Amorim de Araujo) – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2019)
Tiago (Tiago Galvão da Silva) – Sloboda Užice (2010–2014), Čukarički (2015–2016), Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Tiago (Tiago Freitas da Gama Alves) – Banat Zrenjanin (2007–2008)
Tom (Wellington Camargo do Nascimento) – Rad Beograd (2013–2014)
Vítor Hugo (Vitor Hugo Manique de Jesus) – Partizan (2007–2008)
Mateus Viveiros (Mateus Viveiros Andrade) – Red Star (2016–2017)
Washington (Washington Roberto Mariano da Silva) – Partizan (2008–2010), Borac Čačak (2010–2011)
William (William Artur de Oliveira) – OFK Beograd (2007–2009)
William Alves (William Rocha Alves) – Borac Čačak (2008–2012)
Willians (Willians Bartolomeu dos Santos) – Red Star (1998–1999)
Zé Luis (José Luis Boscolo) – Sartid Smederevo (1997–1998)
Zé Marcos (José Marcos Alves Luis) – Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Bulgaria
Todor Atanaskov – Red Star (1946–1948)
Ivan Bandalovski – Partizan (2014–2016)
Valeri Bojinov – Partizan (2015–2017)
Kostadin Gadzhalov – Borac Čačak (2010–2011)
Blagoy Georgiev – Red Star (2006–2007)
Ivan Ivanov – Partizan (2011–2013)
Zoran Janković – Železnik (1996–1998), Vojvodina (1998–2000), Inđija (2009–2011)
Veljko Jelenković – Vojvodina (2022–2023)
Anton Kuzmanov – Jedinstvo Beograd (1939–1941)
Angel Manolov – Hajduk Kula (2009–2012)
Asen Nikolov – Partizan (2006–2007)
Predrag Pažin – Partizan (1994–1999)
Radanov – Mitić Beograd (1942–1943)
Petar Shopov – Železnik (2001–2004)
Blagoy Simeonov – OFK Beograd (1946–1947)
Dragoljub Simonović – Obilić (1997–1999)
Kiril Simonovski – Partizan (1945–1950)
Yanaki Smirnov – Metalac G.M. (2016–2017)
Metodi Tomanov – Radnički Niš (1990–1992)
Iliyan Yordanov – Borac Čačak (2015–2016)
Burkina Faso
Nasser Djiga – Red Star (2023–present)
Dramane Salou – Partizan (2017–2018)
Cameroon
Macky Bagnack – Partizan (2020–2021)
Regis Baha – Napredak Kruševac (2018–2020), Mladost Lučani (2020–2023)
Pierre Boya – Partizan (2003–2007, 2010–2011)
Eric Djemba-Djemba – Partizan (2013–2014)
Thierry Ekwalla – Čukarički Stankom (2004–2005)
Thierry Etoungou – Radnički Niš (2022–present)
Fokim Fon Fondo – BSK Borča (2012–2013)
Ferdinand Fru Fon – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2019)
Patrick Kamgaing – Javor Ivanjica (2012–2013)
Daniel Kamy – Inđija (2020–2021)
Noé Kwin – Spartak Subotica (2012–2013)
John Mary – Vojvodina (2014–2016)
Bernard Mbassi – Rad Beograd (2002–2003)
Donald Molls – Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023), Mladost Lučani (2023–present)
Alexis N'Gambi – Partizan (2008–2009)
Jacques Nguemaleu – Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010)
Idriss Nguessi – Novi Pazar (2012–2013)
Aboubakar Oumarou – Red Star (2008–2009), OFK Beograd (2009–2010), Vojvodina (2010–2013), Partizan (2015–2016), Napredak Kruševac (2019–2021)
Claude Rygan – Partizan (2003–2004)
Jacques Ekangue Tabi – Hajduk Kula (2012–2013)
Léandre Tawamba – Partizan (2016–2018)
Didier Tayou – Sloboda Užice (2011–2013)
Michel Vaillant Mbiobe – Napredak Kruševac (2014–2015), Mladost Lučani (2015–2018)
Ibrahim Walidjo – Javor Ivanjica (2012–2015)
Basile Yamkam – Radnički Niš (2021–present)
Canada
Milan Borjan – Rad Beograd (2009–2011), Radnički Niš (2014–2015), Red Star (2017–2023)
Milan Božić – Zvezdara (2001–2002, 2013–2015), Hajduk Beograd (2002–2005)
Nikola Bursać – TSC Bačka Topola (2019–2022), Spartak Subotica (2022–2023)
Stefan Cebara – Rad Beograd (2009–2010), Vojvodina (2017–2018)
Derek Cornelius – Javor Ivanjica (2016–2019)
Srdjan Djekanović – Zemun (2001–2003), Radnički Obrenovac (2002–(2003)
Dejan Jakovic – Red Star (2008–2009)
Boban Kajgo – Smederevo (2009–2010)
Jovan Lučić – Rad Beograd (2014–2015, 2021–2022)
Aleksa Marković – Zemun (2015–2016, 2017–2018)
Mario Ostojić – Milicionar Beograd (1998–1999), Red Star (2000–2001)
Igor Prostran – Borac Čačak (2002–2004)
Mike Stojanovic – Radnički Kragujevac (1969–1973)
Cape Verde
Patrick Andrade – Partizan (2022–2023)
Ricardo Gomes – Partizan (2018–2019.2021–2023)
Central African Republic
David Manga – Partizan (2011–2012)
Chad
Misdongarde Betolngar – Red Star (2007–2008), Metalac G.M. (2009–2012)
Chile
Mario Berrios – OFK Beograd (2006–2007)
Sebastián Guerrero – Čukarički (2013–2014)
China
Cheng Mouyi – Spartak Subotica (2010–2011)
Dong Li – Metalac G.M. (2019–2021)
Jia Xiuquan – Partizan (1987–1989)
Li Chunyu – Rad Beograd (2009–2010)
Li Siqi – Inđija (2019–2020)
Liu Haiguang – Partizan (1987–1989)
Runze Hao – Radnički Niš (2019–2020)
Yuan Xue – Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017)
Wang Lei – Mladost Lučani (2017–2018)
Zhong Haoran – Spartak Subotica (2016–2017), Borac Čačak (2017–2018)
Chinese Taipei (Taiwan)
Tim Chow – Spartak Subotica (2018–2019)
Colombia
Andrés Colorado – Partizan (2022–2023)
Haider Landázuri – Proleter Novi Sad (2021–2022)
Cristian Martínez Borja – Red Star (2010–2012)
Mauricio Molina – Red Star (2007–2008)
Dilan Ortiz – Čukarički (2019–2020), Mačva Šabac (2020–2021), Proleter Novi Sad (2021–2022)
Nélson Pizarro – OFK Beograd (2006–2007)
Comoros
Ben (El Fardou Mohamed Ben Nabouhane) – Red Star (2017–2023)
Congo
Scott Bitsindou – Javor Ivanjica (2017–2018)
Prestige Mboungou – Metalac G.M. (2019–2021,2021–2022)
Congo D.R.
Jonathan Bolingi – Vojvodina (2023–present)
Aldo Kalulu – Partizan (2023–present)
Francis Masiya – Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Ibrahim Somé Salombo – Bežanija (2007–2008), Red Star (2008–2009)
Poba Yubu Touré – Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Costa Rica
John Jairo Ruiz – Red Star (2016–2017)
Côte d'Ivoire
Herve Amani – Javor Ivanjica (2017–2019)
Liam Ayad – Radnički Niš (2023–present)
Jean-Philippe Krasso – Red Star (2023–present)
Ismaël Béko Fofana – Partizan (2013–2016), Čukarički (2016–2018), Vojvodina (2018–2019)
Cèdric Gogoua – Partizan (2015–2017)
Bayéré Junior Loué – Javor Ivanjica (2023–present)
Ismaël Maïga – Radnički Niš (2022–2023
Marcel Metoua – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2011)
Salia Ouattara – Mladost Lučani (2014–2015)
Sékou Sanogo – Red Star (2019–2023)
Yacouba Silue – Mladost Lučani (2023–present)
Croatia
Excluded the players that played before 1991 when Croatia became independent.
Ivan Aleksić – Jagodina (2014–2015)
Dražen Bagarić – Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023)
Gavro Bagić – Hajduk Kula (2010–2011)
Mario Barić – Vojvodina (2013–2014)
Slavko Bralić – Vojvodina (2019–2021)
Boro Cvetković – Borac Čačak (1994–1995)
Dražen Cvjetković – Čukarički Stankom (1991–1994), Hajduk Kula (1994–1998)
Josip Čalušić – TSC Bačka Topola (2021–present)
Frane Čirjak – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Matej Delač – Vojvodina (2013–2014)
Igor Dević – OFK Beograd (2004–2007), Napredak Kruševac (2008–2009)
Dragan Dobrić – Hajduk Kula (2008–2009)
Duško Dukić – Jagodina (2007)–2008, 2010–2014, 2016–2017), Hajduk Kula (2007–2010), Voždovac (2013–(2014), Spartak Subotica (2014–2015)
Lazo Džepina – Rad Beograd (1990–1995)
Aleksandar Glamočak – Vojvodina (2000–2001)
Dejan Godar – Spartak Subotica (1996–1997), Vojvodina (1998–1999)
Ivica Gvozden – Rad Beograd (1990–1993)
Ronald Habi – OFK Kikinda (1996–1998), Vojvodina (1998–2002)
Nebojša Ivančević – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–2021)
Tomislav Ivičić – Napredak Kruševac (2014–2015)
Radovan Ivković – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2008–2010, 2012–2018)
Saša Jelovac – Zemun (1999–2000)
Veldin Karić – Vojvodina (1992–1993)
Ante Knezović – Zemun (2017–2018)
Ivan Konjević – Zemun (199_–1994)
Darko Lunc – Železničar Pančevo (2023–present)
Nikica Maglica – Proleter Zrenjanin (1988–1992)
Davor Magoč – Vojvodina (2003–2004)
Vinko Malenica – Vojvodina (1998–1999)
Slavko Mandić – Spartak Subotica (199_–1998)
Ljubomir Marčić – Hajduk Kula (1991–1993)
Milan Maričić – Rad Beograd (1991–1992)
Dušan Martić – Mladost Apatin (2005–2007)
Milenko Milićević – Zemun (1991–1993)
Miloš Mišić – Hajduk Kula (2010–2011)
Ante Mitrović – Metalac G.M. (2015–2017)
Mario Nikolić – Mačva Šabac (2020–2021)
Milan Pavličić – Radnički Niš (2012–2013)
Luka Pisačić – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–2021)
Predrag Počuča – Železnik (2003–2004)
Dejan Poljaković – Spartak Subotica (1997–2001)
Denis Prtenjača – Čukarički (1996–2000)
Ivan Radoš – Radnički Kragujevac (2021–2022)
Hrvoje Rizvanović – Vojvodina (2017–2019)
Goran Skeledžić – Spartak Subotica (1991–1994)
Zoran Stamenić – Mladost Apatin (2005–2007)
Dajan Šimac – Jagodina (2013–2015)
Marko Šimić – Jagodina (2010–2012), Radnički Kragujevac (2013)–2014), Novi Pazar (2013–(2014)
Marko Šimić – Radnički Kragujevac (2022–2023)
Filip Tomašković – Spartak Subotica (2021–2022)
Mile Vujasin – Mačva Šabac (2019–2020), Inđija (2020–2021)
Ante Vukušić – Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023)
Croatian internationals that played in Serbian top league clubs only during Yugoslav period:
Ivan Cvjetković – Rad Beograd (1985–1986)
Goran Jurić – Red Star (1987–1991)
Ardian Kozniku – Priština (1988–1990)
Robert Prosinečki – Red Star (1987–1991)
Kujtim Shala – Partizan (1983–1984), Priština (1984–1989)
Ivo Šeparović – Spartak Subotica (1984–1985)
Players that represented NDH (Independent State of Croatia):
Miroslav Brozović – Partizan (1946–1948)
Zlatko Čajkovski – Partizan (1946–1955)
Ernest Dubac – BSK Beograd (1937–1940)
Svetozar Džanić – Vojvodina (1934–1936)
Franjo Glaser – BSK Beograd (1933–1937), Partizan (1945–1947)
Ivan Jazbinšek – BSK Beograd (1935–1938)
Gustav Lechner – BSK Beograd (1934–1941)
Antun Lokošek – Naša Krila Zemun (1947–1948)
Florijan Matekalo – Partizan (1946–1947)
Antun Pogačnik – Jugoslavija (193_–193_)
Curaçao
Xander Severina – Partizan (2023–present)
Richairo Živković – Red Star (2021–2022)
Cyprus
Nikolas Asprogenis – Partizan (2004–2007)
Siniša Gogić – Radnički Niš (1982–1987), Rad Beograd (1987–1989)
Alexander Spoljaric – OFK Beograd (2014–2017)
Milenko Spoljaric – OFK Beograd (1989–1992)
Vladan Tomić – Radnički Niš (1990–1991)
Czech Republic
Including the periods of Bohemia and Czechoslovakia.
Josef Bener – BSK Beograd (1911–1912)
Nikola Beneš – Građanski Niš (1935–1936)
Vladan Binić – Napredak Kruševac (2007–2010), Rad Star (2010–2011), Radnički Kragujevac (2011)–2012), Spartak Subotica (2011–(2012), Radnički Niš (2012–2013)
Josef Čapek – Vojvodina (1919–1921)
Miloš Eckert – Srpski mač (1907–1911), BSK Beograd (1911–1914, 1918–1923)
František Haas – NAK Novi Sad (1935–1939), Vojvodina (1940–1941)
Otto Kohout – Srpski mač (1911), BSK Beograd (1911–1913)
František Kotrba – NAK Novi Sad (1935–1937)
Alois Machek – Jugoslavija (1913–1914, 1918–1926)
Eduard Mifek – Velika Srbija (1913–1914)
Josef Papo – Srpski mač (1908–1911), BSK Beograd (1911–1912)
Václav Petrovický – Jugoslavija (1913–1914, 1918–1921)
Tomáš Poláček – Sloboda Užice (2010–2011)
Josef Švácha – Srpski mač (1911), BSK Beograd (1911–1914)
Batko Voves – Mitić Beograd (1942–1943)
Denmark
Andrija Rajović – Spartak Subotica (2020–2021,2021–2022)
Ecuador
Augusto Batioja – Inđija (2010)–2011), OFK Beograd (2010–2013), Radnički Niš (2014–2015)
Walberto Caicedo – Metalac G.M. (2015–2017)
Segundo Castillo – Red Star (2006–2008)
José Gutiérrez – Novi Pazar (2014–2015)
Jainer Medina – Spartak Subotica (2017–2018)
José Mina – Novi Pazar (2014–2015)
Franklin Salas – Red Star (2007–2008)
Egypt
Ahmed Bogy – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2019)
Omar Fayed – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
El Salvador
Vladan Vicevic – Sloboda Užice (1986–1992, 1999–2002), Bečej (1992–1995)
Estonia
Mark Oliver Roosnupp – Napredak Kruševac (2022–2023)
Bogdan Vaštšuk – Voždovac (2023–present)
Finland
Lauri Dalla Valle – Zemun (2017–2018)
France
Jean-Christophe Bahebeck – Partizan (2020–2022)
Axel Bakayoko – Red Star (2020–2022)
Ivan Bek – BSK Beograd (1925–1928)
Maxime Benayer – BSK Beograd (1923–1924)
Loïs Diony – Red Star (2021–2022)
Boubacari Doucouré – Javor Ivanjica (2020–2021,2022–present), TSC Bačka Topola (2021–2022)
Maka Gakou – Radnički Niš (2022–2023)
Goran Jerković – Jagodina (2015–2016)
Damien Le Tallec – Red Star (2015–2018)
David Milinković – Rad Beograd (2012–2013)
Marko Muslin – Red Star (2003–2004)
Sacha Petshi – Sloboda Užice (2013–2014)
Wajdi Sahli – Radnički Kragujevac (2023–present)
Banfa Sylla – Rad Beograd (2011–2012)
Gaoussou Traoré – Radnički Niš (2023–present)
Gabon
Anselme Délicat – Vojvodina (1983–1986)
Guélor Kanga – Red Star (2016–2018,2020–present)
Gambia
Muhammed Badamosi – Čukarički (2022–2023)
Adama Jarjue – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Modou Jobe – Inđija (2020–2021)
Ousman Marong – Radnik Surdulica (2022–2023)
Sainey Njie – Radnik Surdulica (2023–present)
Georgia
Irakli Azarovi – Red Star (2022–2023)
Guram Giorbelidze – Vojvodina (2023–present)
Irakli Goginashvili – Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Mikheil Khutsishvili – Vojvodina (2008–2010)
Davit Kokhia – Vojvodina (2014–2015)
Giorgi Merebashvili – Vojvodina (2009–2012)
Giorgi Papunashvili – Radnički Niš (2022–2023)
Anton Tolordava – Radnički Niš (2022–2023)
Germany
Including West Germany from 1949 to 1990.
Alexander Arsovic – OFK Beograd (2002–2003), Red Star (2004–2005)
Milan Delević – IMT Beograd (2023–present)
Erich Feldmann – BUSK Beograd (1924–1925)
Nikola Ilić – Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Janko David Jeremic – Radnicki Kragujevac (2021–2022)
Luka Losic – Voždovac (2017–2019)
Marko Marin – Red Star (2018–2020)
Gustav Mut – Grafičar Beograd (1931–1932)
Karl Otterbein – Bačka Subotica (193x–1949)
Aleksandro Petrovic – Zemun (2006–2008), Čukarički Stankom (2007–(2008)
Matthias Predojević – Milicionar Beograd (1997–1999), Vojvodina (2001–2002)
Robert Puha – Spartak Subotica (1989–1990)
Thomas Vasov – Borac Čačak (1993–1996)
Ghana
Sadick Abubakar – Radnik Surdulica (2022–present)
Sadick Adams – Vojvodina (2009–2010)
Addoquaye Addo – Red Star (2007–2008)
Edmund Addo – Spartak Subotica (2022–2023), Red Star (2023–present)
Lee Addy – Red Star (2010–2012), Čukarički (2015–2016)
Dominic Adiyiah – Partizan (2010–2011)
Francis Afriyie – Vojvodina (2016–2018)
Samuel Afum – Spartak Subotica (2018–2019)
Gershon Akuffo – Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010)
Karim Alhassan – Radnički Kragujevac (2013–2014)
Johnson Amuzu – Javor Ivanjica (2023–present)
Ebenezer Annan – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Yaw Antwi – Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010), Vojvodina (2010–2013), Metalac G.M. (2011–(2012)
Bismarck Appiah – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2016–2017), Mladost Lučani (2017–2018)
Eric Appiah – Metalac G.M. (2021–2022)
Stephen Appiah – Vojvodina (2011–2012)
Alfred Arthur – Jagodina (2008–2009)
Kennedy Asamoah – Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Nathaniel Asamoah – Red Star (2011–2013)
Jonas Asare – Javor Ivanjica (2016–2018)
Joseph Bempah – Vojvodina (2016–2018), Proleter Novi Sad (2018–2019)
Richmond Boakye – Red Star (2016–2018, 2018–2021)
Kennedy Boateng – Jagodina (2008–2010)
Kwame Boateng – Metalac G.M. (2011–2012)
Kwaku Bonsu Osei – Spartak Subotica (2022–2023)
Francis Bossman – Sloboda Užice (2010–2012, 2014–2015), Jagodina (2012–2013)
Osman Bukari – Red Star (2022–present)
Joseph Cudjoe – Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2015)
Haminu Draman – Red Star (2005–2006)
Abraham Frimpong – Vojvodina (2011)–2012), Napredak Kruševac (2011–2016), Red Star (2016–2018)
Abdul Rashid Fuseini – TSC Bačka Topola (2022–2023)
Abel Hammond – Metalac G.M. (2010–2011)
Mohammed-Awal Issah – Red Star (2008–2011)
Kojo Kankam – Radnički Niš (2012–2013)
Owusu-Ansah Kontor – Metalac G.M. (2011–2015), Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Andy Francis Kumi – Radnički Niš (2023)–2024)
Francis Kyeremeh – Jagodina (2015–2016), Radnik Surdulica (2016–2019)
Abubakar Moro – Donji Srem (2014–2015)
Ibrahim Mustapha – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021), Red Star (2021)–2022,2022–2023), Novi Pazar (2021-(2022)
Abdul Rashid Obuobi – Donji Srem (2014–2016), Voždovac (2020–2021,2021-2022)
Ferdinand Opoku – Rad Beograd (2011–2012)
Quincy Osei – Hajduk Kula (2011–2012)
Godwin Osei Bonsu – Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2015)
Samuel Owusu – Radnik Surdulica (2014–2016), Čukarički (2017–2019,2022–2023)
Vilson Kwame Owusu – Čukarički (2019–2020)
Obeng Regan – Napredak Kruševac (2012–2014), Čukarički (2014–2017), Mladost Lučani (2020–2021)
Rashid Sumaila – Red Star (2018–2019)
Zakaria Suraka – Radnik Surdulica (2015–2016), Dinamo Vranje (2016–2019), Mladost Lučani (2019–2020)
Prince Tagoe – Partizan (2010–2011)
Ibrahim Tanko – Mladost Lučani (2019–2020), Javor Ivanjica (2020–present)
Michael Tawiah – Borac Čačak (2014–2015)
Greece
Theodoros Apostolidis – Bor (1969–1972)
Nikolaos Baxevanos – Spartak Subotica (2022–2023)
Diamantis Chouchoumis – Vojvodina (2018–2019)
Andreas Dermitzakis – Radnik Surdulica (2018–2019)
Galanos – Obilić (1942–1943)
Lefteris Matsoukas – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2020)
Nemanja Milojević – Čukarički (2016–2018), Vojvodina (2018–2019), Voždovac (2020–2022), Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023), Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Sifnios – Somborski SK (1930)
Dimitrios Tzinovits – IMT Beograd (2022–present)
Andreas Vlachomitros – Javor Ivanjica (2016–2017)
Michalis Zistakis – Jedinstvo Beograd (1924–1925), Radnički Beograd (1925–1926)
Guadeloupe
Kilian Bevis – Radnički Kragujevac (2023–present)
Thomas Phibel – Red Star (2016–2017)
Guinea
Abdoulaye Cissé – Novi Pazar (2020–2021, 2023–present)
Sekou Keita – Voždovac (2021–2022)
Seydouba Soumah – Partizan (2017–2018, 2019–2021), Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Kalla Toure – Sloboda Užice (2012–2013)
Guinea-Bissau
Bacar Baldé – Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Ednilson – Partizan (2007–2008)
Almami Moreira – Partizan (2007–2011), Vojvodina (2011–2013)
Zé Mário – Čukarički (2023–present)
Honduras
Luis Garrido – Red Star (2012–2013)
Hong Kong
Dejan Antonić – Spartak Subotica (1989–1990), Napredak Kruševac (1990–1992), Obilić (1994–1995)
Hungary
Including the period of Austro-Hungary.
Eugen Ábrahám aka Saraz II – Vojvodina (1923–1924)
János Báki – Radnički Kragujevac (1945–1946)
Lajos Barna – Bačka Subotica (1939–1940)
Árpád Blau – BSK Beograd (1920–1921)
Gyula Blau – Velika Srbija (1913–1914), Juda Makabi (1921–1923)
Bertalan Bocskay – TSC Bačka Topola (2021–2022)
Ferenc Bódi – NAK Novi Sad (1937–1942)
János Borsó – Vojvodina (1985–1986)
Rajmond Breznik – Juda Makabi (1923–1924), NTK Novi Sad (1924–1925)
Antun Copko – Bačka Subotica (191_–1923)
Géza Copko – Bačka Subotica (191_–1925)
Ladiszlav Csányi – Vojvodina (1967–1969)
Pál Dárdai – Vojvodina (1985–1986)
Dezső – Vojvodina (1919–1920)
Kálmán Dobi – NAK Novi Sad (1924–1925)
Sándor Dudás – Vojvodina (1921–1926)
József Dzurják – Spartak Subotica (1990–1991)
Gyula Ellbogen – BSK Beograd (1923–1924)
József Fábián – NAK Novi Sad (193x–194x)
István Gligor – OFK Beograd (1973–1974)
Árpád Gőgös – NAK Novi Sad (193x–1937)
Nándor Guttmann – Srpski mač (1908)
János Hajdú – NAK Novi Sad (1924–1925)
Nándor Hargitai – NAK Novi Sad (1940–1943)
Gyula Hegedűs – ŽAK Subotica (1935–1937)
Filip Holender – Partizan (2020–2022)
Gyula Horváth – NAK Novi Sad (1924–1925)
Zoltan Inotai – SAND Subotica (1927–1929)
Jenő Kalmár – Radnički Beograd (1945–1946)
János Karába – NAK Novi Sad (1936–1937)
Zsombor Kerekes – Bečej (1990–1996), Spartak Subotica (1996–1999)
László Köteles – Železnik (2002–2003)
Lajos Kovács – NAK Novi Sad (1937–1945)
Ede Krausz – SAND Subotica (1921–1923)
Bertalan Kun – Proleter Novi Sad (2021–2022)
József Lakatos – 14. Oktobar Niš (1946–1947)
Ferenc Makó – Partizan (195x–195x)
Béla Mayer – Somborski SK (1923–1924)
Tamás Nagy – Spartak Subotica (1990–1991)
Károly Nemes – NAK Novi Sad (1919–1924), Jugoslavija (1924–1925)
István Nyers – ŽAK Subotica (1941–1945), Spartak Subotica (1945–1946)
Mario Onhaus – Hajduk Kula (1999–2000)
Sándor Peics – Vojvodina (1929–1930)
Ferenc Plattkó – KAFK Kula (1921–1922)
Zsolt Radics – Spartak Subotica (1998–2001)
András Rózsa – ŽAK Kikinda (1935–1936)
József Rumos – NAK Novi Sad (193_–1941)
József Schaller – KAFK Kula (1924–1925)
Lajos Schönfeld aka Tusko – NAK Novi Sad (1918–1920), Vojvodina (1921–1922), BSK Beograd (1922–1924)
Vilmos Sipos – Jugoslavija (1930–1931)
Bence Sós – TSC Bačka Topola (2023–present)
Gyula Spitz – Partizan (1946–1947)
Toni Szabó – BSK Beograd (1921–1924)
Sándor Szluha – Vojvodina (1939–1940), NAK Novi Sad (1940–1942)
Adrián Szőke – TSC Bačka Topola (2022–2023)
Gusztáv Taupert – Bačka Subotica (1923)
Janos Thurzó – NAK Novi Sad (193x–1937)
Tőrők – BSK Beograd (1920–1921)
Flórián Urbán – Spartak Subotica (1999–2000)
Sándor Weisz – Juda Makabi (1921–1923), Vojvodina (1923–1927, 1928–1929)
Indonesia
Ilija Spasojević – Vojvodina (2002–2005), Borac Čačak (2009–2010)
Witan Sulaeman – Radnik Surdulica (2019–2021)
Iraq
Rebin Sulaka – Radnički Niš (2019–2020)
Israel
Omri Glazer – Red Star (2023–present)
Bibras Natcho – Partizan (2019–present)
Idan Vered – Red Star (2015–2016)
Italy
Giovanni Bertotto – Jedinstvo Beograd (1924–1925)
Luigi Di Franco – Jedinstvo Beograd (1937–1941), Jugoslavija (1941–1942)
Diego Falcinelli – Red Star (2020–2021)
Filippo Falco – Red Star (2020–2022)
Otmar Gazzari – BSK Beograd (1929–1933)
Emanuele Lirussi – OFK Beograd (2005–2006)
Henoc N′Gbesso – Radnički Kragujevac (2023–present)
Cristiano Piccini – Red Star (2021–2022)
Rodolfo Tommasi – BSK Beograd (1932–1933)
Jamaica
Norman Campbell – Čukarički (2021–2022), Javor Ivanjica (2022–2023), Vojvodina (2023–present)
Junior Flemmings – Voždovac (2023–present)
Japan
Takuma Asano – Partizan (2019–2021)
Mitsusuke Maruyama – Hajduk Kula (2002–2003)
Ryohei Michibuchi – Radnički Niš (2021–2023)
Ryohei Miyazaki – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–2021)
Shingo Morita – Rad Beograd (2003–2004)
Takuya Murayama – Zemun (2018–2019)
Ryosuke Nagasawa – Radnički Niš (2021–2022)
Ryota Noma – Radnički Niš (2016–2020)
Keisuke Ogawa – Sloboda Užice (2013–2014)
Shohei Okuno – Sloboda Užice (2013–2014)
Arihiro Sentoku – Voždovac (2022–2023)
Noboru Shimura – Spartak Subotica (2017–2019,2020–2023)
Takayuki Suzuki – Red Star (2005–2007)
Sho Yamamoto – Spartak Subotica (2019–2020)
Kazakhstan
Nenad Erić – Radnički Kragujevac (2001–2002), OFK Beograd (2003–2004, 2005–2006), Borac Čačak (2006–2008)
Maxim Fedin – Spartak Subotica (2014–2016)
Bauyrzhan Turysbek – Radnički Niš (2014–2015)
Aleksandr Zuyev – IMT Beograd (2023–present)
Kenya
Richard Odada – Red Star (2020–2021), Metalac G.M. (2021–2022)
Korea D.P.R.
Hong Yong-jo – Bežanija (2007–2008)
So Hyon-uk – Zemun (2018–2019)
Korea Republic
Byeon Jae-min – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2019)
Cho Yong-kyo – Mladost Apatin (2006–2007)
Ha Sang-hyun – Radnički Obrenovac (2003–2005)
Hwang In-beom – Red Star (2023–present)
Hwang Jong-won – Rad Beograd (2016–2018)
Jang Su-min – Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Jo Jin-ho – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Kim Chi-woo – Partizan (2004–2005)
Lee San-hyeon – Bežanija (2007–2009)
Park In-hyeok – Vojvodina (2017–2018)
Park Ji-soo – Borac Čačak (2016–2017)
Park Tae-gyu – Bežanija (2007–2010), BSK Borča (2012–2013)
Son Joon-hyo – Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Kosovo
Counting only players that played for Kosovo national team and in clubs within Serbian league system, after 1992, outside province of Kosovo.
Halil Asani – Vojvodina (2001–2002)
Ismet Berisha – Železnik (1997–1998)
Sead Gorani – Železnik (1998–2001)
Enes Maliqi – Milicionar Beograd (1997–1998)
Isa Sadriu – Partizan (1985–1986)
Nermin Useni – Javor Ivanjica (2001–2003), Radnički Obrenovac (2002–(2003), Radnički Beograd (2003–2005), Hajduk Kula (2005–2006), Mladost Lučani (2006–2008, 2011–2013)
Krajina
Zoran Čugalj – Sartid Smederevo (1995–1998)
Zoran Dragišić – Hajduk Beograd (1999–2000)
Sergej Tica – Budućnost Valjevo (199x–1997), Milicionar Beograd (1997–1998), Priština (1998–1999)
Kyrgyzstan
Tamirlan Kozubayev – Jagodina (2015–2016)
Anton Zemlianukhin – Radnički Niš (2014–2016)
Latvia
Including the period of Soviet Union.
Oļegs Karavajevs – OFK Beograd (1990–1993)
Jevgēņijs Kazačoks – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–2021)
Anastasijs Mordatenko – Radnički Niš (2016–2017)
Kaspars Svārups – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–2021)
Liberia
Seku Conneh – Vojvodina (2018–2019)
Christian Essel – Radnički Kragujevac (2011–2012)
Omega Roberts – Sloboda Užice (2011–2012), Smederevo (2012–2013), Red Star (2013–2014), Borac Čačak (2014–2015)
Libya
Mohamed El Monir – Jagodina (2011–2014), Partizan (2016–2018)
Mohamed Zubya – Partizan (2012–2013)
Lithuania
Including the period of Soviet Union.
Justas Lasickas – Zemun (2017–2018), Voždovac (2019–2022)
Daniel Romanovskij – Zemun (2018–2019)
Kęstutis Ruzgys – OFK Beograd (1991–1992)
Mali
Kalifa Coulibaly – Red Star (2022–2023)
Fousseni Diabaté – Partizan (2022–2023)
Lassana N'Diaye – Radnički Niš (2023–present)
Bakary Nimaga – Radnički Niš (2023–present)
Sambou Sissoko – Čukarički (2022–present)
Hamidou Traoré – Partizan (2022–2023)
Mamadou Traoré – Vojvodina (2022–2023)
Malta
Andrei Agius – Zemun (2003–2004)
Nenad Veselji – OFK Beograd (1988–1994)
Moldova
Vitalie Bulat – Novi Pazar (2013)–2014), OFK Beograd (2013–(2014)
Montenegro
Excluded the players that played before 2006 when Montenegro became independent. Montenegrin players that were internationals for FR Yugoslavia/Serbia and Montenegro are indicated in italics.
Bojan Adžić - Spartak Subotica (2021–2022), Radnički Kragujevac (2023–present)
Vladan Adžić – OFK Beograd (2012–2014)
Aldin Adžović – Borac Čačak (2015–2016)
Srđan Ajković – Rad Beograd (2009–2012, 2017–2019), BSK Borča (2012–2014)
Ermin Alić – Spartak Subotica (2015–2016)
Dražen Anđušić – BSK Borča (2010–2014)
Emir Azemović – Zemun (2018–2019), Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023), Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Sead Babača – OFK Beograd (2000–2001), Proleter Zrenjanin (2001–2002), Zemun (2005–2007)
Boban Bajković – Red Star (2003–2004, 2007–2014), Smederevo (2006–(2007)
Blažo Bakrač – Borac Čačak (2011–2012)
Miloš Bakrač – OFK Beograd (2010–2012)
Saša Balić – OFK Beograd (2007–2008)
Sead Banda – OFK Beograd (2008–2009)
Zoran Banović – Red Star (2004–2008)
Jovan Baošić – Jagodina (2015–2016)
Marko Baša – OFK Beograd (2000–2001, 2002–2005)
Veljko Batrović – Radnički Niš (2019–2020)
Dušan Bigović – Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Ramazan Bišević – Novi Pazar (2012–2013)
David Bjelica - Mladost Lučani (2022–2023)
Dragan Bogavac – Red Star (2001–2005), OFK Beograd (2012–2014)
Ivan Bojović – Čukarički Stankom (2001–2005, 2007–2008), Voždovac (2006–2007)
Marko Bojović - Napredak Kruševac (2022-present)
Dejan Boljević – Smederevo (2011–2012), Novi Pazar (2012–2013), Čukarički (2013–2016), Voždovac (2016–2017)
Darko Bošković – Mladost Apatin (2004–2008), Spartak Subotica (2008–2011), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2016–2017)
Ivan Bošković – Vojvodina (2006–2007), Borac Čačak (2007–2008)
Bojan Božović – Napredak Kruševac (2013–2015), Spartak Subotica (2015–2016)
Darko Božović – Bežanija (2005–2007), Partizan (2007–2010), Sloboda Užice (2010–2012), Voždovac (2014–2015)
Mladen Božović – Partizan (2007–2010)
Vladimir Božović – OFK Beograd (2001–2002, 2003–2007)
Miloš Brnović – Radnički Kragujevac (2021–present)
Nenad Brnović – Hajduk Kula (1998–1999), Partizan (2004–2009), Rad Beograd (2008–(2009)
Marko Bugarin - Spartak Subotica (2022–2023)
Boris Bulajić – Borac Čačak (2015–2016)
Darko Bulatović – Radnički Niš (2014–2016), Čukarički (2016–2017), Voždovac (2017–2018)
Radosav Bulić – Sartid Smederevo (1998–2001, 2003–2004), Red Star (2001–2002), Radnički Obrenovac (2002–2003), FK Voždovac (2005–2007)
Igor Burzanović – Red Star (2006–2009)
Lazar Carević - Vojvodina (2022–present)
Stefan Cicmil – Radnički Niš (2012–2013), Spartak Subotica (2013–2014), Mladost Lučani (2014–2015)
Jovan Čađenović – Zemun (2017)–2018), Borac Čačak (2017–(2018), Metalac G.M. (2021-2022)
Nikola Čelebić – BSK Borča (2011–2013)
Marko Ćetković – Partizan (2007–2008)
Nemanja Ćosović – Donji Srem (2013–2014)
Mitar Ćuković – Proleter Novi Sad (2017–2019), Napredak Kruševac (2019–2022)
Dejan Damjanović – Železnik (2000–2003), FK Bežanija (2003–2007), Radnički Beograd (2003–2005)
Dejan Damjanović – Napredak Kruševac (2009)–2010)
Slavko Damjanović – Spartak Subotica (2012–2013), TSC Bačka Topola (2019–2021), Novi Pazar (2022-2023)
Danilo Dašić – Radnički Niš (2019–2020), Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–present)
Uroš Delić – Rad Beograd (2005–2011, 2013–2014), Metalac G.M. (2015–2016), Borac Čačak (2016–2018)
Stefan Denković – Vojvodina (2013–2014), Spartak Subotica (2018–2021)
Andrija Dragojević – OFK Beograd (2012–2013)
Miloš Dragojević – OFK Beograd (2014–2015)
Nikola Drinčić – Partizan (2003–2004, 2013–2015), Budućnost Banatski Dvor (2005–2006), Rad Beograd (2016–2017), Čukarički (2017–2018), Radnički Niš (2018–2019), Vojvodina (2019–present)
Mišo Dubljanić – Spartak Subotica (2018–2023)
Aleksandar Dubljević – Inđija (2010)–2011)
Miloš Đalac – Novi Pazar (2010–2012)
Radomir Đalović – Red Star (2000–2001), Železnik (2001–2002)
Lazar Đokić – Donji Srem (2014–2015), Spartak Subotica (2016–2017), Dinamo Vranje (2016–2017, 2018–present), Čukarički (2017–2018)
Stefan Đorđević – Vojvodina (2016–2017)
Uroš Đuranović – Javor Ivanjica (2015)–2016), Radnički Niš (2020–2021), Kolubara Lazarevac (2021–2022, 2022-present)
Aleksa Đurasović - Spartak Subotica (2022–present)
Zoran Đurašković – Mladost Lučani (1999–2002), Železnik (2002–2005), Smederevo (2005–2009)
Uroš Đurđević – Rad Beograd (2011–2014), Partizan (2016–2018)
Vuk Đurić – Hajduk Kula (2010–2011), Sloboda Užice (2011–2012, 2015–2016)
Duško Đurišić – OFK Beograd (1993–2000), Vojvodina (2009–2010)
Ljubomir Đurović – Mladost Lučani (2007–2009)
Nenad Đurović – Inđija (2009–2011)
Ivan Fatić – Vojvodina (2013–2014)
Denis Fetahović – Javor Ivanjica (2005–2007)
Marko Filipović – Čukarički Stankom (2009–2010, 2011–2012)
Savo Gazivoda – Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017), Radnički Niš (2017–2018), Rad Beograd (2020–present)
Vladan Giljen – OFK Beograd (2013–2014)
Nikola Gluščević – Proleter Novi Sad (2020–present)
Nemanja Gojačanin – Javor Ivanjica (2013–2015)
Tigran Goranović – Čukarički (2014–2015)
Petar Grbić – OFK Beograd (2012–2013), Partizan (2013–2016), Radnički Niš (2018–2019)
Žarko Grbović – Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Bojan Grdinić – BSK Borča (2008–2011)
Boško Guzina – Rad Beograd (2014–2015, 2016–2018)
Vladimir Ilić – Javor Ivanjica (2006–2010), Jagodina (2010–2015)
Mirko Ivanić – Vojvodina (2013–2016), Red Star (2018–present)
Igor Ivanović – OFK Beograd (2012–2014)
Branislav Janković – Čukarički (2015–2017)
Marko Janković – OFK Beograd (2014–2015), Partizan (2016–2019)
Milan Jelovac - Spartak Subotica (2021-2022)
Milan Jovanović – Mladost Lučani (2001–2002), Železnik (2002–2003), Red Star (2012–2013)
Stevan Jovetić – Partizan (2005–2008)
Vladimir Jovović – Red Star (2015)–2016), OFK Beograd (2015–(2016), Napredak Kruševac (2016)–2017), Spartak Subotica (2016–(2017)
Asmir Kajević – BSK Borča (2008–2012), Čukarički (2016–2022), Vojvodina (2023–present)
Miloš Kalezić - Novi Pazar (2021-2022)
Vasko Kalezić – Vojvodina (2017–2018), Spartak Subotica (2020–present)
Darko Karadžić – Rad Beograd (2008–2009), Spartak Subotica (2010–2011)
Nemanja Kartal – Radnički Niš (2016–2017)
Filip Kasalica – OFK Beograd (2004–2007), Hajduk Kula (2007–2011), Sloboda Užice (2011)–2012), Red Star (2011–2014), Napredak Kruševac (2016–2018), Rad Beograd (2018–2020), Radnički Niš (2020–2022)
Mladen Kašćelan – OFK Beograd (2004–2006), Voždovac (2006–2007)
Petar Kasom – Partizan (1998–2000), Budućnost Banatski Dvor (2002–2006), Smederevo (2006–2008)
Ivan Kecojević – Čukarički Stankom (2009–2010), OFK Beograd (2010–2012)
Luka Klikovac – Vojvpdina (2014–2015)
Damir Kojašević – Vojvodina (2017–2018), Radnički Niš (2018–2019)
Boris Kopitović – Čukarički (2016–2019), Vojvodina (2021–2022), Javor Ivanjica (2022-present)
Žarko Korać – Vojvodina (2007–2009)
Marko Kordić – Vojvodina (2011–2013, 2013–2017), Napredak Kruševac (2019–2020)
Šaleta Kordić – Vojvodina (2011–2012,2015–2016), Železničar Pančevo (2022–2024)
Nebojša Kosović – Vojvodina (2010–2014), Partizan (2015–2019)
Igor Kostić – Hajduk Kula (2010–2011)
Danko Kovačević – Čukarički Stankom (2010–2012)
Ljubomir Kovačević – Zemun (2018–2019), Rad Beograd (2019–present)
Miloš Kovačević – Hajduk Kula (2008–2013)
Slaven Kovačević – Zemun (2004–2007)
Nedjeljko Kovinić – Radnički Kragujevac (2021–2022)
Ivica Kralj – Partizan (1995–1998, 2000–2001, 2003–2007)
Miloš Krkotić – Metalac G.M. (2016–2017)
Nikola Krstović – Red Star (2019–2021)
Alija Krnić – Javor Ivanjica (2017–2020,2021–present)
Filip Kukuličić – Zemun (2018–2019)
Dušan Lagator – Čukarički (2015–2018)
Risto Lakić – Partizan (2007–2008), Vojvodina (2008–2010)
Blažo Lalević – Hajduk Kula (2004–2005, 2006–2008, 2009–2011)
Ilija Lalević – Budućnost Banatski Dvor (2005–2006), Banat Zrenjanin (2006–2009, 2011–2013)
Igor Lambulić – BSK Borča (2011–2012)
Uroš Leković – BSK Borča (2012–2013)
Stefan Lončar – Rad Beograd (2016–2017), Novi Pazar (2021–2023)
Stefan Lukačević – Metalac G.M. (2015–2017)
Bojan Magud – Zemun (2015–2018)
Luka Malešević – Radnik Surdulica (2021–2022)
Staniša Mandić – Čukarički (2013–2017), Metalac G.M. (2021-2022)
Ivan Maraš – Hajduk Kula (2008–2011)
Stevan Marković – OFK Beograd (2010–2012)
Rastko Marsenić – TSC Bačka Topola (2021–2022)
Vuk Martinović – OFK Beograd (2015–2016)
Adam Marušić – Voždovac (2010–2014)
Aleksa Marušić - Mladost GAT (2022–2023)
Luka Merdović – OFK Beograd (2010–2011), Metalac G.M. (2014–2016), Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017)
Milan Mešter – Hajduk Kula (2001–2003), Zemun (2003–2004, 2005–2007)
Stefan Mihajlović – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2018–present)
Čedomir Mijanović – Zemun (2004–2007)
Nemanja Mijušković – OFK Beograd (2009–2010)
Kostadin Mikić – Čukarički (2015–2016)
Mirko Milikić – Inđija (2020–2021)
Maksim Milović – Voždovac (2017–2018), Mladost Lučani (2019–2023)
Miloš Milović – Voždovac (2020~2023)
Filip Mitrović – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–present)
Miloš Mrvaljević – OFK Beograd (2006–2009, 2009–(2010), 2010–2012), Hajduk Kula (2008–(2009)
Marko Mugoša – Borac Čačak (2007–2009, 2011–2014), Red Star (2009–2010), Jagodina (2010–2011), Novi Pazar (2011)–2012)
Bojica Nikčević – Čukarički (2018–2019, 2023–present), Novi Pazar (2020–2023)
Baćo Nikolić – Borac Čačak (2013–2015)
Jovan Nikolić – Rad Beograd (2010–2011), Hajduk Kula (2011–2012)
Nemanja Nikolić – Red Star (2008–2010), Spartak Subotica (2010–2011), OFK Beograd (2011–2013), Voždovac (2016–2020), Kolubara Lazarevac (2021–present)
Srđan Nikolić – Obilić (2005–2009)
Stefan Nikolić – OFK Beograd (2007–2008), Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017, 2018–2019), Napredak Kruševac (2017–2018)
Milko Novaković – Banat Zrenjanin (2007–2008), Vojvodina (2010–2011, 2013–2016), Javor Ivanjica (2011–2013), BSK Borča (2012–(2013)
Mitar Novaković – Čukarički Stankom (2001–2003), Železnik (2003–2005), Rad Beograd (2005–2006), OFK Beograd (2006–2008, 2013–2014)
Marko Obradović - Spartak Subotica (2022–2023), Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Dejan Ognjanović – Partizan (2001–2004), FK Obilić (2005–2006), Smederevo (2009–2011, 2012–2013)
Petar Orlandić – Red Star (2014–2017)
Nemanja Ostojić – Radnički Niš (2012–2013)
Petar Pavićević – Vojvodina (2019–present)
Savo Pavićević – Hajduk Kula (1999–2008), Vojvodina (2007–(2008), Red Star (2013–2016), Spartak Subotica (2016–2017)
Vojin Pavlović – Inđija (2019–2020)
Balša Peličić – Donji Srem (2014–2015)
Mihailo Perović – Voždovac (2017–2018)
Periša Pešukić – Partizan (2019–2020), Novi Pazar (2020–2023)
Igor Petković – Mladost Apatin (2001–2002), Čukarički Stankom (2007–2008)
Luka Petričević – Jagodina (2012–2014)
Rade Petrović – Borac Čačak (2006–2008)
Igor Poček – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Dragoslav Poleksić – Hajduk Kula (1995–1996), Radnički Obrenovac (2003–2004), Radnički Beograd (2004–2006), Inđija (2007–2011)
Balša Popović - Kolubara Lazarevac (2021–present)
Nikola Popović – Spartak Subotica (2017–2018)
Milan Purović – Red Star (2005–2007), OFK Beograd (2011–2012), Spartak Subotica (2016–2017), Radnik Surdulica (2017–2018)
Dejan Račić – Voždovac (2015–2017)
Miloš Radanović – Budućnost Banatski Dvor/Banat Zrenjanin (2004–2006), Smederevo (2007–2008)
Vasilije Radenović – BSK Borča (2012–2013, 2016–2017), Proleter Novi Sad (2017–2019)
Nikola Radojičić – Smederevo (2012–2013)
Dragoljub Radoman - Mladost GAT (2022–2023)
Srđan Radonjić – Partizan (2003–2007)
Aleksandar Radović – BSK Borča (2011–2012)
Igor Radović – Milicionar Beograd (2000–2001), OFK Beograd (2001–2004), Hajduk Beograd (2004–2005), Hajduk Kula (2005–2006), Vojvodina (2006–2007)
Ilija Radović – Vojvodina (2007–(2008), Spartak Subotica (2013–2015), Napredak Kruševac (2014–(2015)
Andrija Radulović - Red Star (2020-2021), Mladost GAT (2022)-2023), Radnik Surdulica (2022-2023), Vojvodina (2023–present)
Danilo Radulović – Borac Čačak (2009–(2010)
Miloš Radulović – Napredak Kruševac (2014–2015)
Pavle Radulović - Voždovac (2020-2022)
Risto Radunović – Borac Čačak (2014–2015)
Milivoje Raičević – OFK Beograd (2011–2012)
Marko Rakonjac – Čukarički (2016–2019,2020–2022), Red Star (2022–2023), TSC Bačka Topola (2023–present)
Momčilo Rašo – Radnički Kragujevac (2021–2022)
Stevan Reljić – Red Star (2009–2011, 2012–2013), Borac Čačak (2011–2012)
Vladimir Rodić – Rad Beograd (2012–2015, 2016–2017)
Bojan Roganović – Čukarički (2021–present)
Slobodan Rubežić – Čukarički (2018–2019, 2020–2021), Novi Pazar (2019–2020, 2021–2023),
Anđelo Rudović – Spartak Subotica (2017–2018)
Niša Saveljić – Hajduk Kula (1993–1994), Partizan (1994–1997, 2000–(2001), 2005–2007)
Stefan Savić – BSK Borča (2008–2010), Partizan (2010–2011)
Vladan Savić – Mladost Apatin (2000–2003), Voždovac (2006–2007)
Vukan Savićević – Red Star (2012–2015)
Nemanja Sekulić – Vojvodina (2012–2013)
Radislav Sekulić – Čukarički (2013–2014)
Marko Simić – Jagodina (2010–2011)
Đorđije Spahić – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2017–2018)
Marko Stanovčić – Smederevo (2012–2013)
Slaven Stjepanović – Partizan (2007–2008), Vojvodina (2008–2010)
Filip Stojković – Red Star (2011–2012, 2017–2019), Čukarički (2012–2016)
Aleksandar Šćekić – Partizan (2018–2022, 2023–present)
Nemanja Ščekić – Čukarički Stankom (2009–2011), Javor Ivanjica (2017–2018), Zemun (2018–2019)
Nikola Šipčić - Rad Beograd (2016-2020)
Aleksandar Šofranac – Javor Ivanjica (2013–2015)
Jovan Tanasijević – Vojvodina (1997–2003), Inđija (2010–2011)
Luka Tiodorović – Smederevo (2012–2013), Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2015)
Žarko Tomašević – Partizan (2012–2013)
Goran Trobok – Partizan (1997–2003), Smederevo (2006–2007)
Ilija Tučević – Rad Beograd (2020–present)
Janko Tumbasević – Vojvodina (2007–2011, (2013)–2014, 2014–2015), Spartak Subotica (2013–(2014, 2015–2016, 2022–2023), Mladost Lučani (2016–2019,2021-2022,2023–present), TSC Bačka Topola (2019–2021)
Uroš Vemić – Zemun (2006–2007), Jagodina (2008–2009)
Marko Vešović – Red Star (2010–2014)
Stefan Vico – Rad Beograd (2012–2015, 2016–2019), Javor Ivanjica (2020–2023)
Marko Vidović – Spartak Subotica (2013–2014), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2016–2017), Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Nedeljko Vlahović – Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017)
Nemanja Vlahović – OFK Beograd (2015–2016)
Bojan Vlaović – Metalac G.M. (2019–present)
Vladimir Volkov – Radnički Beograd (2004–2005), OFK Beograd (2008–2009), Partizan (2011–2015), Radnički Niš (2016–2017), Rad Beograd (2017–2019)
Filip Vorotović – Borac Čačak (2017)–2018), Spartak Subotica (2017–(2018)
Marko Vučić - Novi Pazar (2022-2023)
Jovan Vučinić – Smederevo (2011–2012), Jagodina (2013–2014)
Igor Vujačić – Vojvodina (2012–2014), Partizan (2019–present)
Vule Vujačić – Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Nikola Vujadinović – Javor Ivanjica (2011–2012), Radnički Niš (2021–2022), Čukarički (2022)-2023), Mladost GAT (2022–2023), Železničar Pančevo (2023–present)
Luka Vujanović – Vojvodina (2017–2018)
Nikša Vujanović – Spartak Subotica (2019–2021), Voždovac (2022–present)
Nikola Vujnović – Rad Beograd (2014–2015), Voždovac (2020–2022,2022–present)
Miladin Vujošević – Jagodina (2014–2015)
Branko Vujović – Javor Ivanjica (2008–2009), Metalac G.M. (2009–2010)
Goran Vujović – Banat Zrenjanin (2006–2008)
Nikola Vujović – Partizan (2008–2009)
Predrag Vujović – Napredak Kruševac (2001–2005, 2007–2010), FK Vojvodina (2006)–2007), Borac Čačak (2006–(2007)
Marko Vukasović – Vojvodina (2016–2018)
Mladen Vukasović – Radnik Surdulica (2016–2017)
Andrija Vukčević – Spartak Subotica (2017–2019)
Ivan Vukčević – Vojvodina (2021–2023)
Marko Vukčević – Vojvodina (2015–2016)
Simon Vukčević – Partizan (2002–2006), Vojvodina (2013–2014)
Rade Vukotić – OFK Beograd (2001–2002, 2003–2005), Borac Čačak (2005–2006), Bežanija (2007–2008)
Ivan Vuković – OFK Beograd (2014–2015)
Novak Vuković – Voždovac (2018–present)
Milan Vušurović – Napredak Kruševac (2019–2020)
Dejan Zarubica – OFK Beograd (2013–2015)
Miloš Zečević - Kolubara Lazarevac (2021–2022)
Bojan Zogović – Metalac G.M. (2014–2016, 2017–(2018), Novi Pazar (2016)–2017, 2023–present), Radnički Niš (2016–2017), Rad Beograd (2017)–2018), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2018–2019)
Stefan Zogović – Vojvodina (2009–2010), Donji Srem (2013–2014)
Igor Zonjić – Mladost Lučani (2013–2015), Rad Beograd (2017–2018)
Darko Zorić – Borac Čačak (2015–2016), Čukarički (2016–2019)
Nikola Zvrko – Mladost Lučani (2016–2018), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2017–(2018)
Gojko Žižić – Čukarički Stankom (2010–2011), Metalac G.M. (2011–2012)
Montenegrin internationals that only played in Serbian top league clubs before Montenegrin independence.
Radoslav Batak – Vojvodina (1997–1998, 1999–2003)
Branko Bošković – Red Star (1998–2004)
Bojan Brnović – Partizan (2003–2005), Obilić (2004–(2005)
Đorđije Ćetković – Čukarički Stankom (2002–2003), Železnik/Voždovac (2003–2006)
Andrija Delibašić – Partizan (1999–2004)
Miodrag Džudović – OFK Beograd (2002–2004)
Vladimir Gluščević – Borac Čačak (2004–2005), Rad Beograd (2005–2006)
Milorad Peković – OFK Beograd (1994–1999, 2001–2002), Partizan (1999–2001)
Mirko Raičević – Obilić (2002–2003)
Namibia
Rudolf Bester – Čukarički Stankom (2007–2009)
Eliphas Shivute – Čukarički Stankom (2001–2002)
Hendrik Somaeb – Zemun (2018–2019)
Netherlands
Lorenzo Ebecilio – Red Star (2018–2019)
Serginho Greene – Vojvodina (2012–2013)
Aleksandar Janković – Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2015)
Rajiv van La Parra – Red Star (2019–2020)
Queensy Menig – Partizan (2021–present)
Mink Peeters – Čukarički (2019–2020)
New Zealand
Adam Mitchell – Red Star (2016)–2017)
Marko Stamenic – Red Star (2023–present)
Nigeria
Adetunji Adeshina – Novi Pazar (2022–present)
Sunday Adetunji – Čukarički (2023–present)
Abiodun Dayo Adeyoriju – Borac Čačak (2009–2010)
Uche Agbo – Rad Beograd (199_–199_), Obilić (1995–1997)
Victor Agbo – Jagodina (2010–2011)
Kelvin Agho – Voždovac (2023–present)
Sampson Agoha – Voždovac (2023–present)
Donald Agu – Obilić (1994–1995)
Nnaemeka Ajuru – Javor Ivanjica (2004–2005, 2006–2009, 2014–2016), Vojvodina (2009–2013), Spartak Subotica (2016–2017)
Uche Akubuike – Hajduk Kula (200_–200_)
Victor Amos – Mladost Lučani (2018–2020)
Kevin Amuneke – Sloboda Užice (2013–2014)
Izuchuckwu Anthony – Radnički Kragujevac (2023–present)
Collins Atule – Spartak Subotica (2023–present)
Franklin Ayodele – Mladi Radnik (2009–2010)
Toheeb Bamigboye – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Shedrack Charles – IMT Beograd (2021–present)
Geoffrey Chinedu – Radnički Kragujevac (2022-present)
Michael Jaja Dagogo – Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Abiola Dauda – Red Star (2012–2014)
Eddy Dombraye – OFK Beograd (2002–2003)
John Okoye Ebuka – Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Okosi Edhere – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2017–2018)
Frank Egharevba – Javor Ivanjica (2009–2010)
Ifeanyi Emeghara – Partizan (2004–2006)
Patrick Friday Eze – Rad Beograd (2013)–2014), Napredak Kruševac (2013–(2014), Mladost Lučani (2014–2015, 2023–present)
Ikechukwu Ezeh – Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010)
Bassey Howells – Spartak Subotica (2018–2019)
Anthony Agha Ibiam – Javor Ivanjica (2008–2009)
Timothy Idogbe – Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010)
Ifeanyi Igbodo – Javor Ivanjica (2002–2004, 2007–2008)
Victor Jideonwor – Javor Ivanjica (2005–2008)
Moses John – Zemun (2018–2019)
Anthony Lokosa – Železničar Pančevo (2023–present)
Adekunle Lukmon – Borac Čačak (2004–2005)
Oladipupo Martins – Partizan (2002–2003)
Samuel Nnamani – Jagodina (2014–2015)
Gabriel Obegpa – IMT Beograd (2022–present)
Obiora Odita – Javor Ivanjica (2003–2005, (2006)–2007, (2010)–2011, 2011–2012,2021–2022), Partizan (2005–2007), Voždovac (2014–2016), Mladost Lučani (2016–2021)
Ugochukwu Oduenyi – Javor Ivanjica (2021–2023)
Hypolite Emeka Oguegbu – Javor Ivanjica (2010–2011)
Obele Okeke Onyebuchi – Javor Ivanjica (2002–2003)
Eze Okeuhie – Vojvodina (2017–2019), Čukarički (2019–2021)
Samuel Okon – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2019)
Solomon Oladele – Jagodina (2008–2009)
Peter Olayinka – Red Star (2023–present)
Daniel Olerum – Sloboda Užice (2012–2013)
Emmanuel Oletu – Spartak Subotica (2008–2010)
Peter Omoduemuke – Obilić (2004–2007)
Ifeanyi Onyilo – Javor Ivanjica (2009–2013), Red Star (2013–2014)
Umar Sadiq – Partizan (2019–2021)
Gbolahan Salami – Red Star (2014–2015)
Okomayin Segun Onimisi – Dinamo Vranje (2016–2020)
Jesse Sekidika – Napredak Kruševac (2015–2018)
Theophilus Solomon – Partizan (2017–2018)
Obinna Tochukwu – Javor Ivanjica (2015–2016)
Prince Lucky Ukachukwu – IMT Beograd (2022–present)
Ugo Ukah – Čukarički (2014–2015)
Eke Uzoma – Spartak Subotica (2015–2016)
Taribo West – Partizan (2002–2004)
Abdul Zubairu – Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023)
North Macedonia
Named F.Y.R. Macedonia until 2019. Excluded the players that played before 1992 when Macedonia became independent.
Emil Abaz – Spartak Subotica (2016–2018)
Ivan Aleksovski – Spartak Subotica (2020–2021)
Fikret Alomerović – Radnički Niš (199_–199_)
Aleksa Amanović – Javor Ivanjica (2015–2020)
Stefan Andrić – Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2016)
Stefan Aškovski – Partizan (2012–2013), Donji Srem (2013)–2014), Napredak Kruševac (2013–(2014), Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Daniel Avramovski – Red Star (2014–2015, 2016–2017), OFK Beograd (2015–2016), Vojvodina (2017–2018)
David Babunski – Red Star (2015–2017)
Aleksandar Bajevski – OFK Beograd (2002–2003), Radnički Niš (2012–2013)
Goran Bogdanović – Rad Beograd (2012–2013)
Nikola Bogdanovski – Radnik Surdulica (2019–2022), Novi Pazar (2019-2020, 2022–present)
Ivica Cvetanovski – Sloboda Užice (1989–1993, 1993–1996), Napredak Kruševac (1993–1994)
Dragan Čadikovski – Partizan (2007–2009), Radnički Kragujevac (2013–2014)
Igor Damjanoski – Zvezdara (2001–2002)
Zoran Danoski – Radnik Surdulica (2018–2021, 2022–2023), Proleter Novi Sad (2021)–2022), Mladost Lučani (2021–2022), Novi Pazar (2022)-2023)
Olivio Dautovski – Napredak Kruševac (1995–1996)
Benjamin Demir – Spartak Subotica (2018–2019)
Erol Demir – Železnik (1997–1998)
Filip Despotovski – OFK Beograd (2002–2004)
Milan Dimoski – Jastrebac Niš (1991–1994)
Aleksandar Donev – Bežanija (2006–2007)
Hristijan Dragarski – Radnik Surdulica (2015–2016)
Sasho Dukov – OFK Beograd (2012–2013)
Mario Đurovski – Bežanija (2004–2007), Vojvodina (2007–2011)
Haris Fakić – OFK Beograd (2002–2005)
Antonio Filevski – Železnik (1998–2000), Obilić 2000–(2001)
Jane Gavalovski – Rad Beograd (1998–2004), Obilić (2004)–2005)
Boban Georgiev – Radnik Surdulica (2019–2020)
Panče Georgievski – Čukarički Stankom (1999–2000)
Blaže Georgioski – Sartid Smederevo (1998–1999), Red Star (1999–2001)
Marjan Gerasimovski – Partizan (1998–2001)
Bojan Gjorgievski – Mačva Šabac (2017–2018)
Marko Gjorgjievski – Voždovac (2019–2020)
Fahrudin Gjurgjević – Spartak Subotica (2011–2013)
Nikola Gligorov – Bežanija (2006–2007)
Boban Grnčarov – OFK Beograd (2000–2003)
Vlatko Grozdanoski – Vojvodina (2007–2010)
Vasil Gunev – Napredak Kruševac (1988–1990, 1991–1993)
Destan Haciya – Borac Čačak (2017–2018)
Gjorgji Hristov – Partizan (1994–1997)
Martin Hristov – Donji Srem (2014–2015)
Saša Ilić – Partizan (1993–1995)
Harun Isa – Rad Beograd (1989–1991), Priština (1991–1993)
Ismail Ismaili – Priština (199_–199_)
Filip Ivanovski – Javor Ivanjica (2017–2018)
Nikola Jakimovski – Javor Ivanjica (2011–2013), FK Jagodina (2013–2015)
Mirsad Jonuz – Rad Beograd (1988)–1989, 1992–1993)
Aleksa Jordanov – Napredak Kruševac (2020–2021)
Nikola Karčev – Metalac G.M. (2011)–2012)
Hristijan Kirovski – OFK Beograd (2002–2006)
Tome Kitanovski – Voźdovac (2014–2015), Mladost Lučani (2015–2017)
Stojancho Kostov – Rad Beograd (2020–2021)
Darko Krsteski – Red Star (1997–1999), Borac Čačak (2004–2007)
Strahinja Krstevski – Vojvodina (2016–2017), Proleter Novi Sad (2016–2019)
Petar Krstić – Radnički Niš (2015–2019)
Blagoja Kuleski – Radnički Niš (1989–1993)
Stevica Kuzmanovski – Partizan (1982–1983), OFK Beograd (1984–1986, 1990–1991), Rad Beograd (1987–1990, 1997–2000)
Dimitrija Lazarevski – Zemun (2005–2006)
Goran Lazarevski – Vojvodina (2002–2003), Radnički Obrenovac (2003–2004)
Nenad Lazarevski – Borac Čačak (2007–2008), OFK Beograd (2009–2010), Inđija (2012–2014)
Vlade Lazarevski – Napredak Kruševac (2001–2006), Smederevo (2012–2013), Radnički Niš (2014–2015)
Aleksandar Lazevski – Partizan (2007–2008, 2010–2013), Rad Beograd (2013–2014), Mladost Lučani (2015–2016)
Florijan Maksimovski – Hajduk Kula (1997–2000)
Borče Manevski – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2010)
Žan Manovski – Rad Beograd (2010–2011)
Viktor Markov – Spartak Subotica (2020–2021)
Marjan Markoski – Hajduk Kula (1997–2000)
Bojan Markovski – Bežanija (2006–(2007), OFK Beograd (2006–2009)
Darko Micevski – Sloboda Užice (2009–2011), OFK Beograd (2013–2015), Novi Pazar (2015–2017)
Gorazd Mihailov – Čukarički Stankom (1998–1999)
Ljubodrag Milošević – Radnički Niš (1992–1994)
Sašo Miloševski – Vojvodina (1995–1998)
Bojan Miovski – Zemun (2018–2019)
Martin Mirchevski – TSC Backa Topola (2021–present)
Risto Mitrevski – Donji Srem (2014–2015)
Daniel Mojsov – Vojvodina (2010–2013)
Gjorgji Mojsov – Metalac G.M. (2011)–2012)
Ilija Najdoski – Red Star (1988–1993)
Ivan Nastevski – Novi Pazar (2015–2016)
Pavel Nedelkovski – Radnički Niš (2002–2003)
Matej Nikolov – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Boban Nikolovski – Obilić (1996–1997), OFK Beograd (1998–1999), Železnik (2000–2002)
Dragoljub Nikolovski – OFK Beograd (1998–1999)
Vlada Novevski – Vojvodina (2020-2022), Voždovac (2022–present)
Tome Pačovski – Železnik (2003–(2004)
Borjan Panchevski – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2019)
Angelko Panov – OFK Beograd (2002–2003)
Filip Petrov – Javor Ivanjica (2009–2011)
Milovan Petrovikj – Radnik Surdulica (2021–2022)
Goran Popov – Red Star (2004–2005)
Emran Ramadani – Hajduk Kula (2010–2011)
Predrag Ranđelović – Jagodina (2013–2014)
Filip Ristovski – Javor Ivanjica (2016–2018)
Dušan Savić – Zemun (2017–2019)
Žanko Savov – Radnički Niš (199_–199_)
Mirko Simjanovski – Donji Srem (2014–2015)
Stefan Spirovski – Borac Čačak (2009–2014)
Roberto Stajev – Radnički Niš (2015–2016)
Perica Stančeski – Partizan (2002–2006), Bežanija (2006–2008), Čukarički Stankom (2008–2009), BSK Borča (2012–2013), Rad Beograd (2013–2015)
Goran Stanić – Rad Beograd (2002–2003)
Vujadin Stanojković – Partizan (1989–1993)
Ostoja Stjepanović – Partizan (2005–2006), Čukarički Stankom (2007–2009), OFK Beograd (2015–2016), Rad Beograd (2019–2020)
Nikola Stojanović – Radnik Surdulica (2008–2009, 2010–2016)
Milan Stojanovski – Proleter Zrenjanin (1993–1997), Partizan (1997–2000, 2001–2004), Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2009)
Aco Stojkov – Partizan (2006–2007)
Dragan Stojkov – Napredak Kruševac (2009–2010), Jagodina (2010–2014)
Mitko Stojkovski – Red Star (1991–1995)
Gjorgji Tanušev – Sloboda Užice (2010–2011), BSK Borča (2011–2012)
Andrej Todoroski – Spartak Subotica (2021–present)
Todor Todoroski – Radnički Niš (2021–2022)
Zoran Todorov – Smederevo (2009–2012)
Aleksandar Todorovski – Radnički Beograd (2002–2005), Rad Beograd (2008–2011), Radnički Niš (2018–2020)
Zlatko Todorovski – OFK Beograd (1999–2000)
Borislav Tomovski – Vojvodina (1990–1995)
Miloš Tošeski – Zemun (2018–2020), Spartak Subotica (2021–present)
Nikola Tošeski – Proleter Novi Sad (2017–2019)
Viktor Trenevski – Partizan (1995–1998)
Ivan Tričkovski – Red Star (2007–2009)
Daniel Zanovski – Spartak Subotica (2020–2021)
Macedonian internationals that played in Serbian top league clubs only during Yugoslav period:
Boško Đurovski – Red Star (1978–1989)
Milko Đurovski – Red Star (1980–1986), Partizan (1986–1990)
Dejvi Glavevski – Rad Beograd (1990–1992)
Dragan Kanatlarovski – Red Star (1989–1990)
Blagoja Milevski – Red Star (1990–1991)
Darko Pančev – Red Star (1988–1992)
Norway
Moussa Njie – Partizan (2018–2019)
Ohi Omoijuanfo – Red Star (2021–2022)
Ghayas Zahid – Partizan (2023–present)
Palestine
Javier Cohene – Borac Čačak (2014–2015)
Peru
Miguel Araujo – Red Star (2013–2014)
Rodrigo Vilca – Voždovac (2023–present)
Philippines
Diego Bardanca – Inđija (2019–2020)
Poland
Grzegorz Bronowicki – Red Star (2007–2009)
Jeremiah Dąbrowski – Mladost Lučani (2014–2015)
Tomasz Rząsa – Partizan (2003–2004)
Portugal
Andrezinho – Spartak Subotica (2019–2020)
Rafael Floro – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
João Lucas – Red Star (2007–2008)
Marcelo Santiago – Jagodina (2012–2013)
Tomané – Red Star (2019–2020)
Hugo Vieira – Red Star (2015–2017)
Romania
Barna Antal – TSC Bačka Topola (2019–2020)
Radu Banc – Proleter Zrenjanin (1971–1974)
Miodrag Belodedici – Red Star (1989–1992)
Ioan Răzvan Chiriţă – Radnički Kragujevac (2000–2002)
Gabriel Enache – Partizan (2018–2019)
Aurel Han – Spartak Subotica (1991–1992)
Jozef Kezdi – Jedinstvo Beograd (1937–1938)
Gabi Kovács – Juda Makabi (1929–1930)
Dezideriu Laki – BSK Beograd (1924–1925)
Teodor Mogin – Vojvodina (1924–1925)
Cristian Muscalu – Borac Čačak (2010–2011), Voždovac (2013–2014)
Constantin Nica – Vojvodina (2019–2020)
Marinel Pascu – OFK Beograd (2001–2002)
Vasile Păunescu – 14. Oktobar Niš (1946–1947)
Branimir Pavlov – OFK Kikinda (1992–1993)
Iulian Popan – Juda Makabi (1923–1924)
Virgil Popescu – Vojvodina (1938–1941), Partizan (1946–1948)
Svetozar Popovici – BSK Beograd (1920–1925)
Iosif Rotariu – OFK Kikinda (1995–1996)
Marius Sasu – Vojvodina (1997–1998)
Alin Stoica – Vojvodina (2009–2010)
Sorin Vlaicu – Red Star (1992–1993)
Rudolf Wetzer – BSK Beograd (1924–1925)
Russia
Including the period of Soviet Union.
Leonid Bayer – BASK Beograd (1940–1942)
Georgiy Bratukhin – Voždovac (2019–2021)
Daniil Chalov – Inđija (2020–2021)
Tamirlan Dzhamalutdinov – Novi Pazar (2021–2022)
Asteri Filaktov – OFK Beograd (1963–1964)
Ramazan Isayev – Radnički Niš (2016–2017)
Ivan Konovalov – Radnički Niš (2015–2016), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2016–2017)
Uchuk Kuldinov – Jedinstvo Beograd (193_–1933), Jugoslavija (1933–1937)
Matvey Martinkevich – Vojvodina (2020–2021), Radnik Surdulica (2023–present)
Maksim Martusevich – Javor Ivanjica (2015–2016)
Ladislav Polikan – NAK Novi Sad (1924–1925)
Yegor Prutsev – Red Star (2022–2023)
Anton Pushin – Jugoslavija (1936–1937)
Semen Sheptitskiy – Rad Beograd (2017–2019)
Georgiy Shishlov – Mačva Šabac (1924–1925)
Nikolay Simeonov – Vojvodina (1923–1924)
Andrey Sorokin – Spartak Subotica (2020–2021)
Vsevolod Stashevskiy – BSK Beograd (1924–1925)
Sergey Vitvinskiy – Vojvodina (1922–1924)
Vladislav Yefimov – Sartid Smederevo (1999–2001)
Scotland
Islam Feruz – Radnički Niš (2023–present)
Senegal
Bado (Badara Badji) – Mladost Lučani (2017–2018)
Yves Baraye – Vojvodina (2022–2023)
Lamine Diarra – Partizan (2007–2010, 2011–2012)
Cheikhou Dieng – Spartak Subotica (2017–2018)
Ibrahima Gueye – Red Star (2006–2009), Radnički Niš (2013–2014)
Franck Kanouté – Partizan (2023–present)
Mamadou Mbodj – Napredak Kruševac (2014)–2015), Red Star (2014–2016)
Cherif Ndiaye – Red Star (2023–present)
Ibrahima Mame N'Diaye – Napredak Kruševac (2012–2017, 2017–2019), Čukarički (2019–2021, 2021–present)
Maissa Ndiaye – Železničar Pančevo (2023–present)
Seydou Bocar Seck – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2020)
Thierno Thioub – Novi Pazar (2021–2022)
Sierra Leone
Mustapha Bangura – Borac Čačak (2015–2016)
Kelfala Marah – Čukarički Stankom (2003–2005)
Medo (Mohamed Kamara) – Partizan (2010–2013)
Lamin Suma – Jagodina (2011–2012)
Singapore
Aleksandar Đurić – Napredak Kruševac (2000–2001)
Slovakia
Including the period of Czechoslovakia.
Janoš Buzgo – NAK Novi Sad (1935–1936)
Jozef Buzgo – NAK Novi Sad (1935–1936)
Hesko – Vojvodina (1923–1924)
Erik Jirka – Red Star (2018–2019), Radnički Niš (2019–2020)
Maroš Klimpl – Sloboda Užice (2010–2011)
Ján Podhradský – Vojvodina (1935–1936), BSK Beograd (1936–1939)
Nikolas Špalek – TSC Bačka Topola (2022–2023)
Lajoš Žiga – BASK Beograd (1936–1937)
Milan Zvarík – Vojvodina (1985–1986)
Slovenia
Excluded the players that played before 1991 when Slovenia became independent.
Milenko Ačimovič – Red Star (1997–2002)
Gregor Balažic – Partizan (2014–2017)
Klemen Bolha - Napredak Kruševac (2022–2023)
Saša Bosilj – Železnik (2001–2002)
Marko Božič – Rad Beograd (2007–2008)
Emir Dautović – OFK Beograd (2014–2015, 2015–2016)
Timotej Dodlek – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2017–2018)
Dejan Djermanović – Voždovac (2014–2015)
Željko Filipović – Vojvodina (2019–2020)
Branko Ilić – Partizan (2014–2015)
Safet Jahič – Partizan (2006–2007)
Dragan Jelić – Radnički Niš (2013–2014)
Haris Kadrič – Kolubara Lazarevac (2022)-2023), Voždovac (2022–2023)
Darko Karapetrovič – Radnički Niš (1998–1999), Obilić (1998–1999)
Dejan Kelhar – Red Star (2013–2014)
David Kiselak – Smederevo (2011–2012)
Omar Kočar – Mačva Šabac (2020–2021)
Aljaž Krefl – Spartak Subotica (2016–2017)
Anej Lovrečič – Voždovac (2014–2015)
Vladimir Mandić – Vojvodina (2005–2006)
Danijel Marčeta – Partizan (2008–2009)
Darko Milanič – Partizan (1986–1987, 1988–1993)
Džoni Novak – Partizan (1990–1992)
Vanja Panić – Mačva Šabac (2020–2021)
Nejc Pečnik – Red Star (2013–2015)
David Poljanec – Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2015)
Milan Rakič – Smederevo (2009–2010)
Aleksander Rodić – Proleter Zrenjanin (1999–2000), Red Star (2000–2001)
Filip Starič – Vojvodina (2018–2019)
Ante Šimundža – Železnik (2001–2002)
Mirnes Šišić – Red Star (2008–2009)
Davor Škerjanc – Voždovac (2014–2015)
Zlatko Zahovič – Partizan (1989–1990, 1991–1993), Proleter Zrenjanin (1990–1991)
Sandro Zukić – Mačva Šabac (2020–2021)
Slovenian internationals that played in Serbian top league clubs during Yugoslav period:
Marko Elsner – Red Star (1983–1987)
Srečko Katanec – Partizan (1986–1988)
Marko Simeunovič – Red Star (1989–1990), Napredak Kruševac (1990–1991)
South Africa
Kurt Abrahams – Novi Pazar (2023–present)
Bernard Parker – Red Star (2008–2009)
Luther Singh – Čukarički (2023–present)
South Sudan
Kur Gai Kur – Novi Pazar (2022–2023)
Spain
José Cañas – Red Star (2019–2020)
Francis Durán – Jagodina (2012–2013)
Antonio Moreno – Partizan (2008–2009)
Marc Valiente – Partizan (2018–2019)
Suriname
Mitchell Donald – Red Star (2015–2018)
Sweden
Bojan Djordjic – Red Star (2003–2004)
Frederick Enaholo – Vojvodina (1991–1992)
Marko Mitrović – Radnički Niš (2018)–2019, 2019–2020), Dinamo Vranje (2018–(2019)
Niclas Nyhlén – Vojvodina (1984–1985)
Petar Petrović – Radnički Niš (2014–2015, 2018–2019)
Andrej Simeunović – Voždovac (2017–2018)
Switzerland
Miloš Antić – OFK Beograd (2014–2016)
Milan Basrak – Metalac G.M. (2014–2016), Napredak Kruševac (2017–2018)
Mihailo Bogićević – Spartak Subotica (2021–present)
Boško Borenović – Zemun (2006–2007)
Nemanja Cvijanović – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2020)
Stefan Čolović – OFK Beograd (2014–2016)
Filip Frei – Radnički Niš (2022–present)
Veselin Lakić – Rad Beograd (2016–2017)
Boban Maksimović – Red Star (2008)–2009), Vojvodina (2008–2010)
Srdjan Maksimović – Rad Beograd (2005–2007)
Milan Marjanović – Metalac G.M. (2019–2020)
Nikola Nikolić – BSK Borča (2009–2010)
Aleksandar Njeguš – Zlatibor Čajetina (2018–2021)
Nemanja Petrovic – Radnik Surdulica (2017–2018)
Milorad Stajić – Radnički Niš (2023–present)
Luka Stević – Metalac G.M. (2021–2022)
Dejan Subotić – Rad Beograd (2018–2019)
Nikola Sukacev – Metalac G.M. (2020–2021)
Stefan Todorović – Javor Ivanjica (2010–2011)
Tajikistan
Nuriddin Davronov – Sloboda Užice (2012–2013)
Tanzania
Morice Abraham – Spartak Subotica (2021–2023)
Alphonce Msanga – Spartak Subotica (2021–2023)
Togo
Emmanuel Hackman – Mladost GAT (2022–2023)
Tunisia
Kamel Zaiem – Partizan (2008–2009)
Turkey
Ömer Koca – Čukarički Stankom (2000–2002)
Günkut Özer – Radnički Niš (2015–2016)
Uganda
Khalid Aucho – Red Star (2017–2018)
Nestroy Kizito – Vojvodina (2004–2010), Partizan (2010–2011)
Eugene Sseppuya – Vojvodina (2007–2008), Čukarički Stankom (2008–2009), Mladi Radnik (2009)–2010), Borac Čačak (2011–2012)
Ukraine
Including the period of Soviet Union.
Maksym Andrushchenko – Spartak Subotica (2020–2021)
Taras Bondarenko – Metalac G.M. (2016–2018), Radnički Niš (2018–2020), Radnik Surdulica (2022–2023)
Pavlo Bovtunenko – Novi Pazar (2013–2014)
Marko Dević – Zvezdara (2000–2002), Železnik (2002–2003), Voždovac (2004–2005, 2019–2020)
Yevhen Kovalenko – Rad Beograd (2019–2020)
Serhiy Kulynych – Spartak Subotica (2018–2019)
Yevhen Pavlov – Mladost Lučani (2014–2015), Radnik Surdulica (2019–2021), Radnički Niš (2021–2022), Železničar Pančevo (2023–present)
Ivan Spotar – OFK Beograd (1957–1958)
Mykhailo Stelmakh – Spartak Subotica (1991–1992)
Vitaliy Tolmachyov – Spartak Subotica (1993–1994)
Yuriy Vakulko – Partizan (2018–2019)
Vadym Zhuk – Spartak Subotica (2016–2017)
United States
Freddy Adu – Jagodina (2014–2015)
Danny Barrera – Spartak Subotica (2011–2012)
Mark Conrad – Vojvodina (2007–2008)
Matt Dunn – OFK Beograd (2011–2013)
Romain Gall – Mladost GAT (2022–2023)
Jordan Gruber – OFK Beograd (2005–2006)
Will John – Čukarički Stankom (2008–2009)
Ilija Mitić – Partizan (1960–1963), OFK Beograd (1965–1967)
Simon Mrsic – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2016–2018)
Preki – Red Star (1982–1985)
Danilo Radjen – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020–2021)
Scoop Stanisic – Partizan (1983–1984)
Aleksandar Thomas Višić – Rad Beograd (2011–2012)
Jeremiah White – OFK Beograd (2003–2004)
Uruguay
Miguel Angel Lavié – Javor Ivanjica (2009–2010)
Gerardo Vonder Pütten – Javor Ivanjica (2009–2010)
Uzbekistan
Husniddin Gafurov – Javor Ivanjica (2013–2017), Mladost Lučani (2017–2018)
Murod Rajabov – Novi Pazar (2016–2017)
Zambia
Kings Kangwa – Red Star Belgrade (2022–present)
Zimbabwe
Blessing Makunike – Javor Ivanjica (2002–2003)
Mike Temwanjera – Javor Ivanjica (2003–2006), Borac Čačak (2006–2007)
Leonard Tsipa – Javor Ivanjica (2002–2003)
Doubts
See talk-page.
Other levels
This is a list of foreign players that have played, or play, in the Serbian First League and its predecessors, Second League of Serbia and Montenegro, Yugoslav Second League, top Subassociation Leagues.
The criterion is the same as applied in the main list above.
Abkhazia
Daur Chanba – Teleoptik (2018–2019), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2019–2020)
Shabat Logua – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2019–2020), Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–2021)
Albania
Shpend Abrashi – Trepča (1982–1984)
Ajazaj – Liria Prizren (1988–1990)
Bekim Behrami – Priština (1990–1991)
Mehmet Dragusha – Priština (1994–1998)
Besnik Hasi – Liria Prizren (1988–1990)
Almedin Murati – BSK Borča (2013–2014)
Dodë Tahiri – ASK Obilić Aranđelovac (1930s&1950s)
Alban Tusuni – Dinamo Vranje (2019–2020)
Algeria
Adel Beggah - Radnički Beograd (2022–2023)
Argentina
Franco Abrego – Rad Beograd (2022–2023)
Guido Barreyro – RFK Novi Sad (2009–2010)
Luis Ibáñez – Grafičar Beograd (2021–2023)
Leonardo Iorlano – Radnički Niš (2005–2006)
Gustavo Marino – Radnički Niš (2005–2006)
Armenia
Ognjen Čančarević – Sloboda Užice (2006–2007, 2008–(2009), (2014)–2015), Sevojno (2008)–2009), Radnički Kragujevac (2009–2014)
Artem Karapetyan – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Australia
Vid Amidzic – Bežanija (2011–2012)
Tomislav Arčaba – OFK Beograd (2015–2017)
John Belme – RFK Novi Sad (2010–2011)
Steven Bozinovski – Radnički Niš (2002–2003)
Matthew Byrne – Donji Srem (2011–2012), Teleoptik (2012–2013)
James Cakovski – Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2022–present)
Enzo Campana – Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–2023)
Stephen Frantzeskakis – Sinđelić Beograd (2018–2019)
Zoran Ilic – Jagodina (1993–1995)
Milan Ivanović – Radnički Niš (1986–1988)
Aleksandar Jovanovic – RFK Novi Sad (2009–2011)
Aleksandar Jovovic – BASK Beograd (2010–2011)
Vladimir Kosovac – OFK Beograd (2016–2017)
Sebastian Petrovich – Mačva Šabac (2003–2004)
Salvatore Russo – Bežanija (2017)–2018), Sinđelić Beograd (2017–(2018)
Danilo Spasojević – Sloga Kraljevo (2013–2014)
Stefan Stanojević – Metalac G.M. (2012–2013), Kolubara Lazarevac (2013–2015), Sloga Kraljevo (2014–(2015), Donji Srem (2015–2016)
Milan Susak – Veternik (2003–2004), ČSK Pivara (2006–2007)
Anthony Trajkovski – Smederevo (2019–2020)
Domenico Velardi – Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–2023)
Goran Zarić – RFK Novi Sad (199_–199_), Radnički Beograd (1998–1999), Čukarički Stankom (2002–2004)
Austria
Miloš Andrejić – BSK Borča (2015–2016)
Josip Bolvari – Spartak Subotica (1983–1984)
Rudolf Chmelicek – Odžaci SK (1938–19__)
Tode Djakovic – Smederevo (2019–2020)
Ludwig Götz – ŠK Amater Sombor (1923)
Grabliker – Budućnost Valjevo (19__–194_)
Lazar Lazarević-Živojinović - Žarkovo (2020-2021)
Saša Lazić – Loznica (2015–2016)
Franz Machek – RFK Bor (1941–1943)
Theodor Mantler – UTK Novi Sad (191_–19__)
Stefan Milojević – Bežanija (2017–2019)
Miroslav Orlic – Dinamo Vranje (2020–2021)
Rastko Rastoka - Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–2023)
Dejan Sarac – Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–2023)
Azerbaijan
Murad Hüseynov – Mladost Lučani (2009–2011)
David Samedov – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Branimir Subašić – OFK Beograd (2015–2017)
Barbados
Abiola Grant – Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2021–2022), Inđija (2023–present)
Belarus
Ilya Tyunis – Dinamo Vranje (2016–2017)
Belgium
Nikola Pejcic - Mačva Šabac (2021–2022)
Bosnia-Herzegovina
The players that played before 1992 are excluded except for the ones that played for the Bosnian national team.
Admir Aganović – FK Teleoptik (2004–2006), Dinamo Vranje (2006–2007)
Esmir Ahmetović – Sinđelić Beograd (2017–2018)
Mile Andrić – Sloboda Užice (1992–1994, 2001–2002), Sloga Kraljevo (199_–199_), FK Sevojno
Aleksandar Anđić – Jedinstvo Ub (2001–2002), FK Dorćol (2002–2003)
Nemanja Arsenić – Proleter Novi Sad (2009–2010)
Nemanja Arsić – FK Bežanija (2008–2009)
Milun Avramović - Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–present)
Miloš Bajić – Napredak Kruševac (2011–2015), BSK Borča (2016–2017), Smederevo (2019–2020), IMT Beograd (2018–2019,2020–present)
Marko Bjeković – Kabel Novi Sad (2019–present)
Zoran Blagojević – Mladost Apatin (1997–1999)
Slaviša Bogdanović – Radnik Surdulica (2013–2014), BSK Borča (2015–2017), OFK Žarkovo (2018)
Slobodan Bojić – Radnički Sombor (2011–2013, 2014–2015)
Boris Bošković – Mladost Apatin (200_–200_), BSK Borča (2008–2009), Srem S.Mitrovica (2011–present)
Igor Božić – Rad Beograd (2005–2009)
Mario Božić – FK Loznica (2001–2003, 2015–2017), Radnički Stobex (2002–(2003), FK Beograd (2003–2004)
Saša Božić – Dinamo Vranje (2007–2009)
Adnan Cakić – Mačva Šabac (2006–2008)
Anđelko Crnomarković – OFK Mladenovac (2007–2008)
Nedeljko Crnomarković – FK Bežanija (2012–2014)
Enes Curkić – Radnički Pirot (2006–2007)
Sredoje Cvjetičanin – Radnički Beograd, RFK Novi Sad, FK Bor (1998–1999), Rad Beograd, FK Obilić
Benjamin Čalaković – Dinamo Vranje (2019–2020)
Davor Čavrić – Banat Zrenjanin (2007–2012, 2013–2014)
Novica Čomić – Mladost Apatin (2001–2005)
Miroslav Čovilo – RFK Novi Sad (2007–2010)
Marko Čubrilo – FK Teleoptik (2016–2018), OFK Žarkovo (2019)–2020), Budućnost Dobanovci (2019–present)
Siniša Čubrilo – ČSK Pivara (1997–2004)
Nikola Danilović – Sinđelić Beograd (2013)–2014), Dolina Padina (2013–(2014)
Nebojša Desnica – ČSK Pivara (2006–2009), RFK Novi Sad (2010–2011)
Aleksandar Dikić – RFK Novi Sad (2011–2012)
Vladan Dinić – Radnik Surdulica (2014–2015)
Đurađ Dobrijević – FK Teleoptik (2012–2015), Budućnost Dobanovci (2016–2021), Loznica (2022-present)
Boban Dragić – Spartak Subotica (2006–2007)
Dalibor Dragić – Proleter Novi Sad (2009–2010)
Zoran Dragišić – Javor Ivanjica (1995–1996)
Goran Dragović – Radnički Beograd (2001–2002), FK Voždovac (2002–2008)
Ratko Dujković – OFK Kikinda (200_–200_)
Miroslav Dukić – FK Loznica (2013–present)
Ognjen Đelmić – Rad Beograd (2006–2008)
Boban Đerić – FK Inđija (2011–2012), Javor Ivanjica (2017–present)
Gordan Đerić – RFK Novi Sad (2009–2010)
Uroš Đerić – Borac Čačak (2013–2016), Sloboda Užice (2016–2017, 2023–present)
Rade Đokić – Kabel Novi Sad (199_–200_), Srem S.Mitrovica (200_–2004)
Željko Đokić – Javor Ivanjica (2007–2011), FK Zemun (2016–present)
Mladen Đoković – RFK Novi Sad (2011–2012)
Dejan Đogo – Sinđelić Niš (2011–2012), Metalac G.M. (2012–2013)
Aleksandar Đurašović – Mladost Apatin (1997–1999)
Miloš Đurđić – ČSK Pivara (2016–2017)
Saša Đuričić – FK Beograd (20__–20__)
Siniša Đurić – Spartak Subotica (2004–2005)
Velibor Đurić – Proleter Zrenjanin (2003–2004)
Predrag Erak – Sloga Kraljevo (2001–2003)
Borislav Erić – FK Inđija (2013–2014)
Haris Fazlagić – Banat Zrenjanin (2010–2011)
Marko Filipović – Palilulac Beograd (1996–1997), Mladi Radnik (199_–199_), FK Loznica (2002–2003)
Luka Gajić – FK Teleoptik (2013–2014)
Radovan Gajić – Dinamo Pančevo (1998–)
Mladen Galić – Proleter Novi Sad (2011–2012), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2015–2017), OFK Odžaci (2016–2017), TSC Bačka Topola (2017–present)
Miodrag Gigović – BASK Beograd (2006)–2007)
Slobodan Gigović – Dolina Padina (2012–2014)
Dragan Glogovac – Radnički Beograd (1999–2000)
Stevo Glogovac – FK Zvezdara (1995–1997)
Ivan Gluhović – Donji Srem (2015–2017)
Aleksej Golijanin - Grafičar Beograd (2020–present)
Radoslav Golubović – Mladost Luks (–)
Jovan Golić – Mladost Luks (2002–2005), FK Inđija (2006–2010)
Bojan Gostimirović – FK Inđija (2005–2007)
Slobodan Grbić – Banat Zrenjanin (2012–2014)
Boris Gujić – ČSK Pivara (2006–2008)
Šerif Hasić – FK Novi Pazar (2010–2011)
Nermin Haskić – FK Voždovac (2012–2013)
Alen Holjan – ČSK Pivara (2006–2007)
Luka Ikonić – RFK Novi Sad (2013–2014)
Jovan Ilić - RFK Novi Sad (2022-present)
Filip Ivezić – Proleter Novi Sad (2014–2015)
Maid Jaganjac – FK Inđija (2011–2012)
Vlado Jagodić – Morava Ćuprija (199_–199_)
Adnan Jahić – FK Inđija (2009–2010)
Bojan Jamina – FK Zvezdara (1997–1998)
Nemanja Janičić – FK Bežanija (2011)–2012), Napredak Kruševac (2011–2015)
Stefan Janjić – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2014–2015)
Ognjen Jeftenić – FK Bežanija (2012–2013)
Branko Jelić – Borac Čačak (1995–2000)
Peđa Jerinić – RFK Novi Sad (2012–2013)
Igor Joksimović – Hajduk Beograd (2001–2002), FK Zemun (2006–2008)
Mladen Jovančić – FK Dorćol (2002–2003), Radnički Beograd (2003–2004)
Vladimir Jovančić – BASK Beograd (2005–2007), Rad Beograd (2007–2011)
Branko Jovanović – BASK Beograd (2010–2011)
Jovica Jovanović – FK Bežanija (2015–2016)
Petar Jovanović – Radnički Stobex (2001–2005), Čukarički Stankom (2003–(2004), OFK Mladenovac (2006–2007), Sloboda Užice (2009–2011, 2022–2023), FK Sevojno (2009–2010), Jedinstvo Putevi (2012–2013), Zlatibor Čajetina (2019–2020, 2021–2022)
Darko Jović – Proleter Novi Sad (2016)–2017), OFK Odžaci (2016–(2017), ČSK Pivara (2017–present)
Aleksandar Kahvić - Grafičar Beograd (2022–2023), OFK Beograd (2023–present)
Đorđe Kamber – Zastava Kragujevac (1998–2001), Remont Čačak (2001–2002), Mačva Šabac (2004–2006), Srem S.Mitrovica (2005–(2006)
Vedran Kantar – OFK Mladenovac (2007–2008)
Nikola Karanović – Srem S.Mitrovica (2010–2012)
Dragan Kavaz – RFK Novi Sad (1988–1990), Napredak Kruševac (1990–1993)
Igor Kenjalo – FK Bežanija (2012–2014)
Dušan Kerkez – Srem S.Mitrovica, FK Voždovac
Darko Kikanović – Kolubara Lazarevac (2011–2012)
Nenad Kiso – Zemun (2017–2018, 2019–2020), Žarkovo (2020–present)
Duško Klindo – Mladost Luks (2003–2008)
Arsen Knežević – Kolubara Lazarevac (2019–present)
Igor Kojić – FK Obilić (200_–200_), Rad Beograd (2007–2008), Hajduk Beograd (2008–2009)
Saša Kolunija – FK Bežanija (2005–2007, (2008)–2009, 2014–2015, 2017–2018), FK Voždovac (2007)–2008), FK Zemun (2015–2016)
Dragiša Komarčević – Loznica (2020–present)
Vladanko Komlenović – Mladost Lučani (2008–2010), FK Zemun (2010–2011)
Milivoj Kovačević – FK Inđija (2012–2013)
Bojan Kremenović – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2014–2015), ČSK Pivara (2015–2016)
Sulejman Krpić – Metalac G.M. (2012–2013)
Esad Kuhinja – Napredak Kruševac (1990–1994)
Vladan Kujundžić – Remont Čačak (2001–2003), Metalac G.M. (2006–2008), Banat Zrenjanin (2010–2011)
Radojica Kukolj – FK Loznica (2002–2003)
Nikola Kulašević – FK Inđija (2006–2008)
Miloš Kuljanin – Metalac G.M. (2012–2013)
Milan Lalić – Radnički Kragujevac (2018)–2019), Budućnost Dobanovci (2018–2019), Dinamo Vranje (2019–2020)
Miodrag Latinović – Mačva Šabac (199_–199_)
Milan Lazarević – Proleter Novi Sad (2015–2017)
Nemanja Lekanić – Sloga Kraljevo (2013–2014), Mačva Šabac (2015–2017), Sinđelić Beograd (2017–2018)
Dejan Limić – FK Jagodina (2007–2008)
Mitar Lukić – Mačva Šabac (1991–199_)
Marinko Mačkić – Mladost Lučani (2000–2003)
Zoran Majstorović – Radnički Beograd (2003–200_)
Mirko Malinović – OFK Kikinda (2001–2003, 2004–(2005), 2007–2009, 2010–2012, 2013–2014), Mladost Apatin (2003–2005), BASK Beograd (2006–2007)
Stevo Malinović – BASK Beograd (2006–2007)
Milenko Malović – Radnički Nova Pazova (2012)–2013), FK Čukarički (2012–(2013), Sinđelić Beograd (2014–2016), Budućnost Dobanovci (2018–present)
Strahinja Manojlović - Mačva Šabac (2020-2022), Grafičar Beograd (2021–2022)
Slavko Marić – Hajduk Beograd (2001–2006), Mladost Lučani (2006–2008)
Jefto Marković – FK Loznica (2007–2011)
Neven Marković – Rad Beograd (2005–2008)
Vladimir Marković – Proleter Novi Sad (2014–2015)
Dragan Matković - Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2020-2022)
Darjan Matović – FK Inđija (2013–2014)
Nemanja Matović – FK Bežanija (2010–2016), Mačva Šabac (2016–2017), Radnički Pirot (2017)–2018), Sinđelić Beograd (2017–(2018)
Marko Mazalica – Rad Beograd (2005–2007)
Miodrag Medan – Bačka Bačka Palanka (199_–199_), Rad Beograd (199_–1995)
Goran Medenica – FK Zemun (2006–2008)
Nedžad Mehović – FK Novi Pazar (1997–1999)
Almir Memić – RFK Novi Sad (1991)
Samir Memišević – FK Teleoptik (2012–2013, 2013–(2014), FK Bežanija (2013)–2014)
Dragan Mičić – FK Loznica (1993–1996), Banat Zrenjanin (2002–2007)
Marko Mihajlović – RFK Novi Sad (2008-2010), Sloga Kraljevo (2020–present)
Nenad Mijailović – Jedinstvo Ub (2009–(2010)
Borislav Mikić – Železničar Lajkovac (1998–1999), Remont Čačak (2000–2002)
Miroslav Milutinović – ČSK Pivara (2004–2006), Kolubara Lazarevac (2010)–2011, 2013–(2014), RFK Novi Sad (2010–(2011), FK Inđija (2011–2014)
Milan Mirić – FK Bežanija (200_–2010)
Milan Mirić – Sloboda Užice (2017–2019), Zlatibor Čajetina (2018–(2019)
Igor Mišan – Radnički Sombor (2009–2010), RFK Novi Sad (2011–2013)
Jovo Mišeljić – Radnički Niš (1992–1995, 2001–2003), Proleter Zrenjanin (2000–2001), OFK Niš (2003–2004)
Nenad Mišković – Radnički Beograd (1993–1997)
Marko Mitrušić – Metalac G.M. (2012)–2013), OFK Mladenovac (2012–(2013), FK Bežanija (2013–2015, 2016–2017), Donji Srem (2015–2016)
Siniša Mladenović – Sloga Kraljevo (2008–2009, 2010–2014), Grafičar Beograd (2019–2020)
Nikola Mojović – Proleter Novi Sad (2009–2011)
Aleksa Mrđa – Inđija (2018–(2019)
Momčilo Mrkajić – FK Bežanija (2009–2011, (2011)–2012), BSK Borča (2013–2015)
Nemanja Mrkajić – Donji Srem (2010–2012)
Dragan Mučibabić – Hajduk Beograd
Siniša Mulina – Milicionar Beograd (1997–2000)
Igor Muratović – Železničar Beograd (2001–2002), Radnički Beograd (2003–2004, 2005–2006), Radnički Obrenovac (2004–2005)
Stevo Nikolić – OFK Žarkovo (2019–present)
Nenad Novaković – Timok Zaječar (2012–2013)
Muhamed Omić – FK Inđija (2009–2010)
Amer Osmanagić – FK Zemun (2016–2017)
Amir Osmančević – Sloga Kraljevo (2014–2015)
Branko Ostojić – Radnički Kragujevac (2007–2008, 2018–2019)
Aco Pandurević – Železničar Beograd (2001–2002), OFK Mladenovac (2012)–2013)
Ljubiša Pecelj – Kolubara Lazarevac (2019–2020,2021–present)
Nebojša Pejić – BSK Borča (2006–2011)
Aleksandar Perendija – FK Voždovac (2007–2008)
Saša Perić – OFK Žarkovo (2019–present)
Milovan Petrić – RFK Novi Sad (2012–2013), BSK Borča (2014–2015), Proleter Novi Sad (2015–2016), Kolubara Lazarevac (2016–2017), FK Bečej (2018–2019), Kabel Novi Sad (2019–present)
Novica Petrović – Mladost Apatin (2008–2010), Radnički Sombor (2010–2011), Srem S.Mitrovica (2011–2013)
Almir Pliska – Moravac Mrštane (2014–2015)
Željko Polak – Mačva Šabac (1989–199_), Palilulac Beograd (1998–1999), Radnički Beograd (1999–2000, 2001–2004), FK Bežanija (2004–2006)
Dajan Ponjević - RFK Novi Sad (2010-2011), Proleter Novi Sad (2013-2014), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2014–2017, 2017-2021), OFK Odžaci (2016-(2017), ČSK Čelarevo (2017)-2018), Grafičar Beograd (2021-2022)
Mirko Popadić – FK Bežanija (2013–2014)
Nikola Popara – FK Teleoptik (2009–2012)
Nikola Popin – RFK Novi Sad (2005–2008), ČSK Pivara (2008–2009, 2013–2014), Proleter Novi Sad (2009–2011)
Dejan Popović – FK Inđija (2013–2014), Dinamo Vranje (2019–2020)
Goran Popović – FK Zemun (2007–2008)
Damir Poturović – FK Smederevo (2013–2014)
Ilija Prodanović – Mladost Goša (2002–2003)
Milan Pržulj – Hajduk Beograd (2003–200_)
Velibor Pudar – Čukarički Stankom (1993–1995), Jedinstvo Paraćin (1995–(1996), Palilulac Beograd (1996–1997)
Darko Raca – Mladost Apatin (1997–1998), ČSK Pivara (2009–2010)
Čedomir Radić – OFK Mladenovac (2011–2013), Sinđelić Beograd (2013–2015)
Danko Radić – Sinđelić Beograd (2017–present)
Dušan Radić – FK Loznica (2014–present)
Dragan Radović – Mladi Radnik (1995–1997), Sartid Smederevo (199_–199_)
Slaviša Radović – FK Zemun (2016–2017)
Dragan Rajović – Spartak Subotica (2003–2004, 2006–2007)
Zoran Rajović – FK Vrbas (1997–1999)
Marinko Rastoka – Mladost Lučani (2011–2012)
Rastko Rastoka - Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–present)
Mladen Ratkovica – FK Bečej (2001–2002), FK Bežanija (2002–2003, 2009–2010), Srem S.Mitrovica (2010–2011)
Siniša Ratković – Banat Zrenjanin (2010–present)
Zoran Repac – RFK Novi Sad (200_–2003), FK Beograd (2003–200_)
Ilija Ristanić – Rad Beograd (2007–2008)
Edin Rustemović – Sinđelić Beograd (2013–2014)
Branislav Ružić – Mladost Apatin (2009–2010), Kolubara Lazarevac (2010–2011)
Damir Sadiković – Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023)
Stefan Santrač – Grafičar Beograd (2018–2020), FK Loznica (2022-present)
Boris Savić – Hajduk Beograd (2008–2009)
Denijel Savić – FK Teleoptik (2010–2012)
Stojan Savić – Mladost Luks (–)
Željko Savić – FK Inđija (2012–2014)
Miloš Sekulović – Napredak Kruševac (2014–2016)
Miljan Sekulović – Dinamo Pančevo (1992–1995, 1997–1999)
Senad Seljimi – Srem Jakovo (2002–2006, 2009–2010), BASK Beograd (2006–2008), ČSK Pivara (2008–2009)
Jovan Sikima – Radnički Pirot (1997–1998), FK Zvezdara (1998–1999), Mladost Apatin (2002–2003)
Milan Simić – Srem S.Mitrovica (2003–2004)
Marko Simović – FK Teleoptik (2017–2018 ), Smederevo (2019–present)
Elvedin Spahić – OFK Niš (2005–2006), FK Novi Pazar (2007–2008)
Milan Srećo – Radnički Stobex (2002–2003), OFK Mladenovac (2007)–2008), FK Zemun (2007–(2008)
Filip Sredojević – OFK Odžaci (2016)–2017)
Duško Stajić – Proleter Zrenjanin (2000–2002)
Valeri Stanić – Kabel Novi Sad (1998–200_), FK Veternik (200_–2004)
Slobodan Stanojlović – FK Loznica (2020–2021)
Saša Stević – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2010), FK Zemun (201_–2015)
Nenad Studen – FK Teleoptik (2000–2002)
Boško Stupić – OFK Mladenovac (2005–2006)
Nemanja Supić – Radnički Obrenovac (2004)–2005), FK Bežanija (2004–(2005), Čukarički Stankom (2006–2007), FK Voždovac (2007–2008)
Pavle Sušić – Srem S. Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Zoran Šaraba – RFK Novi Sad (2004–2005)
Admir Šarčević – FK Vojvodina (1989–1990), FK Novi Pazar (1992–1993)
Budimir Šarčević – Sinđelić Beograd (2015–2016), Budućnost Dobanovci (2016–2017)
Milomir Šešlija – Sloboda Užice (1991–1992)
Ognjen Šinik – Mladost Apatin (2009–2010), Srem S.Mitrovica (2011–2012), Mladost Lučani (2012–2013), Dinamo Vranje (2015–2016)
Aleksandar Šljivić – FK Bežanija (200_–2010), BASK Beograd (2010–2012)
Nebojša Šodić – Mladost Apatin (2007–2008)
Zoran Šupić – Remont Čačak (2001–2002), Metalac G.M. (2003–2004), FK Bežanija (2004–2006, (2006–2007), BSK Borča (2011–2015), OFK Odžaci (2015–2016)
Srđan Tarbuk – Mačva Šabac (2011–201_)
Amir Teljigović – Proleter Zrenjanin (1986–1992, 2000–2002), Mladi Radnik (2002–2003, 2004–2005)
Sergej Tica – Budućnost Valjevo (199_–199_), Hajduk Beograd (199_–199_), Milicionar Beograd (1997–1998)
Darjan Todorović – Javor Ivanjica (2006–2007), Srem S.Mitrovica (2007–2009), FK Inđija (2011–2013)
Ognjen Todorović – OFK Vršac (2022–present)
Borislav Topić – BSK Borča (2006–2010)
Ranko Torbica – Sloboda Užice (2015–2016)
Bojan Trkulja – Radnički Pirot (2006–2007)
Milorad Trkulja – Mladost Luks (–)
Haris Ukić – FK Novi Pazar (2006–2009)
Nikola Valentić – FK Voždovac (2001–2005), Srem S. Mitrovica (2005–2006), FK Inđija (2015–2016), FK Bežanija (2015–(2016), Sinđelić Beograd (2018–2019)
Dragan Vasić – Mačva Šabac (199_–199_), Sartid Smederevo (199_–199_)
Aleksandar Vasiljević – Budućnost Dobanovci (2004–2005, 2016–2017), FK Bežanija (2005–2008), FK Sevojno (2008–2009), FK Mladi Radnik (2008–2010), Sloga Kraljevo (2014–2015)
Branislav Vasiljević – Proleter Novi Sad (2012–2013), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2015–2016)
Zoran Vasiljević – Sloboda Užice (1992–1995), FK Loznica (199_–199_)
Saša Vidović – Srem Jakovo (2001–2003), Mladost Lux (2003–2004), Rad Beograd (2007–2010), FK Zemun (2010–2011), RFK Novi Sad (2012–present)
Nemanja Vještica – FK Teleoptik (2018–2019), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2020-2022), Zlatibor Čajetina (2022-present)
Danilo Vlačić – FK Bežanija (2009)–2010, 2010–2012), Mladost Apatin (2009–(2010)
Predrag Vladić – Kabel Novi Sad (2018–2020), Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2021-2022), Kabel Novi Sad (2022-present)
Darko Vojvodić – FK Loznica, Napredak Kruševac, FK Badnjevac, Radnički Kragujevac (199_–199_), Sartid Smederevo (1998–2001), Milicionar Beograd
Zlatko Vojvodić – Sinđelić Beograd (2010–present)
Željko Vranješ – ČSK Pivara (1994–1999)
Igor Vujanović – Železničar Beograd (1999–2000), Remont Čačak (2001–2002)
Filip Vujić – Radnički Sombor (2011–2012), Jedinstvo Putevi (2012–2013)
Filip Vujović – FK Žarkovo (2016–present)
Stefan Vukadin – FK Čukarički (2012–2013), Metalac GM (2017–2019), Grafičar Beograd (2019–present)
Goran Vukliš – OFK Beograd (2016–2017), FK Novi Pazar (2017–2018), Kabel Novi Sad (2019–2020)
Dejan Vukomanović – FK Inđija (2015–2016), FK Novi Pazar (2017–2018)
Bojan Vuković – Proleter Novi Sad (2010–2011)
Zoran Vuković – RFK Novi Sad (2012–2016), ČSK Pivara (2016–2017)
Nikola Zagrađanin – Bane Raška (199_–199_), Borac Čačak (199_–1998)
Milosav Zečić – Sloboda Užice (1998–1999)
Vanja Zekić – FK Bežanija (2016–present)
Borislav Zgonjanin – Proleter Novi Sad (2011–2013)
Mladen Zgonjanin – OFK Odžaci (2015–present)
Ivan Zlatanović – Radnički Niš (2006–2007)
Predrag Živković – Jedinstvo Ub (2005–2006)
Milija Žižić – ČSK Pivara (2006–2007)
Brazil
Adãozinho (Adão Cleiton Bernardes Pontes) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Alex (Alex dos Santos Gonçalves) – Teleoptik (2008–2010)
Anderson Costa (Anderson José de Jesús Costa) – Dinamo Pančevo (2002–2004)
Anderson de França (Anderson de França) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Gabriel Bacan (Gabriel Rocha Bacan) - Rad Beograd (2022–2023)
Casimiro (Marcelo da Silva Casimiro) – Inđija (2007–2009)
Dinei (Vatinei César Moreira dos Santos) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Edmilson (Edmilson de Carvalho Barbosa) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2007–2008)
Eliomar (Eliomar Correia Silva) – Javor Ivanjica (2008–2012, 2015–2018,2021–present)
Erivelto (Erivelto Alixandrino da Silva) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Fabinho (Fábio de Oliveira Manoel) – Spartak Subotica (2008–2009)
Fábio Ricardo (Fábio Ricardo Sanos Soares) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Fábio Silva (Fabio Carleandro da Silva) – Rad Beograd (2006–2007)
Franco (Franco Alves de Souza) – Sevojno (2008–2009)
Geovane (Geovani Feital de Oliveira) – Bežanija (2014–2016)
Hegon (Henrique Martins de Andrade) – Jagodina (2016–2018)
Jairon (Jairon Feliciano Damasio) – Radnički Niš (2004–2006)
Kamilo Silva (Kamilo Oliveira da Silva) – Jedinstvo Putevi (2012–2013)
Leandro Pinto (Leandro Climaco Pinto) - RFK Novi Sad (2022–2023), Kolubara Lazarevac (2023–present)
Luis Gustavo (Luis Gustavo Lopes dos Santos) – Bežanija (2014–2016)
Magno (Magno Costa Fernandes) – Bežanija (2014–2015)
Maurício (Maurício Paiva Costa) – Sevojno (2008–2009)
Nathan (Nathan Crepaldi da Cruz) - Rad Beograd (2022–2023)
Ricardo Pereira (José Ricardo Pereira dos Santos) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Pierre (Pierre Ramos Vieira Ladeira) – Sevojno (2008–2009)
Jose Pontes (José António Bernardes Pontes) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Rafael Carioca (Rafael Felipe Barreto) – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2010)
Raphael (Raphael José da Silva) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2009–2010)
Ricardinho (Ricardo Silva de Almeida) – Borac Čačak (2012–2014)
Riquelme (Riquelme Sousa Silva) – Vršac (2023–present)
Rivan (Rivanilton de França) – Hajduk Beograd (2002–2003)
Rodrigo Leorato aka Preto (Rodrigo Leorato) – Inđija (2008–2009)
Rodrigo Negro (Rodrigo Neves Negro) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2007)
Tiago (Tiago Galvão da Silva) – Kolubara Lazarevac (2023–present)
Val Baiano (Jercival Sousa Santos) – Dinamo Vranje (2020–2021), Mladost GAT (2021–2022)
Mateus Viveiros (Mateus Viveiros Andrade) – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Washington Santana (Washington Santana da Silva) – Teleoptik (2008–2010)
William (William Artur de Oliveira) – Srem S.Mitrovica (2006–2008)
William Alves (William Rocha Alves) – Borac Čačak (2008–2013)
Brunei
Arsen Marjan – Milicionar Beograd (1996–1998), Zvezdara (1998–2002), FK Beograd (2003–2004)
Bulgaria
Nisim Alkalay – Jug Bogdan Prokuplje (1919–1924), Pobeda Niš (1924–1925)
Kiril Chobanov – RFK Novi Sad (2012–2013)
Viktor Gantchev – Radnički Pirot (2019–2020)
Todor Ivanov – Radnički Pirot (1982–1986)
Zoran Janković – Železnik (1994–1998), Inđija (2008–2011)
Veljko Jelenković – Kabel Novi Sad (2021–(2022)
Ivan Marinov – Radnički Kragujevac (1995–1996)
Mincho Minchev – Radnički Beograd (1990–1992)
Preslav Petrov – Grafičar Beograd (2020–2021)
Dragoljub Simonović – RFK Novi Sad (199_–1997)
Zanko Stoichkov – Šumadija Aranđelovac (1974–1975)
Zlatomir Zagorčić – RFK Novi Sad (1996–1997, 2004–2005)
Burkina Faso
Issouf Compaoré – Banat Zrenjanin (2009–2011)
Dramane Salou – Teleoptik (2018–2019)
Cameroon
Theophile Abanda - OFK Mladenovac (2005-2006)
Thierry Ako – Spartak Subotica (2003–2005, 2007–2008), Inđija (2008–2009), Proleter Novi Sad (2009–2010), Zemun (2010–2011), Radnički Sombor (2011–2012), RFK Novi Sad (2012–2013), BSK Borča (2013–2014)
Guy Edoa – Radnički Pirot (2019–2021)
Thierry Ekwalla – Čukarički Stankom (2004–2006)
Hervé Elame - IMT Beograd (2021-2022)
Lionel Abate Etoundi – OFK Žarkovo (2019–2021)
Fokim Fon Fondo – Radnik Surdulica (2013–2014)
Ferdinand Fru Fon – Temnić Varvarin (2017–2018)
Simon Tjeck Migne – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Michel Vaillant – Napredak Kruševac (2014–2015), Trayal Kruševac (2018–2019), Budućnost Dobanovci (2020–2021)
Ibrahim Walidjo – Javor Ivanjica (2012–2015), ČSK Pivara (2017–2018), Loznica (2020–2022)
Canada
Milan Božić – Hajduk Beograd (2002–2005), Inđija (2006–2007)
Nikola Bursać - Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2021-2022)
Derek Cornelius – Javor Ivanjica (2016–2019)
Luka Gluščević – Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2023–present)
Erik Hermanns – Budućnost Dobanovci (2021–2022), Radnički Beograd (2022–2023)
Boban Kajgo – Hajduk Beograd (2007–2011)
Steve Knezevic – Budućnost Dobanovci (2016–2017)
Jovan Lučić – Bežanija (2016–2017), Budućnost Dobanovci (2020–present), Rad Beograd (2021–2022)
Aleksa Marković – Zemun (2015–2016), Inđija (2017)–2018)
Bryan Ouanda – Metalac G.M. (2023–present)
Filip Prostran – Mladost Apatin (2009–2010)
Igor Prostran – Remont Čačak (2002–2004)
Mike Stojanovic – Radnički Kragujevac (1969–1973)
Josh Tucker – Grafičar Beograd (2023–present)
Kai Tucker – Rad Beograd (2022–2023), Radnički Beograd (2023–present)
Chad
Misdongarde Betolngar – Mladost Lučani (2012–2014), Borac Čačak (2013–(2014), Sloga Kraljevo (2014–2015)
Chile
Sebastián Guerrero – Sinđelić Beograd (2013–2014)
China
Chi Jiahong – Metalac G.M. (2019–2020)
Deng Yanlin – Zemun (2019–2020)
Dong Li – Metalac G.M. (2019–2021), Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2021–2022), Zlatibor Čajetina (2022-present)
Huang Yishen - Kabel Novi Sad (2021–2022), Rad Beograd (2022-present)
Lai Qirui – Sinđelić Beograd (2018–present)
Li Siqi – Smederevo (2019)–2020)
Liu Bin – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Liu Bo – Sinđelić Beograd (2013–2014)
Pan Qi – Jagodina (2016–2017)
Su Yuliang – Grafičar Beograd (2023–present)
Talepeng Yesidawulieti – Rad Beograd (2022–present)
Tan Jiajie – Sinđelić Beograd (2018–present)
Yimuran Kuerban – Sinđelić Beograd (2018–present)
Wang Jiahui – Sloga Kraljevo (2020-2021), Trayal Kruševac (2022–present)
Wang Lei – Temnić Varvarin (2017–2018)
Yang Chenyu – Radnički Pirot (2017–2018)
Yao Xuchen – Radnički Pirot (2017–2018)
Yuhao Wang – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Zeng Qingshen – Smederevo (2019–2020)
Zhang Meng – Sinđelić Beograd (2019–present)
Zhang Yue – Bežanija (2018)–2019), Sinđelić Beograd (2018–present)
Zhang Wu – Temnić Varvarin (2017–2018), Trayal Kruševac (2018–2019)
Zhong Haoran – Proleter Novi Sad (2016–2017)
Zhu Zhengyu – BSK Borča (2016–2017)
Colombia
Juan Mina Nazarit – Metalac G.M. (2023–present)
Congo
Prestige Mboungou – Metalac G.M. (2019–2021, 2021–2022)
Côte d'Ivoire
Herve Amani – Radnički Kragujevac (2017–2018), Javor Ivanjica (2018–2019)
Achille Anani – Dinamo Vranje (2015–2016)
Kouao Desire Bako – Budućnost Dobanovci (2020–2021)
Alassane Diaby – Dinamo Vranje (2015–2016)
Modibo Kané Diarra – ČSK Pivara (2006–2007)
Ismaël Béko Fofana – IMT Beograd (2020–2021)
Ferdinand Kanga – Loznica (2022–present)
Bayéré Junior Loué – Železničar Pančevo (2021–2022)
Marcel Metoua – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2011)
Mohamed Sylla – Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2021–2022)
Aboubacar Toure – Timok Zaječar (2021–2022)
Croatia
The players that have played for the Croatia National Team are in bold, the others have played since 1992.
Predrag Alić – Napredak Kruševac (2010–2011)
Vedran Bjelajac – Proleter Zrenjanin (2003–2006)
Matteo Brdar – Inđija (2013–2015)
Dražen Cvjetković – Čukarički Stankom (1991–1994), Spartak Subotica (2001–2007)
Ivan Cvjetković – Rad Beograd (1985–1987)
Damjan Daničić – Grafičar Beograd (2018–2019)
Dragan Dobrić – Dinamo Vranje (2010–2011)
Stevica Dujaković – Rad Beograd (2003–2005)
Duško Dukić – Vlasina (2006–2007), Jagodina (2007–2008, 2010–2014, 2016–2017)
Nikola Gavrić – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Boris Gospojević – Proleter Novi Sad (2010–2011)
Ronald Habi – OFK Kikinda (1996–1998)
Marko Iharoš – Radnički Beograd (2022–2023)
Nebojša Ivančević – Inđija (2017–2019), Radnički Kragujevac (2019–2020), Budućnost Dobanovci (2020)–2021)
Miro Ivković – Napredak Kruševac (2005–2006)
Radovan Ivković – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2008–2010, 2012–2018)
Srđan Ivković – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2014–2015)
Ilija Knezić – Big Bull Radnički (2010–2011)
Mislav Komorski — Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–2023)
Ardian Kozniku – Priština (1988–1990)
Dario Krivokuća – Inđija (2012–2015)
Slaven Lakić – Radnički Sombor (2001–2006, 2009–2014, 2018–2022)
Denis Lazinica – Spartak Subotica (2008–2009)
Jurica Lovrić – Loznica (2022–2023)
Darko Lunc – Železničar Pančevo (2021–2023)
Davor Magoč – ČSK Pivara (2004–2008, 2009–2010), RFK Novi Sad (2011–2012)
Denis Malešević – Kabel Novi Sad (1999–2000)
Slavko Mandić – Bor (1998–1999)
Dušan Martić – Mladost Apatin (2005–2007)
Boris Miljković – Sinđelić Niš (2007–2011)
Todor Mizdrak – OFK Mladenovac (2010–2012), Smederevo (2013–201x)
Arian Mršulja – Smederevo (2019–2020), OFK Vršac (2022–2023)
Miroslav Pavlović – ČSK Pivara (2001–2004, 2004–2011, 2013–2014), Budućnost Banatski Dvor (2004)–2005)
Predrag Počuča – BSK Borča (2016–2017), Inđija (2017)–2018), Sinđelić Beograd (2017–(2018)
Uroš Puskas – Srem S. Mitrovica (2011–2012), RFK Novi Sad (2012–2013)
Nikola Rudnicki – Banat Zrenjanin (2009–2010, 2013–2014), RFK Novi Sad (2010–2011)
Kujtim Shala – Liria Prizren (1981–1983), Priština (1984–1989)
Zoran Stamenić – ČSK Pivara (1998–2004, 2004–2006), Mladost Apatin (2005–2007)
Dragan Trešnjić – Spartak Subotica (2003–2005)
Mile Vujasin – Inđija (2011–2013, 2015–2018), Radnički Kragujevac (2018–2019), Kolubara Lazarevac (2019–2020)
Cyprus
Siniša Gogić – Radnički Niš (1982–1986)
Alexander Spoljaric – OFK Beograd (2014–2017)
Vladan Tomić – Mačva Šabac (1988–1989)
Czech Republic
Vladan Binić - Radnik Surdulica (2014-2015)
Karlo Brener – PSVD (1900)
Gustav Greifahr – Soko Beograd (1896)
Marko Stanojkoviĉ – Dinamo Vranje (2020–2021)
Zdeněk Vořechovský – Remont Čačak (2002–2003)
Denmark
Michael Hansen Schon – ČSK Pivara (2009–2010)
Ecuador
Augusto Batioja – RFK Novi Sad (2009–2010)
El Salvador
Vladan Vicevic – Sloboda Užice (1986–1992, 1999–2002)
England
Benjamin Agyeman-Badu – Sloboda Užice (2017–2018)
Kal Malass – Timok Zaječar (2021–2022)
Stefan Vukoje – Sloboda Užice (2022–2023)
France
Loic Akpo – Dinamo Vranje (2020–2021)
Mohamed Bangoura – Jagodina (2020–2021)
Mathias Dimizas – Dinamo Vranje (2016–2017)
David Marinković – Banat Zrenjanin (2012–2015), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2015–2016)
Marko Muslin – Hajduk Beograd (2003–2004)
Hugo Rouxel – Inđija (2022–2023)
Gambia
Abdou Faye – Trayal Kruševac (2019)–2020)
Adama Jarjue – Sloga Kraljevo (2020–2021)
Lamin Jobe – Trayal Kruševac (2018–2020)
Ousman Joof – Trayal Kruševac (2018–2021, 2022–2023)
Ousman Marong – Trayal Kruševac (2018–2019), Grafičar Beograd (2019–2020,2020–2021)
Georgia
Revaz Injgia – Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2020–2021)
Artur Mkrtichyan – ČSK Pivara (2016–2018)
Imeda Putkaradze – Novi Pazar (2010–2011)
Akaki Tskarozia – Bežanija (2008–2010)
Davit Volkovi – Zemun (2016–2017)
Germany
Daniel Arsovic – Čukarički Stankom (200_–200_)
Mirko Bulatović - Teleoptik (2018-2019)
Milan Delević – Žarkovo (2021–2022), Loznica (2022)-2023), IMT Beograd (2022–present)
Aleksandar Erak – TSC Bačka Topola (2016–2019), Bečej (2018)–2019)
Johann Graf – Palilulac Beograd (1932–1933)
Stefan Kukoljac – Sinđelić Beograd (2016–2017)
Irsen Latifović – Novi Pazar (1995–1996), Napredak Kruševac (1996–1997)
Danijel Milovanović – Bežanija (2008–2009)
Marko Mišković – Bežanija (2015–2019)
Karl Otterbein – Bačka Subotica (193x–1949)
Aleksandro Petrovic – Zemun (2006–2008)
Matthias Predojević – RFK Novi Sad (1997)–1998), Milicionar Beograd (1997–1999), Javor Ivanjica (2000–2002)
Maksim Rajković – Tekstilac Odžaci (2023–presemt)
Thomas Vasov – Timok Zaječar (19__–1993), Borac Čačak (1993–1996)
Marc Phillipp Wessner – Dinamo Vranje (2020–2021)
Ghana
Jacob Aboosah – OFK Beograd (2023–present)
Rashid Abubakar - Loznica (2022-present)
Sadick Abubakar – Smederevo (2019–2020), Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2020–2022)
Abdul Alhassan – Grafičar Beograd (2021–2022)
Yaw Antwi – Bežanija (2012–2013), Timok Zaječar (2013–2014), Inđija (2014–2017)
Bismarck Appiah – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2013–2015), Proleter Novi Sad (2016–2017)
Stephen Appiah – Trayal Kruševac (2018–2019)
Melvin Banda – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2013–2015)
Joseph Bempah – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019), Radnički Pirot (2019–2020), Borac Čačak (2020–2021)
Ronal Bortey – Srem S.Mitrovica (2010–2011)
Francis Bossman – Sloboda Užice (2010–2012, 2014–2015), Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2013–2014)
Joseph Cudjoe – Radnik Surdulica (2013–2015)
Abraham Frimpong – Napredak Kruševac (2011–2017)
Alidu Harif Mohammed – Napredak Kruševac (2013–2014)
Zubairu Ibrahim - Jedinstvo Ub (2022–present)
Kwaku Karikari - Jedinstvo Ub (2022–present)
Owusu-Ansah Kontoh – Metalac G.M. (2011–2015)
Andy Francis Kumi – Vršac (2023–present)
Maxwell Mensah – Temnić Varvarin (2017–2018)
Abdul Majeed Muiz – Grafičar Beograd (2021–2022), Metalac G.M. (2022–2023)
Baba Musah – Trayal Kruševac (2018–2021)
Ibrahim Mustapha – Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2021–2022)
Justice Neequaye – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Abdul Rashid Obuobi – Sloga Kraljevo (2013–2014), Donji Srem (2014–2016), Borac Čačak (2020–2021), Zlatibor Čajetina (2021–present)
Godwin Osei Bonsu – Radnik Surdulica (2013–2014)
Samuel Owusu – Radnik Surdulica (2014–2016)
Maxwell Quaye - Loznica (2022-present)
Obeng Regan – Napredak Kruševac (2012–2014), Železničar Pančevo (2021–present)
Zakaria Suraka – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2013–2014), Inďija (2014–2015), Dinamo Vranje (2016–2019), Železničar Pančevo (2020–present)
Ibrahim Tanko – Bežanija (2018–2019), Javor Ivanjica (2020–present)
Greece
Nikolaos Antoniadis – Kabel Novi Sad (2021–2022)
Theodoros Apostolidis – Bor (1969–1972)
Konstantinos Galeadis – Radnički Pirot (2019–2020)
Anastasio Galinis – Radnički Obrenovac (2004–2005)
Dimitris Koxidis – Sloga Kraljevo (2013–2014)
Lefteris Matsoukas – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2020)
Todor Mistakidis – Bačka Subotica
Yiannis Nestoras – ČSK Pivara (2016–2018)
Asterios Oikonomikos – Dinamo Vranje (2020–2021), Zlatibor Čajetina (2021–2022)
Athanasios Stoinovits - Zlatibor Čajetina (2022-2023)
Dimitrios Tsinovits – IMT Beograd (2017–2018,2019–present), Sinđelić Beograd (2018–2019)
Guatemala
Adolfo Alvarez – ČSK Pivara (2017–2018)
Guinea
Amadou Bailo – Novi Pazar (2010–2011)
Fodé Camara – RFK Novi Sad (2022–2023)
Ibrahima Sory Camara – Zemun (2015–2016)
Honduras
Luis López – Srem S.Mitrovica (2010)–2011), Novi Pazar (2010–(2011)
Hong Kong
Dejan Antonić – Napredak Kruševac (1990–1992)
Anto Grabo – RFK Novi Sad (1986–1988)
Enson Kwok – Timok Zaječar (2021–2022), Mačva Šabac (2022–2023)
Hungary
János Báki – Kabel Novi Sad (1937–1941)
Predrag Bošnjak – RFK Novi Sad (2006–2008), Proleter Novi Sad (2009–2010)
Zoltán Búrány – Spartak Subotica (200_–2006)
Gyula Ellbogen – Juda Makabi (1922–1923), Sparta Zemun (1923)
István Gligor – Spartak Subotica (1974–1976), FK Crvenka (1977–1978), OFK Kikinda (1979–1980)
Zoltán Horváth – Spartak Subotica (1983–1986)
Zoltan Inotai – Sport Subotica (1921–192x), Juda Makabi (193x–193x)
Zsombor Kerekes – FK Bečej (1990–1996)
László Köteles – FK Bežanija (2004–2005)
Sándor Krizán – OFK Kikinda (1990–1991)
László Némedi – FK Bor (1959–1961)
Károly Nemes – NAK Novi Sad (1919–1924)
István Nyers – ŽAK Subotica (1941–1945)
Norbert Pintér – TSC Bačka Topola (2018–2019)
Ferenc Plattkó – KAFK Kula (1921–1923)
Adrián Potloka – OFK Kikinda (200_–2007)
Zsolt Radics – Mladost Apatin (199_–1998)
David Sinkovics – TSC Bačka Topola (2016–2020)
Vilmos Sipos – Građanski S.Mitrovica (1930–1931)
Tojvas – ŽAK Subotica (1924–1925)
László Varga – Bačka Subotica (1941–1949)
India
Swapnil Raj Dhaka – Sinđelić Beograd (2018–2019)
Dhruv Vikram Singh - Timok Zaječar (2021–2022)
Rahul Soni – Žarkovo (2018–2019), Borac Čačak (2020-2021)
Indonesia
Ilija Spasojević – ČSK Pivara (2006–2007)
Iran
Houtan Delfi – Proleter Novi Sad (2011–2014)
Iraq
Ibrahim Salim Saad – Dubočica Leskovac (2000–2001)
Mohamad Shamkhi – Budućnost Dobanovci (2021–2022)
Israel
Slobodan Drapić – RFK Novi Sad (1984–1986)
Italy
Stefano Andreata – Inđija (2012–2015)
Antonio Balduini – Bor (1953–1955)
Arnoldo Balduini – Bor (1953–1954)
Gaston Balduini – Bor (1952–1954)
Giovanni Balduini – Bor (1920–192_)
Arbri Dedja – Inđija (2014–2016)
Stefan Dimitrijević – Grafičar Beograd (2022–2023), Mačva Šabac (2023–present)
Jamaica
Norman Campbell – Grafičar Beograd (2020–2021)
Duncan McKenzie - Grafičar Beograd (2022–present)
Japan
Kazuo Honma – Mačva Šabac (2003–2005)
Hiroya Kiyomoto – Zlatibor Čajetina (2019–2020)
Gentaro Murakami – Jagodina (2016–2017)
Yuto Nakamura – Tekstilac Odžaci (2023–present)
Ryo Tachibana – Zlatibor Čajetina (2019–2020)
Masafumi Takatsuka (Mabo) – Bane Raška (2002–2005)
Yoshikato Uchino – Mačva Šabac (2002–2005)
Takuto Yasuoka – OFK Beograd (2016–2017)
Kazakhstan
Nenad Erić – Big Bul Bačinci (2002–2003), Mačva Šabac (2003–2005)
Izat Kulzhanov – Radnički Kragujevac (2020–2021)
Kenya
Brian Berry Odhiambo – Inđija (2012–2013)
Albert Muema – Sinđelić Beograd (2017–2019)
Richard Odada – Grafičar Beograd (2019–2020)
Korea (South)
Hwang Jong-won – Radnički Kragujevac (2018)–2019), OFK Žarkovo (2018–(2019), Smederevo (2019–2020)
Jang Hyeok-jin – Sloga Kraljevo (2014–2015)
Jo Min-se – ČSK Pivara (2017–2018)
Kim Chang-seong – Sloga Kraljevo (2013–2014)
Kim Do-hyun – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Kim Seon-il – Radnički Niš (2011–2012)
Kim Young-moon – Sloga Kraljevo (2014–2015)
Lee Gee-hyeon – Zlatibor Čajetina (2019)–2020), Trayal Kruševac (2019–(2020)
Lee Je-myeong – Sloga Kraljevo (2013–2014)
Lee Jong-chan – Budućnost Dobanovci (2020–2021), Rad Beograd (2021–present)
Lee Joon-so - Zemun (2019-2020)
Lee San-hyeon – Bežanija (2007–2010)
Lim Chang-jong – Radnički Nova Pazova (2012–2013)
Myeong Se-jin – Sloboda Užice (2023–present)
Park Chan-sol – Bežanija (2016–2018)
Park Ji-han – Bežanija (2014–2015)
Park Tae-gyu – Bežanija (2007–2010)
Sang Ghyeok-seo – Sloga Kraljevo (2014–2015)
Shim Tae-soo – Sloboda Užice (2017–2018)
Son Joon-hyo – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Woo Chun-yong – Mladost Apatin (2009–2010)
Yu Dong-gyu – Bežanija (2014–2016), ČSK Pivara (2017–2018)
Yoon Sang-young – BSK Borča (2016–201x)
Yun Tae-ho – Inđija (2014–2015)
Kosovo
Counting only clubs outside Kosovo, or inside Kosovo for internationals before declaration of independence.
Edin Ahmeti – OFK Mladenovac (2006–2007)
Halil Asani – ČSK Pivara (1997–2000, 2002–2007), Proleter Novi Sad (2007–2012)
Filip Berisha – Budućnost Dobanovci (2018–2019)
Amir Bislimi – Proleter Novi Sad (2008–2010)
Enis Fetahu – Bor (2003–2004)
Sead Gorani – Železnik (1998–2001)
Muhamed Ilazi – Dubočica Leskovac (2001–2006, 2008–2013)
Besnik Kollari – Novi Pazar (1995–1996)
Rahmani Kurti – Novi Pazar (1995–1996)
Shefqet Kurti – Novi Pazar (1995–1996)
Memiš Limani – RFK Novi Sad (1991–1992)
Enes Maliqi – ZSK Valjevo (2001–2002), FK Beograd (2002–2010)
Ajazdin Nuhi – Čukarički Stankom (1997–2001)
Hajzerdzan Ramadani – Palilulac Beograd (1997–1998)
Edi Sulejmani – Palilulac Beograd (1998–1999)
Kuwait
Ahmad Al-Saqer – Sinđelić Beograd (2017–2018)
Kyrgyzstan
Viktor Kelm – Bežanija (2016–2017)
Latvia
Oļegs Karavajevs – OFK Beograd (1990–1993)
Lebanon
Muhamad Jawad Abdallah – Budućnost Dobanovci (2018–2019)
Mohamad Shamkhi - Budućnost Dobanovci (2021–2022)
Lesotho
Thapelo Tale – Srem S.Mitrovica (2011–2012)
Liberia
Omega Roberts – Donji Srem (2015–2016,2021–2023), Žarkovo (2018)–2019), Novi Pazar (2018–(2019), Budućnost Dobanovci (2019–2020)
Lithuania
Tomas Dapkus – Dinamo Vranje (2015–2016)
Libya
Mahdi Majid – Donji Srem (2015–2017)
Malaysia
Adam Hamid – IMT Beograd (2020–2021)
Omar Raiyan - Grafičar Beograd (2022–2023)
Mali
Issa Hare Diawara – Zemun (2015–2017)
Malta
Nenad Veselji – OFK Beograd (1988–1994)
Jamie Zerafa – Inđija (2018–2019)
Moldova
Dimitrie Moşneagă – Mladi Radnik (2010–2011)
Sergiu Diulgher – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Mongolia
Murun Altankhuyag – Mačva Šabac (2014–2015)
Montenegro
Incomplete
Zoran Aković – Novi Pazar (2018–present)
Danilo Bracanović – Zlatibor Čajetina (2019–2020)
Božidar Bujiša – Zlatibor Čajetina (2019–present)
Bojan Bulatović – Novi Pazar (2018–present)
Drago Bumbar – Sinđelić Beograd (2018–present)
Stefan Dabetić – FK Voždovac (2011–2013)
Mitar Ćuković – Proleter Novi Sad (2017–present)
Danilo Dašić – Zlatibor Čajetina (2019–2020)
Marko Despotović – FK Bežanija (2018–present)
Marko Drašković – BASK Beograd (2017–(2018), Sloga Despotovac (2018–2019), Borac Šakule (2019)–2020), Borac Čačak (2019–2020), Trayal Kruševac (2020–present)
Lazar Đokić – FK Zemun (2015)–2016), Dinamo Vranje (2016–2017, 2018–present), Metalac GM (2017–2018)
Vuk Đurić – Sloboda Užice (2005–2007, (2011)–2012, 2015–2016), FK Srem (2009–2011), FK Voždovac (2011–2013), Jedinstvo Putevi (2013–2015, 2017–present)
Nemanja Gojačanin – Javor Ivanjica (2013–2016)
Tigran Goranović – Sinđelić Beograd (2016–2017, 2019–2020), Dinamo Vranje (2019–2021)
Boško Guzina – Bežanija (2017–(2018), Teleoptik (2018–present)
Milovan Ilić – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Milan Jelovac – Metalac G. M. (2017–2020), Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2020–present)
Asmir Kajević – BSK Borča (2008–2012)
Filip Kasalica - Mačva Šabac (2006-2007), Srem S. Mitrovica (2007-2008), Grafičar Beograd (2022-2023), OFK Beograd (2023–present)
Šaleta Kordić – RFK Novi Sad (2012–2013), BSK Borča (2014–2015), Železničar Pančevo (2022–2024)
Alija Krnić – Javor Ivanjica (2017–present)
Nikola Krstinić – Banat Zrenjanin (2009–2011, 2013–2016)
Nikola Krstović – Grafičar Beograd (2019–2020)
Mijat Lambulić - Grafičar Beograd (2021–present)
Krsto Ljubanović – Inđija (2021–2022)
Bojan Magud – Zemun (2015–2018)
Marko Medenica - Metalac G.M. (2022-present)
Marko Milikić - Radnički Pirot (2020-(2021), OFK Žarkovo (2021-2022), Železničar Pančevo (2022-present)
Drago Milović – OFK Žarkovo (2018–present)
Filip Mitrović – Novi Pazar (2019–2020)
Sava Mugoša – Sinđelić Beograd (2015)–2016)
Bojica Nikčević – Radnički Pirot (2019–2020)
Nemanja Nikolić – Grafičar Beograd (2020–2021)
Petar Pavlićević – Kabel Novi Sad (2019–present)
Nikola Pejović – Zemun (2020–present)
Ognjen Peličić – Sloboda Užice (2017)–2018), FK Teleoptik (2018–present)
Mladen Popović – Dinamo Vranje (2019–present)
Stefan Popović – Dinamo Vranje (2019–present)
Stefan Račković – Bežanija (2014–(2015), Donji Srem (2015–(2016)
Vasilije Radenović – Kolubara (2013–2016), BSK Borča (2016–2017), Proleter Novi Sad (2017–2018), OFK Žarkovo (2018–2019, 2019–2020)
Dragoljub Radoman - Sloboda Užice (2022-present)
Aleksandar Radović – Hajduk Beograd (2007–2008)
Andrija Radulović - Grafičar Beograd (2021-2022)
Bogdan Rmuš – FK Novi Pazar (2018–present)
Peđa Savić – Teleoptik (2015–present)
Petar Sekulović – Teleoptik (2017–2018)
Janko Simović – Metalac G.M. (2007–2008), Dinamo Vranje (2019–2020)
Marko Stanovčić – FK Bežanija (2009–2012, 2013–2015), FK Inđija (2014–2015)
Nemanja Šćekić – Sinđelić Beograd (2014–2017), OFK Žarkovo (2018–present)
Tomo Šoc – Sloboda Užice (2022–2023), Mačva Šabac (2023–present)
Boris Tatar – Budućnost Dobanovci (2019–2020)
Mihailo Tomković – Zlatibor Čajetina (2018–present)
Stefan Vico - Grafičar Beograd (2022-present)
Marko Vidović – Sloga Kraljevo (2020–present)
Filip Vorotović – FK Teleoptik (2016–2017, 2018–present)
Predrag Vujović – Napredak Kruševac (2001–2005, 2007–2010), FK Novi Pazar (2010–2011), FK Metalac G.M. (2012–2014), FK Loznica (2015–2016)
Bojan Zogović – Radnički Sombor (2007–2009, (2010)–2011) – Banat Zrenjanin (2009–2010, 2010–2011), Timok Zaječar (2012–2014), Metalac G.M. (2014–2016,2017–2018), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2018–2019), Kolubara Lazarevac (2020–present)
Netherlands
Aleksandar Janković – Sloboda Užice (2017–2018)
Ralph Kerrebijn – Žarkovo (2020–2021), Budućnost Dobanovci (2021–2022)
New Zealand
Adam Mitchell – OFK Beograd (2016)–2017)
Nigeria
Abel Abah - Metalac G.M. (2022–present)
Kazeem Ojo Aderounmu – Radnički Beograd (2023–present)
Victor Agboh – BSK Borča (2001–2002), Žitorađa (2002)–2003), Novi Pazar (2005–2006), Mladost Apatin (2007–2008)
Nnaemeka Ajuru – Javor Ivanjica (2004–2005, 2006–2009), Jagodina (2017–2018), Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Victor Amos – Sloga Kraljevo (2020–2021), Trayal Kruševac (2022–present)
Justine Aniekwilo – Radnički Beograd (2023–present)
Shedrack Charles - IMT Beograd (2021–present)
Ayogueke Chibueze – Moravac Orion (2014–2015), Bežanija (2015–2016)
Eleanya Kelechi Collins – Kolubara Lazarevac (2001–2003), Mladost Apatin (2007–2008)
Ezeh Chinedu – Kosanica (2004–2008)
Emeka Emerun – Sloboda Užice (2015–2017), Radnički Pirot (2017–2018), Budućnost Dobanovci (2018–2022)
Ikechukwu Ezeh – Hajduk Beograd (2007–2008)
Yusuf Faisal – Grafičar Beograd (2023–present)
Frederick Famakinwa – Radnički Pirot (2007–2008)
Ogundele Gbemisola - Kabel Novi Sad (2021–2022)
Mark Geff – Novi Pazar (2003–2004), Kosanica (2004–2005)
Ifekwe Godswill – Temnić Varvarin (2017–present)
Stanley Ibe – Javor Ivanjica (2001–2002)
Ifeanyi Igbodo – BSK Borča (2000–2002), Javor Ivanjica (2002–2004, 2007–2008), FK Beograd (2003–(2004), Vlasina Vlasotince (2004–2005)
Kennedy Ikporo - IMT Beograd (2022-present)
Victor Jideonwor – Javor Ivanjica (2005–2008)
Moses John – Novi Pazar (2019)–2020), Smederevo (2019–(2020), Sloga Kraljevo (2020–2021)
Gideon Kadiri – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Peter Kolawole – Sloboda Užice (2017–2018)
Adekunle Lukmon – Borac Čačak (2002–2005)
Damien Maduba – Timok Zaječar (2021–2022)
Umar Mohammad – Smederevo (2023–present)
Abdulahi Muhamedom – Mačva Šabac (2023–present)
Cyril Nebo – Kabel Novi Sad (2019–2021), Jagodina (2020–(2021)
Kingsley Nnaji – Jagodina (2020–2021), Timok Zaječar (2021–2022)
Samuel Nnamani – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2013–2014), Donji Srem (2015–2016), Sloboda Užice (2016–2018)
Augustine Nwagwu – Metalac GM (2017–2018)
Kelvin Obasi – ČSK Pivara (2017–2018)
Gabriel Obekpa – IMT Beograd (2022–present)
Julius Ochima – Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–present)
Michel Odinakachakwu – Novi Pazar (2007–2008)
Obiora Odita – Javor Ivanjica (2003–2005, (2006)–2007, (2010)–2011, 2011–2012,2021–2022), Železničar Pančevo (2022–present)
Ugochukwu Oduenyi - Javor Ivanjica (2021–2023)
Kingsley Chukwudi Ogbonnaya – Srem S.Mitrovica (200_–200_)
Favour Ogbu – Grafičar Beograd (2023–present)
Ikechukwu Ojukwu – Novi Pazar (2005–2006)
Martins Okafor – Jagodina (2020–2022), Timok Zajecar (2021–(2022)
Michael Unadike Ukechukwu – Tekstilac Odžaci (2023–present)
Eze Vincent Okeuhie – Metalac GM (2017–2018)
Livinus Okorie – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Franklin Azubuike Ononaobi aka Frank Doski – Zemun (2015–2016)
Obele Okeke Onyebuchi – Železničar Beograd (2001–2002), Radnički Kragujevac (2002–2003)
Reuben Okoro – Sloga Kraljevo (2013–2014), Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2014)–2015), Mačva Šabac (2014–2015)
Emmanuel Oletu – Spartak Subotica (2008–2010)
Peter Omoduemuke – Obilić (2004–2007)
Okomajin Segun Onimisi – Sloga Kraljevo (2014)–2015), BSK Borča (2015–2016), Dinamo Vranje (2016–2020), Dubočica Leskovac (2020–2022)
Henry Onyilo – Inđija (2013–2014)
Peter Taiye Oladotun – Bežanija (2008–2009)
Elijah Peace – Mačva Šabac (2023–present)
Raphael Remingus Governor – Kolubara Lazarevac (2014–2015)
Kayode Saliman - Zlatibor Čajetina (2022–2023)
Olatunji Sulaimon Teslim – Inđija (2013–2014)
Emmanuel Udeh – BSK Borča (2015–2016)
Emeka Jude Ugali – FK Beograd (1998–1999)
Efe Ugiagbe – Mačva Šabac (2023–present)
Dante Charles Ugwu – Moravac Orion (2014–2015)
Prince Lucky Ukachukwu - IMT Beograd (2022–2023), Tekstilac Odžak (2023–present)
Abdul Zubairu – Kolubara Lazarevac (2022–2023)
Ibrahim Zubairu – Jedinstvo Ub (2023–present)
North Macedonia
The players that have played for the Macedonian National Team are in bold, the others have played since 1992.
Ahmet Ahmetović – Novi Pazar (1997–1999)
Muhamet Ajvazi – BSK Borča (2016–2017)
Fikret Alomerović – Radnički Niš (199_–199_)
Marjan Altiparmakovski – Radnički Beograd (2023–present)
Aleksa Amanović – Javor Ivanjica (2015–2020)
Stefan Andrić – Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2016), Radnički Beograd (2022-present)
Igor Angelovski – Srem S.Mitrovica (2009–2010)
Stefan Aškovski – Teleoptik (2009–2012)
Boban Avramovski – Kolubara Lazarevac (2008–2009)
Sava Avramovski – Grafičar Beograd (2021–2023)
Vlado Blazeski – Sloga Kraljevo (2001–2005)
Nikola Bogdanovski – Bežanija (2018–2019), OFK Žarkovo (2019)–2020), Novi Pazar (2019–2020, 2022–present)
Dragan Čadikovski – Kolubara Lazarevac (1997–2001, 2014–2015, 2016–2019)
Cvetanovski – Bežanija (2001–2002)
Ivica Cvetanovski – Sloboda Užice (1989–1993, 1993–1996)
Olivio Dautovski – Topličanin Prokuplje (1989–1995)
Filip Despotovski – Bežanija (2004–2005), Mačva Šabac (2005–2007)
Stefan Despotovski - Grafičar Beograd (2021-2022)
Milan Dimovski – Topličanin Prokuplje (1993–1994)
Lazar Djorejlievski – Bežanija (2015–2016)
Mario Đurovski – Bežanija (2003–2008)
Dušan Filimanovski – Bežanija (2010–2013), Metalac G.M. (2013–2014)
Jane Gavalovski – Rad Beograd (1998–2004), Mačva Šabac (1997–1998, 2005–2007)
Georgijevski – Rudar Bor (1989–1993)
Marko Gjorgjievski – Radnički Pirot (2020–2021)
Igor Ilić – Jedinstvo Ub (2004–2005)
Ismail Ismaili – ština (199_–199_)
Filip Jančevski – Hajduk Kula (2014–2017)
Georgije Jankulov – Železničar Pančevo (2020–present)
Aleksa Jordanov - Trayal Kruševac (2021–2023)
Stefan Josifoski – Zemun (2010–2011, 2013–(2014), Inđija (2011–2012)
Hristijan Kirovski – Veternik (2003–(2004), Mačva Šabac (2004–2006)
Tome Kitanovski – Sloboda Užice (2023–present)
Vlatko Kolev – Napredak Kruševac (200_–2002), Metalac G.M. (2002–2003)
Tihomir Kostadinov – Moravac Orion (2014–2015)
Antonio Krstanoski – Moravac Orion (2014–2015)
Strahinja Krstevski – Proleter Novi Sad (2016–2019), Grafičar Beograd (2019)–2020)
Petar Krstić – Radnički Pirot (2019–present)
Stevica Kuzmanovski – OFK Beograd (1984–1986, 1990–1991), Rad Beograd (1997–2000)
Nenad Lazarevski – RFK Novi Sad (2003–2006, 2011–2013), Radnički Sombor (2010–2011), Inđija (2013–2014)
Vlade Lazarevski – Napredak Kruševac (2001–2005), Temnić Varvarin (2016–present)
Aleksandar Lazevski – Teleoptik (2004–2007, 2008–2010), Vršac (2018-present)
Daniel Lempevski – Moravac Orion (2014–2015)
Borče Manevski – Banat Zrenjanin (2008–2010)
Žan Manovski – Srem S.Mitrovica (2011–2012)
Boban Marić – Hajduk Beograd (2006–2008)
Zoran Martinovski – GSP Polet Beograd (1997–1998)
Dančo Masev – Rad Beograd (2003–2004)
Darko Micevski – Sevojno (2009–2010)
Mitovski – Sinđelić Beograd (1997–1998)
Kliment Nastovski – Dinamo Vranje (2006–2007)
Filip Naumčevski – OFK Mladenovac (2011–2012)
Pavel Nedelkovski – Radnički Niš (2003–2004)
Matej Nikolov – Zlatibor Čajetina (2020–present)
Boban Nikolovski – Bor (1995–1996, 2003–2004), Železničar Beograd (1999–2000, 2001–2002), Srem S.Mitrovica (2002–2003), Hajduk Beograd (2003)–2004), Radnički Niš (2004–200_)
Dragi Pavlov – Radnički Pirot (199_–1998)
Milovan Petrovikj - Zlatibor Čajetina (2021-present)
Petrovski – Bor (1993–1996)
Bojan Petrovski – Radnički Niš (2006–2007)
Borče Postolov – Dinamo Vranje (2006–2007)
Predrag Ranđelović – Teleoptik (2008–2011)
Stevica Ristić – Mladost Luks (2002–2003), Temnić Varvarin (2017–present)
Dušan Savić – Dubočica Leskovac (2003–2004,2020–present)
Sazdov – Sloga Kraljevo (1997–1998)
Marko Simunovikj – Teleoptik (2018–2022), Radnički Beograd (2023–present)
Stefan Spirovski – Borac Čačak (2009–2014)
Perica Stančeski – Hajduk Beograd (2003–2004), Mačva Šabac (2016–2017)
Ostoja Stjepanović – Dinamo Vranje (2006–2007)
Milan Stoilković – Hajduk Beograd (2009)–2010, 2011–2012, 2013–present)
Nikola Stojanov – Sloboda Užice (2016–2017)
Nikola Stojanović – BSK Bujanovac (2001–2005, 2017–2018), Dinamo Vranje (2005–2013, 2016–2017), Radnik Surdulica (2008)–2009, 2013–2016)
Filip Stojanovski – Radnički Pirot (2017–2018)
Milan Stojanovski – Proleter Zrenjanin (1993–1997)
Gjorgji Tanušev – Proleter Novi Sad (2012–2014), Kolubara Lazarevac (2014–2015)
Zoran Todorov – Zemun (2007–2008), Voždovac (2008–2009)
Aleksandar Todorovski – Radnički Beograd (2002–2005), Grafičar Beograd (2020–2022)
Milosh Tosheski – Zemun (2018–2020), Smederevo (2018–2020)
Nikola Tosheski – Proleter Novi Sad (2017–2019)
Lazar Vidić – Radnički Kragujevac (2009–2011), Mladi Radnik (2011)–2012), Dinamo Vranje (2017)–2018)
Macedonian internationals that played in Serbian second league clubs only during Yugoslav period:
Toni Jakimovski – Radnički Kragujevac (1988–1989)
Poland
Aleksander Čišič – Bežanija (2014–2015)
Portugal
Miguel Barbosa – Sloboda Užice (2018–2019)
Tiago Carneiro – Sevojno (2005–2006)
Maki Faria - BASK Beograd (2020-2021)
Vuk Kovacevic – Bežanija (2013–2014)
Puerto Rico
Andrés Cabrero – Teleoptik (2009–2010)
Romania
Eugen Cîrstea – RFK Novi Sad (1998–1999)
Jozef Kezdi – Viktorija Vršac (1936–1937)
Marinel Pascu – Spartak Subotica (–2001, 2005–2006)
Paunescu – Grafičar Beograd (1939–1940)
Florin Pelecaci – Srem S.Mirovica (2006–2007)
Russia
Nikita Arshinov – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Maksim Artemchuk – Proleter Novi Sad (2017–2018), Zlatibor Čajetina (2019-2020)
Alexander Azzam – Tekstilac Odžaci (2023–present)
Stefan Baronov – OFK Žarkovo (2018–2019)
Leonid Bayer – BASK Beograd (1940–1942)
Leonid Bobrizhnyiy – KAFK Kula (1934–1936)
Ignat Deryavko – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Yuri Gazzaev – Mačva Šabac (1990–1991)
Stanislav Goldin – Borac Čačak (2020–present)
Vladislav Goldin – Tekstilac Odžaci (2023–present)
Ilya Guchmazov – Grafičar Beograd (2019-2021)
Andrei Guzienko – Bečej (1990–1992)
Fedor Khudenko – Radnički Beograd (2022–2023)
Roman Korhovoy – Sinđelić Beograd (2019–present)
Stanislav Krapukhin – Radnički Beograd (2023–present)
Uchuk Kuldinov – Proleter Zrenjanin (1946–1949)
Maksim Lada – Teleoptik (2017–2018). OFK Žarkovo (2021–present)
Martvey Martinkevich – Kabel Novi Sad (2021–2022), Loznica (2022–present)
Egor Mishura – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2014–2015)
Sergei Mokoida – Sinđelić Beograd (2017–2018)
Kiril Pakhomov – OFK Žarkovo (2020–present)
Danil Pechenkin – OFK Žarkovo (2019–present)
Fedor Solovei – Inđija (2023–present)
Nikita Sudarikov – IMT Beograd (2021–2022)
Igor Sveshnikov – Inđija (2016–2017)
Daniil Timofeev – IMT Beograd (2021–present)
Igor Vasiliev – Ruski SK (1924–1925)
Rastislav Vasiliev – Ruski SK (1924–1925)
Vladislav Vasilyev – Bežanija (2017–2018)
Vladimir Vinogradov – Ruski SK (1924–1925)
Sergei Vitvinskiy – Građanski Sr. Mitrovica (192_–192_), Vojvodina (1922–1924)
Bogdan Zhbanov – Sloboda Užice (2017–2018)
Arkadi Zhelnin - Jedinstvo Ub (2022–2023), Sloboda Užice (2023–present)
Aleksei Zolotarenko – ČSK Pivara (2017–2018)
Senegal
Bado (Badara Badji) – Inđija (2018–2019, 2021–2022)
Mbao Cire – Grafičar Beograd (2022–present)
Alioune Diakhate – Teleoptik (2012–2013)
Mamadou Diarra – Bežanija (2009–2010)
Mamadou Diatta – Javor Ivanjica (2021–2022)
Cherif Diouf – Vršac (2022–present)
Fallou Fall – Grafičar Beograd (2022–2023)
Babacar Mboup – Grafičar Beograd (2023–present)
Ibrahima Mame N'Diaye – Napredak Kruševac (2012–2017)
Seydou Bocar Seck – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2020)
Sierra Leone
Mustapha Bangura – Zemun (2016–2017)
Kelfala Marah - Čukarički (2003-2005)
Singapore
Aleksandar Đurić – Sloga Kraljevo (1992–1993)
Fahrudin Mustafić – Novi Pazar (2000–2002)
Slovakia
Boris Durgala – Dolina Padina (2011–2012)
Boris Sekulić – Zemun (2009–2010)
Marko Turan – Bežanija (2016–2018)
Slovenia
The players that have played for the Slovenian national team are in bold, the others have played since 1992.
Marko Božič – Rad Beograd (2007–2008)
Nino Dirnbek – Donji Srem (2015–2016)
Dejan Gerić – Radnik Surdulica (2013–2014)
Goražd Gorinšek – Železničar Lajkovac (2000–2001)
Josip Lukenda – Javor Ivanjica (2006–2007)
Vladimir Mandić – Železničar Pančevo (2020–2021)
Peđa Misimović – Sinđelić Beograd (2013–2014)
Žan Osredkar – Javor Ivanjica (2006–2007)
Vanja Panič – Grafičar Beograd (2020)–2021)
Milan Rakič – RFK Novi Sad (1998–2000, 2010–2011)
Marko Simeunovič – Napredak Kruševac (1990–1991)
Stefan Smiljanić – Jedinstvo Putevi (2014–2015)
Peter Stojanovič – Bežanija (2012–2013)
South Sudan
Peter Maker - Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2023–present)
Suriname
Mitchell Donald - Grafičar Beograd (2022-2023)
Sweden
Robin Kačaniklić – Teleoptik (2011–2012)
Michell Miljević-Sachpekidis – Radnik Surdulica (2014–2015)
Switzerland
Milan Basrak – Zemun (2010–2011), Smederevo (2013)–2014, 2019–2020), Inđija (2013–(2014), Jagodina (2020–2021), Budućnost Dobanovci (2021–2022)
Mihailo Bogicevic – Loznica (2019–2021)
Nemanja Cvijanović – Dinamo Vranje (2018–2020)
Svetlan Kosić – Loznica (2015–2016), Budućnost Dobanovci (2016–2017)
Veselin Lakić – Jagodina (2016–2018)
Srdjan Maksimović – Radnički Pirot (2006–2007), Sevojno (2007–2008)
Stefan Marinković – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2015–2016)
Milan Marjanovic – Metalac G.M. (2019–2020)
Aleksandar Njeguš – Zlatibor Čajetina (2018–2021)
Miloš Opačić - Rad Beograd (2022-2023)
Emil Osmanovic – Javor Ivanjica (2014–2015)
Milorad Stajić - Grafičar Beograd (2021–2023)
Nikola Stevanović – Sloga Kraljevo (2012–2013)
Miroslav Trajković – Moravac Orion (2014–2015)
Yves Vladislav – Teleoptik (2016–2018), Sinđelić Beograd (2018–2019)
Tanzania
Morice Abraham – RFK Novi Sad (2023–present)
Leonard Chindongo – Radnički Pirot (2020–2021)
Nassor Hamoud – OFK Žarkovo (2019–2020)
Said Khamis – Jedinstvo Ub (2023–present)
Muhsini Malima – Grafičar Beograd (2019–2020)
Alphonce Msanga – RFK Novi Sad (2023–present)
Thailand
Olaxon A Tamba – Metalac G.M. (2022–2023)
Uganda
Khalid Aucho – OFK Beograd (2016–2017)
Timothy Batabaire – OFK Niš (2003–2005)
Abdulwahid Iddi – Budućnost Dobanovci (2021–present)
Vincent Kayizi – Srem S. Mitrovica (2008–2011), Novi Pazar (2010–(2011)
Nestroy Kizito – Srem S. Mitrovica (2003–2005)
Abraham Ndugwa - Budućnost Dobanovci (2021-present)
Pius Obuya – Kabel Novi Sad (2021–2022), Radnički S. Mitrovica (2022–present)
Lawrence Segawa – Srem S. Mitrovica (2009–2010)
Phillip Ssozi – Srem S. Mitrovica (2003–2005)
Ukraine
Maksym Andrushchenko – Smederevo (2019–2020), Dubočica Leskovac (2020-2021)
Taras Bondarenko – Metalac G.M. (2016–2018)
Marko Devych – Zvezdara (2000–2002), Radnički Beograd (2003–2004), Voždovac (2004–2005, 2019–2020)
Andriy Gordon – Sloboda Užice (2000–2002)
Serhiy Gordon – Sloboda Užice (2000–2002)
Yevhen Kovalenko – OFK Žarkovo (2018–2019)
Pavlo Matviychenko – Novi Pazar (1993–1994)
Yevhen Pavlov - Vršac (2022–2023)
Bohdan Sichkaruk – Napredak Kruševac (2015–2016)
United States
Vukasin Bulatovic - Metalac G.M. (2022-present)
Ilija Mitić – Bor (1963–1965)
George Pantelic – Zemun (2010–2013)
Peter Thomas – Bane Raška (2003–2008)
Nate Weiss – Metalac G.M. (2008–2009)
Uzbekistan
Nazimov – Jadran Beograd (192x–193x)
Venezuela
Alejandro Pol Hurtado – Srem S.Mitrovica (2010–2011)
Zimbabwe
Tinotenda Chibharo – Sloboda Užice (2017–2018)
Ronald Tendai Chitiza – ČSK Pivara (2016–2017), TSC Bačka Topola (2017–2018)
Mike Temwanjera – Javor Ivanjica (2003–2006)
This is a list of foreign players that have played, or play, in the Serbian Leagues; North/Vojvodina, Belgrade, East, West, Serbian Republic League, lower Subassociation Leagues
The criterion is the same as applied in the main list.
Abkhazia
Daur Chanba – Lokomotiva Beograd (201x–2018)
Albania
Arjan Beqaj – Liria Prizren (1992–1995)
Mario Beqaris – FK Beograd (2014–2015)
Edonis Dacaj – Radnički Zrenjanin (2017–present)
Armend Dallku – Kosovo Vučitrn (1997–2002)
Mehmet Dragusha – KF Beselidhja (199_–1994)
Arbnor Fejzullahu – FK Trnovac (2010–2011)
Besnik Hasi – Vlaznimi Đakovica (198_–1988), Dinamo Pančevo (1991–1992)
Bekim Kastrati – Budućnost Peć (199_–199_)
Blerim Krasniqi – FK Trnovac (200_–20__)
Riza Lushta – FK Rudari Trepča (1932–1934)
Dodë Tahiri – ASK Obilić Aranđelovac (1930s&1950s)
Gjelbrim Taipi – BSK Bujanovac (200_–2010), FK Trnovac (2010–2011)
Faton Xhemaili – Budućnost Popovac 2017–2018
Argentina
Gustavo Marino – Car Konstantin (2006–200_)
Roberto Oreb – Omladinac Zemun (195_–195_)
Armenia
Angelyan – Timok Zaječar (1924–1925)
Ognjen Čančarević – Sloga Bajina Baŝta (2007–2008)
Gari Charatsupyan – Palilulac Beograd (201_–201_)
Australia
Vid Amidzic – BASK Beograd (2011–2013)
Stefan Cicmil – , IMT Beograd (2016–2017), Žarkovo (2017–2018)
Bobby Despotovski – Dinamo Pančevo (1989–1991)
Zoran Ilic – FK Jagodina (1993–1995)
Milan Ivanović – FK Crvenka (1978–1979)
Joey Jevtić – OFK Beograd (2019–2021)
Aleksandar Jovanovic – FK Palić (2008)–2009), FK Veternik (2008–(2009)
Jake Jovanovski – OFK Beograd (2019–present)
Angelo Kalamvokis - Radnicki Nova Pazova (2021)-2022), Hajduk Beška (2021-(2022)
Joshua Markovski – IMT Beograd (2016–2019)
Marko Milutinović – OFK Beograd (2017–2018)
Srećko Mitrović – Radnički Stobex (2009–2010)
Srećko Mitrović – Cement Beočin (2017)–2018), Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2017–(2018)
David Ninkovic – Mladost Bački Jarak (2017–present)
Damir Prodanovic – Vujić Voda Valjevo (2009–2010)
Nemanja Sokolović – OFK Beograd (2018–2019), OFK Mladenovac (2019–present)
Stefan Stanojević – Radnički Stobex (2012)–2013), Železničar Lajkovac (2013–(2014), FK Loznica (2016–present)
Milan Zoric – Indeks Novi Sad (2010)–2011), Cement Beočin (2010–(2011)
Austria
Goran Kartalija – Vrbas (1985–1988)
Ivan Kristo – Hajduk Beograd (200_–200_)
Stefan Milojević – Bežanija (2017–2019)
Rastko Rastoka – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2023–present)
Azerbaijan
David Samedov – BASK Beograd (2016–2017)
Branimir Subašić – FK Sremčica (2001–2002)
Belgium
Akwasi Oduro – Radnički Kragujevac (2008–2009)
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Very incomplete
Nebojša Arbutina – Dinamo Pančevo (2009–2010, 2011–2012, 2012–present), Dolina Padina (2010–2011)
Omer Arifović – Loznica (2017–present)
Osman Arifović – Loznica (2017–present)
Aleksandar Babić – Bečej (2017–present)
Njegoš Babić – Vršac (2016–2017), Grafičar Beograd (2017–present)
Denil Badzak - Dinamo Pancevo (2021–present)
Miloš Bajić – Radnički Beograd (2016–2017), IMT Beograd (2018–2019,2020–present)
Ognjen Blagojević – PKB Padinska Skela (2012)–2012), Dinamo Pančevo (2012–(2013), Dorćol (2013)–2014), OFK Žarkovo (2013–2017), Železničar Pančevo (2017–2019)
Slaviša Bogdanović – Palić (2012–2013), Dorćol (2013–2014), Srem Jakovo (2014–2015), FK Smederevo (2017–present)
Marko Bogojević – Radnički Šid (2017–2018)
Filip Božić – Sloga Požega (2018–2019)
Milorad Cimirot – Jedinstvo Ub (2010–2012)
Marko Čubrilo – FK Teleoptik (2016–2018)
Čedomir Dakić – Sloga Temerin (2008–2010), Mladost Bački Jarak (2013–present)
Đurađ Dobrijević – FK Teleoptik (2012–2015), OFK Žarkovo (2015–2016)
Nemanja Doderović – Karađorđe Topola (2011–2012, 2013–2017), Šumadija Aranđelovac (2012–2013, 2017–present)
Borislav Erić – Mačva Bogatić (2019–present)
Mladen Galić – FK Sopot (2009–2010), Sloga Temerin (2010–2011), Banat Zrenjanin (2013–2014), OFK Odžaci (2016–2018)
Ivan Gluhović – Radnički Šid (2016–2017), FK Sopot (2017–2018)
Almir Gredić – Polimlje Prijepolje (1999–2000)
Goran Guja – FK Vršac (2010–2012)
Jovan Ilić – Grafičar Beograd (2017–2018), Brodarac (2018–2020)
Mladen Jezdić – Borac Bivolje (2009–2013), Jedinstvo Paraćin (2013–2014), Dinamo Vranje (2014–2015), Dunav Prahovo (2017–present)
Mladen Jovančić – Dinamo Pančevo (2017–present)
Petar Jovanović – Radnički Stobex (2001–2004), Sloboda Užice (2004–2005)
Darko Jović – ČSK Pivara (2017–present)
Nemanja Jović – Teleoptik (2019–2020)
Milorad Kosić – Sloga Temerin (2011)–2012), Mladi Radnik (2012–2013), Cement Beočin (2014–2015), Mladost Bački Jarak (2011–(2012), 2013–2014), 2015–present)
Stefan Kovač – IMT Novi Beograd (2017–2018)
Milan Lalić – Zemun (2012–2014), Radnički Nova Pazova (2015–2016, 2017–2018)
Milenko Malović – Srem Jakovo (2011–2012), BASK Beograd (2013–2014)
Slavko Marić – Hajduk Beograd (2001–2006)
Dragan-Vuk Marković – Radnički Beograd (2017–2018), OFK Beograd (2018–present)
Dragan Matković - Vršac (2020-2021)
Slobodan Milanović – FK Beograd (2010–2011)
Milan Mirić – Borac Čačak (2019–present)
Siniša Mladenović – Sloga Kraljevo (2008–2009, 2010–2014), Metalac Kraljevo (2009–2010)
Aleksa Mrđa – Lokomotiva Železnik (2018)–2019), BSK Borča (2019–present)
Momčilo Mrkaić – FK Zemun (2011–2013, 2018–2019)
Branko Ostojić – Sloboda Čačak (2002–2007), Radnički Kragujevac (2007–2008, 2018–2019), FAP Priboj (2008–2010), Partizan Bumbarevo Brdo (2010–2011), Borac Čačak (2019–present)
Danijel Panić – RFK Novi Sad (2013)–2014), Sloga Temerin (2013–2017), Mladost Bački Jarak (2017–present)
Đorđe Pantelić – Kabel Novi Sad (2018–present)
Stefan Paranos – Crvena zvezda Mali Mokri Lug (2016–2017), BSK Batajnica (2017)–2018), BASK Beograd (2017–present)
Milovan Petrić – OFK Vršac (2018)–2019)
Todor Petrović – FK Zemun (2011–2012), FK Sopot (2012–2014)
Bojan Popović – Srem Jakovo (2010–2011), FK Beograd (2011–2012)
Kristijan Radinovic - OFK Beograd (2020-2022)
Branislav Ružić – Loznica (2011–2012, 2019–present)
Stefan Santrač – Grafičar Beograd (2018–present)
Željko Savić – Omladinac Novi Banovci (2006–2012, 2019–present)
Filip Sredojević – FK Smederevo (2015–2016), Grafičar Beograd (2016–present)
Đorđe Stanković – Sinđelić Niš (2019–present)
Nemanja Stjepanović – Big Bull Bačinci (2004–2005)
Ognjen Stjepanović – Brodarac (2016–2017)
Ognjen Šinik – Radnik Stari Tamiš (2004–2008), Sinđelić Beograd (2008–2009), FK Beograd (2009–2010), Dolina Padina (2014)–2015), Radnički Sombor (2014–(2015), OFK Beograd (2017–present)
Branislav Terzić – BASK Beograd (2011–2012), FK Zemun (2012–2013, 2018–present)
Zoran Vasiljević – Radnički Sombor (199_–199_), Cement Beočin (199_–)
Nemanja Vejnović – Jedinstvo Ub (2010–2012)
Predrag Vladić – Kabel Novi Sad (2018–present)
Filip Vujović – FK Žarkovo (2016–present)
Stefan Vukadin – OFK Žarkovo (2013–2014), IM Rakovica (2014–2015), FK Teleoptik (2015–2017)
Goran Vukliš – Radniĉki Nova Pazova (2006–2007), FK Zemun (2008–2009)
Dejan Vukomanović – Palilulac Beograd (2006–2011), BSK Borča (2011–2012, 2019–2020)
Brazil
Adriano – Zmaj Zemun (2007–2008)
Alex – FK Teleoptik (2008–2010)
Edison Amaral – Remont Čačak (2000–2001)
Anderson Costa – Dinamo Pančevo (2002–2004)
Elton Martins – FK Teleoptik (2008–2009)
Fabio Silva - Hajduk Beograd (2020–present)
Jefferson Madeira – FK Teleoptik (2008–2009)
Moisés – Sinđelić Niš (2008–2009)
Renan Eduardo – Sinđelić Niš (2008–2009)
Wagner – Zmaj Zemun (2007–2008)
Washington Santana – FK Teleoptik (2008–2010)
William Alves – Slavija Novi Sad (2008–2009)
Brunei
Arsen Marjan – PKB Padinska Skela (199_–1998), Palilulac Beograd (2010–2011)
Bulgaria
Georgi Bogdanov – Morava Ćuprija (1990–1991)
Ivan Čvorović – FK Teleoptik (2002–2003), Srem Jakovo (2003–2005)
Tsvetko Ivanov – FK Jagodina (1990–1991)
Veljko Jelenković – Bečej (2021)–2022)
Karakashanov – Ozren Sokobanja (1963–1964)
Hari Kazakov – Timok Zaječar (199_–199_)
Yordan Kostov – Timok Zaječar (1990–1991)
Bev Lulin – Radnički Svilajnac (1990–1991)
Kiril Petrov – Radnički Svilajnac (1990–1991)
Dimitar Petrunov – Jedinstvo Platičevo (2003–2008), Jedinstvo Pirot (201_–2015)
Sokolov – FK Bor (1987–1989, 1997–2000)
Metodi Tomanov – Timok Zaječar (1990–1991)
Zlatomir Zagorčić – Grafičar Beograd (2006–2009)
Nikolay Zoykov – Morava Ćuprija (1990–1991)
Burkina Faso
Issouf Compaoré – Fruškogorac (2008–2009)
Cameroon
Theophile Abanda - Loznica (2006-2007), Vujić Voda Valjevo (2007-2008), Jedinstvo Ub (2008-2009)
Thierry Ako – Spartak Subotica (2003–2005, 2007–2008), Bečej (2005–2007)
Vincent Ngongang – BSK Batajnica (2001–2004), Teleoptik (2004–2006), Proleter Novi Sad (2006–2009), Metalac Futog (2009–2012), Borac Kruševac (2012–2014), Crvenka (2014–2017)
Claude Rygan – Teleoptik (2003–2004)
Canada
Milan Beader – Omladinac Novi Banovci (2016–2017)
Milan Božić – Železničar Beograd (2007)–2008), Kolubara Lazarevac (2007–(2008), FK Beograd (2009–2010), FK Bulbuderac (2012–2013), FK Zvezdara (2013–2015)
Srdjan Djekanović – Zmaj Zemun (2001–2002), Železničar Beograd (2003–2004)
Tibor Gemeri – FK Crvenka (1974–1975)
Milan Janikic – Lokomotiva Beograd (2008–2012)
Boban Kajgo – Hajduk Beograd (2007–2009, 2009–2011), Balkan Bukovica (2012–2013)
Misel Klisara – Spektrum Novi Sad (2006)–2007)
Olivier Lacoste-Lebuis – Mladi Radnik Bačina (2000–2002)
Jovan Lučić – Hajduk Beograd (2014–2015), BSK Batajnica (2015)–2016), FK Vršac (2015–(2016), Radnički Beograd (2016–2018). FK Zvezdara (2018–2019)
Aleksa Marković – Radnički Beograd (2016)–2017), FK Brodarac (2016–(2017)
Igor Prostran – FK Beograd (200x–2001)
Mike Stojanovic – Morava Velika Plana (1966–1969)
China
Gao Feng – FK Beograd (2006–2007)
Li Xin – Zvižd Kučevo (2007–2008)
Wan Houliang – ČSK Pivara (2002–2004)
Xu Yang – FK Beograd (2006–2007)
Zeyi Feng - Kabel Novi Sad (2020-2021)
Zhao Pu – Zvižd Kučevo (2007–2008)
Côte d'Ivoire
Rudolph Diezion – FK Gučevo (2007–2009)
Arnaud Gaibo – FK Gučevo (2008–2009)
Marcel Metoua – FK Fruškogorac (2007–2008)
Simlice Ouhomblegnon – FK Gučevo (2008–2009)
Croatia
The players that have played for the Croatia National Team are in bold, the others have played since 1992.
Predrag Alić – Budućnost Gložan (2014–present)
Vedran Bjelajac – Proleter Zrenjanin (2003–2006), Begej Žitište (2006–2007), Crvena zvezda Vojvode Stepe (2007–2008), Spartak Debeljača (2008)–2009), Metalac Futog (2008–2010), KMF SAS Zrenjanin (2010–2011), FK Veternik (2011–2012), Cement Beočin (2012–present)
Dean Borović – Radnički Beograd (2007–2008), Balkan Bukovica (2008–2012)
Matteo Brdar – Dunav Stari Banovci (2013–2014), Jedinstvo Stara Pazova (2015)–2016), Sremac Vojka (2015–present)
Ivan Budinčević – Obilić Novi Kneževac (1991–199_), Radnički Bajmok (199_–199_), Zorka Subotica (199_–199_), FK Aleksa Šantić (199_–2000)
Dražen Cvjetković – Tekstilac Odžaci (1998–1999), FK Crvenka (1999–2000, 2006–2007, 20__–2014), FK Inđija (2000–2001), Spartak Subotica (2001–2007), FK Vršac, FK Bajmok
Armando Čekić – Sloboda Novi Kozarci (2009–201_), FK Palić (201_–2014), OFK Kikinda (2014–2015), ŽAK Kikinda (2015–present)
Dejan Čugalj – FK Srbobran (2014–2016)
Zoran Čugalj – Radnički Šid (2001–2002)
Dragan Dobrić – BSK Borča (2004–2005), Palilulac Beograd (2005–2010), Srem Jakovo (2010–2011), FK Resnik (2011–2012), PKB Padinska Skela (2012–present)
Dražen Dobrić – Šumadinac Stojnik (2007–2009), Posavac Tišma (2009–2010), Borac Progar (2010–2011), Srem Jakovo (2011–present)
Branislav Drobnjak – Borac Martinci (2004–2006), FK Big Bul (2009–2010), Radnički Šid (2010–2011, 2012–present)
Stevica Dujaković – BSK Borča (2004–2005)
Duško Dukić – Jedinstvo Paraćin (2004–2006, 2019–present), Borac Paraćin (2018–2019)
Svetozar Džanić – Slavija Novi Sad (193x–1934)
Dejan Godar – FK Tavankut (199_–199_), Solunac Karađorđevo (199_–199_)
Boris Gospojević – Borac Novi Sad (2007–2008), Radnički Šid (2008–2011, 2011–present), Proleter Novi Sad (2010–(2011)
Nebojša Ivančević – Radnički Nova Pazova (2014–2016)
Goran Ivanišević – Omladinac Novi Banovci (2009–2011), Dunav Stari Banovci (2011–present)
Ognjen Ivić – Radnički Sremska Mitrovica (2011–2012)
Radovan Ivković – Krila Krajina Bačka Palanka (2006–2007), OFK Futog (2007–2008), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2008–2010, 2012–present), ČSK Pivara (2010–2011, 2018–present), Hajduk Kula (2018)–2019)
Srđan Ivković – Radnički Šid (2012–2014, 2014–present)
Nemanja Jorgić – Sloga Temerin (2006–2008, 2011–2014), FK Palić (2008–2010), Radnički Sombor (2013–2014), Cement Beočin (2014)–2015), TSC Bačka Topola (2014–present)
Slaven Juriša – Dinamo Pančevo (2012–2016)
Ilija Knezić – FK Big Bull (2007–2010), FK Resnik (2009)–2010), FK Žarkovo (2011–present)
Ivan Konjević – FK Teleoptik (199_–199_)
Dario Krivokuća – Jedinstvo Stara Pazova (2015–present)
Petar Krneta – Radnički Šid (2011–2012)
Zoran Kukić – Radnički Šid (1999–2000)
Slaven Lakić – Radnički Sombor (2001–2006, 2009–present)
Denis Lazinica – FK Palić (2009–2011), Radnički Bajmok (2011–2012), FK Bačka 1901 (2012–2015)
Marko Lepinjica – Radnički Šid (2013–present)
Boženko Lešina – Zmaj Zemun (2005–2008)
Davor Magoč – Šajkaš Kovilj (2004)–2005), ČSK Pivara (2004–2008, 2009–2010), Stražilovo Sr. Karlovci (2010–2011), Crvena zvezda Novi Sad (2011–2012)
Slavko Mandić – FK Bačka 1901 (199_–199_)
Aleksandar Manojlović – Jedinstvo Stara Pazova (2011–present)
Dušan Martić – Tekstilac Odžaci (2011–2013)
Jovica Mikić – Zmaj Zemun (2007–2009), Fruškogorac Kukujevci (2012–2014), Radnički Šid (2014–present)
Boris Miljković – FK Car Konstantin (2010–present)
Bojan Milovanović – RFK Novi Sad (20__–20__)
Todor Mizdrak – Mladi Obilić (2003–2005), Železničar Beograd (2005–2006, 2008–2010), Balkan Bukovica (2009–(2010), FK Žarkovo (2012–2013), FK Brodarac (2014–present)
Marko Moravčić – FK Bačka 1901 (2003–2004), Zlatibor Voda Horgoš (2006–2007), Spartak Subotica (2007–2008)
Miroslav Pavlović – ČSK Pivara (2001–2004, 2004–2011, 2013–present), Budućnost Gložan (2012–2013)
Predrag Počuča – FK Dorćol (2004)–2005), FK Žarkovo (2004–(2005)
Dejan Poljaković – FK Bačka 1901 (1993–199_)
Mario Pufek – Spartak Subotica (200_–2004), FK Bačka 1901 (2014–2015)
Tomislav Pukšec – Topličanin Prokuplje
Ognjen Pupovac – FK Obilić (201_–2015)
Uroš Puskas – Radnički Šid (2015–present)
Obrad Ratković – FK Vršac (2008–2014)
Nikola Rudnicki – Banat Zrenjanin (2009–2010, (2013)–2014), Vojvodina Novo Miloševo (2010)–2011), Zadrugar Lazarevo (2011–2012), Budućnost Srpska Crnja (2012–2013), Jedinstvo Novi Bečej (2013–(2014), Jedinstvo Banatsko Karađorđevo (2014–2015), Begej Žitište (2015–present)
Kujtim Shala – Liria Prizren (1981–1983)
Aleksandar Špehar – Bratstvo Prigrevica (2015–present)
Zoran Stamenić – ČSK Pivara (1998–2004, 2004–2006)
Nemanja Tomić – Mladi Radnik (2012–present)
Dragan Trešnjić – Spartak Subotica (2003–2005)
Damir Vitas – Radnički Bajmok (2002–2003)
Mile Vujasin – Cement Beočin (2012–2013), Dunav Stari Banovci (2013)–2014), Radnički Nova Pazova (2013–(2014), 2014–2016), Ozren Sokobanja (2014)–2015)
Cyprus
Alexander Špoljarić – Hajduk Beograd (2016–2017), Grafičar Beograd (2017–2018)
Czech Republic
Jozef Boucek aka Josip Buček – Deligrad Aleksinac (1909)
Richard Jakubec – Palilulac Beograd (197_–19__)
Janiček – ĐSK Inđija (193_–1941)
Alois Machek – FK Šumadija 1903 (191_–191_), Morava Ćuprija (1918), Soko Beograd (1927–192_)
Eduard Mifek – FK Šumadija 1903 (191_–191_), Morava Ćuprija (1918)
Venčel Petrovický – FK Šumadija 1903 (191_–191_)
Jozef Urlah – Mladost Bački Petrovac (1990–1991)
Juraj Varga – Mladost Bački Petrovac (1990–1991)
Rudolf Vitner – Bačka Bačka Palanka (194_–195_)
Batko Voves – Srbobran
Denmark
Michael Hansen Schon – Bačka Bačka Palanka (2009–2010)
Dominican Republic
Eduardo Acevedo – FK Crvenka (2008–2009), FK Veternik (2009–2010)
Kerbi Rodríguez – FK Crvenka (2008–2009), FK Veternik (2009–2010)
Egypt
Karim Marei – FK Obilić (2009–2010)
El Salvador
Vladan Vicevic – Sloboda Užice (1986–1992, 1999–2002)
England
Nicholas Tonic – Car Konstantin (2013–present)
France
Comisser – FK Bor (1920–19__)
Galoa – FK Bor (1920–19__)
Gisse – FK Bor (1920–19__)
Jean – BSK Vitez Bor (1924–1925)
Goran Jerković – Prva Iskra Barić (2021–present)
Marcel – BSK Vitez Bor (1924–1925)
David Marinković – Banat Zrenjanin (2012–2015), Radnički Zrenjanin (2016–present)
David Milinković – BASK Beograd (2012–2015)
Stephen Milosavljević – Bane Raška (2011–2012)
Morran – FK Bor (1920–19__)
Prinne – FK Bor (1920–19__)
Talle – FK Bor (1920–19__)
Georgia
Akaki Tskarozia – Sinđelić Beograd (2007–2008)
Germany
Andrej Bencke - Kabel Novi Sad (2022)-2023), Zemun (2022-present)
Milan Delevic – Zvezdara (2018–2020)
Aleksandar Dugonjić – Cement Beočin (2015–2016), Sloga Temerin (2016–present)
Aleksandar Erak – Sloga Temerin (2013–2016), Bratstvo Prigrevica (2016)–2017, 2019–present), TSC Bačka Topola (2016–2019), Hajduk Kula (2019)–2020), RFK Novi Sad (2021-present
Zarije Gojkovic – Mladost Bački Jarak (2017–present)
Stefan Jovanović – FK Zemun (2012–2013), Radnički Obrenovac (2013–2014), Srem Jakovo (2014–2016), FK Dorćol (2016–2017), OFK Beograd (2017–present)
Viktor Jung – Viktorija Vršac (1924–1925)
Arsenije Klisurić – Kolubara Lazarevac, FK Teleoptik, Sloga Kraljevo (2006–2008)
Stefan Kukoljac – Crvena zvezda Mali Mokri Lug (2015–2016, 2018–2019), BASK Beograd (2017–2018), OFK Beograd (2019–present)
Uroš Milovanović – OFK Beograd (2016–present)
Robert Puha – FK Bačka 1901 (1990–1991)
Srđan Stevanović – Grafičar Beograd (2005–2006)
Nikola Vukasinovic – OFK Kula (2012–2014), Ozren Sokobanja (2014–2015), Hajduk Kula (2015–present)
Ghana
Melvin Banda – OFK Šapine (2015–2016)
Greece
Theodoros Apostolidis – Mladost Bor (1970)–1971)
Artas Charaiskakis - OFK Beograd (2022-present)
Janko Jovanovic – Šumadija Kragujevac (2017–present)
Christoforos Margaritis – Indeks Novi Sad (2006–2008), FK Dorćol (2008–2009)
Marko Stojanov – Železničar Pančevo (201_–2018), Dinamo Pančevo (2018–present)
Dimitris Tsinovits – IMT Beograd (2018–2020)
Michalis Zistakis – Konkordija Beograd (19__–1924), Trgovački Beograd (1929–1930)
Guinea
Fodé Cisse – Sinđelić Niš (2004–2006), FK Dorćol (2006–2007), Sinđelić Beograd (2007–2008)
Honduras
Manuel Ancheta – FK Bačka Topola (2011–2012)
Hungary
Gyula Blau – UTK Novi Sad (19__–1913)
Tamás Boros – TSC Bačka Topola (2013–2016)
Predrag Bošnjak – FK Bačka 1901 (2002–2004), FK Veternik (2004–2006), OFK Kikinda (2008–2009)
Toni Buják – Radnički Sombor (20__–2013), Partizan Kupusina (2013–(2014)
Hampar Cumjan Garabet – Grafičar Beograd (2007–2008)
Ivan Glavnik – Metalac Bor (1944–1945), FK Bor (1945–1946)
Jószef Hornok – Bačka Subotica (1945–1949)
Lajos Horváth – Građanski Sr. Mitrovica (1919–1920s)
István Juhász – FK Bačka 1901
Jenő Kalmár – Eđšeg Bačka Topola (1946–1948)
Zsombor Kerekes – AFK Ada (198_–1990)
János Keresztes – Bunjevac Subotica (193_–1938), Bohemija Subotica (1938–19xx)
Norbert Könyves – FK Bačka Topola (2007–2008)
József Kőszegi – FK Bačka Mol (1920s)
Sándor Kőszegi – FK Bačka Mol (1920s)
László Köteles – Grafičar Beograd (2003–2005)
Sándor Kovács – FK Senta (199_–199_)
Károly Kovacsics – Zlatibor Voda Horgoš (2007–2008)
József Lakatos – Jugoslavija Jabuka (1937–1938), Radnički Kragujevac (1945–1946)
Robert Mak – Spartak Debeljača (2007–2011, 2013–2015), Dolina Padina (2011–2012)
Ferenc Makó – Bulbuderac (1952–195_)
Tamás Mező – OFK Niš (1997–1998)
Sándor Mihalecz – FK Senta (2009–2010)
Ádám Nagypál - AFK Ada (2021-present)
László Némedi – FK Bor (1959–1963)
Károly Nemes – NAK Novi Sad (1919–1924)
Nemanja Nikolić – FK Senta (200_–2006)
István Nyers – ŽAK Subotica (1941–1945)
György Oláh – FK Bačka Mol (192_–1931, 1943–1947, 1950–195_), FK Senta (1934–1937), Jugoslavija Jabuka (1937–19__) – played for Hungary B
Lajos Pál – FK Omladinac Bor (1937–19__)
Zsolt Radics – FK Horgoš (199_–199_), Graničar Jamena (–2001), FK Senta (2005–2006)
László Rozgonyi – Radnički Pirot (2007–2008), Dinamo Pančevo (200_–200_)
David Sinkovics – TSC Bačka Topola (2016–present)
Tibor Szabó – FK Teleoptik (199_–199_), Cement Beočin (1996–1997)
Toni Szabó – PSK Pančevo (1924–192_)
Tojaš – UTK Novi Sad (1920)
József Urda – FK Bačka Mol (1940s)
Stefan Vladul – Dinamo Pančevo (20__–20__), Dolina Padina (2011–2012)
István Vörös – RFK Novi Sad (1961–1962)
Iceland
Zlatko Krickic – Polet Ljubić (2013–2014)
Đorđe Panić – Grafičar Beograd (2017–2018)
Iran
Darie Keramat - AFK Ada (2022-present)
Italy
Stefano Andreata – Inđija (2012–2015), Jedinstvo Stara Pazova (2015–2018)
Arnoldo Balduini – Metalac Bor (1955–1961)
Mirko Benin – Inđija (2007–2008)
Augusto Della Pietra – Jedinstvo Zaječar (193_–1937), Građanski Ćuprija (1937–193_)
Franceschi – Sloga Kraljevo (1961–1962)
Lino Gazapi – Sloboda Užice (1947)
Stefano Guidici – Bačka Subotica (1945–1947)
Lorenzo Luciano – Kabel Novi Sad (2017–2018), Homoljac Žagubica (2020–present)
Mario – Maksim Divnić Zemun (1945)
Stefano Pignatelli – Palilulac Beograd, (196_–196_), FK Jugopetrol (196_–1967), Čukarički (1967–1969)
Japan
Masafumi Takatsuka – IMT Beograd ()
Kazakhstan
Nenad Erić – Sloga Požega (1999–2002)
Korea D.P.R.
An Il-bom – Radnički Kragujevac (2009–2010)
Myong Cha-hyon – Radnički Kragujevac (2009–2010)
Ri Kwang-il – Radnički Kragujevac (2009)–2010), Erdoglija Kragujevac (2009–(2010)
Korea (South)
Jeo Won-dang – Teleoptik (2004–2005)
Lin Chan-jang - Radnicki Nova Pazova (201x-2017)
Uh Jun-yong - Mladost Apatin (2010-2011)
Kosovo
Safet Abazaj – Jedinstvo Novi Bečej (1989–1993)
Edin Ahmeti – Prva Petoletka Trstenik (200_–2006), Palilulac Beograd (2006–present)
Filip Berisha – Zvezdara (2016–2018, 2019–present), BSK Borča (2018)–2019)
Ernes Dalifi – Hajduk Beograd (2012–2014), BASK Beograd (2014–present), Radnički Beograd (2015–(2016)
Eldin Djemaj – Dunav Stari Banovci (2013–2015)
Bujamim Dzemaili – Dinamo Vranje (2014–2015)
Muhamed Ilazi – Sloga Leskovac (2006–2008), Moravac Predejane (2012–present)
Besnik Krasniqi – Trnovac (2014–2015)
Lapidar Lladrovci – 14. Oktobar (2011–2013)
Enes Maliqi – Borac Ostružnica (201_–2014)
Husein Nazifi – Jastrebac Proleter (2006–2008)
Stefan Shala – Sloga Despotovac (2016)–2017), Borac Paraćin (2016–present)
Nexhat Sulejmani – Železničar Beograd (1998–1999)
Gjelbrim Taipi – Trnovac (2010–2011)
Jetmir Topalli – Trnovac (2015–2017)
Iljasa Zulfiu – Pukovac (2016–2017), Ozren Sokobanja (2017–2018)
Libya
Majid Mahdi – Donji Srem (2015–2017)
Lithuania
Peter Jesaulenko – Ruski SK (1924–192x)
Malta
Neil Frendo – OFK Beograd (2018–2019)
Zachary Grech – OFK Beograd (2018–2019)
Mattia Veselji – OFK Beograd (2018–2019,2020–2021)
Moldova
Dmitrie Moşneagă – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (2006–2010)
Igor Tiunikov – Železničar Niš (2007–20xx)
Montenegro
Bojan Adžić - Brodarac (2021)-2022)
Radovan Banjević – Crvena zvezda Novi Sad (2018–2019), Bačka Subotica (2019–present)
Darko Bošković – OFK Odžaci (2017–present)
Vladimir Božović – Šumadija Kragujevac (2016–present)
Marko Brnović - Teleoptik (2021–2022)
Drago Bumbar – Grafičar Beograd (2016–2018)
Pavle Čujović – IMT Novi Beograd (2018)–2019), Stepojevac Vaga (2018–present)
Stefan Dabetić – Šumadija Jagnjilo (2009–2011), FK Voždovac (2011–2013), IM Rakovica (2013)–2014), FK Sopot (2013–2014, 2015–2017), Radnički Beograd (2015)–2016), FK Dorćol (2016)–2017, 2017–present)
Marko Despotović – Jedinstvo Ub (2012–2015), Radnički Obrenovac (2014–(2015), Omladinac Novi Banovci (2015–2016), Dunav Stari Banovci (2016–2018)
Mirko Drašković – BASK Beograd (2017–present)
Jovan Drobnjak – FK Beograd (2010–2011)
Lazar Đokić – Radnički Beograd (2015–(2016)
Vuk Đurić – Sloboda Užice (2005–2007, (2011)–2012, 2015–2016), FK Voždovac (2011–2013), Sinđelić Beograd (2012–(2013), Sloga Bajina Bašta (2016–2017)
Nikola Glavičanin – Pobeda Beloševac (2012–2014), OFK Mladenovac (2013–(2014), Zvezdara (2014–2016), Vršac (2016–2017), Crvena zvezda Novi Sad (2017–2019), Hajduk Kula (2019–present)
Tigran Goranović – Grafičar Beograd (2016–2017), Radnički Beograd (2017–2018), IMT Novi Beograd (2018–2010)
Boško Guzina – FK Žarkovo (2015–2017)
Milovan Ilić – Radnički Pirot (2018–2019), Topličanin Prokuplje (2019–present)
Stefan Knežević – Brodarac Beograd (2018–2019), Radnički Obrenovac (2019–present)
Veselin Kosović – Železničar Pančevo (2016–2017), Proleter Vranovo (2017–present)
Nikola Krstinić – Banat Zrenjanin (2009–2011, 2013–2016), Zadrugar Lazarevo (2011–2012), Dolina Padina (2015–(2016), Radnički Zrenjanin (2016–present)
Krsto Ljubanović – Teleoptik (2022–present)
Stefan Mihajlović – Crvena zvezda Novi Sad (2016–2017), Mladost Bački Jarak (2017–2018)
Nemanja Mijušković – Jedinstvo Ub (2009–2010)
Petar Milivojević – Radnički Obrenovac (2016–present)
Sava Mugoša – FK Vršac (2016)–2017), BSK Batajnica (2016–(2017), Dinamo Pančevo (2017)–2018), FK Tutin (2017–present)
Nedžad Nezirović – FK Tutin (2017–present)
Baćo Nikolić – Drina Ljubovija (2018–2019), Timočanin Knjaževac (2019–present)
Nemanja Ostojić – FK Palić (2013–2014), FK Teleoptik (2014–2015), Hajduk Beograd (2015–2016)
Vasilije Perović – Ozren Sokobanja (2017–present)
Andrej Pupović – Železničar Pančevo (2019–present)
Stefan Račković – Zvižd Kučevo (2015)–2016), BASK Beograd (2016)–2017), Stepojevac Vaga (2017)–2018), Proleter Vranovo (2017–present)
Vasilije Radenović – Kolubara Lazarevac (2013–2016), Brodarac Beograd (2019)–2020)
Aleksandar Radović – Kolubara Lazarevac (2003–2004, 2006–2007), FK Bečej (2005)–2006, (2006)–2007), FK Sopot (2005–2006), Hajduk Beograd (2007–2008), Borac Sakule (2015–2016)
Marko Rakonjac – IMT Beograd (2019–2020)
Peđa Savić – Teleoptik (2015–present)
Marko Stanovčić – Sinđelić Beograd (2008–2009), FK Zemun (2012–2013), FK Sopot (2016–2017), GSP Polet Dorćol (2017–present)
Nikola Šipčić – OFK Žarkovo (2014–2016)
Bojan Šljivančanin – Teleoptik (2006–2008)
Filip Vorotović – Teleoptik (2016–2017, 2018–present)
Aleksandar Vujačić – FK Zemun (2008–2009)
Nikola Vujnović – Radnički Obrenovac (2012–2014)
Predrag Vujović – Trayal Kruševac (2016–2018), Jedinstvo Paraćin (2018–present)
Nikola Vukčević – Lokomotiva Beograd (2017–present)
Netherlands
Suleiman Jalu - OFK Beograd (2019-2020)
Aleksandar Janković – Radnički Kragujevac (2020–2021)
Nigeria
Victor Agbo – Grafičar Beograd (2004–2005), Sloga Kraljevo (2007–2008), Šumadija Aranđelovac (2008–2009), Rudar Kostolac (2009–2011), Šećeranac Beograd (2012)–2013), Hajduk Veljko (2012–201x)
Nnaemeka Ajuru – Metalac G.M. (2005–2006)
Amuda Alabi – Železničar Novi Sad (19__–19__) Note: before 1996
Victor Amos – Trayal Kruševac (2022–present)
Franklin Ayodele – Loznica (2008–2009)
Casey - Jedinstvo Ub (2006-2007)
Eleanya Kelechi Collins – Tekstilac Ites (2003–2004), Bane Raška (2004–2005)
Ezeh Chinedu – Kosanica (2004–2008), Jedinstvo Ub (2007–(2008)
Ifeanyi Emeghara – Teleoptik (2003–2004)
Mark Geff – Tutin (2004–2006), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2005–2006), Jedinstvo Ub (2006–2007), Komgrap Beograd (2007–2008), Mladi Obilić (2008–2009), FK Dorćol (2009–2010)
Anthony Agha Ibiam – ŽAK Kikinda (2008)–2009), Radnički Nova Pazova (2008–(2009), Balkanski Dimitrovgrad (2009–2010)
Ifeanyi Igbodo – Banja Beograd (2004–2007)
John Igbodo – Bor (2020–present)
Charming Temiloluwa Imabeh – BASK Beograd (2015–2016)
Victor Jideonwor – Dragačevo Guča (2005–2007), Lokomotiva Beograd (2007–2008)
Oladipupo Martins – Teleoptik (2003–2005, 2006–2007)
Samuel Nnamani – OFK Tabane (2014–2015)
Obiora Odita – FK Vučje (2002–2003)
Obele Okeke Onyebuchi – OFK Mladenovac (2003–2004), FK Ljubija (2008–(2009)
Henry Okoro – Budućnost Valjevo (2003–2004)
Reuben Okoro – Mačva Šabac (2014–2016)
Sunday Patrick Okoro – Radnički Pirot (2008–2010)
Solomon Oladele – Sinđelić Niš (2009–2010)
Celestine Olisa – Polimlje Prijepolje (200_–200_)
Ifeanyi Victor Onyilo – Sloga Požega (2008–2009)
Peter Taiye Oladotun – Radnički Beograd (2006–2007), PKB Padinska Skela (2008–2009), Radnički Kragujevac (2009–2010)
Raphael Remigus Governor - OFK Kikinda (202_-present)
Aminu Sani - Radnički Kragujevac (2008-2009)
Okomayin Segun Onimisi - Dubočica Leskovac (2020-2022)
Sodiq Suraj - Teleoptik (2008-2009)
Amaechi Nwabunwane Tochukwu – Dinamo Pančevo (2007–2008)
North Macedonia
The players that have played for the Macedonian National Team are in bold, the others have played since 1992.
Milan Aleksić – Dinamo Vranje (201_–2015)
Darko Aleksovski – Lokomotiva Beograd (200_–201_)
Vebi Alievski – FK 1. Maj Agroruma (2010–2012)
Aleksa Amanović – FK Teleoptik (2014–2015), IMT Beograd (2015–2016)
Stefan Andrić – Radnički Kragujevac (2014–2016), Šumadija Kragujevac (2016–2017)
Ljupče Arsovski – Topličanin Prokuplje
Boban Avramovski – Turbina Vreoci (2008–present)
Sava Avramovski – OFK Beograd (2018–2020, 2022–(2023), BSK Borča (2022)–2023), Zvezdara (2023–present)
Albert Bajrami – FK Bačka 1901 (2013–present)
Arbën Biboski – Jedinstvo Smederevo (2006–2008)
Omer Biševac – Big Bul Bačinci (2008–2009)
Vlado Blazeski – Sloga Kraljevo (2001–2005)
Nikola Bogdanovski – FK Teleoptik (2016–2017), Radnički Beograd (2017–2018)
Bojan Bogojevski – Šumadija Jagnjilo (2007–2009), Palilulac Beograd (2010–present)
Dragan Čadikovski – Kolubara Lazarevac (1997–2001, 2014–2015, 2016–2019), TEK Sloga Veliki Crljeni (2019–present)
Ivica Cvetanovski – Sloboda Užice (1989–1993, 1993–1996)
Milan Cvetanovski – FK Voždovac (2001–2003), BPI Pekar (2003–2004), Železničar Beograd (2004–2005), Grafičar Beograd (2007–2008)
Olivio Dautovski – Topličanin Prokuplje (1989–1995)
Igor Denkić – Železničar Niš (200_–200_), Car Konstantin (200_–present)
Lazar Djorejlievski – FK Dorćol (2016–2017), IMT Beograd (2017–present)
Boris Dobrić – Šumadija Kragujevac (201_–2018), Radnički Svilajnac (2018–present)
Mario Đurovski – OFK Mladenovac (2003)–2004), FK Sopot (2003–(2004)
Milko Đurovski – Čukarički Stankom (1979–1980)
Argjent Gafuri – FK Jošanica (200_–200_)
Georgijevski – Rudar Bor (1989–1993)
Sašo Gjoreski – Radnički Sombor (–)
Darko Grozdanoski – BASK Beograd (2015–2017), Žarkovo (2017)–2018), Prva Iskra Barić (2017–present)
Blerim Gudjufi – Spektrum Novi Sad (2011–2012)
Jovan Gunev – Trajal Kruševac (200_–2008)
Ilijevski – Rudar Bor (1988–1997)
Nelson Iseni – FK Vinča (200_–2010), FK Resnik (2010–present)
Bojan Ivanov – Balkan Mirijevo (2013–present)
Filip Jančevski – Hajduk Kula (2014–present)
Čedomir Janevski – Železničar Niš (1980–1982)
Aleksa Jordanov - Budućnost Dobanovci (2023–present)
Stefan Josifoski – Sopot (2012)–2013), Jedinstvo Stara Pazova (2012–2014), Radnički Beograd (2014–2017), Jedinstvo Surčin (2017–present)
Strahinja Krstevski – Grafičar (2019–present)
Petar Krstić – Radan Lebane (201_–201_), Sloga Leskovac (201_–2015)
Vlade Lazarevski – 14. Oktobar Kruševac (2002–(2003), 2003–(2004), Temnić Lipa Varvarin (2015–present)
Aleksandar Lazevski – Teleoptik (2005–2008, 2008–2010), Vršac (2018–present)
Lazo Lipovski – FK Bor (199_–199_)
Branislav "Bane" Manevski – Lokomotiva Beograd (2016–2018), GSP Polet Dorćol (2018–present)
Boban Marić – Šumadija Jagnjilo (2007–2008), Radnički Nova Pazova (2008–2009)
Marjan Markoski – Radnički Zrenjanin (201_–2015)
Zoran Martinovski – Polet Beograd (1997–1998)
Igor Matenicarski – Sloga Požega (2003–2005), FK Crnokosa (200_–2008, 20__–2014)
Kliment Nastovski – FK Teleoptik (2004–2006)
Boban Nikolovski – FK Bor (1995–1996, 2003–(2004), Železničar Beograd (1999)–2000, 2001–(2002), Rudar Bor (200_–2006)
Nikola Novevski - Radnički Stara Pazova (2020-2021), Bečej (2021)-2022), Radnički Zrenjanin (2021-(2022), Bačka Bačka Palanka (2022-present)
Dušan Pavlov – OFK Kikinda (2007–2010), FK Bačka Topola (2010–2011)
Marko Pavlov – ŽAK Sombor (2012–2013)
Petrovski – FK Bor (1993–1996)
Bojan Petrovski – Aluminijum Niš (2006–2007)
Predrag Ranđelović – FK Teleoptik (2008–2011)
Stevica Ristić – FK Vršac (2000–2001), Jedinstvo Vršac (2001–2002)
Dušan Savić – Dubočica Leskovac (–2002,2020–present)
Đorđe Serpak – Trudbenik Beograd (199_–1993)
Aleksandar Simjanovski – Topličanin Prokuplje
Ivan Simjanovski – Topličanin Prokuplje
Marko Simunovikj – IM Rakovica (2017–2018), Teleoptik (2018-2022)
Jovan Sovreski – FK Voždovac (2009)–2010), FK Dorćol (2009–(2010)
Perica Stančeski – FK Teleoptik (2004–2006)
Ostoja Stjepanović – FK Teleoptik (2003–2005)
Milan Stoilković – Hajduk Beograd (2009)–2010, 2011–2012, 2013–present), Hajduk Šimanovci (2009–(2010), FK Voždovac (2010–2011), Slavija Beograd (2012–2013)
Nikola Stojanov – FK Brodarac (2015–(2016), Lokomotiva Beograd (2015)–2016, 2018–present), IMT Novi Beograd (2016–2018)
Nikola Stojanović – BSK Bujanovac (2001–2005, 2017–2018), Dinamo Vranje (2005–2013, 2016–2017), Železničar Vr.Banja (2007–2008), Radnik Surdulica (2008–2009, 2013–2016)
Milan Stojanovski – BASK Beograd (2009)–2010), Lokomotiva Beograd (2009–2011), FK Kovačevac (2010–(2011)
Aleksandar Todorovski – Radnički Beograd (2002–2005)
Miloš Tošeski – Brodarac (201_–present)
Nikola Tošeski – FK Brodarac (2013–2015, (2016)–2017, 2019–present), FK Smederevo (2015)–2016, 2018–2019), IM Rakovica (2015–(2016)
Vladimir Tošeski – FK Brodarac (2014–2015), FK Smederevo (2015–present)
Haris Tutić – FK Tutin (2014–present)
Lazar Vidić – Šumadija Kragujevac (2006–2009, 2017–present), Radnički Kragujevac (2009–2011)
Northern Ireland
John Barrons – IMT Novi Beograd (2001–2002)
Norway
Bojan Jakovic – Jedinstvo Kalenić (200_–2006), FK 1. Maj Ruma (2008–2011)
Palestine
Hani Odeh – Železnik (201_–present)
Poland
Tadeusz Batkowski – Kadima Bečkerek (192_–1924), Kosovo Kikinda (1924–192_)
Aleksander Čišič – Radnički Beograd (2012–2013), FK Jošanica (2013)–2014), Krušik Valjevo (2013–(2014), Dinamo Pančevo (2014–(2015), Dolina Padina (2015)–2016), Železničar Pančevo (2015–2016)
Jan Nosal – Jedinstvo Stević (2002–2005, 2006–200_, 20__–2014)
Portugal
Maki Faria - BASK Beograd (2020-2021)
Vuk Kovacevic – Budućnost Dobanovci (2014)–2015), BASK Beograd (2014–2016, 2018–2019), FK Žarkovo (2016–2018), Crvena zvezda MML (2019–present)
Ivan Mladenović – Sinđelić Niš (2016–2017), Car Konstantin (2017–present)
Angelo Stevanovic – Srem Jakovo (2013–present)
Puerto Rico
Chris Megaloudis – Radnički Obrenovac (2009–2010)
Romania
Franc Baroul – Kadima V. Bečkerek (1924–1925)
Ionel Carabas – Palilulac Beograd (197_–19__)
Ioan Răzvan Chiriţă – Jedinstvo Petrovac (199_–199_)
Mihail Costescu – Radnički Vršac (1998–1999)
Olimpiu Deac – Budućnost Srpska Crnja (1990–1991)
Ștefan Dobrescu – FK Sopot (2017–present)
Dimitru Drindea – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (1990–1991)
Ștefan Dumitru – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (1990–1991)
Alberto Emanuel – FK Vršac (199_–199_)
Aurel Han – Zorka Subotica (1990–1991)
Gheorghe Iordan – Sloga Petrovac na Mlavi (1990–1991)
József Kezdi – Viktorija Vršac (1936–1937)
Kiril Kostel – Budućnost Alibunar (199_–199_)
Lăcătuș – Jugoslavija Jabuka (1937–19__)
Romeo Malak – FK Vršac (199_–199_)
Gheorghe Mureşan – Budućnost Srpska Crnja (1990–1991)
Marinel Pascu – Radnički Bajmok (2002–2003), FK Bečej (200_–200_)
Păunescu – Grafičar Beograd (1939–1940)
Branimir Pavlov – Jedinstvo Novi Bečej (1991–1992, 1992–(1993)
Dario Todor – FK Vršac (2015–2016)
Mateja Vezilici – JNA team (1945)
Russia
Nikolai Alexeyev – Ruski SK (1924–192_)
Chakarev – Borac Čačak (1966–1967)
Asteri Filaktov – Palilulac Beograd, Bor (1964–1965)
Aleksandr Frangu – Železnik (201_–present)
Ilya Guchmazov – Grafičar Beograd (2020–2021)
Andrei Guzienko – Bečej (1990–1992)
Igor – Maksim Divnić Zemun (1945)
Marko Jeremis – Mladi Radnik (20__–present)
Uchuk Kuldinov – Ruski SK (1930–193_), Sinđelić Beograd (1937–1941)
Maksim Lada – Grafičar Beograd (2018–2020), Brodarac (2020-2021), Žarkovo (2021-2022)
Konstantin Lalionov – Ruski SK (1924–192x)
Aleksandr Minayev – Budućnost Valjevo (1990–1991)
Aleksandr Nazarko - Bor (2020–present)
Danil Pechenkin – Grafičar Beograd (2017–2019)
Anton Pushin – Građanski Ćuprija (1937–1938)
Dmitri Shikhovtsev – Radnički Kragujevac (2008–2010)
Stefan Shilovtsev – Momčilo Leskovac (1923–1924)
Aleksandr Shtcheglov – Jug Bogdan Prokuplje (1919–1925)
Fedor Solovei – Brodarac (2022–2023)
Gennadi Soshenko – Budućnost Valjevo (1990–1991)
Igor Vasilyev – Ruski SK (1924–192_)
Rastislav Vasilyev – Ruski SK (1924–192_)
Vladimir Vinogradov – Ruski SK (1924–192_)
Sergei Vitvinskiy – Ruski SK (192_–192_)
Vorontsov – Bor (1952–1953)
Mikhail Yagovlev – Ruski SK (1924–192x)
Alexei Yashuk – Palilulac Beograd (2010–2011)
Sergei Yerniev – Mačva Šabac (1919)
Saudi Arabia
Yazeed Yahya Jawshan - Zemun (2022-present)
Senegal
Mamadou Diarra – Teleoptik (2008–2009)
Sierra Leone
Kelfala Marah – Rudar Kostolac (2005–2010)
Slovakia
Boris Durgala – Dolina Padina (2011–201x)
Silvester Galamboš – FK Palić (200_–200_), Radnički Bajmok (200_–2010)
Vladimír Gombár – Srem Sr. Mitrovica (1993–1994)
Ladislav Gonda – FK Majdanpek (1937–193_)
Boris Hesek – Bane Raška (2013–2014)
Nikola Makar – Radnički Sombor (2012–2014), PIK Prigrevica (2014–2015), Bratstvo Prigrevica (2015–present)
Ján Podhradský – SŠK Bački Petrovac (1933–1935), SK Štefanik Stara Pazova (1939–1941)
Boris Sekulić – Grafičar Beograd (2009–2010), FK Beograd (2010–2011)
Marko Turan – IMT Novi Beograd (2014–2016), Srem Jakovo (2015–(2016), Radnički Obrenovac (2019–present)
Slovenia
The players that have played for the Slovenian national team are in bold, the others have played since 1992.
Živko Aleksandrić – FK Prijevor (2008–2012), FK Bačka Topola (2012–2013), Partizan Bumbarevo Brdo (2013–present)
Saša Bosilj – Železničar Lajkovac (2002–2003)
Marko Drljača – Jedinstvo Novi Bečej (2004–2006, 2006–2013, 2013–present), Tekstilac Odžaci (2006)–2007), FK Brezovica (2013)–2014)
Nermin Horvat – Rudar Kostolac (2004–2008)
Nebojša Ivanović – Radnički Sombor (2013–2014), Bratstvo Prigrevica (2015–present)
Safet Jahič – FK Teleoptik (2006–2007)
Boris Klabec – FK Vršac (2009–2010), Dolina Padina (2010–2011)
Dušan Makarić – Grafičar Beograd (2006–2007), BSK Batajnica (2007–2008, (2014)–2015), Železničar Beograd (2008–2010), Posovac Boljevci (2010–2011), Radnički Nova Pazova (2011–2012), FK Sopot (2012–2013), FK Zemun (2013–2014), Sremac Vojka (2014–(2015)
Vladimir Mandić – Banat Zrenjanin (2013–2014), OFK Vršac (2018)–2019), Železničar Pančevo (2018–2020), Bratstvo Prigrevica (2020)–2021), Cement Beočin (2020–present)
Mladen Marković – Kabel Novi Sad (2007–2008)
Vladimir Ostojić – Mačva Šabac (199_–199_)
Denis Salkunič – Mačva Šabac (2010–201_)
Andrej Vitali – Hajduk Beograd (2014)–2015), FK Baćevac (2014–present)
Sweden
Jovan Jakovljević – Bačka Subotica (2017–2018)
Philip Milenković – Radnički Obrenovac (2010–2011)
Switzerland
Toplica Avramović – FK Zvezdara (2011–2012), Bulbuderac Beograd (2012)–2013), FK Dorćol (2012–201x)
Pajtim Badalli – FK 14. Oktobar (2014–2015)
Milan Basrak – FK Sopot (2012)–2013), Mačva Šabac (2012–(2013)
Mihailo Bogicevic – FK Loznica (2019–2021)
Boško Borenović – FK Zemun (1991–1999, 2006–2007)
Darko Damjanović – Mačva Šabac (2011–2012)
Aleksandar Djuric – Hajduk Beograd (2009–2010)
Svetlan Kosić – IMT Beograd (2014–2015)
Aleksandar Njeguš – Zlatibor Čajetina (2017–present)
Zeljko Ognjanovic – FK Šapine (2003–201x)
Miloš Opačić – Radnički Pirot (2023–present)
Emil Osmanovic – FK Jošanica (2014)–2015), Železničar Lajkovac (2015–2016), Mladi Radnik (2019–present)
Nemanja Petrovic – Jedinstvo Paraćin (2021–2022)
Milaim Rama – KF Beselidhja (1996–1997)
Luka Stević – FK Teleoptik (2019–2020)
Aleksandar Todorović – Mačva Šabac (2011–2013), Mladost Bački Jarak (2016–2017)
Miroslav Trajković – Sinđelić Niš (2013)–2014), (2015)–2016), Moravac Mrštane (2013–(2014), 2014–(2015), Ozren Sokobanja (2014)–2015), Radan Lebane (2015–(2016), Budućnost Popovac (2016–2018), Car Konstantin (2018–present)
Yves Vladislav – FK Teleoptik (2016–2018), OFK Beograd (2019–2020)
Tanzania
Nassor Hamoud – Šumadija Aranđelovac (2020–2023)
Turkey
Serif Çoroğlu – BSK Borča (1998–1999)
Günkut Özer – Sinđelić Niš (2014)–2015), Palilulac Niš (2014–(2015)
Uganda
Abraham Ndugwa – Budućnost Dobanovci (2021–present)
Ukraine
Maksym Demchenko – Palić (1990–1991)
Gantchev – Bačka Subotica (1994–1995)
Andriy Gordon – Sloboda Užice (2000–2002), Sloga Požega (2006–2008)
Serhiy Gordon – Sloboda Užice (2000–2002), Sloga Požega (2006–2008)
Sasha Havrlyenko – AIK Bačka Topola (1991–1998)
Aleksandar Pisarenko – Proleter Majdanpek (194_–195_)
Makariy Tkachenko – Metalac Bor (1953–1955), Proleter Majdanpek (1962–1963)
Vitaliy Tolmachyov – Mladost Končarevo (1991–1992), Palić (1992–1993), Bačka Subotica (1994–1996)
Trile – Palilulac Beograd (1962–1963)
Maksym Zinakov – Radnički Nova Pazova (2008–2009)
United States
Aleksandar Gluvačević – Dorćol (2016–2017), Dunav Stari Banovci (2017–2018), Vršac (2018–2019)
Slaviša Krstić – Teleoptik (2005–2008)
Vuk Latinovich – Brodarac (2014–2017)
Luka Nedić – Loznica (2019–2020)
Michael Palacio – Radnički Obrenovac (2009–2010)
George Pantelic – Morava Velika Plana (2010)–2011), Zemun (2010–2013)
Danilo Radjen – Teleoptik (2019–2020)
Peter Thomas – Bane Raška (2003–2008)
Aleksandar Thomas Višić – Resnik (2011)–2012), Zemun (2012–2013)
Uzbekistan
Rauf Mirolim – Omladinac Pirot (1923–1925)
References and notes
See also
List of foreign footballers in top leagues of former Yugoslavia
Notes
Additional information
In English, the capital city of Serbia, Beograd, is called Belgrade.
In Serbian, Red Star Belgrade is named FK Crvena zvezda.
Sponsorship names
The list uses the original club names, however, in some cases, certain clubs during one, or more, seasons, used sponsorship names in those specific times. Here is the list to identify those clubs and their sponsorship names:
FK Čukarički, initially formed as ČSK (Čukarički SK), became sponsored for much of the 1990s by Stankom and was vastly known as FK Čukarički Staknom.
FK Zemun was for much of the 1980s sponsored by pharmaceutical company Galenika and became known as FK Galenika Zemun.
FK Smederevo was known from 1992 until 2004 as FK Sartid or Sartid 1913, indicated here as Sartid Smederevo. The exception was made here because the club was founded by the company and spent most of its history using the name Sartid.
FK Spartak Subotica was merged in 2007 with FK Zlatibor Voda (a club from Horgoš sponsored by the company Zlatibor Voda, and, between 2007 and 2014, played under sponsor name of FK Spartak Zlatibor Voda. Since 2018 it is officially using again a sponsorship name, this time as FK Spartak Ždrepčeva krv.
TSC Bačka Topola was known for most of its history as AIK Bačka Topola.
FK Radnički Beograd was known for most of the 1990s as FK Radnički Jugopetrol.
FK Javor Ivanjica has been officially sponsored by local company Matis and became known as FK Javor-Matis Ivanjica since 2017.
GSK Jasenica 1911 was sponsored for much of the 1980s and 1990s by GOŠA and during that period played under name of FK Mladost GOŠA.
FK ČSK Čelarevo was sponsored for decades by local brewery company thus making the club widely known as FK ČSK Pivara.
FK Mladost Apatin was formed by the owner of the local company Tri zvezde thus the club was known until 1945 as SK Tri zvezde Apatin.
FK Srbobran was for decades sponsored by Elan thus known as FK Elan Srbobran.
FK FAP Priboj is a club that was throughout its history sponsored by local truck manufacturer FAP and has kept its name until today.
FK Trstenik was for much of its history known by the name of the local company Prva petoletka, thus resulting in FK PPT Trstenik.
During the 1990s, FK Timok Zaječar was sponsored by local company Kristal and became known as FK Timok Kristal Zaječar.
Mergers
Two of the oldest Serbian clubs, Konkordija and Vardar, both from Belgrade, merged and formed SK Jedinstvo Beograd.
Another important of the oldest clubs was SK Soko from Belgrade that changed its name to FK BASK.
FK Voždovac, was known as SK Dušanovac during its earliest period.
FK Milicionar Beograd was a club from Belgrade that was founded in 1946 and dissolved and merged into an already existing FK Radnički Obrenovac in 2001.
SK Jugoslavija was one of the most successful clubs in Yugoslavia until the WWII. It was a club from Belgrade that was formed in 1913 and was disbanded by the new socialist authorities in 1945. Most of its property was handed over to the newly formed Red Star Belgrade. From 1941 until 1944 it was named SK 1913.
BSK Beograd was renamed into OFK Beograd in 1957. After WWII was also known as FK Metalac Beograd.
FK Priština is since 1999 more commonly known in its Albanian translation form as KF Prishtina, and, as the majority of the clubs from the territory of Kosovo, has been absent from the Serbian football league system since then.
FK Sloboda Užice was merged with FK Sevojno in 2010, and after playing the season 2010-11 and beginning of 2011-12 as FK Sloboda Point Sevojno, it restored its name in October 2011.
FK Vojvodina was known as FK Sloga Novi Sad for some years after WWII.
External sources
National-Football-Teams
Srbijafudbal
EUFO
Weltfussball
Soccerway
Superliga
Fudbalske lige SiCG
Zerodic
Zerozero
rsssf, Ital-players-abroad
rsssf, Arg players
Brazil transfers
YU Football
League stats 2004-07 EX SiCG Fudbal
Macedonian players abroad at Utrinski
Derbi pre derbija
Foreign
Serbia
Association football player non-biographical articles |
The 1972 United States Senate election in Delaware was held November 7, 1972. Incumbent Republican Senator J. Caleb Boggs ran for a third term in the United States Senate. Boggs faced off against Democrat Joe Biden, a New Castle County Councilman. Though Boggs was expected to easily win a third term, Biden narrowly defeated the incumbent on election day, even while fellow Democrat George McGovern lost Delaware by 20.4% in the concurrent presidential election. Biden's victory margin of 3,162 votes made this the closest U.S. Senate election of the year. Biden won a total of seven terms in the Senate, before being elected vice president in 2008 and in 2012 and president in 2020. At the age of 29, Biden became the youngest person to be elected senator since Rush Holt won in West Virginia in 1934 even as incumbent Republican President Richard Nixon overwhelmingly won the state for re-election on the same ballot.
This is the only time that Biden has lost Sussex County in his seven elections to the Senate, though he has lost the county in all his vice presidential and presidential elections. This would be the last time that Republicans won any counties for this seat until 2002 when Biden still comfortably won re-election.
General election
Campaign
Longtime Delaware political figure and incumbent Republican Senator J. Caleb Boggs was considering retirement, which would likely have left U.S. Representative Pete du Pont and Wilmington Mayor Harry G. Haskell Jr. in a divisive Senate primary fight. To avoid a potential primary, president Richard Nixon helped convince Boggs to run again with full party support.
Aside from Biden, a New Castle County Councilman, no Democrat wanted to challenge Boggs. Biden's campaign had virtually no money and was given little to no chance of winning. The campaign was managed by Biden's sister, Valerie Biden Owens (who managed his future campaigns), was staffed by other members of the Biden family, and relied upon handed-out newsprint position papers. Biden did receive some assistance from the AFL–CIO and from Democratic pollster Patrick Caddell. Biden's campaign focused on withdrawal from the Vietnam War, the environment, civil rights, mass transit, more equitable taxation, health care, the public's dissatisfaction with politics-as-usual, and "change". Biden also opposed giving amnesty to draft dodgers. Despite not supporting the legalization of marijuana, he said in a campaign ad that: "the possession of marijuana is a misdemeanor—a minor offense. The police should treat it that way, and devote the greater part of their efforts to heroin."
During the summer, Biden trailed Boggs by almost 30 percentage points; however, Biden's energy level, attractive young family, and ability to connect with voters' emotions gave him an advantage over the ready-to-retire Boggs. John Marttila served as one of his consultants and had previously worked for Robert Drinan's campaign for the U.S. House of Representatives. Biden's campaign was described as having "no money to speak of" and relied on position papers in newspapers and a few campaign advertisements on the radio. One notable advertisement used by the Biden campaign was a brochure printed in newspaper format that contrasted the world view of the two candidates, e.g. (full page) "To Cale Boggs an unfair tax was the 1948 poll tax"; (opposite page) "To Joe Biden an unfair tax is the 1972 income tax." On November 7, 1972, Biden upset Boggs by a margin of 3,162 votes.
Biden varied his messaging during campaign events throughout the state as well. For example, in the southern parts of the state his pitch was: "thirty years ago, caring for the environment meant picking up bottles and beer cans on Rehoboth Beach … and now it means saving the beach." In the northern parts of the state in the Wilmington area it was "in 1950, Cale Boggs promised to keep highways growing; in 1970 Joe Biden promises to keep trees growing."
A few weeks later on December 18, 1972, Biden's wife and daughter died in a car crash which injured his sons. Biden contemplated resigning the Senate seat and told his brother to talk with governor-elect Sherman W. Tribbitt on his successor. Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield persuaded Biden to stay in the Senate for at least six months. Biden was sworn in at the hospital where his sons were recovering. Biden held the seat until his election as Vice President 36 years later.
At the time of the 1972 election, Biden was 29 years old. He turned 30—the minimum age for a U.S. senator—on November 20, 1972, in time for the Senate term beginning January 3, 1973. At the commencement of his Senate term, Biden was the sixth-youngest U.S. Senator in history.
A 2004 book contained a story, allegedly from Frank Sheeran, that in the week prior to Election Day, an unidentified lawyer approached Sheeran about preventing the distribution of the local paper because Senator Boggs was running an advertisement unflattering to Biden. Sheeran claimed that he organized a work stoppage, and that Teamsters truck drivers refused to cross a picket line, so the papers were not delivered. The credibility of Sheeran's account has been called into question, although an article published in The New York Times on Friday November 3, 1972, does seem to confirm that a work stoppage took place four days prior to election day, preventing the delivery of a single Friday edition of local paper The Morning News.
There were two other candidates in the 1972 Senate election: Henry M. Majka and Herbert B. Wood. Majka came from the American Party while Wood hailed from the Prohibition Party. Majka managed to receive 803 votes, or 0.3% of the vote, while Wood got 175 votes, or 0.1% of the vote.
Biden was elected President of the United States in November 2020 at age 77. Because of mail-in voting his victory was not official until November 7, five days after conventional voting began and the 48th anniversary of his Senate election over Boggs.
Candidates
Joe Biden (Democratic Party), New Castle County council member
J. Caleb Boggs (Republican Party), incumbent senator and former Governor of Delaware
Henry M. Majka (American Party)
Herbert B. Wood (Prohibition Party)
Results
County results
Results by state representative district
See also
1972 United States Senate elections
References
1972
Delaware
1972 Delaware elections
s |
Antony Valentini is a theoretical physicist known for his work on the foundations of quantum physics.
Education and career
Valentini obtained an undergraduate degree from Cambridge University, then earned his Ph.D. in 1992 with Dennis Sciama at the International School for Advanced Studies (ISAS-SISSA) in Trieste, Italy. In 1999, after seven years in Italy, he took up a post-doc grant to work at the Imperial College with Lee Smolin and Christopher Isham.
He worked at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics. In February 2011, he became professor of physics and astronomy at Clemson University; as of 2022, he was listed as adjunct faculty.
Together with Mike Towler, Royal Society research fellow of the University of Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory, he organized a conference on the de Broglie-Bohm theory the Apuan Alps Centre for Physics in August 2010, hosted by the Towler Institute located in Vallico di Sotto in Tuscany, Italy, which is loosely associated with the Theory of Condensed Matter group of the Cavendish Laboratory. Among the questions announced for discussion, the organizers included "Why should young people be interested in these ideas, when showing interest in quantum foundations still might harm their careers?"
Work
Valentini has been working on an extension of the causal interpretation of quantum theory. This interpretation had been proposed in conceptual terms in 1927 by Louis de Broglie, was independently re-discovered by David Bohm who brought it to a complete and systematic form in 1952, and was expanded on by Bohm and Hiley. Emphasizing de Broglie's contribution, Valentini has consistently referred to the causal interpretation of quantum mechanics underlying his work as the "de Broglie–Bohm theory".
Quantum equilibrium, locality and uncertainty
In 1991, Valentini provided indications for deriving the quantum equilibrium hypothesis which states that in the frame work of the pilot wave theory. Valentini showed that the relaxation → may be accounted for by a H-theorem constructed in analogy to the Boltzmann H-theorem of statistical mechanics. Valentini showed that his expansion of the De Broglie–Bohm theory would allow "signal nonlocality" for non-equilibrium cases in which ≠. According to Valentini, the universe is fundamentally nonlocal, and quantum theory merely describes a special equilibrium state in which nonlocality is hidden in statistical noise. He furthermore showed that an ensemble of particles with known wave function and known nonequilibrium distribution could be used to perform, on another system, measurements that violate the uncertainty principle.
In 1992, Valentini extended pilot wave theory to spin- fields and to gravitation.
Background and implications
Valentini has been described as an "ardent admirer of de Broglie". He noted that "de Broglie (rather like Maxwell) emphasized an underlying 'mechanical' picture: particles were assumed to be singularities of physical waves in space". He emphasized that de Broglie, with the assistance of Erwin Schrödinger, had constructed pilot wave theory, but later abandoned it in favor of quantum formalism.
Valentini's derivation of the quantum equilibrium hypothesis was criticized by Detlef Dürr and co-workers in 1992, and the derivation of the quantum equilibrium hypothesis has remained a topic of active investigation.
"Signal nonlocality", which is forbidden in orthodox quantum theory, would allow nonlocal quantum entanglement to be used as a stand-alone communication channel without the need of a classical light-speed limited retarded signal to unlock the entangled message from the sender to the receiver. This would be a major revolution in physics and would possibly make the cosmic landscape string theory Popper falsifiable.
Publications
Book
Guido Bacciagaluppi, Antony Valentini: Quantum theory at the crossroads: Reconsidering the 1927 Solvay Conference, Cambridge Univ. Press, 2009,
Articles
Antony Valentini, Hans Westman: Dynamical origin of quantum probabilities, Proceedings of the Royal Society A 8, vol. 461, no. 2053 p. 253-272, January 2005,
Antony Valentini: Subquantum information and computation, 2002, Pramana Journal of Physics, vol. 59, no. 2, August 2002, p. 269–277
Antony Valentini: Signal-locality in hidden-variables theories, Physics Letters A, vol. 297, no. 5-6, 20 May 2002, p. 273-278 online from arxiv.org
Antony Valentini: Hidden Variables, Statistical Mechanics and the Early Universe, Chance in Physics, Lecture Notes in Physics, Springer 2001, Volume 574/2001, 165–181,
Antony Valentini: On Galilean and Lorentz invariance in pilot-wave dynamics, Physics Letters A, 228, 215–222, 1997 online from arxiv.org
Antony Valentini: Pilot-wave theory of fields, gravitation and cosmology, in: James T. Cushing, Arthur Fine, Sheldon Goldstein (eds.): Bohmian mechanics and quantum theory: an appraisal, Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1996, p. 45–66 (a brief outline by Valentini of his work of 1991–1996 on the de Broglie–Bohm theory)
Antony Valentini: On the Pilot-Wave Theory of Classical, Quantum and Subquantum Physics, Ph.D. Thesis, ISAS, Trieste 1992
Antony Valentini: Signal-locality, uncertainty, and the sub-quantum H-theorem, II, Physics Letters A, vol. 158, no. 1, 1991, p. 1–8
Antony Valentini: Signal-locality, uncertainty, and the sub-quantum H-theorem, I, Physics Letters A, vol. 156, no. 5, 1991
Antony Valentini: Resolution of causality violation in the classical radiation reaction, Physical Review Letters vol. 61, no. 17, p. 1903–1905, 1988
References
External links
Antony Valentini at the Perimeter Institute (Internet Archive version of 28 September 2011)
Cover story on Antony Valentini in New Scientist
Is quantum mechanics tried, true, wildly successful, and wrong?, Science magazine, AAAS, 19 June 2009,
James T. Cushing: Quantum mechanics: historical contingency and the Copenhagen hegemony, therein: Appendix 2 Valentini's H-Theorem, The University of Chicago Press, 1994, , p. 171–173
Living people
Alumni of the University of Cambridge
American people of Italian descent
Clemson University faculty
Quantum physicists
Theoretical physicists
1965 births |
The Joe Pell Building, also known as The Hub, on Pell St. in Lewisport, Kentucky, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
It was deemed significant as "the only intact late 19th century wood frame commercial building in Lewisport, and one of few which
exist, intact in the state. It is a fine representative example of a once popular vernacular commercial building."
The building is no longer on the site.
References
Commercial buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Kentucky
National Register of Historic Places in Hancock County, Kentucky
Former buildings and structures in Kentucky |
Kimeshek (, ) or Elechek () is a traditional headgear of married women with children in Kazakhstan, Karakalpakstan and Kyrgyzstan. Kimeshek is also worn by Central Asian Jewish women. Uzbek and Tajik women wear a similar headdress called . Kimeshek is made of white cloth, and the edge is full of patterns. Kimeshek might have different designs and colors based on the wearer's social status, age, and family.
In Karakalpakstan, there are two different types of kimeshek, alike in Kazakhstan, only married women wear kimeshek. A red kimeshek, or , was worn by a younger married woman. A girl preparing for marriage would make the kimeshek herself. As the woman grew older, she would instead wear a white . However, she would keep the red kimeshek. The kimeshek was considered very important; it was taboo to give one away.
Gallery
References
Culture of Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstani culture
Marriage in Asia
Headgear
Islamic female clothing |
Matthew Robert Bonner (born April 5, 1980), also known as the Red Rocket or Red Mamba, is an American former professional basketball player. Bonner played college basketball for the University of Florida before being selected by the Chicago Bulls with the 45th overall pick in the 2003 NBA draft. During his career Bonner played for the Toronto Raptors and the San Antonio Spurs with whom he won two NBA championships.
Early life
Born in Concord, New Hampshire, Bonner attended Concord High School, where he helped lead them to three state championships. Bonner was also the Valedictorian of his graduating class.
College career
Bonner accepted an athletic scholarship to attend the University of Florida, where he played for coach Billy Donovan's Florida Gators men's basketball team from 1999 to 2003. In his four seasons, he amassed 1,570 points, 778 rebounds and 165 three-point field goals. As a senior in 2003, he was a first-team All-Southeastern Conference (SEC) selection and an Associated Press honorable mention All-American.
Bonner graduated with a bachelor's degree, with high honors, in business administration and a 3.96 grade point average (GPA). He won Academic All-American of the Year for the sport of basketball in both 2002 and 2003.
Professional career
Italy (2003–2004)
Bonner was selected with the 45th overall pick in the 2003 NBA draft by the Chicago Bulls but was then traded to the Toronto Raptors. The Raptors did not have a roster spot available at the time and asked Bonner to play overseas and hone his skills with a verbal promise to make the team the following season.
Bonner signed with Sicilia Messina of the Italian league in Messina, Sicily. Sicilia filed for bankruptcy in the middle of the season and stopped paying its players. Many players left the team but Bonner continued to play and finished the year averaging 19.2 points and 9.3 rebounds.
Toronto Raptors (2004–2006)
In September 2004, Bonner signed a one-year deal with the Toronto Raptors. On December 15, 2004, Bonner was ejected during a game against the Minnesota Timberwolves after attempting to block a Kevin Garnett shot attempt, with Raptors fans giving him a standing ovation, chanting his name and high-fiving him on his way out. In 2004–05, he played in all 82 regular season games and averaged 7.2 points. He remains the only Raptors rookie to play all 82 games in a season.
In August 2005, Bonner re-signed with the Raptors on a two-year deal.
San Antonio Spurs (2006–2017)
On June 21, 2006, Bonner was traded with Eric Williams and a second round draft pick to the San Antonio Spurs for Rasho Nesterović and cash considerations. In his first season with the Spurs, he averaged 4.9 points in just 11.7 minutes per game, both of which were career lows for Bonner at that time. The team went on to win the NBA championship that season.
In July 2007, Bonner re-signed with the Spurs on a three-year deal. On December 11, 2007, in a loss to the Golden State Warriors, Bonner recorded season-highs of 25 points and 17 rebounds.
On December 7, 2009, Bonner scored a career high 28 points and grabbed 8 rebounds in a 104–101 loss to the Utah Jazz.
In July 2010, Bonner again re-signed with the Spurs on a multi-year deal. He went on to lead the NBA in three-point field goal percentage for 2010–11 after he shot 45.7%.
In 2011, Bonner starred in Fundamentals of the Game with Coach B, a comedy web series hosted on the Spurs' official website.
After a social media campaign from his brother Luke, Bonner participated in the 2013 NBA Three-Point Shootout during All-Star Weekend. He recorded a score of 19 in the first round to knock out Ryan Anderson (18) and Stephen Curry (17) and advanced to the final where he lost 20–23 to Kyrie Irving. Later that year, Bonner and the Spurs reached the NBA Finals where they lost to the Miami Heat in seven games.
On June 15, 2014, Bonner won his second NBA championship after the Spurs defeated the Miami Heat 4–1 in the 2014 NBA Finals. On July 21, 2014, Bonner re-signed with the Spurs,
On July 15, 2015, Bonner again re-signed with the Spurs. Bonner's final NBA game was played on April 13, 2016, in a 96–91 win over the Dallas Mavericks where he recorded 6 points,1 rebound, 1 assist and 1 block.
He announced his retirement on January 6, 2017. On January 12, 2017, the Spurs jokingly "retired" Bonner's iconic flannel shirt in a locker room ceremony.
NBA career statistics
Regular season
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | Toronto
| 82 || 0 || 18.9 || .533 || .424 || .789 || 3.5 || .6 || .5 || .2 || 7.2
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | Toronto
| 78 || 6 || 21.9 || .448 || .420 || .829 || 3.6 || .7 || .6 || .4 || 7.5
|-
| style="text-align:left;background:#afe6ba;"| †
| style="text-align:left;"| San Antonio
| 56 || 0 || 11.7 || .447 || .383 || .711 || 2.8 || .4 || .3 || .2 || 4.9
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 68 || 3 || 12.5 || .416 || .336 || .864 || 2.8 || .5 || .2 || .3 || 4.8
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 81 || 67 || 23.8 || .496 || .440 || .739 || 4.8 || 1.0 || .6 || .3 || 8.2
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 65 || 8 || 17.9 || .446 || .390 || .729 || 3.3 || 1.0 || .5 || .4 || 7.0
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 66 || 1 || 21.7 || .464 || style="background:#cfecec;"|.457* || .744 || 3.6 || .9 || .4 || .3 || 7.3
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 65 || 2 || 20.4 || .440 || .420 || .762 || 3.3 || .9 || .2 || .3 || 6.6
|-
| align="left" |
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 68 || 4 || 13.4 || .487 || .442 || .733 || 1.9 || .5 || .3 || .3 || 4.2
|-
| style="text-align:left;background:#afe6ba;"| †
| style="text-align:left;"| San Antonio
| 61 || 0 || 11.3 || .445 || .429 || .750 || 2.1 || .5 || .2 || .2 || 3.2
|-
| style="text-align:left;" |
| style="text-align:left;" | San Antonio
| 72 || 19 || 13.0 || .409 || .365 || .811 || 1.6 || .7 || .1 || .2 || 3.7
|-
| style="text-align:left;"|
| style="text-align:left;"| San Antonio
| 30 || 2 || 6.9 || .509 || .441 || .750 || .9 || .3 || .2 || .0 || 2.5
|- class="sortbottom"
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2" | Career
| 792 || 112 || 16.9 || .464 || .414 || .780 || 3.0 || .7 || .4 || .3 || 5.8
Playoffs
|-
| style="text-align:left;background:#afe6ba;"| 2007†
| style="text-align:left;"| San Antonio
| 9 || 0 || 2.8 || .286 || .250 || 1.000 || .3 || .0 || .2 || .0 || .8
|-
| align="left" | 2008
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 2 || 0 || 4.5 || .667 || .000 || .000 || 1.0 || 1.0 || .0 || .0 || 2.0
|-
| align="left" | 2009
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 5 || 5 || 20.0 || .217 || .231 || 1.000 || 3.2 || .0 || .6 || .4 || 3.0
|-
| align="left" | 2010
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 10 || 0 || 17.3 || .432 || .370 || 1.000 || 3.2 || .4 || .1 || .3 || 5.0
|-
| align="left" | 2011
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 6 || 0 || 20.5 || .480 || .333 || .800 || 3.2 || .3 || .2 || .2 || 6.3
|-
| align="left" | 2012
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 13 || 0 || 12.7 || .313 || .348 || .600 || 1.9 || .7 || .2 || .3 || 2.4
|-
| align="left" | 2013
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 20 || 1 || 13.4 || .475 || .469 || .833 || 2.0 || .3 || .3 || .3 || 4.1
|-
| style="text-align:left;background:#afe6ba;"| 2014†
| style="text-align:left;"| San Antonio
| 22 || 2 || 6.1 || .476 || .333 || .750 || .7 || .5 || .1 || .0 || 1.3
|-
| align="left" | 2015
| align="left" | San Antonio
| 7 || 0 || 5.1 || .200 || .222 || .000 || .9 || .1 || .1 || .1 || .9
|-
| style="text-align:center;" colspan="2" | Career
| 94 || 8 || 11.0 || .402 || .355 || .811 || 1.7 || .4 || .2 || .2 || 2.8
Awards and achievements
2013–14 NBA champion
2006–07 NBA champion
2010–11 NBA three-point field-goal percentage leader
2002–03 Honorable Mention All-American
2001–02 Honorable Mention All-American
2002–03 Academic All-American of the Year
2001–02 Academic All-American of the Year
2002–03 All-SEC First Team
2001–02 All-SEC Second Team
2000–01 All-SEC Third Team
2002–03 SEC three-point field-goal percentage leader
2002–03 All-SEC Academic
2001–02 All-SEC Academic
2000–01 All-SEC Academic
1998–99 NHIAA Champions – Concord HS
1997–98 NHIAA Champions – Concord HS
1996–97 NHIAA Champions – Concord HS
Post-NBA career
After retiring from professional basketball, Bonner joined San Antonio Spurs TV Broadcast as a studio analyst.
Personal life
Bonner and his wife Nadia have one daughter, Evangeline-Vesper Lynne Bonner (born June 21, 2009) and one son, August Bonner (born August 27, 2012).
He has a younger brother, Luke, who was also a professional basketball player. Luke served as Matt's best man at his wedding.
Bonner applied for Canadian citizenship in February 2009, but did not qualify, due to the amount of time he spent outside the country.
Bonner is a sandwich enthusiast. He has a blog titled "The Sandwich Hunter: The Quest for the Hoagie Grail" in which he documents his search for the "world's best sandwich." He is also a fan of the sport of curling, due to discovering it on Canadian television during his tenure with the Toronto Raptors.
During his tenure with the Toronto Raptors, he received the nickname the "Red Rocket" for his red hair and constant use of the public transit in Toronto, the Toronto Transit Commission, whose slogan is "Ride the Rocket."
Kobe Bryant coined Bonner's other nickname, the "Red Mamba", on Twitter while live-tweeting in 2013 during a televised replay of his 81-point game against Bonner and the Toronto Raptors.
He was well known for being the lone NBA player wearing New Balance shoes, even if he did not have a proper sponsorship deal with the brand. He told in an interview that a friend, who was a New Balance representative, was one who provide him few dozens of shoes. Few years later, after using all these shoes and New Balance being out of the basketball sneakers market, Bonner finally signed his first basketball shoe deal with Adidas in January 2014 with the use of the Nice Kicks twitter account.
Bonner and his brother Luke run a nonprofit organization called the Rock On Foundation, in which they look to support community involvement in arts and athletics.
In March 2016, Bonner was featured on the season-premiere episode of FYI's Tiny House Nation, where he and his wife Nadia had a 276-sq.-foot house custom-built.
See also
List of Florida Gators in the NBA
List of University of Florida alumni
References
External links
1980 births
Living people
American expatriate basketball people in Canada
American expatriate basketball people in Italy
American men's basketball players
Basketball players from New Hampshire
Centers (basketball)
Chicago Bulls draft picks
Florida Gators men's basketball players
Parade High School All-Americans (boys' basketball)
Power forwards (basketball)
Sportspeople from Concord, New Hampshire
San Antonio Spurs players
Toronto Raptors players |
The Grasshopper and the Ant () is a 1913 Russian short animated film directed and written by Ladislas Starevich.
Plot
The film is based on a fable by I. Krylov.
References
External links
1913 films
1913 short films
1910s Russian-language films
Russian silent short films
Russian black-and-white films
1913 animated films
Films directed by Ladislas Starevich
Films of the Russian Empire
1910s animated short films
Russian animated short films |
Amoskeag may refer to:
Amoskeag Falls, a waterfall on the Merrimack River in Manchester, New Hampshire, USA
Amoskeag Manufacturing Company, a former textile manufacturing company
Amoskeag Company, a company spun off from the Amoskeag Manufacturing Company
Amoskeag Locomotive Works, a former locomotive manufacturing company
Amoskeag Rugby Club, a rugby team in Manchester, NH |
The New Year Honours 1901 were appointments to various orders and honours of the United Kingdom and British India.
The list was published in The Times on 1 January 1901, and the various honours were gazetted in The London Gazette on 28 December 1900 and 8 January 1901.
The recipients of honours are displayed or referred to as they were styled before their new honour and arranged by honour and where appropriate by rank (Knight Grand Cross, Knight Commander etc.) then division (Military, Civil).
Privy Council
Lewis Fry, Esq.
Thomas Frederick Halsey, Esq., MP
Edmund Barton, QC, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
Sir Samuel Walker Griffith, GCMG, Lieutenant-governor and Chief Justice of Queensland, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
Baronet
John Aird, Esq., MP
Thomas Barlow, Esq., MD, Physician Extraordinary to the Queen
Jonathan Edmund Backhouse, Esq.
William Selby Church, Esq., MD, FRCS
Colonel Robert Gunter, MP
Wyndham Spencer Portal, Esq.
Knight Bachelor
Hugh Adcock, CMG
Edward Henry Busk, Esq., Chairman of Convocation in the University of London
Alfred Cooper, Esq., Surbiton
Robert Harvey, Esq., High Sheriff of Cornwall
Edward Wollaston Knocker, Esq., CB, Registrar of the Cinque Ports
Hiram Maxim, Esq.
John Mark, Esq., former Mayor of Manchester
Joseph Sykes Rymer, Esq., late Lord Mayor of York
Henry Miller, Speaker of the Legislative Council, New Zealand
Arthur Robert Wallace, Esq., CB, DL, Principal Chief Clerk Secretary′s Office, Dublin Castle
Edward Matthew Hodgson, Esq., JP, Chairman of the Rathmines and Rathgar Urban District Council
John Quick, of Victoria, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
The Most Honourable Order of the Bath
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB)
Civil Division
Sir Alfred Milner, KCB, High Commissioner for South Africa
Sir Francis Mowatt, KCB, Secretary to the Treasury
Lord Justice Romer
Knights Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB)
Civil Division
Edward Chandos Leigh, CB, QC, Counsel to the Speaker, House of Commons
Richard Mills, Esq., CB, late Comptroller and Auditor General
Sir William Turner, D.C.L.
Companions of the Order of the Bath (CB)
Civil division
Francis Alexander Campbell, Esq., of the Foreign Office
Frederick Victor Dickins, Esq., Registrar to the University of London
Lawrence Charles Edward Downing Dowdall, Esq., of the Irish Office
George Vandeleur Fiddes, Esq., Colonial Office
Robert O′Brien Furlong, Esq., Solicitor to the Inland Revenue Department, Ireland
Lieutenant-Colonel Michael Clare Garcia, Inspector-General of Military Prisons
Henry Paul Harvey, Esq., of the War Office
Charles Prestwood Lucas, Esq., Assistant Under-Secretary of State, Colonial Office
Malcolm McNeill, Esq., Chairman of the Local Government Board for Scotland
Lieutenant-Colonel George Tindall Plunkett, Royal Engineers, Director of the Science and Art Department, Dublin
Order of the Star of India
Knight Commander of the Order of the Star of India (KCSI)
Charles Montgomery Rivaz, Esq., CSI, Ordinary Member of the Council of the Governor General of India
Companion of the Order of the Star of India (CSI)
Frederick Styles Philpin Lely, Esq., Indian Civil Service
John Ontario Miller, Esq., Indian Civil Service
George Robert Irwin, Esq., Indian Civil Service
William Robert Bright, Esq., Indian Civil Service
Order of Saint Michael and Saint George
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George (GCMG)
Sir John Forrest, LL.D, KCMG, Premier and Colonial Treasurer of Western Australia, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG)
Brigadier-General Frederick John Dealtry Lugard, CB, DSO, High Commissioner for the Northern Nigeria Protectorate
Sir Henry Nevill Dering, Baronet, CB, Her Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States of Brazil
The Honourable William Augustus Curzon Barrington, Her Majesty's Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Argentine Republic
John Gordon Kennedy, Esq., Her Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of His Majesty the King of Romania
Colonel Herbert Jekyll, Royal Engineers, CMG, Secretary to the Royal Commission for the Paris Universal International Exhibition of 1900
The Honourable Sir James Robert Dickson, DCL, CMG, Chief Secretary of Queensland, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
William McMillan, Esq., formerly Colonial Treasurer of New South Wales, Chairman of the Finance Committee of the Australian Federal Convention, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
Josiah Henry Symon, Esq., QC, formerly Attorney-General of South Australia, Chairman of the Judiciary Committee of the Australian Federal Convention, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG)
Colonel Gerald Charles Kitson, lately Commandant of the Royal Military College, Kingston, Canada
Lieutenant-Colonel D la Cherois Thomas Irwin, formerly Inspector of Artillery in Canada, Secretary of the Canadian Patriotic Fund
Maximilian Frank Simon, Esq., MD, on retirement as Principal Civil Medical Officer of the Straits Settlements
William Shelford, Esq., MICE, Consulting Engineer for West African Railways
William Matthews, Esq., MICE, Consulting Engineer for Harbour Work in the Colonies
Francis Alfred Cooper, Esq., Director of Public Works of the Island of Ceylon
Ralph Champneys Williams, Esq., Colonial Secretary of the Island of Barbados
Alfredo Naudi, Esq., LL.D, Crown Advocate of the Island of Malta
Thomas Robertson Marsh, Esq., on retirement as Head of the Engineering and Contract Branches of the Office for the Crown Agents for the Colonies
Charles Clive Bigham, Esq., Honorary Attaché to Her Majesty's Legation at Peking, attached to Admiral Seymour's force
Charles William Campbell, Esq., Her Majesty's Vice-Consul at Shanghai, attached to Admiral Seymour's force
Pelham Laird Warren, Esq., Her Majesty's Consul-General at Hankow
William Richard Carles, Esq., Her Majesty's Consul at Tientsin
Everard Duncan Home Fraser, Esq., Her Majesty's Consul at Chinkiang
Edmund Robert Spearman, Esq., Assistant Secretary to the Royal Commission for the Paris Universal International Exhibition of 1900
Lionel Earle, Esq., Assistant Secretary to the Royal Commission for the Paris Universal International Exhibition of 1900
Herbert Hughes, Esq., for services in connection with International Industrial Conferences
Edwin Gordon Blackmore, Esq., Clerk of the Legislative Council and Clerk of the Parliaments of South Australia, Clerk of the Australian Federal Convention, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
Robert Randolph Garran, Esq., MA, Barrister, New South Wales, Secretary to the Drafting Committee of the Australian Federal Convention, on the occasion of the Federation of the Australian Colonies
Order of the Indian Empire
Knights Grand Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire (GCIE)
Major General Sir Edwin Henry Hayter Collen, KCIE, CB, Military Member of the Council of the Governor General of India
Maharao Raja Sir Raghubir Singh Bahadur, of Bundi
Knights Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire (KCIE)
Alexander Frederick Douglas Cunningham, Esq., CIE, Indian Civil Service
Henry Evan Murchison James, Esq., CIE, Indian Civil Service
Honorary Knight Commander of the Order of the Indian Empire
Colonel Eduardo Augusto Rodrigues Galhardo, Governor-General of Portuguese India
Companion of the Order of the Indian Empire (CIE)
Mian Bhure Singh, of Chamba
Captain Walter Somerville Goodridge, Royal Navy, Director of the Royal Indian Marine
Lieutenant-Colonel Solomon Charles Frederick Peile, Indian Staff Corps
Bertram Prior Standen, Esq., Indian Civil Service
Henry Alexander Sim, Esq., Indian Civil Service
Major James Robert Dunlop Smith, Indian Staff Corps
Major John Crimmin, VC, Indian Medical Service
Major Granville Henry Loch, Indian Staff Corps
Fardunji Kuvarji Tarapurvala, Public Works Department, Executive Engineer, Ahmedabad
Babu Kalinath Mitter, laletly Member of the Council of the Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal for making Laws and Regulations
Frederick William Latimer Esq., Assistant Private Secretary to His Excellency the Viceroy of India
William Jameson Soulsby, Esq., CB, Secretary to the Mansion House Indian Famine Relief Funds in 1877, 1897, and 1900
Kaisar-i-Hind Medal
References
New Year Honours
1901 in the United Kingdom
1901 awards |
Kennedia glabrata, commonly known as Northcliffe kennedia, is a species of flowering plant in the family Fabaceae and is endemic to the south-west of Western Australia. It is a prostrate shrub or creeper with trifoliate leaves and orange-pink to red flowers with a yellow centre.
Description
Kennedia glabrata is a prostrate shrub or creeper with hairy stems. The leaves are trifoliate, long with stipules long at the base, the leaflets with wavy edges. The flowers are arranged in groups on an erect flower stalk up to long, each flower on a glabrous pedicel about long. The five sepals are glabrous and long. The standard petal is orange-pink to red with a yellow centre and long, the wings red and about long and the keel red and about long. Flowering occurs from August to November and the fruit is a flattened pod long.
Taxonomy
Kennedia glabrata was first formally described in 1836 by John Lindley in Edwards's Botanical Register. The specific epithet (glabrata) means "nearly glabrous".
Distribution and habitat
Northcliffe kennedia grows in shallow pockets of soil on granite outcrops from Northcliffe to near Esperance.
Conservation status
Kennedia glabrata is listed as "vulnerable" under the Australian Government Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 and as "Threatened Flora (Declared Rare Flora — Extant)" under the Western Australian Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016. The main threats to the species include weed invasion, grazing pressure, disturbance by feral pigs and dieback caused by Phytophthora cinnamomi.
References
Fabales of Australia
Plants described in 1836
Rosids of Western Australia
glabrata
Taxa named by John Lindley
Endemic flora of Southwest Australia |
The American Physical Society gives out a number of awards for research excellence and conduct; topics include outstanding leadership, computational physics, lasers, mathematics, and more.
Prizes
David Adler Lectureship Award in the Field of Materials Physics
The David Adler Lectureship Award in the Field of Materials Physics is a prize that has been awarded annually by the American Physical Society since 1988. The recipient is chosen for being "an outstanding contributor to the field of materials physics, who is noted for the quality of his/her research, review articles and lecturing." The prize is named after physicist David Adler with contributions to the endowment by friends of David Adler and Energy Conversion Devices, Inc. The winner receives a $5,000 honorarium.
Will Allis Prize for the Study of Ionized Gases
Will Allis Prize for the Study of Ionized Gases is awarded biannually "for outstanding contributions to understanding the physics of partially ionized plasmas and gases" in honour of Will Allis. The $10000 prize was founded in 1989 by contributions from AT&T, General Electric, GTE, International Business Machines, and Xerox Corporations.
Early Career Award for Soft Matter Research
This award recognizes outstanding and sustained contributions by an early-career researcher to the soft matter field.
LeRoy Apker Award
The LeRoy Apker Award was established in 1978 to recognize outstanding achievements in physics by undergraduate students. Two awards are presented each year, one to a student from a Ph.D. granting institution, and one to a student from a non-Ph.D. granting institution.
APS Medal for Exceptional Achievement in Research
The APS Medal for Exceptional Achievement in Research was established in 2016 to recognize contributions of the highest level that advance our knowledge and understanding of the physical universe. The medal carries with it a prize of $50,000 and is the largest APS prize to recognize the achievement of researchers from across all fields of physics. It is funded by a generous donation from Jay Jones, entrepreneur. Recipients to date are Edward Witten (2016), Daniel Kleppner (2017), Eugene Parker (2018), Bertrand Halperin (2019), Myriam Sarachik (2020), Gordon Baym (2021) and Elliott H. Lieb (2022).
Hans A. Bethe Prize
The Hans Bethe Prize is presented annually to recognize outstanding work in theory, experiment or observation in the areas of astrophysics, nuclear physics, nuclear astrophysics, or closely related fields. The prize was first awarded in 1998.
Tom W. Bonner Prize in Nuclear Physics
The Tom W. Bonner Prize in Nuclear Physics is an annual prize awarded by the Division of Nuclear Physics to recognize outstanding experimental research in nuclear physics. It was established in 1964.
Edward A. Bouchet Award
The Edward A. Bouchet Award was established in 1994 by the APS Committee on Minorities in physics to recognize and honor distinguished underrepresented minority physics researchers who have made significant contributions to physics research. This lectureship provides funding for Award recipients to conduct visits to institutions where the impact on minority students is significant, to deliver technical or topical lectures, and in some cases, to conduct informal discussions with faculty and students.
Herbert P. Broida Prize
The Herbert P. Broida Prize, established in 1979, is awarded every two years for outstanding experimental advances in the fields of atomic and molecular spectroscopy or chemical physics.
Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Physics Prize
The Oliver E. Buckley Condensed Matter Prize is an annual prize with an award of $20,000 for "outstanding theoretical or experimental contributions to condensed matter physics". The prize is named after Oliver Ellsworth Buckley, a former president of AT&T Bell Laboratories, which endowed the prize in 1952.
Joseph A. Burton Forum Award
The Joseph A. Burton Forum Award was established in 1974 to recognize outstanding contributions to the public understanding or resolution of issues involving the interface of physics and society.
Stanley Corrsin Award
Stanley Corrsin Award is a $5000 prize given since 2011 "to recognize and encourage a particularly influential contribution to fundamental fluid dynamics."
Davisson–Germer Prize in Atomic or Surface Physics
The Davisson–Germer Prize in Atomic or Surface Physics is an annual prize for "outstanding work in atomic physics or surface physics". The prize is named after Clinton Davisson and Lester Germer, who first measured electron diffraction.
John Dawson Award for Excellence in Plasma Physics Research
The John Dawson Award for Excellence in Plasma Physics Research, established in 1981 but named after John M. Dawson in 2007, is an annual award that recognizes "a particular recent outstanding achievement in plasma physics research". The award carries a prize of $5000 divided among the year's recipients and an allowance for registration and travel to the APS Division of Plasma Physics Annual Meeting.
Max Delbruck Prize in Biological Physics
The Max Delbruck Prize recognizes and encourage outstanding achievement in biological physics research, and is one of the most prestigious international prizes in biological physics. It is awarded annually with a prize of $10000.
John H. Dillon Medal
The John H. Dillon Medal is an annual medal with an award of $2,000 for "outstanding accomplishment and unusual promise in research in polymer physics".
Mildred Dresselhaus Prize in Nanoscience or Nanomaterials
Mildred Dresselhaus Prize in Nanoscience or Nanomaterials was first awarded in 2023. It honours the legacy of Mildred Dresselhaus, and is awarded for an "outstanding scientist in the areas of nanoscience or nanomaterials". The first recipient of the price was Eva Andrei.
George E. Duvall Shock Compression Science Award
George E. Duvall Shock Compression Science Award was established in 1987 "to recognize contributions to understanding condensed matter and non-linear physics through shock compression." It is awarded biannually.
Einstein Prize
The Einstein Prize was established in 1999 to recognize outstanding accomplishments in the field of gravitational physics. It is awarded in odd-numbered years.
Prize for a Faculty Member for Research in an Undergraduate Institution
Prize for a Faculty Member for Research in an Undergraduate Institution is awarded annually since 1986 to a "physicist whose research in an undergraduate setting has achieved wide recognition and contributed significantly to physics and who has contributed substantially to the professional development of undergraduate physics students".
Herman Feshbach Prize in Theoretical Nuclear Physics
The Herman Feshbach Prize in Theoretical Nuclear Physics was inaugurated in 2014 and is awarded annually to recognize and promote outstanding achievements in theoretical nuclear physics.
Fluid Dynamics Prize
The Fluid Dynamics Prize is a prize that has been awarded annually by the society since 1979. The recipient is chosen for "outstanding achievement in fluid dynamics research". As of 2007 the prize is valued at $10,000. In 2004, the Otto Laporte Award, another APS award on fluid dynamics, was merged into the Fluid Dynamics Prize.
Maria Goeppert-Mayer Award
The Maria Goeppert-Mayer Award recognizes and enhances outstanding achievements by women physicists in the early years of their careers and provides opportunities for them to present these achievements to others through public lectures.
Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics
The Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics is awarded annually since 1959 to recognize outstanding publications in the field of mathematical physics.
DPF Instrumentation Award
The Division of Particles and Fields Instrumentation Award was established in 2015 and is "bestowed annually to honor exceptional contributions to instrumentation advancing the field of particle physics through the invention, refinement, or application of instrumentation and detectors". Inaugural recipients were David Nygren and Veljko Radeka.
Richard A. Isaacson Award in Gravitational-Wave Science
Richard A. Isaacson Award in Gravitational-Wave Science is an annual award of $5000. It recognizes contributions in gravitational-wave physics and astrophysics, and technologies which enable them. It was first awarded in 2019.
Frank Isakson Prize for Optical Effects in Solids
The Frank Isakson Prize was established in 1979 to recognize outstanding optical research that leads to breakthroughs in the condensed matter sciences. The prize is awarded in even-numbered years.
Leo P. Kadanoff Prize
The Leo P. Kadanoff Prize, established in 2018, is awarded annually to recognize outstanding theoretical, experimental, or computational research in statistical and nonlinear physics.
Joseph F. Keithley Award For Advances in Measurement Science
The Joseph F. Keithley Award For Advances in Measurement Science recognizes physicists who have furthered the development of measurement techniques or equipment for the physics community that provides better measurements. Starting in 1998, the annual award consists of a $5,000 award and certificate.
Lev D. Landau and Lyman Spitzer Jr. Award
Lev D. Landau and Lyman Spitzer Jr. Award for Outstanding Contributions to Plasma Physics is "given to an individual or group of researchers for outstanding contributions in plasma physics and for advancing the collaboration between Europe and the United States of America." The $4000 prize is funded equally by the Plasma Physics Divisions of American Physical Society and European Physical Society.
Rolf Landauer and Charles H. Bennett Award in Quantum Computing
Rolf Landauer and Charles H. Bennett Award in Quantum Computing recognizes contributions in quantum information science. It was established in 2015.
Irving Langmuir Prize in Chemical Physics
The Irving Langmuir Prize in Chemical Physics is awarded annually to US residents, in even years by the American Chemical Society and in odd years by the American Physical Society. The award was established in 1931 to recognize and encourage outstanding interdisciplinary research in chemistry and physics, in the spirit of Nobel Prize-winning chemist Irving Langmuir.
Julius Edgar Lilienfeld Prize
APS has awarded the Julius Edgar Lilienfeld Prize annually since 1989, excepting 2002. The purpose of the prize is to recognize outstanding contributions to physics. Among the recipients are Michael Berry, Alan Guth, Stephen Hawking, and Frank Wilczek.
James Clerk Maxwell Prize
The James Clerk Maxwell Prize for Plasma Physics was established in 1975 by the Maxwell Technologies, Inc., in honor of the Scottish physicist, James Clerk Maxwell. The prize recognizes outstanding contributions to the field of plasma physics. The prize consists of $10,000 and a certificate citing the contributions made by the recipient. The prize is presented annually.
James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials
The James C. McGroddy Prize for New Materials has been awarded annually since 1975 for "outstanding achievement in the science and application of new materials". Initially known as the International Prize for New Materials, the prize has been named for physicist James C. McGroddy since 1999.
Lars Onsager Prize in Statistical Physics
The Lars Onsager Prize recognizes outstanding research in theoretical statistical physics including the quantum fluids. The prize consists of $10,000 as well as a certificate citing the contribution made by the recipient. It is presented annually, beginning in 1997. The prize was endowed in 1993 by Drs. Russell and Marian Donnelly in memory of Lars Onsager and his passion for analytical results.
Abraham Pais Prize for History of Physics
The Abraham Pais Prize for History of Physics is given jointly by the American Physical Society and the American Institute of Physics for "outstanding scholarly achievements in the history of physics". The prize, named after physicist and historian Abraham Pais, has been awarded annually since 2005.
George E. Pake Prize
The George E. Pake Prize was established in 1983 to recognize outstanding work by physicists combining original research accomplishments with leadership in the management of research or development in industry. The prize is presented biennially in even-numbered years.
Panofsky Prize in Experimental Particle Physics
The Panofsky Prize is an annual prize, established in 1985, given to recognize and encourage outstanding achievements in experimental particle physics.
Francis M. Pipkin Award
The Francis M. Pipkin Award is a biennial prize established in 1997 to recognize the research achievements by an early-career physicist in precision measurement and fundamental physical constants and to encourage the dissemination of the research.
Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy & Dynamics
The Earle K. Plyler Prize for Molecular Spectroscopy was established in 1976 and is awarded annually to recognize notable contributions to the field of molecular spectroscopy and dynamics.
Polymer Physics Prize
The Polymer Physics Prize is awarded annually since 1962 for outstanding achievements in polymer physics research.
I. I. Rabi Prize in Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics
The I. I. Rabi Prize in Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics was established in 1989 and is awarded biennially to recognize outstanding research by an early-career physicist in atomic, molecular, and optical physics.
Aneesur Rahman Prize for Computational Physics
The Aneesur Rahman Prize for Computational Physics was established in 1992 with support from IBM Corporation. It recognizes outstanding work in computational physics. It is awarded annually with a value of $5000 and is open to scientists of all nationalities. The winner delivers the Rahman lecture.
Norman F. Ramsey Prize
The Norman F. Ramsey Prize in Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics, and in Precision Tests of Fundamental Laws and Symmetries recognizes achievements in the two fields of Norman Ramsey: AMO physics and in precisions tests of fundamental laws and symmetries. It was established in 2017.
Andrei Sakharov Prize
The Andrei Sakharov Prize was established to recognize "outstanding leadership and/or achievements of scientists in upholding human rights." The prize is named in recognition of the courageous and effective work of the Soviet nuclear physicist Andrei Sakharov on behalf of human rights, to the detriment of his own scientific career and despite the loss of his own personal freedom.
J. J. Sakurai Prize
The J. J. Sakurai Prize for Theoretical Particle Physics is presented by the American Physical Society at its annual April Meeting, and honors outstanding achievement in particle physics theory. The prize, considered one of the most prestigious in physics, consists of a monetary award, a certificate citing the contributions recognized by the award, and a travel allowance for the recipient to attend the presentation. The award is endowed by the family and friends of particle physicist J. J. Sakurai. The prize has been awarded annually since 1985.
Arthur L. Schawlow Prize in Laser Science
The Arthur L. Schawlow Prize in Laser Science is an annual award established in 1991 to recognize outstanding contributions to basic research which uses lasers to advance the knowledge of the fundamental physical properties of materials and their interaction with light.
Leo Szilard Lectureship Award
The Leo Szilard Lectureship Award was established in 1974 in commemoration of physicist Leo Szilard. It is presented annually for outstanding accomplishments by international physicists to promote the use of physics for the benefit of society.
George E. Valley, Jr. Prize
George E. Valley, Jr. Prize was established in 2000 to "recognize an early-career individual for an outstanding scientific contribution to physics that is deemed to have significant potential for a dramatic impact on the field."
John Wheatley Award
Established in 1991 "to honor and recognize the dedication of physicists who have made contributions to the development of physics in countries of the third world" with the support of the Forum on International Physics.
Robert R. Wilson Prize
The Robert R. Wilson Prize for Achievement in the Physics of Particle Accelerators was established in 1987 "to recognize and encourage outstanding achievement in the physics of particle accelerators. The prize consists of $10,000, an allowance for travel to the meeting at which the prize is awarded and a certificate citing the contributions made by the recipient. It is presented annually." The prize is named after Robert R. Wilson, the first director of Fermilab.
See also
List of physics awards
References
External links
Prizes and awards
American Physical Society
American P
American Physical Society prizes and awards |
The Alliance Party of Northern Ireland (APNI), or simply Alliance, is a liberal and centrist political party in Northern Ireland. Following the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election, it was the third-largest party in the Northern Ireland Assembly, holding seventeen seats, and broke through by placing third in first preference votes in the 2019 European Parliament election and polling third-highest regionally at the 2019 UK general election. The party won one of the three Northern Ireland seats in the European Parliament, and one seat, North Down, in the House of Commons, the lower house of the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
Founded in 1970 from the New Ulster Movement, the Alliance Party originally represented moderate and non-sectarian unionism. However, over time, particularly in the 1990s, it moved towards neutrality on the Union, and came to represent wider liberal and non-sectarian concerns. It supports the Good Friday Agreement but maintains a desire for the reform of the political system towards a non-sectarian future and, in the Northern Ireland Assembly, it is designated as neither Unionist nor Irish nationalist, but "Other" or "United Community".
The Alliance Party won its first seat in the UK House of Commons in the 2010 general election, unseating the former East Belfast MP Peter Robinson, First Minister of Northern Ireland and leader of the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP). Naomi Long was the first MP from the Alliance Party since Stratton Mills, who joined the party from the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) in 1973. However, the DUP regained the seat at the 2015 general election, following an electoral pact with the UUP. In the 2019 general election, Alliance regained its presence in the House of Commons when Stephen Farry won the North Down seat vacated by the independent unionist, Sylvia Hermon. Earlier that year, the party's leader, Naomi Long, won the party's first seat in the European Parliament in the last European election before Brexit. Under Long's leadership, the Alliance Party exceeded expectations in the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election and gained numerous seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly.
The Alliance Party is a member of the Liberal International and Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe, and is aligned with the Liberal Democrats in Great Britain.
History
Early growth and the 1974 Northern Ireland Executive
The party was formed in April 1970 as an alternative to the established parties. In the context of a rapidly worsening political crisis, it aimed not only to present an alternative to what they perceived as sectarian parties and expressly aimed to act as a bridge between the Protestant and Catholic sections of the community and heal the divisions in Northern Ireland society. The Party's founding principles were expressly in favour of Northern Ireland remaining part of the United Kingdom, although, in contrast to other unionist parties, that was expressed in socio-economic rather than ethnic terms.
On 5 February 1973, prior to the 1973 Northern Ireland border poll, the party's chairman, Jim Hendron, stated that: "Support for the position of Northern Ireland as an integral part of the United Kingdom is a fundamental principle of the Alliance Party, not only for economic reasons but also because we firmly believe that a peaceful solution to our present tragic problems is only possible within a United Kingdom context. Either a Sinn Fein all-Ireland republic or a Vanguard-style Ulster republic would lead to disaster for all our people."
The party's prominence increased in 1972 when three members of the Northern Ireland House of Commons defected to Alliance. The MPs were drawn from across Northern Ireland's political divide and included Bertie McConnell, an independent Unionist, the Ulster Unionist Phelim O'Neill and Tom Gormley who sat as an independent Nationalist. In 1973 Lord Dunleath joined the party in the House of Lords. Stratton Mills, who had been elected as an Ulster Unionist/Conservative MP at Westminster for North Belfast also joined that year, becoming the party's sole MP between 1973–74 and didn't have another MP until 2010. Its first electoral challenge was the District Council elections of May 1973 when they managed to win 13.6% of the votes cast.
In the elections to the Northern Ireland Assembly which followed the Sunningdale Agreement the party polled 9.2% and won eight seats. After the elections Alliance entered the power sharing Northern Ireland Executive. Oliver Napier became Legal Minister and Head of the Office of Law Reform and Bob Cooper took the junior role of Minister for Manpower Services.
In its manifesto for the elections to the Northern Ireland Constitutional Convention in 1975, the Alliance Party stated "Alliance supports the constitutional position of Northern Ireland as an integral part of the United Kingdom. We know that this belief is shared by the overwhelming majority of our people and that provocative debate about it has been the primary cause of all our most fundamental troubles. The link is in the best economic and social interests of all the people of Northern Ireland, and we will maintain that only the people of Northern Ireland have the right to decide any change by voting in a referendum."
Alliance's vote increased significantly in the 1977 local elections when it obtained 14.4% of the vote and had 74 Councillors elected. In 1979, Party Leader Oliver Napier came closer than Alliance had previously come to electing a Westminster MP, polling just 928 votes short of Peter Robinson's winning total in East Belfast, albeit placing third in a three-way marginal.
Stabilisation and decline
Alliance was seriously damaged by the 1981 Irish Hunger Strike, which deeply polarised Northern Ireland politics, and led to the emergence of Sinn Féin as a serious political force. The party supported the 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement, and despite claims that this would fatally damage its soft unionist support, Alliance rebounded to pick up 10.0% of the vote in Northern Ireland in the 1987 United Kingdom general election.
Its new leader, John Alderdice, polled 32.0% of the vote in East Belfast, while Alliance came within 15,000 votes of both the Democratic Unionist Party and Sinn Féin across Northern Ireland. In 1996 Alderdice accepted a peerage, becoming the Alliance Party's only representation in Parliament. Lord Alderdice took the Liberal Democrat whip on wider UK and European issues but remained free from the whip's control on issues impacting Northern Ireland.
In 1988, in Alliance's keynote post-Anglo Irish Agreement document, Governing with Consent, Alderdice called for a devolved power-sharing government. Throughout the late 1980s and early 1990s, Alliance's vote stabilised at between 7% and 10%. After the IRA and loyalist ceasefires in 1994, Alliance became the first non-nationalist party to enter into talks with Sinn Féin, as an active participant in the Northern Ireland peace process negotiations leading to the Good Friday Agreement, which it strongly supported. Alliance polled poorly in the 1996 elections for the Northern Ireland Forum, and the 1998 election for the Northern Ireland Assembly winning around 6.5% of the vote each time. This did enable the party to win six seats in the Assembly, although this was somewhat of a let-down given that it had been expected to do much better.
The Good Friday Agreement era
1998–2004
John Alderdice resigned as party leader in 1998 to take up the post of the Assembly's Presiding Officer. He was replaced by Seán Neeson, who himself resigned as party leader in September 2001. Neeson was replaced by David Ford, a member of the Assembly for South Antrim.
It was predicted that Alliance would suffer electorally as a new centrist challenger established itself in Northern Irish politics, the Northern Ireland Women's Coalition. Another problem for the APNI was that the rules of the Assembly require major votes (such as the election of the First Minister and deputy First Minister) to have the support of both a majority of unionist and nationalist MLAs, thus diminishing the importance of parties such as Alliance which are not aligned to either of these two blocs.
In the 2003 Assembly elections, Alliance held all their seats, while the Women's Coalition lost both of theirs. Alliance's vote fell to just 3.7%. In the European Parliament Elections in 2004, Alliance gave strong support to Independent candidate John Gilliland who polled 6.6% of the vote, the highest for a non-communal candidate in a European election since 1979. In the early years of the peace process, the centre ground was relentlessly squeezed in Northern Ireland politics. The support for Gilliland's candidature, which was also supported by parties such as the Workers' Party and Northern Ireland Conservatives, reflected a desire to reunite the fragmented and weakened non-communal bloc in Northern Ireland politics.
2004–2016
In the 5 May 2005 United Kingdom general election, they contested 12 seats and polled 3.9% of the vote. In the simultaneous elections to Northern Ireland's local authorities, they polled 5.0% of first preference votes and had 30 Councillors elected, a gain of two seats relative to the previous elections.
The 2006–2007 period saw some signs of an Alliance upturn, topping the poll and gaining a seat in a by-election for Coleraine Borough Council.
In the 2007 Northern Ireland Assembly elections, Alliance put in a strong media campaign and polled 5.2%, up from 3.6% in the previous election and gaining a seat in Belfast South following the successful candidature of Anna Lo, the first ethnic Chinese public representative in a national assembly anywhere in Western Europe. In an election cycle where many pundits had predicted that the Alliance Party would struggle to hold on to the six seats it won in the 2003 election, the party pulled off a credible performance which included Deputy Leader Naomi Long doubling her share of the vote in Belfast East.
In 2008, during the deadlock between Sinn Féin and the DUP over the devolution of policing, the two parties came to an agreement that the Minister of Justice would not come from either party. The Alliance Party was the obvious choice but party leader David Ford said "it's a very definite and a very emphatic no". Ford further stated, "this executive is incompetent, it's time they got on with doing the job that they were set up to do". Following further negotiations, Ford assumed office on 12 April 2010.
At the 2009 European elections, Alliance candidate Ian Parsley achieved the party's best European election vote share in 30 years with 5.5% of the vote.
In the 2010 general election, the party won its first seat in Westminster, with Naomi Long taking the seat of sitting First Minister Peter Robinson. The 2011 Northern Ireland Assembly Election resulted in eight Assembly members being returned with a gain in Belfast East. It overtook the UUP on Belfast City Council.
In a poll conducted in November 2012, Alliance (on 11.6%) overtook the UUP (11.4%) for the first time.
During the 2016 elections to the Assembly, in spite of initially confident predications from David Ford that Alliance would see a surplus of up to 11 seats, the party's share of the popular vote stagnated somewhat, from 7.7% in 2011 to 7.0%. Ultimately, its 8 MLAs from their original respective constituencies were returned to Stormont for the fifth Assembly term. Ford later resigned as Alliance Party leader on 6 October 2016, on his 15th anniversary as leader of the party.
2016–2019: Opposing Brexit
On 26 October 2016, Naomi Long officially became the new leader of the Alliance Party. In the snap 2017 Assembly election, Alliance increased its vote share to 9.1% and retained all eight of their MLA seats in a reduced Assembly. For the 2017 general election, the party advocated a confirmatory referendum on the Brexit withdrawal agreement and remaining in the European Single Market. In April 2018, the party joined the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe Party as an associate member.
Alliance increased its vote share by 5 percentage points in the 2019 local elections and broke out of its traditional Greater Belfast heartlands by taking seats on Armagh, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council and Derry City & Strabane District Council where the party had not previously been represented. During the election campaign, the party had urged a break from "orange and green politics" and was vocal in its opposition to Brexit using the slogan "Demand Better".
In the 2019 European election, Naomi Long became the Alliance Party's first ever MEP, receiving the second of three seats allocated to Northern Ireland and securing the best ever result for Alliance with 18.5% of first-preference votes.
The party greatly increased its vote share at the 2019 general election, from 7.9% to 16.8% of Northern Ireland, over-taking the SDLP and UUP to come third overall. The party re-gained a seat in the House of Commons (North Down, previously held by the retiring independent Sylvia Hermon), and was second in another four constituencies.
2020–present: COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent elections
Long became Stormont's justice minister in January 2020, holding the position throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2022, Long told the Alliance Party conference in Belfast that the DUP and Sinn Féin were "addicted to crisis and conflict", and hoped that her party could bring an end to the "binary system" at Stormont.
The Alliance Party fought the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election on a platform of reforming the Stormont institutions, health transformation, integrated education, a Green New Deal and tackling paramilitarism. Alliance would go on to win the third highest number of seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly, 4.5% more of the vote than they did in the 2017 election and also gaining at least nine seats. In all, the 2022 election saw the party win 17 seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly, more than double the number of seats than what they previously had after the 2017 Northern Ireland Assembly election.
The 2023 Northern Ireland local elections were, in Long's own words, "a mixed bag", but the party still gained 14 seats overall, increasing its councillor total to 67.
Ideology and policies
Over the past 40 years (and particularly since the mid-1990s), Alliance's political philosophy has veered away from non-sectarian unionism towards a more liberal, neutral position on the question of either a united Ireland or continued Union with Great Britain. Alliance supports the Good Friday Agreement as a basis that can be used to manage the conflict whilst working to ultimately create a non-sectarian political system for Northern Ireland. It believes that the consociational power-sharing structure established by the agreement may not be capable of providing long-term stability, citing various reservations such as the entrenchment of pre-existing divisions as well as the inability to adapt to demographic changes. Its 2022 manifesto stated "Alliance supports the Good Friday Agreement, and endorses its underlying principles, its structures, and its interlocking relationships. However, we have always supported reform of the structures of government and, in light of recent developments, the case for reform is stronger than ever."
The Alliance Party was founded by moderate Unionists in the New Ulster Movement in April 1970 in response to the emergence of the Troubles. As Alliance viewed the situation, the major problem of Northern Ireland was the division between Protestants and Catholics. It contended that the turmoil had its origins in that division and not in the partition of Ireland. The party's founding members resolved to change the "traditional mould" of sectarian politics in Northern Ireland, by launching a party deliberately set out to win support from both sections of the population. The party's founding principles were an attempt to address the "fundamental fears" of Protestants being coerced into a united Ireland, and of Catholics being condemned to second-class citizenship within Northern Ireland.
The distinguishing feature of Alliance is its belief in the legitimacy of a distinctive Northern Irish community, one that has more in common than what divides it, with most inhabitants speaking a common language, sharing some form of Christianity, and not separated by distinguishable racial or physical characteristics. Alliance does not view unionism and nationalism as distinct communities, but as "political positions". Furthermore, Alliance sees identity as an individual matter, one that is fluid and open to change over time. In a 2014 document, the Alliance stated:
Because of this stance, Alliance is at times referred to as representing a "third tradition" or "third force" within Northern Irish politics that is outside of Nationalism and Unionism.
As Alliance have moved to an ideologically liberal perspective, and Northern Ireland society has become more diverse, support for diversity has become a key Alliance platform, with Anna Lo MLA elected as the first ethnically East Asian parliamentarian in Northern Ireland and the party promoting a number of openly gay spokespeople. In July 2005, Seamus Close, then an MLA and Lisburn councillor for the party and its former deputy leader, proposed that the Lisburn Council deny gay couples access to the council's designated wedding facility if they were seeking a civil partnership under the Civil Partnership Act 2004. The council adopted his recommendation, although it was later reversed on legal advice. His position ran against Alliance policy, which had been strongly supportive of the introduction of civil partnership laws, and he was publicly criticised by other senior party members. The then party chair and future MLA, Lisburn councillor Trevor Lunn, who had also opposed the use of the wedding facility for civil partnerships, resigned as chair later that year, stating that "I always thought the Alliance Party was a broad enough church that we could support some difference of opinion. But it appears that in terms of equality issues, that we just can't." The party's liberal ideology has also pushed the party towards a general favourable position on abortion, immigration and LGBT rights. The party also supports an integrated education system where Catholics and Protestants are educated together, improving healthcare in Northern Ireland, and legislating a Green New Deal.
Electoral performance and the regionalisation of Alliance's vote
One trend over time with Alliance's vote is that in contrast to 1973, when Alliance support was dispersed across Northern Ireland, Alliance has increasingly polled best in the Greater Belfast hinterland. For example, the 1977 elections, while representing an overall increase for Alliance, masked a sharp decline in vote share in many Western councils. In the 12 councils covering the former counties of Londonderry, Tyrone, Armagh and Fermanagh their vote only rose in Omagh, it remained static in Magherafelt and fell in the other ten councils (these being Fermanagh, Dungannon, Cookstown, Strabane, Londonderry, Limavady, Coleraine, Newry & Mourne, Armagh and Craigavon.) Overall in these 12 councils the number of Alliance councillors fell from 18 in 1973 to ten in 1977. In contrast, in the rest of the region Alliance increased their number of councillors from 45 to 60.
The party won eight council seats across Belfast in 1985. Although that has now recovered to six (from three in 2001), the six are entirely from South and East Belfast. Both seats in the Falls Road area of West Belfast were lost after the death and resignation of their councillors there in 1987 while their seat in North Belfast was lost in 1993, regained four years later and lost again in 2001. In the neighbouring areas of Dunmurry Cross (Twinbrook/Dunmurry) and Macedon (Rathcoole) Alliance lost their councillors in 1989 and 1994 respectively; on the other hand, the party won three out of seven seats in Victoria in 2011, the first time since 1977 that the party had won three council seats in the same electoral area.
By 2005, the party had councillors in only half of Northern Ireland's 18 constituencies. However, this rose to 13 in 2011 after gains in Coleraine, Craigavon, Down and elsewhere. Having had around 30 councillors for a decade, the party won 44 seats in 2011. In the 2010 elections, the Alliance gained the Westminster seat of Belfast East, and gained a 22.6% swing there; in 2011 it re-emphasised that result, winning two out of the six MLA seats available.
In 2014 the party gained one seat in the Belfast Council area, this coming in North Belfast when Nuala McAllister ousted Sinn Féin. Outside of the capital the party's vote held up, and with the exception of Patrick Brown winning in Rowallane, there were no outstanding results.
In the 2015 Westminster elections the party directed their resources at retaining the East Belfast seat Naomi Long had gained from the DUP in 2010. The party lost the seat to the DUP by 2,500 votes, after a Unionist pact, whilst the Alliance vote increased by 6% across the constituency.
The 2019 Northern Ireland local elections saw a substantial increase in the Alliance vote and resulted in 53 councillors being elected, with the only council not having any Alliance representation being in Mid Ulster. The balance of power in the capital of Belfast, is held by the party after an increase to 10 seats and becoming the 3rd party, at Belfast City Hall.
Several Alliance members have held the position of Lord Mayor of Belfast, including Long and (from 2021 to 2022), Kate Nicholl.
Vote share by district council (1973–2011)
Vote share by district council (2014–present)
Devolved Legislature elections
Leaders
Deputy leaders
Elected representatives and party spokesman
MPs
Stratton Mills – Belfast North, 1973–74 (defected from Ulster Unionists)
Naomi Long – Belfast East, 2010–2015
Stephen Farry – North Down, 2019–present
MLAs
Elected in the 2022 Northern Ireland Assembly election:
Youth and student wing
Alliance Youth is the party's youth wing and student movement. Alliance members who are under 31 years old automatically become members of Alliance Youth if they choose to share their details at registration.
Alliance Youth
Alliance Youth is the youth and student movement of the Alliance Party. Alliance members who are under 31 years old automatically become members of Alliance Youth if they choose to share their details at registration. Alliance Youth is also responsible for overseeing Alliance Societies at Northern Ireland universities. Young Liberals Northern Ireland does not organise in any of Northern Ireland's Universities, encouraging members to become active within Alliance Youth societies.
Activity
Alliance Youth actively campaign on issues affecting young people, and aim to shape policy of the main party in these areas. Previous campaigns have focused on racism, child poverty, and human trafficking, as well as specific domestic issues facing young people, such as mental health care, tuition fees, sustainable transport, LGBT rights and homelessness.
Alliance Youth is also particularly active in the recruitment and support of young candidates and elected representatives.
Executive
The current executive is as follows:
See also
Contributions to liberal theory
Demographics and politics of Northern Ireland
Liberalism in the United Kingdom
Notes
References
External links
Liberal International
1970 establishments in Northern Ireland |
Color Me Dead is a 1969 Australian thriller directed by Eddie Davis, starring American actors Tom Tryon, Carolyn Jones and Rick Jason. It is a remake of the 1950 film D.O.A.. Due to the failure on renewing copyright of D.O.A., the content of D.O.A. became the property of United States public domain. Thus, the content of Color Me Dead could have been exactly the same as D.O.A.
Plot
Lawyer Frank Bigelow discovers he has been poisoned and has only weeks to live. He spends the time tracking down his own murderer.
The starting scenes from George Raynolds (Raymond Rakubian) was stealing a piece of iridium and selling it to Mr. Phillips. At the same time, Mr. Bigelow prepared to go for a one-week vacation, due to Mr. Bigelow (the accountant) did not get along well with his girlfriend (the secretary, Paula). While George and Philips were trading the iridium, they asked Mr. Bigelow to notarize the transaction.
After Mr. Bigelow arrived at the place of vacation, he went to a nightclub called "Pink Panther" with a couple he meets in the hotel. However, he did not notice that someone had changed his drink while he was talking with a charming lady at the nightclub. After he went back to the hotel, he felt a stomachache and went to hospital. The doctor explained he was being poisoned by a luminous toxin and no antidote had been found yet. How much time he left in the world is difficult to predict, but for sure it will be less than a week. After Bigelow felt the diagnosis is true and the doctor mentioned someone wanted him dead, Bigelow decided to find out who killed him. Meanwhile, Bigelow received a call from Paula that Mr. Phillips had tried to reach him many times. However, Bigelow had no idea about who Philipps was until Paula told Bigelow he committed suicide.
To find the person who is trying to kill people, Mr. Bigelow went to Sydney and met Mr. Philips's controller (Mr. Halliday) and secretary Miss Foster. They told Mr. Bigelow that Philips committed suicide by jumping from his apartment. To make sure whether Philips died by suicide or something else, Mr. Bigelow went Philips's house, but Philip's wife and relatives did not know anything about it. At this time, Miss Foster provided some important information, which is Philips had called a model (Marlo Stevens) before he died. Using this information, Mr. Bigelow finally found the person who tried to buy the iridium — Bradley Taylor.
Bradley explained he was doing business, though he was deceived by Philips and his nephew George, because Bradley finally found out his nephew stole his iridium to sell to Philips, and Philips sold it to Bradley again. Therefore, at this time, Mr. Bigelow came to ask why he was trying to kill Philips and the others, Bradley is very angry and feels like Bigelow knows too much. Thus, Bradley asked his subordinates to kill Bigelow, though Bigelow already is a dead person.
Luckily, Bigelow escaped Bradley's attempt, and went back to Philips' home, but he found Mrs. Phillips and her brother had been poisoned, as well. He had been told Philips' controller (Mr. Halliday) had been here before. Now, he realized the first person who was trying to kill him is Philips' controller. Because after Philips sold the iridium to Bradley, Philips got $60,000 and Halliday stole it. After Bradley found the problem with his iridium, he wanted to get the money back from Philips. Halliday already took the money, though, and to avoid Phillips, he told Bradley the truth, and decided to kill the persons who knew of the transaction. Bigelow, with little time to live, killed Halliday and went to the police office.
Cast
Tom Tryon as Frank Bigelow
Carolyn Jones as Paula Gibson
Rick Jason as Bradley Taylor
Pat Connolly as Marla Rukubian
Tony Ward as Halliday
Penny Sugg as Miss Foster
Reg Gillam as Eugene Phillips
Margot Reid as Mrs Phillips
Peter Sumner as Stanley Phillips
Michael Laurence as George Reynolds
Sandy Harbutt as Chester
John Dease as Doctor Matson
Tom Oliver as Doctor McDonald
Phil Haldemann as Hotel Clerk
Production
The film was the second of three movies Eddie Davis made in Australia for Reg Goldsworthy: It Takes All Kinds, Color Me Dead, and That Lady from Peking. Shooting began in September 1968 and took place in Mittagong, Surfers Paradise and Sydney. The common feature of these three movies is that the main actors are Americans and the Australian company Goldsworthy Productions provided the other resources of the movie, such as the $500,000 budget.
Reception
The film was poorly received critically and commercially. Although the main actors, Tom Tryon and Carolyn Jones, have already won some cinematic achievements and rewards before they joined this movie, in fact, the movie Color Me Dead did not show any big impact on their film careers.
Nan Musgrove has evaluated that "'Color Me Dead', the Goldsworthy Productions film which, it is expected, will be a boost to the Australian movie industry, is one of the few films I have watched being made. On its budget of $500,000 it is an accomplishment and more than pleasantly surprised the experts."
See also
D.O.A. – 1988 American remake of the 1950 film
Kate – 2021 American remake of the 1950 film
References
External links
Color Me Dead at TCMDB
Color Me Dead at Oz Movies
1969 films
1960s thriller films
Remakes of American films
Films directed by Eddie Davis
Australian action adventure films
1960s English-language films |
Pseudopleuronectes obscurus, or dark flounder is a flatfish of the family Pleuronectidae. It is a demersal fish that lives on salt bottoms in the temperate waters of the northwestern Pacific, from Hokkaido to the Kuril Islands, the Sea of Okhotsk, Sakhalin and the Tatar Strait to the northeastern coast of Korea and the Yellow Sea. It can grow up to in length, though it more commonly reaches around , and its maximum recorded weight is .
References
Pleuronectidae
Taxa named by Solomon Herzenstein
Fish of the Pacific Ocean
Fish described in 1890 |
Turbonilla thewe is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Pyramidellidae, the pyrams and their allies.
References
External links
To Encyclopedia of Life
To World Register of Marine Species
thewe
Gastropods described in 2010 |
Criação Velha is a civil parish in the municipality of Madalena on the island of Pico in the Azores. The population in 2011 was 768, in an area of 18.36 km². It contains the localities Alto da Cêrca, Canada de Beatriz, Canada de Pedro Nunes, Canada do Bacelo, Canada do Costa, Canada do Japão, Canada do Monte, João Lima, Lajidos, Rosário and Tapadas.
History
Historical evidence, from the municipality of Madalena, relates that the name Criação Velha comes from an agricultural reference: it was an area where cattle (no distinction) were raised long ago. The term criação means "raising", and Velha is old, referring to historical records that the area was (and continues to be) important in this pursuit. Owing to the rich fertile lands the early settlers occupied most of their time with agriculture and wine production, slowly developing a commerce sector and industry later into its existence.
Geography
The parish is located in the western coast of the municipality, sandwiched between the parishes of Madalena and Candelária; a pie-shaped wedge that extends just to the base of Ponte do Pico to an area of about 2.75 kilometers at its maximum width. Unlike the other parishes with the municipality of Madalena, Criação Velha's borders does not extend to the top of Pico (its limit stops about 2 kilometers from the summit of the stratovolcano). The area is relatively hilly, sloping gradually from forested parcels into an area of semi-cultivatable land and then scrub pasture-lands. Most practical farming occurs around the central parish, since the forested lands are dense and impractical. The area is recognized for a series of grottos, with about 5 kilometers of extensions, carved from the dykes and subterranean lava fields along the island's history.
Sights
The parish church of Nossa Senhora das Dores consisting of only one nave was constructed in 1728. The church is united to the main street by a representative avenue consisting of plane trees. The Chapel of the Holy Spirit close to the church was built in 1902. In the village center several well-preserved residential buildings dating from the 19th and from the beginning of the 20th centuries can be seen.
The parish is surrounded by vineyards. The Landscape of the Pico Island Vineyard Culture was declared a Unesco World Heritage Site in 2004.
References
Freguesias of Madalena, Azores |
The Uibărești is a right tributary of the river Ribița in Romania. It flows into the Ribița near the village Uibărești. Its length is and its basin size is .
References
Rivers of Romania
Rivers of Hunedoara County |
Beautiful Mess is the fourth full-length album by Thelonious Monster. It was their major label debut. Two versions of the album were released.
Track listing
I Live in a Nice House
Blood Is Thicker Than Water
Body and Soul?
Adios Lounge
I Get So Scared
Song for a Politically Correct Girl From the Valley
Ain't Never Been Nuthin' for Me in This World
Bus With No Driver
Vegas Weekend
Weakness in Me (by Joan Armatrading)
The Beginning and the End #12 N 35
European version
I Live in a Nice House
Blood Is Thicker Than Water
Body and Soul?
Adios Lounge
I Get So Scared
Song for a Politically Correct Girl From the Valley
Ain't Never Been Nuthin' for Me in This World
Bus With No Driver
Vegas Weekend
I Met an Angel
A Little Bit Nervous
You Want Me to Change
Couple Of Kids
Personnel
Bob Forrest — vocals
Dix Denney — guitar
Chris Handsome — guitar
Pete Weiss — drums
Jon Sidel — guitar
Martyn LeNoble - bass
Zander Schloss - guitar
Additional musicians:
Dan and Dave from Soul Asylum
Benmont Tench III
Michael Penn (backing vocals on "Body and Soul?")
Al Kooper
Sam Bush
Tom Waits (duets on "Adios Lounge")
References
External links
Unappreciated Album of the Month
Playboy - Feb 1993
1992 albums |
Robert James Bidinotto (born 1949) is a novelist, journalist, editor, and lecturer. He is best known for his critiques of leniency within the criminal justice system, and for criticisms of the environmentalist movement and philosophy. Bidinotto is influenced by the philosophy and writings of Ayn Rand, and from July 2005 until October 2008 he was editor-in-chief of The New Individualist, the monthly magazine published by The Atlas Society. In 2011, he turned his focus to writing crime fiction.
Background
In the mid-1980s, Bidinotto was a contributing editor for the Objectivist political newsletter On Principle; then, in 1987, for its brief-lived successor, Oasis magazine. Also during the mid-1980s, he self-published several papers and lectures on libertarianism, styles of thinking, and problems of practicing the philosophy of individualism within the context of ideological organizations.
During the late 1980s and until 1995, Bidinotto was a staff writer for Reader's Digest, for which he authored high-profile pieces dealing with failings in the United States criminal justice system. The most well-known of these was "Getting Away with Murder" (July 1988), which, during the 1988 presidential campaign, helped make murderer William R. ("Willie") Horton and prison furloughs among the decisive issues in the defeat of candidate Michael Dukakis. He also wrote in the magazine about environmental issues, such as the Alar scare and global warming.
Subsequently, he worked for several years for The Objectivist Center in a number of writing, speaking, and fundraising capacities, and later for The Capital Research Center in Washington, D.C., where he edited two monthly periodicals: Organization Trends and Foundation Watch. He left CRC in July 2005 to return to The Objectivist Center, now called The Atlas Society, where he served as editor-in-chief of their monthly magazine of politics and culture, The New Individualist, until October 2008.
Bidinotto's work as a writer and editor has won a number of awards. In September 2007, The New Individualist was honored with Folio magazine's prestigious Gold "Eddie" Award for Bidinotto's article "Up from Conservatism," which appeared in the magazine's March 2007 issue. The American Society of Magazine Editors recognized Bidinotto's prison-furlough article in the July 1988 Reader's Digest as one of five national finalists for "Best Magazine Article of the Year in the Public Interest Category."
Bidinotto currently resides with his wife on the Chesapeake Bay, where he is working on sequels in his "Dylan Hunter" vigilante thriller series.
Selected bibliography
"Terrorism and Unilateral Moral Disarmament" in
"Prison Furloughs Allow Criminals to Commit More Crimes" in
"What Is Freedom For?" in
"What Is the Truth about Global Warming?" in
"Global Warming" in
"Environmentalism: Freedom's Foe for the '90's" in
Editor.
References
External links
The Vigilante Author blog
1949 births
21st-century American novelists
American magazine journalists
American mystery novelists
American male novelists
American male journalists
American political writers
Living people
Objectivists
21st-century American non-fiction writers
21st-century American male writers |
Qaiser Abbas (born 7 May 1982) is a Pakistani cricketer who played in one Test match in 2000. He has played first-class cricket, mostly for National Bank of Pakistan, since 1999. He has also played for Rajshahi Rangers in the Bangladesh T20 competition.
References
1982 births
Living people
Pakistan Test cricketers
Pakistani cricketers
People from Muridke
National Bank of Pakistan cricketers
Sialkot cricketers
Quetta cricketers
Sheikhupura cricketers
Sialkot Stallions cricketers
Quetta Bears cricketers
Rajshahi Division cricketers
Rajshahi Royals cricketers |
Molybdenite is a mineral of molybdenum disulfide, MoS2. Similar in appearance and feel to graphite, molybdenite has a lubricating effect that is a consequence of its layered structure. The atomic structure consists of a sheet of molybdenum atoms sandwiched between sheets of sulfur atoms. The Mo-S bonds are strong, but the interaction between the sulfur atoms at the top and bottom of separate sandwich-like tri-layers is weak, resulting in easy slippage as well as cleavage planes.
Molybdenite crystallizes in the hexagonal crystal system as the common polytype 2H and also in the trigonal system as the 3R polytype.
Description
Occurrence
Molybdenite occurs in high temperature hydrothermal ore deposits.
Its associated minerals include pyrite, chalcopyrite, quartz, anhydrite, fluorite, and scheelite. Important deposits include the disseminated porphyry molybdenum deposits at Questa, New Mexico and the Henderson and Climax mines in Colorado. Molybdenite also occurs in porphyry copper deposits of Arizona, Utah, and Mexico.
The element rhenium is always present in molybdenite as a substitute for molybdenum, usually in the parts per million (ppm ) range, but often up to 1–2%. High rhenium content results in a structural variety detectable by X-ray diffraction techniques. Molybdenite ores are essentially the only source for rhenium. The presence of the radioactive isotope rhenium-187 and its daughter isotope osmium-187 provides a useful geochronologic dating technique.
Features
Molybdenite is extremely soft with a metallic luster, and is superficially almost identical to graphite, to the point where it is not possible to positively distinguish between the two minerals without scientific equipment. It marks paper in much the same way as graphite. Its distinguishing feature from graphite is its higher specific gravity, as well as its tendency to occur in a matrix.
Uses
Molybdenite is an important ore of molybdenum, and is the most common source of the metal. While molybdenum is rare in the Earth's crust, molybdenite is relatively common and easy to process, and accounts for much of the metal's economic viability. Molybdenite is purified by froth flotation, and then oxidized to form soluble molybdate. Reduction of ammonium molybdate yields pure molybdenum metal, which is used for fertilizer, as a catalyst, and in battery electrodes. By far the most common use of molybdenum is as an alloy with iron. Ferromolybdenum is an important component of high strength and corrosion-resistant steel.
Semiconductor
Multilayer molybdenite flakes are semiconductors with an indirect bandgap. In contrast, monolayer flakes have a direct gap. In the early years of the 20th century, molybdenite was used in some of the first crude semiconductor diodes, called cat's whisker detectors, which served as a demodulator in early crystal radios. Monolayer molybdenite shows good charge carrier mobility and can be used to create small or low-voltage transistors. The transistors can detect and emit light and may have future use in optoelectronics.
See also
Powellite (calcium molybdate: CaMoO4)
Rheniite (rhenium sulfide: ReS2)
Wulfenite (lead molybdate: PbMoO4)
References
External links
Sulfide minerals
Molybdenum minerals
Non-petroleum based lubricants
Dry lubricants
Trigonal minerals
Minerals in space group 160
Hexagonal minerals
Minerals in space group 194
Semiconductor materials |
Luniz (pronounced Loonies) (formerly Luniz Toons and LuniTunes), is an American hip hop duo from Oakland, California, formed by West Coast rappers Yukmouth and Numskull. They were signed to Virgin Records, Noo Trybe Records, and C-Note Records. They were the flagship act for C-Note Records. The group is best known for the internationally successful hit in 1995 titled "I Got 5 on It", known as a weed-smoking anthem.
Discography
Studio albums
Operation Stackola (1995)
Lunitik Muzik (1997)
Silver & Black (2002)
No Pressure (2018)
Mixtapes
High Timez (2015)
Extended plays
Formally Known as the LuniTunes (1994)
Filmography
1996—Original Gangstas, as customers at Thelma's Café
Awards
Grammy Award nominations
References
Musical groups from Oakland, California
San Francisco Bay Area
Virgin Records artists
African-American musical groups
Musical groups established in 1992
Musical duos from California
American hip hop duos
Rappers from the San Francisco Bay Area
1992 establishments in California |
Collections of Colonies of Bees is an American musical ensemble from Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
History
Collections of Colonies of Bees was founded by Chris Rosenau and Jon Mueller in 1998, then both members of the band Pele. Their debut album appeared on the UK-based label Rosewood Union, while their next several releases appeared on Crouton Records. By the time of their 2004 release Customer, they had added two new members, Jon Minor and Jim Schoenecker, and signed with Polyvinyl Records. In 2006, the group added Thomas Wincek and Daniel Spack, though two more years would pass before their next full-length, Birds, appeared. In 2011, the band released the album Giving on the label Hometapes. Following the release, Mueller and Wincek left to pursue a solo career (Mueller) and the band All Tiny Creatures (Wincek).
Collections of Colonies of Bees also forms half of the band Volcano Choir, the other half being Justin Vernon. They released two albums, Unmap in 2009 and Repave in 2013.
Members
Chris Rosenau - guitar (1998–present)
Jon Mueller - percussion (1998-2011)
Jon Minor - electronics (2003-2004)
Jim Schoenecker - electronics (2004-2011)
Thomas Wincek - electronics (2006-2011)
Matthew Skemp - bass (2008–present)
Daniel Spack - guitar (2006–present)
Ben Derickson - percussion (2012–present)
Marielle Allschwang - vocals (2016–present)
Timeline
Discography
Collections of Colonies of Bees (Rosewood Union, 1998)
Rance (Crouton Records, 2000)
fa.ce(a (Crouton, 2002)
Meyou (Crouton, 2003)
Stuck EP (Pillowface Records, 2003)
Customer (Polyvinyl Records, 2004)
Birds (Table of the Elements, 2008)
Six Guitars (Table of the Elements, 2008)
Giving (Hometapes, 2011)
Set (Hometapes, 2014)
Hawaii (Polyvinyl Records, 2018)
References
American instrumental musical groups
Rock music groups from Wisconsin
Musical groups from Milwaukee |
State Route 606 (SR 606) is a north–south state highway in the northeastern quadrant of the U.S. state of Ohio. The southern terminus of SR 606 is at a T-intersection with SR 3 approximately northeast of Medina. The highway's northern terminus is at another T-intersection, this time with the SR 94/SR 303 concurrency nearly west of Richfield.
SR 606, which was established in the late 1930s, is a two-lane route located in the northeastern Medina County township of Hinckley. The highway serves the popular Hinckley Reservation, home to the annual "Buzzard Day," which marks the annual arrival of large numbers of buzzards to the area on March 15 of every year.
Route description
All of SR 606 is situated within Hinckley Township, Medina County. This state highway is not included as a component of the National Highway System.
SR 606 commences at a T-intersection with SR 3 at the boundary of Hinckley and Granger Townships approximately northeast of Medina, and northeast of the SR 3 interchange off of Interstate 71, its exit 222. The highway immediately crosses into Hinckley Township as it departs to the northeast from the SR 3 intersection. Starting out, SR 606 is bounded by open fields on the southeast side and houses on the northwest side. The highway crosses Stony Hill Road, then passes amidst a stretch where both sides of the roadway feature a mix of residences and woods, with a little bit of open space mixed in. SR 606 bends east and intersects SR 3 again, this time joined by SR 94. SR 606 crosses the road, and then curves back to the northeast. The area the route travels through is now more heavily wooded than previously, but a number of homes continue to dot the landscape. It curves to the east-northeast, passes Kellogg Road, then turns back to the northeast as it passes by the Hinckley Reservation. After intersecting Bellus Road, SR 606 bends to the north, and then to the northwest, prior to arriving at its endpoint at a T-intersection with the SR 94/SR 303 concurrency about west of Richfield.
History
SR 606 was designated in 1937. The SR 606 designation was applied to the same stretch of highway through northeastern Medina County that it utilizes to this day. There have been no changes of major significance to the routing of this state highway since its inception.
Major intersections
References
606
Transportation in Medina County, Ohio |
Zefyria is a village in the inner part of the island of Milos. It had been the chief-town of the island before this title was moved to Plaka. It belongs to the community of Tripiti of the municipality of Milos. Its population according to the 2011 census was 176 inhabitants. It is a mostly agricultural settlement.
References
Villages in Greece
Populated places in Milos (regional unit) |
Allopodocotyle is a genus of trematodes in the family Opecoelidae.
Species
Allopodocotyle argyropsi Madhavi, 1975
Allopodocotyle atzi (Nigrelli, 1939) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle enkaimushi Blend, Kuramochi & Dronen, 2015
Allopodocotyle epinepheli (Yamaguti, 1942) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle heronensis Downie & Cribb, 2011
Allopodocotyle israelensis (Fischthal, 1980) Bray, 1987
Allopodocotyle jaffensis (Fischthal, 1980) Bray, 1987
Allopodocotyle lepomis (Dobrovolny, 1939) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle lethrini (Yamaguti, 1942) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle lutianusi Gupta & Ahamad, 1977
Allopodocotyle manteri (Saoud & Ramadan, 1984) Cribb, 2005
Allopodocotyle margolisi Gibson, 1995
Allopodocotyle mecopera (Manter, 1940) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle pedicellata (Stossich, 1887) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle plectropomi (Manter, 1963) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle pritchardae Madhavi, 1975
Allopodocotyle recifensis Bray, 1987
Allopodocotyle serrani (Yamaguti, 1952) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle skoliorchis Aken'Ova, 2003
Allopodocotyle tamame (Yamaguti, 1942) Pritchard, 1966
Allopodocotyle tunisiensis Derbel & Neifar, 2009
Allopodocotyle virens (Sinitsin, 1931) Pritchard, 1966
References
Opecoelidae
Plagiorchiida genera |
The first season of Million Star () is a Taiwanese reality talent show that is aired on Chinese Television System (CTS). The first episode was filmed on 2 July, and aired on 15 August 2015. This is Taiwan's first reality series to be aired across the globe (Taiwan, Hong Kong, China, Malaysia and Singapore). Viewers can use the Million Star mobile app to interact with the contestants and submit their predictions. The show premiered on 15 August 2015 on Taiwan's CTS, STAR Chinese Channel, Star Entertainment Channel, Fox Taiwan, Coture, Yahoo! Taiwan, Malaysia's Astro Xi Yue HD and Singapore's StarHub E City.
The show sponsor is Gamania.
Judges and hosts
The show's hosts are Sean Lin, winner of the first season of Mimic King, and Patty Wu. Judges forming the judging panel include Matilda Tao, Xiaoyu Sung, Winnie Hsin, William So, Richie Jen, Steve Wong and Edmond Leung; while guest judges include Samingad, Kenji Wu, Chief Chao, Alan Tam, Jam Hsiao, Pauline Lan and Grasshoppers.
Contestants
Colour key
Blind auditions
The contestants will perform from behind a screen in the beginning. The screen will be lifted when one of the five judges has cast his or her vote, and the contestant is safe if he or she gets three or more votes. On the other hand, the contestant is immediately eliminated if the screen is not lifted. At the end of each episode, the judges will pick five contestants to advance into the top 24. In the end of week 4, the judges will choose four more contestants who were previously eliminated in the blind auditions to save into the top 24.
Colour key
Episode 1 (15 August)
Episode 2 (22 August)
Episode 3 (29 August)
Episode 4 (5 September)
Top 24
In each episode, each of the six contestants to perform in the episode will select another contestant to battle against each other. In the event that there the contestant has no contenders, the contender will be selected randomly. After both contestants have performed their songs, the judges will decide who will be advanced based on the number of votes for the contestant (Team Red or Team Blue). After each episode, they will decide three eliminated contestants that will be saved among the six.
Top 18 – Cooperative Competition
The 18 contestants will be selected by the producers to be grouped into 9 pairs. After the contestants' performance, the judges will cast their votes. Both contestants will be advanced if they get three or more votes. At the end of the episode, the judges will select two potential contestants to be saved among the six eliminated.
Top 14 – Oldies
The 14 contestants will select the oldie they want to perform. The song selected has to be the song that was performed around their birth. After each contestant's performance, the judges will cast their votes. The contestant will be advanced if he or she get three or more votes. At the end of the episode, the judges will select three potential contestants to be saved among the six eliminated.
The special guest for this episode is Khalil Fong.
Top 10 (Part 1)
The 10 contestants will choose their song to contest. After each contestant's performance, the judges will cast their votes. These votes will be carried over to the following week, where two contestants with the lowest number of votes at the end of two weeks will be eliminated. Grasshoppers occupy two tables and hence are entitled to two votes.
Top 10 (Part 2)
Elimination chart
References
Taiwanese reality television series
2015 television seasons
2015 Taiwanese television series debuts |
Juan Nogueira (born 1 May 1988) is a Brazilian amateur heavyweight boxer who won a bronze medal at the 2014 South American Games. He competed at the 2013 and 2015 world championships and qualified for the 2016 Summer Olympics.
References
1988 births
Living people
Olympic boxers for Brazil
Boxers at the 2016 Summer Olympics
Brazilian male boxers
Boxers at the 2015 Pan American Games
Sportspeople from São Paulo
South American Games bronze medalists for Brazil
South American Games medalists in boxing
Competitors at the 2014 South American Games
Heavyweight boxers
Pan American Games competitors for Brazil
20th-century Brazilian people
21st-century Brazilian people |
Ndokwa East is a Local Government Area of Delta State, Nigeria. Its headquarters are in the town of Aboh.
It has an area of 1,617 km and a population of 103,171 at the 2006 census.
The postal code of the area is 322. The southernmost end of the area is Asaba-Assay.
References
Local Government Areas in Delta State |
Sarah Champion (born 22 August 1977) is an English television presenter, disc jockey and actress.
Professional career
Champion has hosted The Official Album Chart Show, Planet Celebrity News and Radio Gaga for MTV networks, acted in Jonathan Creek for BBC One and ITV2 sitcom FM.
On 20 July 2005, Champion began working for British radio station Virgin Radio and remained on the station after it was rebranded as Absolute Radio in 2008. She currently presents an 11am to 2pm weekend show on Absolute Radio. She also presents a 10am to 1pm weekday show on its sister station Absolute 80s, where she also presents The Absolute 80s Singles Chart 4pm to 7pm on Sundays.
She covers the Night Shift show on an occasional basis.
In November and December 2020, Champion covered the 7pm-10pm weeknight show on Absolute Radio whilst the show's usual presenter Danielle Perry was on maternity leave.
Champion also presents a 6pm-10pm show every Friday and Saturday on Magic Soul.
Television
Pub Ammo (2004) Herself
Ready, Steady, Cook (2008) Herself
Jonathan Creek: The Grinning Man (2009) Marcia
FM (2009)
White Gold Series 2 Episode 6 - Lizzie Farrell
Casualty Series 37 Episode 16 "Fight or Flight" - May Brooker
References
External links
The 80s No Repeat Guarantee on Absolute 80s
Sarah Champion on Absolute Radio
Magic Soul Afternoons with Sarah Champion on Magic Soul
The Absolute 80s Singles Chart on Absolute 80s
Living people
British radio DJs
British radio personalities
Absolute Radio
British actresses
1977 births
British women radio presenters |
John Robert Fisher Jeffreys (25 January 1916 – 13 January 1944) was a British mathematician and World War II codebreaker.
A research fellow at Downing College, Cambridge, Jeffreys joined the codebreaking efforts at Bletchley Park in September 1939 alongside fellow Cambridge mathematicians Gordon Welchman, with whom he had previously worked closely, and Alan Turing. These three, together with Peter Twinn and working under Dilly Knox, formed the research section working on the German Enigma machine, and were housed in "The Cottage" at Bletchley Park.
Jeffreys was put in charge of a small section manufacturing perforated sheets for use in the cryptanalysis of the Enigma, a task which took over three months, completed on 7 January 1940. One type were the Zygalski sheets, known as Netz at Bletchley Park, a technique revealed to the British by Polish cryptologists. Another type, named "Jeffreys sheets", were different, and were a "catalogue of the effect of any two Enigma rotors and the reflector". Jeffreys's perforated sheets were used by Polish cryptologists in exile in France to make the first wartime decryption of an Enigma message on 17 January 1940.
In early 1940, a section called "Hut 6" — named after the building in which it was initially housed — was created to work on solving German Army and Air Force Enigma messages. Jeffreys was chosen to run the hut alongside Welchman. Jeffreys was in charge of "Sheet-Stacking and Machine Room activities", while Welchman handled "Registration, Intercept Control, Decoding, and relations with the intelligence people in Hut 3".
In May 1940, Jeffreys took a vacation, but became ill and was diagnosed with tuberculosis and diabetes. He died in January 1944.
Gordon Welchman later recalled:
"Jeffreys was very much liked at Bletchley Park. His death was a tragic loss to all of us. We felt deep sympathy for his fianceé, Pat Hempsted, who had been a member of his team from its beginnings in the Cottage. She was involved both in the initial punching of the sheets and in the testing of drops on which our early breaks depended."
References
Sources
Updated and extended version of Action This Day: From Breaking of the Enigma Code to the Birth of the Modern Computer Bantam Press 2001
20th-century British mathematicians
Bletchley Park people
Fellows of Downing College, Cambridge
1916 births
1944 deaths
20th-century deaths from tuberculosis
Tuberculosis deaths in the United Kingdom
Deaths from diabetes |
Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House is a heritage-listed former colliery official's residence at 195 Denison Street, Hamilton, City of Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia. It was built from 1849 to 1920. It is also known as A.A. Company House and A. A. Company Mine Manager's Cottage. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 25 August 2017.
History
Pre- and Post-Contact Aboriginal Custodianship
The Awabakal people are the traditional custodians of the site of Newcastle (Muloobinba). It has been claimed that Hamilton was called Nickimble, meaning "place of coal". (Gloucester Advocate, 9 October 1931, p. 3) Cameron's Hill, as dry ground rising above surrounding swampland, may have been a ceremonial site. It is said to have been intermittently visited as late as the 1890s by Awabakal people, who, walking in from Swansea, some 25 km to the south, would throw boomerangs down to what is now Gregson Park.
Australian Agricultural Company
The Australian Agricultural Company (universally known as the A.A. Company) was established in London in 1824 for "the cultivation and improvement of waste lands in the Colony of New South Wales and for other purposes relating thereto". The Court of Directors included Members of Parliament, directors of the Bank of England and of the East India Company, and other prominent bankers and merchants.
The Company soon became interested in the coal resources of the Newcastle area, which at the time was being exploited by convict labour under government control. Here the A.A. Company selected 1,920 acres of coal-bearing land and obtained privileges amounting to fixed-term privatisation of most NSW coal mining. In opening its "A" Pit of 1831, and importing plant, miners and colliery officials from Scotland and the North of England, the A.A. Company's Colliery Department imposed the Industrial Revolution on a henceforth primitive coal industry.
In 1848 an A.A. Company exploring party boring for coal discovered a superior seam beneath the remote western part of the Company's Newcastle estate. To this "Borehole Seam" a shaft was sunk which in 1850 came into full production as the "D" Pit (or Borehole colliery), the colony's most technologically advanced coal mine. The colliery was opened just in time to support a new export trade with the west coast of North and South America. This trade, initially associated with the California Gold Rush, was to underwrite the prosperity of the Northern coal industry, uniquely linking the Newcastle district with the United States in terms of economics and culture until the collapse of the market with the opening in 1914 of the Panama Canal. Around the colliery grew up a miners' settlement, called "The Borehole" or "The Coal Pits", of earth-floored slab huts of one or two rooms. As coal production increased, the colliers built additional huts on Borehole Hill, addressing Pit Row (now Denison Street) and others at Happy Flat (now Turner Street). In the mid-1850s the A.A. Company subdivided and sold nearby land to create the village of Pit Town.
Mine Manager's House
Immediately responsible for the operation of the "D" Pit was its Overman, a colliery official. In accordance with corporate hierarchy, the Overman's house was built on the highest point of Borehole Hill, overlooking both the settlement and the colliery. Extensive grounds allowed a degree of self-sufficiency, while an underground tank provided a source of water independent of the wells used by the miners and their families. The northern boundary, addressing Pit Row, was protected by a six-foot picket fence with double gates.
The first Overman was James ('Jimmy') Lindsay. In 1854 Scots-born Lindsay proved his worth in helping to save The Borehole from a bushfire. He also extended the working life of the previously-mismanaged "C" Pit in inner Newcastle, and in 1857 helped convert the A.A. Company's horse tramways to locomotive traction. Lindsay chaired the Borehole Co-operative Society and store; recruited volunteers to the NSW Military Forces; and helped found the Pit Town Presbyterian Church and the Borehole Temperance Society.
When in 1860 the A.A. Company dismissed Robert Whyte, its Superintendent of Collieries (also described as Manager of Collieries), Lindsay temporarily assumed the position. He was succeeded by James Barron Winship, who arrived from the UK in early 1861 determined to reduce the pitmens' wages and to break their union, the Coal Miners' Mutual Protective Association of the Hunter District.
Winship, derided as a "psalm-singing Wesleyan" for his strong belief in social hierarchy, was at first unsuccessful, but his importation of 300 contract strikebreakers from Victoria and South Australia soon turned the tables. Many of them, called "blacklegs" (scabs) by the miners and "free labourers" by the Company, were quartered in houses from which Winship's agents had unhesitatingly evicted the striking pitmen and their families. When many labourers, on becoming aware of real reason for their recruitment, broke their contracts and fled, Winship set off after them, on one occasion ranging as far as railway construction works at Picton. Here he arrested a worker under the Masters and Servants Act 1857 (NSW) and sent him, with 20 others, to Sydney in chains. Bitterness against Winship was to last into the 1930s, when a veteran miner claimed, probably mistakenly, that Winship had promised the miners "I will make you eat grass".
James Lindsay, sympathising with the miners, clashed with Winship and left both the Company's service and the Overman's house. Winship and his wife who moved in, with Pit Row becoming Winship Street and Borehole Hill becoming Winship's Hill. As the Overman's-cum-Manager's house remained a modest one, the Winships later found more suitable accommodation.
The house appears thereafter to have been leased to a doctor, although details are lacking. In 1869 it was occupied by Dixon Little, his wife Mary and their children. Little, a North of England-born colliery engineer, was mainly concerned with the nearby Borehole No. 2 colliery, established by Winship. In 1871, Pit Town, The Borehole and Happy Flat were incorporated as the Municipality of Hamilton, named after Edward Terrick Hamilton, Governor of the A.A. Company. In the mid-1870s a new mine, the "H" Pit, was opened some distance to the south. Here Dixon Little superintended underground engineering operations and, having been promoted Chief Engineer, was also responsible for the New Winning colliery (in inner Newcastle, and called the Sea Pit as its workings extended beneath the ocean). When, in June 1889, 11 men and boys were entombed in the "H" Pit disaster, Little assisted in the recovery of the bodies, the provision of the coffins and the re-opening of the mine. Dixon Street, Hamilton, appears to have been named after him. Little retired in May 1899, by which time Winship's Hill had become better known as Cameron's Hill after the former proprietor of a nearby inn.
Little's son, William Richard Little, now succeeded his father, and with his wife Alice and their children moved into the former Manager's house. The A.A. Company, vexed by the Land Tax Act 1910 (Cth) and the collapse of the American export market, afterwards subdivided and sold much of Cameron's Hill. The site of the Manager's house was itself subdivided into three lots, but was retained unsold. The Colliery Department afterwards decided to dispose of its remaining Newcastle assets, including the Manager's house, which William Little purchased in July 1914. While the central lot was occupied by the Manager's house, those remaining were occupied by two homes built by the Little family. These are now 193 Denison Street ( 1920) and 197 Denison Street (1937). Both were designed by Dixon Allan Little, son of William and Alice, who, despite having trained as an architect, became a railway surveyor and engineer.
William Little, who retired in 1933 and died in 1945, served the A.A. Company for 50 years. The Manager's house was inherited by Dixon Allan Little and his brother Charles Millican Little as tenants in common. It was around this time that Winship Street was renamed Denison Street, removing the obvious link between the Manager's house and James Barron Winship. The Manager's house, formerly 29 Winship Street, became 195 Denison Street. Here Charles Little continued to live until his accidental death in 1963. He left his share in the house to his niece, Naomi McCourt, daughter of Dixon Allan Little, who soon afterwards secured her father's half share but continued to live with him at 197 Denison Street.
The Manager's house, for decades concealed by plantings and surrounding dwellings, faded from public knowledge until in the early 1990s it was identified by history student David Campbell. In 1995 State funding was secured for the transfer of the property to Newcastle City Council, the lot being subdivided to allow Mrs McCourt to build a new dwelling, 195A Denison Street, which was ultimately intended as a caretaker's cottage.
State-funded conservation and restoration works enabled the opening of the house to the public, attracting in excess of 200 visitors per day. The house was also used for architectural short courses, photography exhibitions and the like. 195A Denison Street was acquired by Council in 2004, but after policy changes it was on-sold four years later. In 2016, Council sought to sell the Manager's house by expressions of interest.
Description
The house is situated on a battleaxe lot on the southern side of Denison Street (previously Pit Row and Winship Street) near the crest of Cameron's Hill (previously Borehole Hill and Winship's Hill). The principal, eastern, facade addresses the rear yard of a neighbouring dwelling. Areas of brick paving, concealed by grass, remain on the northern and eastern elevations. The original elements of the house comprise an architecturally undistinguished mid-1850s hipped-roofed cottage in the Colonial Georgian style. Later elements of the house, constructed over an extended period, include a gable-roofed kitchen; a gable-roofed dining room, pantry and entrance hall; and a verandah on the southern elevation. Roofing is of comparatively recent corrugated galvanised iron, much of it laid over earlier timber shingles. The bulk of the structure is of sandstock brick, of which most is either painted or rendered, laid in English bond and bedded in lime mortar, although the complex includes a free-standing weatherboard bathroom/laundry and a free-standing weatherboard lavatory.
Condition
Much of the house was reported to be in fair condition and highly intact as at 11 January 2017, although parts of the original element are in poor condition. Rendered walls are in fair external condition, and while some areas of face brick have fretted they are limewashed in parts. Some roofing members, previously damaged by termites, have been fortified. Some roof gutter intersections remain unsoldered. Some verandah posts are badly weathered. The walls of the original element lack a damp-proof course, while some floor joists, laid directly on the ground, have in the past been damaged by termites. Some wall areas feature depleted plaster and peeling paint and wallpaper. Some timber flooring, previously affected by damp and termite damage, has been reconstructed. Some ceilings are depleted and/or corroded as the result of past water penetration. Electricity and reticulated water are available.
The item is substantially intact both internally and externally.
Modifications and dates
circa 1849–1850
Construction of the original dwelling of four rooms and an attic with access from a central hallway, with front (eastern) verandah and possibly a rear (western) verandah. A detached kitchen, probably slab-built, appears to have stood to the west on the central hallway axis.
circa 1850–1860s
The south-eastern (sitting) room, doubling as an office and featuring both internal and external doors, is converted to a bedroom. This involves the infilling of the external doorway and probably the rendering of the southern wall.
1860
The existing kitchen wing, and perhaps the rear verandah, are constructed. If the rear verandah already existed, it may at this time be partially enclosed.
1900
The rear verandah is demolished to make way for a dining room and pantry addition linking the kitchen to a new rear entry, protected by a metal canopy, featuring a star, two kangaroos and an emu in celebration of Federation. Two rooms of the original element are joined to create a larger sitting room, involving the removal of two fireplaces and a chimney. The shingle roof is sheeted over in iron to match the roofs of the kitchen and additions. The rear verandah is removed. A southern verandah is added, complete with a decorative valance which is also retrofitted to the front verandah, the posts of which are replaced, the floorboards being replaced in concrete. Gas lighting is provided and the kitchen is equipped with a fuel stove.
circa 1907
The outside lavatory, which will originally have been served by an on-site cesspit and then by the Hamilton municipal pan system, is relocated to its present position for compulsory connection to the Newcastle district sewerage system.
circa 1920
Interior redecoration occurs. The weatherboard bathroom/laundry to the north is probably constructed at about this time, replacing a primitive facility in an enclosed section of the southern verandah. The roof dormer is enlarged, providing additional attic space. Electricity is laid on; most gas light fittings are removed. A fibro garage is constructed addressing Denison Street.
Mid-1990s
The NSW government funds the purchase of the subdivided property by Newcastle City Council, as well as conservation and security works and the provision of an enclosed lavatory on the southern verandah.
2016
The property is advertised for sale by expressions of interest.
Heritage listing
The former Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House, Hamilton, is of state heritage significance for its historical associations with the Colliery Department of the Australian Agricultural Company (A.A. Company), one of Australia's oldest companies and an entity of much importance in the social and economic development of New South Wales. The house has state heritage significance as the only readily legible example of a structure built by the A.A. Company's Colliery Department. It is of state heritage significance for its special association with the development of the A.A. Company's technologically-advanced "D" Pit. This was the first colliery associated with the famous Borehole Seam, the exploitation of which supported the exponential expansion of the Northern NSW coal industry during the nineteenth century; forged unique economic and cultural links between the Newcastle district and the United States of America; and stimulated the establishment of the colliery townships that coalesced into the present City of Newcastle. The house is of state heritage significance in its association with persons prominent in the social and technological development of the nineteenth century NSW coal industry, and in demonstrating the social hierarchies and living standards associated with that industry, symbolising the continuing relationship between the A.A. Company and the people of NSW over two centuries. The place is of state heritage significance in demonstrating the origins of the suburb of Hamilton, originally known as The Borehole, and in contributing to the sense of place of the local community.
Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 25 August 2017 having satisfied the following criteria.
The place is important in demonstrating the course, or pattern, of cultural or natural history in New South Wales.
The Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House, Hamilton, is of state heritage significance for its association with the Colliery Department of the Australian Agricultural Company, an entity important in the social and economic development of NSW. The house is of state heritage significance in its association with the early period of technologically advanced coal mining in NSW, and in its demonstration of social hierarchies and living standards in the nineteenth century NSW coal industry. The house is of state heritage significance in demonstrating the leading role of the Colliery Department of the Australian Agricultural Company in the discovery and mining of the Borehole Seam. It was the exploitation of this coal seam that supported the exponential expansion of the Northern NSW coal industry during the nineteenth century; forged unique economic and cultural links between the Newcastle district and the United States of America; and stimulated the establishment of the colliery townships that coalesced into the present City of Newcastle.
The place has a strong or special association with a person, or group of persons, of importance of cultural or natural history of New South Wales's history.
The Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House, Hamilton, is of state heritage significance in demonstrating continuity and change in the lives of nineteenth century NSW colliery officials and their families, affording a comparison with the living conditions of non-salaried colliers and their dependents. The place is of state heritage significance for its strong association with senior staff of the Colliery Department of the Australian Agricultural Company, several of whom were prominent in the social and technological development of the NSW coal industry.
The place is important in demonstrating aesthetic characteristics and/or a high degree of creative or technical achievement in New South Wales.
The Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House, Hamilton, is of state heritage significance in demonstrating, by way of its highly intact heritage fabric, the manner in which an early colliery official's residence strongly associated with a mine important in the development of the NSW coal industry has been adapted over a known period to suit changing economic, cultural and social conditions and aesthetic tastes.
The place has potential to yield information that will contribute to an understanding of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales.
The Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manger's House, Hamilton, is of state heritage significance in its potential to yield new information as to the lives of NSW salaried colliery officials and their dependents during the nineteenth century. The place is also of state heritage significance for its archaeological potential.
The place possesses uncommon, rare or endangered aspects of the cultural or natural history of New South Wales.
The Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House, Hamilton is of state heritage significance in demonstrating through its fabric the social hierarchies and living standards of nineteenth century NSW colliery officials and their families. The item is also of state heritage significance as the only readily legible example of a structure associated with the Colliery Department of the Australian Agricultural Company, an entity important in the social and economic development of NSW.
The place is important in demonstrating the principal characteristics of a class of cultural or natural places/environments in New South Wales.
The Australian Agricultural Company Mine Manager's House, Hamilton, is of state heritage significance as a fine example of a substantially intact nineteenth century colliery official's residence demonstrating the customs and philosophies of its periods of construction and alteration. It is also of state heritage significance in providing evidence as to the establishment and development of nineteenth century NSW coal mining communities.
See also
References
Bibliography
Attribution
New South Wales State Heritage Register
Houses in New South Wales
Articles incorporating text from the New South Wales State Heritage Register
City of Newcastle |
refers to the classical Japanese performing art of dance.
developed from earlier dance traditions such as and , and was further developed during the early Edo period (1603–1867), through the medium of kabuki dances, which often incorporated elements from the older dance genres. Although the term means "Japanese dance", it is not meant to refer to Japanese dance in general, and instead refers to a few dance genres such as , which are performed in theatre. differs from other varieties of Japanese traditional dance, in that it is a refined style intended as entertainment on a public stage.
The term is a modern term coined during the Meiji period (1868–1911) as a term for "dance", and the writer Tsubouchi Shōyō is believed to have been the first to use the term . Prior to this, dance was generally referred according to its particular dance genre, such as and . The term is a combination of the characters , which can also be pronounced , and , which can also be pronounced . Shōyō intended to be a term for , a form of dance drama in kabuki plays, but the term has now grown to cover several Japanese dance styles, including the modern dance form . As a genre of dance that has multiple influences, borrows from many different dance traditions developed over a long period, overlaps with theatre and has many different schools, there is some difficulty in defining and categorizing .
Definition
Wider definition
In the broad sense, refers to the dances , and .
- in the exact definition refers solely to alone
or - dance born and developed in the region of Kyoto and Osaka (the Kamigata region). developed during the Edo period, and would be performed at private parties on a relatively small surface, such as the surface of one tatami mat. Its movements are slow and gentle. It can be accompanied by music (), composed for a soloist. It is also called , referring to the name of the room () where it is practiced.
or – has known European and American influences during the 20th century. In the Taishō period (1912–1926), Western arts-inspired writer Tsubouchi Shōyō proposed changes to the performance of kabuki theater, resulting in a new style of dance known as , performed by artists wanting to experiment with a new form of expression.
Narrower definition
In the narrow sense, refers solely to .
The term dates to the Meiji period. Until then, was referred to by various names such as , , or more simply .
The choreographers of , whose first appearance dates back to around 1673, founded schools to teach this dance to amateurs. , listed as an important intangible cultural property since 1955, is performed by both a kabuki actor and a dancer.
Dance styles and elements
Unlike Noh, , kabuki and theater, which feature male performers, is also performed by women. There are two different dance styles taught in : , "female roles", and , "male roles". Thus, a woman can play a male role, and a man can play a female role.
has three main elements: , and . is a static and abstract movement with an emphasis on the ritual aspect, which is often present in the adaptation sequences of the nô theater; is a dynamic and rhythmic movement resulting from , a dance invented by a Buddhist monk around the 10th century; includes theatrical, dramatic and figurative body language (such as writing a letter, drinking sake, etc.), representing the actions of everyday life in the Edo period.
Influences
Kabuki
schools were founded by choreographers (who were originally kabuki musicians or actors), or by actors. These two backgrounds mean that both still share the same dance repertoire.
Noh
There are many plays which are inspired by Noh theater plays. The three major series of - , and - are adapted from the Noh plays , and , as well as the repertoire series, adapted from Noh during the Meiji period, with inspiration taken from the approach of kabuki adapting Noh dramas. For these plays, Noh dance () is integrated into the choreography.
Even before the Meiji period, there were already -origin kabuki dance plays, but, like Noh, was much adapted after the Meiji period, and this repertoire was appropriated by kabuki actors of this period.
The plays , and , are acts in the kabuki plays adapted from , and .
In addition, during climaxes of plays adapted from (, ), (a style of acting imitating the movements of puppets) is used: the character is supported by puppeteers standing behind him and moves as if he was a puppet.
Plays
plays consists mainly of kabuki dance plays () created in the Edo period, such as and . In addition, there are plays choreographed with the kabuki dance technique. The themes of the plays are plentiful: legends, classical literature, historical figures, crime stories, and life and customs in the Edo period. There are also adaptations of Noh, , and theater.
Plays danced by one person take up about 60% of the repertoire, and plays danced by more than two people make up the rest of the repertoire. About 60% of the plays consist of pure dance plays without drama (metamorphosis play, Edo period daily life play, festive play), compared to around 40% dramatic plays.
Not all parts can be classified perfectly, but they can be roughly grouped into the following categories:
In the Noh play , the most sacred play mixing dance and prayer ritual for a bountiful harvest and prosperity, three characters, Okina, Senzai and Sanbasō, appear. The latter's dynamic dance gave rise to a series of repertoires in kabuki: the play is the most ritualistic, and the rest of the repertoire develops the more entertaining aspects for kabuki: , , , , , , etc.
The Noh play, inspired by the myth of the Dōjōji temple, was adapted in the kabuki dance as , which then gave birth to the main series of the repertoire: , , , , , , etc.
The Noh play , in which the Buddhist monk sees mythical lions playing with peonies at Mount Seiryo in China, was adapted as an (female role) dance in the early kabuki period, resulting in the plays , and . It was around the Meiji period that the adaptation came closer to Noh: the majestic lion dance is performed by a (male actor) in the plays and .
A number of center around stories of ghosts or phantoms.
A newly-engaged man burns the letter of a courtesan, with whom he had a love affair. In the smoke, the spirit of the courtesan appears and speaks resentfully. The play, , gave variations such as (confession of (literally "castle-toppler", a moniker given to courtesans) Takao).
Two characters with totally identical appearances dance together, and one reveals his true, ghostly nature: this style, which originated in a Noh play , has become in vogue with many plays as from . The most famous plays are (the last act of the kabuki play ) and . In these plays, the main character is a ghost with two spirits inside. The souls of two lovers who have killed each other come together in an vengeful half-male, half-female spirit.
Inspired by the category of Noh plays about madness, this theme was developed in dance plays from the earliest period of kabuki. Apart from themes of madness in love, another common theme in is madness due to the loss of a child: in the Edo period, a child could be taken away to be sold to circus troupes. In , the central character of the child's mother commonly loses her mind to grief, and becomes a traveling artist who searches for her child, singing and dancing. In Noh, this theme is featured in the plays , and .
Madness among men: ,
Madness among women: , , , .
Description of the landscape
For a long time in Japanese art there has been a style called which describes a journey to a destination. This theme was very popular with the people of the Edo period, as it depicted the freedom of travelling in contrast to the constriction of movement under the shogunate. However, travellers would also be depicted facing melancholy, such as retribution for wrongdoing or attachment to a person met along the journey they must leave. themes are found in the plays (Act VIII of the kabuki play ), (Act IV of the kabuki play ), (Act IV of the kabuki play ).
Double love suicide
Since the play (double suicide in Sonezaki) by Chikamatsu Monzaemon, the genre of has been associated with themes of a double suicide: a couple consider killing each other at the end of their journey. There, character psychology is brought to the fore, and the description of the landscape becomes a background. Later, a new style entered into vogue: a peddler or a street artist intervenes during the couple's journey, remonstrating with them: (Act IV of the kabuki play ), , .
In , the same actor transforms into different characters with a rapid change of costume, and plays between three and twelve (usually seven) characters, one after another – male and female of all ages, from different periods and of all social strata, animals, apparition, and gods. was very popular at the start of the 19th century, particularly with the two great actors Bandō Mitsugorō III and Nakamura Utaemon III, who competed to develop this genre. Today, the genre of is broken down into several plays, one for each character, which are performed independently, like the famous play , which was originally the first part of a series of five quick-changes: the girl changes into a , a , a and a boatman. Nowadays, many quick-change plays no longer exist in their entirety, with one exception: (six great poets), a play of one performer transforming into 5 poets, for which all 5 quick-changes are still extant and known of.
The most famous plays are , , , , , , and .
Traditional festival (): The pleasure of popular life was undoubtedly the and many pieces on this theme show the people's passion for this festival: , etc.
Annual events: , etc.
Peddler: The variety of occupations among the citizens of Edo was surprising, including a peddler or a street performer, who animated the city of Edo. A peddler was not just a salesman, but was accompanied by various performances or songs, sometimes comical, to attract children, and in some cases with an extravagant costume: , etc.
Street artist: , etc.
Noh: In the Edo period, when belonging to the warrior class was distinguished from the kabuki which was an entertainment of the popular classes, the adaptation of Noh in the kabuki dance tended to move away from the original piece by completely changing the context, the characters, and the staging. However, in the Meiji era, when the kabuki tried to renew the popular image by introducing the Noh of a high dress, the adaptation of this medieval theater was made by approaching this noble taste, while keeping the content and style of the original piece: , etc.
: Like Noh, was adapted in kabuki dance after the Meiji era: , etc. However, even before this period, there was already an adaptation of , such as pieces , etc., but it was transformed into kabuki style.
The genre, which already existed in the Edo period in the field of music, consists of pieces created to celebrate the founding of a new school, the inheritance of a name or the inauguration of an establishment etc. Also, around the beginning of the Meiji era, musicians broke away from the kabuki world, and school leaders performed new pieces every New Year. These festive pieces, celebrating prosperity and auspiciousness, were given choreography, often in the style of Noh dance: this genre is called , presented in general in the style called (dance with the kimono or the , without costume): .
Schools
Japan has about two hundred nihon-buyō schools, including the "five great schools":
founded in 1849 by Hanayagi Jusuke Ist, who was a disciple of Nishikawa Senzō IVth. This is the school with the most disciples.
founded by Fujima Kanbei Ist during the Hōei era (1704–1711).
founded in 1893 by Wakayagi Judō Ist, who was a disciple of Hanayagi Jusuke.
founded by Nishikawa Senzō Ist during the Genroku era (1688–1704). At the origin of many schools, it is the oldest school of .
founded by Bandō Mitsugorō IIIrd, kabuki actor representing the Kasei period (1804–1830).
Notable people
Masumi Uno (born 1932)
References
Bibliography
External links
Nihon-buyō Association The main organisation for nihon-buyō
Nihon Buyo Foundation on nihonbuyo.or.jp
List of Kabuki dance plays on Kabuki Play Guide
List of Kabuki dance plays on Kabuki21.com
List of Kabuki dance plays on Invitation to kabuki
Dances of Japan
Performing arts in Japan
Concert dance
Japanese words and phrases
Kabuki |
The Laika class, Russian designation Project 545 Laika (), also referred to as Husky class (), are series of nuclear-powered, modular, fifth-generation multi-purpose submarines currently under development by Malakhit Marine Engineering Bureau for the Russian Navy.
History
On 16 December 2014, it became known Malakhit was developing a new fifth-generation nuclear submarine as an internal initiative. On 17 March 2016, the codename Husky was disclosed, and finally on 8 August 2016, a contract was signed with the Russian Defence Ministry for development of the submarine. In April 2018, Malakhit CEO Vladimir Dorofeyev reported the preliminary design of the prospective Husky class nuclear submarine was complete. A year later, in April 2019, Malakhit announced it had launched R&D work on the submarine under a new codename Laika.
On 24 December 2019, during the Russia's Defence Ministry Board session held in Moscow, project number and some technical characteristics of the submarine were revealed. The lead vessel of the class is expected to be built by 2027–2030.
Design
The submarines are reported to combine the roles of multi-purpose and strategic submarines, being able to use both cruise and ballistic missiles depending on the task and modular configuration. The submarines will have a smaller displacement than the current fourth-generation s and incorporate the double hull design with the outer hull made of composite materials. The composites are also expected to be used for control surfaces and propulsion system.
The main armament is to include the 3M-54 Kalibr and P-800 Oniks anti-ship cruise missiles as well as the 3M22 Zircon hypersonic cruise missiles. The vessels are also projected to be armed with MARVed ballistic missiles currently in development by the Makeyev Rocket Design Bureau. According to President of the United Shipbuilding Corporation Alexei Rakhmanov, the submarines are to be highly unified in their key components in order to substantially reduce the costs for the Russian Defence Ministry.
The Project 545 submarines reportedly feature the displacement of 11,340 tons, maximum speed of 35 knots, 90 days of autonomy and maximum submersion depth of 600 meters.
References
External links
HUSKY / Pr.545 Laika: Russia's Next Generation Attack Submarine - H.I. Sutton
Proposed ships
Nuclear submarines of the Russian Navy
Submarine classes
Submarines of Russia
Attack submarines |
Kaliganj () is an upazila of the Lalmonirhat District in Rangpur Division, Bangladesh.
History
This area was formerly a chakla governed by Indra Narayan Chakravarti during the reign of Maharaja Madan (Moda) Narayan (1665–1680) of Koch Bihar. Ibadat Khan, the Mughal faujdar of Ghoraghat, led an expedition against Koch Bihar in 1687. The Mughals were supported by Raghavendra Narayan and Ram Narayan, who were the two sons of Chakravarti's personal officer Raghuram. Following the Mughal victory, Chakravarti was deposed and the Mughals honored Raghavendra Narayan as the Chaudhury Zamindar of Bashatti and Ram Narayan as the Chaudhury Zamindar of Kakina. The zamindars of Kakina, descended from Ram Narayan, continued to hold influence in the region.
The area was affected by the peasant rebellion of Nuraldin in 1783 and the Fakir-Sannyasi Rebellion. In 1793, 21 thanas (police outpost headquarters) were assigned to the Rangpur district in accordance to Regulation No. 12. One thana was established in the village of Phurunbari in Goral mouza and encompassed parts of the present-day subdistricts of Kaliganj, Hatibandha and Aditmari. In 1304 BS ( AD), the Bengal Dooars Railway was established and the thana was relocated from Phurunbari to Kaliganj in need of good communication. Kaliganj takes its name from Raja Kaliprasad Raichaudhury of the Ghosal clan, who was the erstwhile zamindar of Tushbhandar. Mahendra Ranjan Chaudhury, the Zamindar of Kakina, fell into debt from moneylenders and government revenue and his zamindari was auctioned in 1925. Chaudhury fled with his family to Darjeeling in 1949 where he died, and his remaining descendants converted to Islam. His final descendant, Hamida Khatun, married a man from Sheikhpara in Gangachara. Her son and successor Musaddiq Ali Azad is the current chairman of Morneya Union council.
During the Bangladesh Liberation War of 1971, Kaliganj thana was under Sector No. 6 led by Khademul Bashar. Several civilians were executed by the Pakistan Army on 6 April. The army left Hatibandha and took shelter in Kaliganj on 30 November. The area was liberated by Bengali freedom fighters on 6 December.
On 9 April 1981, eight unions of Kaliganj thana separated to form the Aditmari thana. On 15 December 1983, Kaliganj thana was made an upazila (sub-district) as part of the President of Bangladesh Hussain Muhammad Ershad's decentralisation programme. Muhammad Ansar Ali was appointed as the first Upazila Nirbahi Officer of Kaliganj.
Geography
Kaliganj is located at . It has 35,459 households and total area of 236.96 km2.
Demographics
As of the 1991 Bangladesh census, Kaliganj has a population of 187,494. Males constitute 51.48% of the population, and females 48.52%. This Upazila's eighteen up population is 89,669. Kaliganj has an average literacy rate of 24% (7+ years), and a national average of 32.4% are literate.
Administration
Kaliganj Upazila is divided into eight union parishads: Bhotemari, Chalbala, Chandrapur, Dalagram, Goral, Kakina, Madati, and Tushbhandar. The union parishads are subdivided into 64 mauzas and 92 villages.
Upazila chairmen
Facilities
Kaliganj is home to 74 madrasas and the famous Ijaradar Mosque. Among them, there are 19 Alia madrasahs:
Kakinahat Mostafabia Kamil Madrasa
Kashiram Ekramia Alim Madrasa
Munirabad Sufia Alim Madrasa
Chalbala-Dalgram Fazil Madrasa
Latabar Ekramia Rahmania Alia Madrasa
Bhullyarhat Ashrafia Dakhil Madrasa
Shialkhoa Karimia Dakhil Madrasa
Dalgram Dakhil Madrasa
Goral Dakhil Madrasa
Karimpur Nesabia Dakhil Madrasa
Tetulia Islamia Dakhil Madrasa
Shakhati Jabbaria Dakhil Madrasa
Naodabas Dakhil Madrasa
North Dalgram B. A. Dakhil Madrasa
West Rudeshwar Dakhil Madrasa
Achintala Dakhil Madrasa
Harishwar Dakhil Madrasa
Bairati Dakhil Madrasa
Darus Salam Girls Dakhil Madrasa
Notable people
Sheikh Fazlul Karim (1882–1936), poet and author
Sheikh Reyazuddin Ahmed (1882–1972), author and social worker
Karim Uddin Mohammad (1923–1981), politician
Nuruzzaman Ahmed (born 1950), government minister
See also
Upazilas of Bangladesh
Districts of Bangladesh
Divisions of Bangladesh
References
Upazilas of Lalmonirhat District |
The 1901 Federal Flag Design Competition was an Australian government initiative announced by Prime Minister Edmund Barton to find a flag for the newly federated Commonwealth of Australia. In terms of its essential elements the winning entries are the official flag of Australia.
Background
After Federation on 1 January 1901 and following receipt of a request from the British government to design a flag to distinguish Australia, the new Commonwealth Government held an official competition for a new 'federal flag' in April. The competition attracted 32,823 entries, including those originally sent to the one held earlier by the Review of Reviews. One of these was submitted by an unnamed governor of a colony. The two contests were merged after the Review of Reviews agreed to being integrated into the government initiative. The £75 prize money of each competition were combined and augmented by a further £50 donated by Havelock Tobacco Company.
Conditions
Each competitor was required to submit two coloured sketches, a red ensign for the merchant service and public use, and a blue ensign for naval and official use. The designs were judged on seven criteria: loyalty to the Empire, Federation, history, heraldry, distinctiveness, utility and cost of manufacture. The majority of designs incorporated the Union Flag and the Southern Cross, but native animals were also popular, including one that depicted a variety of indigenous animals playing cricket. The entries were put on display at the Royal Exhibition Building in Melbourne and the judges took six days to deliberate before reaching their conclusion.
Winners
Five almost identical entries were chosen as the winning design, and their designers shared the £200 (2015: $29,142.12) prize money. They were Ivor Evans, a fourteen-year-old schoolboy from Melbourne; Leslie John Hawkins, a teenager apprenticed to an optician from Sydney; Egbert John Nuttall, an architect from Melbourne; Annie Dorrington, an artist from Perth; and William Stevens, a ship's officer from Auckland, New Zealand. The five winners received £40 each. The differences from the present flag were the six-pointed Commonwealth Star, while the components stars in the Southern Cross had different numbers of points, with more if the real star was brighter. This led to five stars of nine, eight, seven, six and five points respectively.
Aftermath
A simplified version of the competition-winning design was submitted to the British admiralty for entry into their register of flags in December 1901. Prime Minister Edmund Barton announced in the Commonwealth Gazette that Edward VII had officially recognised the design as the Flag of Australia on 11 February 1903. This version made all the stars in the Southern Cross seven-pointed apart from the smallest, and is the same as the existing flag except the six-pointed Commonwealth Star.
Misconceptions
There were five judges for the competition and not seven. This misunderstanding seems to have arisen from the Review of Reviews listing the seven names of the competition's "judges and officials" The Review of Reviews gives the names of the five judges in the 20 August 1901 edition, and subsequently confirms that number on 20 September 1901. Mr J.S. Blackham, chief of staff of the Melbourne Herald, was the competition official "who superintended the classification and arrangement of the flags" for "when they were shown in Melbourne's Exhibition Building"; Mr G. Stewart was another competition official described by Frank Cayley as "an expert in heraldry".
Several secondary sources have claimed the conditions stated the design should "be based on the British ensigns ... signalling to the beholder that it is an Imperial union ensign of the British Empire" and around the Southern Cross. In fact there was no such stipulation made either by the Reviews of Reviews, which had received the majority of the entries, or the federal government (although contestants in the Review of Reviews contest were advised that "A flag, perhaps, which omitted these symbols might have small chances of success; yet it seems unwise to fetter the competition with any such absolute limitations"). This error stems from Gwen Swinburne's 1969 book, Unfurled: Australia's Flag, in which she incorrectly attributes the above quote as a condition for the 1901 Federal Flag Competition. She had apparently used a passage from Barlow Cumberland's 1909 book, History of the Union Jack and the Flag of the Empire, as the basis of her quote.
Gallery of Entries
References
External links
Digitised copy of Review of Reviews for Australasia, 20 September 1901
Flags of Australia
1901 in Australia
Arts competitions
Competitions in Australia |
The Rothschild banking family of England was founded in (1798) by Nathan Mayer von Rothschild (1777–1836) who first settled in Manchester but then moved to London, England (at the time in the Kingdom of Great Britain). Nathan was sent there from his home in Frankfurt by his father, Mayer Amschel Rothschild (1744–1812). Wanting his sons to succeed on their own and to expand the family business across Europe, Mayer Amschel Rothschild had his eldest son remain in Frankfurt, while his four other sons were sent to different European cities to establish a financial institution to invest in business and provide banking services. Nathan Mayer von Rothschild, the third son, first established a textile jobbing business in Manchester and from there went on to establish N M Rothschild & Sons bank in London.
From the home base in Frankfurt, Rothschild sons not only established themselves in the UK but also in Paris, Vienna and Naples in the Two Sicilies. Through their collaborative efforts, the Rothschilds rose to prominence in a variety of banking endeavours including loans, government bonds and trading in bullion. Their financing afforded investment opportunities and during the 19th century they became major stakeholders in large-scale mining and rail transport ventures that were fundamental to the rapidly expanding industrial economies of Europe.
Changes in the heads of government, war, and other such events affected the family's fortunes both for their benefit and to their detriment at various times. Despite such changes, the UK branch of the Rothschild family is arguably the most prominent of all the Rothschild branches due its elevation to the British peerage, and its continued high-profile philanthropic activities.
Involvement in finance and industry
During the early part of the 19th century, the Rothschild's London bank took a leading part in managing and financing the subsidies that the British government transferred to its allies during the Napoleonic Wars. Through the creation of a network of agents, couriers and shippers, the bank was able to provide funds to the armies of the Duke of Wellington in Portugal and Spain, therefore funding war. In 1818 the Rothschild bank arranged a £5 million loan to the Prussian government and the issuing of bonds for government loans. The providing of other innovative and complex financing for government projects formed a mainstay of the bank's business for the better part of the century. N M Rothschild & Sons financial strength in the City of London became such that by 1825–26, the bank was able to supply enough coin to the Bank of England to enable it to avert a liquidity crisis.
Nathan Mayer's eldest son, Lionel de Rothschild (1808–1879) succeeded him as head of the London branch. Under Lionel the bank financed the British government's 1875 purchase of Egypt's interest in the Suez Canal. Lionel also began to invest in railways as his uncle James had been doing in France. In 1869, Lionel's son, Alfred de Rothschild (1842–1918), became a director of the Bank of England, a post he held for 20 years. Alfred was one of those who represented the British Government at the 1892 International Monetary Conference in Brussels.
The Rothschild bank funded Cecil Rhodes in the development of the British South Africa Company and Leopold de Rothschild (1845–1917) administered Rhodes's estate after his death in 1902 and helped to set up the Rhodes Scholarship scheme at Oxford University. In 1873, de Rothschild Frères in France and N M Rothschild & Sons of London joined with other investors to acquire the Spanish government's money-losing Rio Tinto copper mines. The new owners restructured the company and turned it into a profitable business. By 1905, the Rothschild interest in Rio Tinto amounted to more than 30 per cent. In 1887, the French and UK Rothschild banking houses loaned money to, and invested in, the De Beers diamond mines in South Africa, becoming its largest shareholders.
The London banking house continued under the management of Lionel Nathan de Rothschild (1882–1942) and his brother Anthony Gustav de Rothschild (1887–1961) and then to Sir Evelyn de Rothschild (b. 1931). In 2003, following Sir Evelyn's retirement as head of N M Rothschild & Sons of London, the UK and French financial firms merged under the leadership of David René de Rothschild.
Other activities
Beyond banking and finance, members of the Rothschild family in the UK became academics, scientists and horticulturalists with worldwide reputations.
Nathaniel de Rothschild (1812–1870) was born in London, the fourth child of the founder of the British branch of the family. In 1842, he married cousin Charlotte de Rothschild (1825–1899) of Paris, France. She was the daughter of James Mayer de Rothschild and in 1850 they moved to Paris where he was to work for his father-in-law's bank. However, in 1853, Nathaniel acquired Château Brane Mouton, a vineyard in Pauillac in the Gironde département of France.
Elevation to British peerage
In 1822, the five Rothschild brothers at the head of the family's banks in various parts of Europe were each granted the hereditary title of Freiherr (baron) in the Austrian nobility by Emperor Francis I of Austria (formerly Francis II, the last Holy Roman Emperor). As a result, some members of the Rothschild family used the nobiliary particle de or von before their surname to acknowledge the grant of nobility.
In 1847, Anthony Nathan de Rothschild (1810–1876) was made a baronet in the Baronetage of the United Kingdom. Upon his death, the title went to his nephew Nathan Mayer Rothschild, who was subsequently elevated to the House of Lords when he was created Baron Rothschild in 1885, with which title the baronetcy remains merged.
In 1858, Lionel de Rothschild (1808–1879) became the first practising Jew to take a seat in the British Parliament.
Philanthropy
The English Rothschilds and members of the other branches in Europe were all major contributors to causes in aid of the Jewish people. However, many of their philanthropic efforts extended far beyond Jewish ethnic or religious communities. They built hospitals and shelters for the needy, supported cultural institutions and were patrons of individual artists. Their donation of works of art to various galleries has been the largest of any family in history. At present, a research project is underway by The Rothschild Archive in London to document the family's philanthropic involvements.
Family members
Members of the Rothschild family of the UK include:
Alfred de Rothschild (1842–1918)
Amschel Mayor James Rothschild (1955–1996)
Anthony Gustav de Rothschild (1887–1961)
Anthony James de Rothschild (b. 1977)
Anthony Nathan de Rothschild (1810–1876)
Charles Rothschild (1877–1923)
Charlotte Henriette de Rothschild (b. 1955)
David Mayer de Rothschild (b. 1978)
Dorothy de Rothschild (1895–1988)
Edmund Leopold de Rothschild (1916–2009)
Emma Georgina Rothschild (b. 1948)
Evelina de Rothschild (1839–1866)
Evelyn Achille de Rothschild (1886–1917)
Sir Evelyn de Rothschild (1931-2022)
Ferdinand James von Rothschild (1839–1898)
Hannah de Rothschild, Countess of Rosebery (1851–1890)
Jacob Rothschild, 4th Baron Rothschild (b. 1936)
Kathleen (Nica de Koenigswarter) Rothschild (1913–1990)
Leopold de Rothschild (1845–1917)
Leopold David de Rothschild (1927–2012)
Lionel de Rothschild (1808–1879)
Lionel Nathan de Rothschild (1882–1942)
Lynn Forester de Rothschild (b. 1954)
Mayer Amschel de Rothschild (1818–1874)
Miriam Louisa Rothschild (1908–2005)
Nathaniel de Rothschild (1812–1870)
Nathan Mayer Rothschild (1777–1836)
Nathan Mayer Rothschild, 1st Baron Rothschild (1840–1915)
Gregory Zalewski de Rothschild (b. 2001)
Richard Anton de Rothschild (b. 1966)
Nathaniel Philip Rothschild (b. 1971)
Serena Dunn Rothschild (1935-2019)
Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild (1910–1990)
Walter Rothschild, 2nd Baron Rothschild (1868–1937)
Rothschild properties
Among the Rothschild properties in the UK are:
Ascott House – Ascott, Buckinghamshire
Aston Clinton House – Aston Clinton, Buckinghamshire
Ashton Wold – Northamptonshire
Exbury Estate – Hampshire
Eythrope – Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire
Gunnersbury Park – Ealing, London
Halton House – Halton, Buckinghamshire
Mentmore Towers – Mentmore, Buckinghamshire
Tring Park Mansion – Tring, Hertfordshire
Waddesdon Manor – Waddesdon, Buckinghamshire
Spencer House – St James's, London. A leasehold extending until 2082 was purchased in 1986 from the Spencer family who owns the house.
See also
Rothschild family
Rothschild & Co
Rothschild banking family of Austria
Rothschild banking family of France
Rothschild banking family of Naples
References
Rise of the House of Rothschild by Egon Caesar Corti (1928) (reprint 1982, 2003) R A Kessinger Publishing Co, London, 2003
The Rothschilds; a Family Portrait by Frederic Morton. Atheneum Publishers (1962) (1998 reprint)
The Rothschilds, a Family of Fortune by Virginia Cowles. Alfred A. Knopf (1973)
Two Rothschilds and the Land of Israel by Simon Schama. Knopf, London (1978)
Rothschilds at Waddesdon Manor by Dorothy de Rothschild. Viking Penguin (1979)
The English Rothschilds by Richard Davis. Collins, London (1983)
A History of the Jews by Paul M. Johnson (1987) HarperCollins Publishers
Rothschild: The Wealth and Power of a Dynasty by Derek Wilson. Scribner, London (1988)
House of Rothschild : Money's Prophets: 1798-1848 by Niall Ferguson. Viking Press (1998)
The Rothschild Gardens by Miriam Louisa Rothschild (1998) Harry N. Abrams, Inc., London
Gilt-edged Life: A Memoir by Edmund de Rothschild (1998) John Murray Publishers Ltd., London
The House of Rothschild (vol. 2): The World's Banker: 1849–1999 by Niall Ferguson. Diane Publishing Co. (1999)
Charlotte and Lionel: A Rothschild Love Story by Stanley Weintraub. (2003) Free Press, London
External links
The Rothschild Archive – an international centre in London for research into the history of the Rothschild family.
The Musical Associations of the Rothschild Family by Charlotte Henriette de Rothschild
British bankers
Economy of England
Ashkenazi Jews topics
Jewish British history
Business families of the United Kingdom
British Jewish families |
Fictive motion is the metaphorical motion of an object or abstraction through space. Fictive motion has become a subject of study in psycholinguistics and cognitive linguistics. In fictive motion sentences, a motion verb applies to a subject that is not literally capable of movement in the physical world, as in the sentence, "The fence runs along the perimeter of the house." Fictive motion is so called because it is attributed to material states, objects, or abstract concepts, that cannot (sensibly) be said to move themselves through physical space. Fictive motion sentences are pervasive in English and other languages.
History
Cognitive linguist Leonard Talmy discussed many of the spatial and linguistic properties of fictive motion in a book chapter called "Fictive motion in language and 'ception (Talmy 1996). He provided further insights in his seminal book, Toward a Cognitive Semantics Vol. 1, in 2000. Talmy began analyzing the semantics of fictive motion in the late 1970s and early 1980s but used the term "virtual motion" at that time (e.g. Talmy 1983).
Fictive motion has since been investigated by cognitive scientists interested in whether and how it evokes dynamic imagery. Methods of investigation have included reading tasks, eye-tracking tasks and drawing tasks.
Influence on perception of time
A recent avenue of research has focused on fictive motion's influence on perceptions of time. People often speak about time in terms of motion. English speakers may describe themselves as moving through time toward or past events with statements such as "we're entering the holidays" or "we slipped past the due date." They may also talk about events as moving toward or past themselves with statements such as "tough times are approaching us" or "summer vacation has passed". Broadly speaking, metaphorical talk about time borrows from two different perspectives for conceptualizing motion. In the ego-moving metaphor, one progresses along a timeline toward the future, while in the time-moving metaphor, a timeline is conceived as a conveyor belt upon which events move from the future to the past like packages. (e.g. Lakoff 1987).
It appears that not only does thinking about actual motion influence people's judgments about time, but thinking about fictive motion has the same effect, suggesting that thinking about one abstract domain may influence people's understanding of another. This raises the question of whether the influence of fictive motion on people's understanding of time is rooted in a concrete, embodied conception of motion, such that both time and fictive motion are ultimately understood in terms of simulations of concrete experience, or whether the effects of fictive motion are a product of the way that language influences thought.
References
Fauconnier, G & Turner, M. (2002). The Way We Think: Conceptual Blending and the Mind's Hidden Complexities. New York: Oxford University Press. Pages 376-380.
Lakoff, G., & Johnson, M. (1999) Philosophy In The Flesh: the Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought. New York: Basic Books.
Cognitive science
Psycholinguistics
Motor control |
John Ferguson (1836–1906) was an Ulster-born, Glasgow-based radical activist for Irish nationalism, Irish people in Scotland and the Scottish Labour Party. He worked closely with Michael Davitt.
References
E.W. McFarland (2003). John Ferguson 1836–1906: Irish Issues In Scottish Politics, England.
Scottish people of Irish descent
Scottish Labour Party (1888) politicians
Irish nationalists
Georgist politicians
1836 births
1906 deaths |
Beelitz is a historic town in Potsdam-Mittelmark district, in Brandenburg, Germany. It is chiefly known for its cultivation of white asparagus (Beelitzer Spargel).
Geography
Beelitz is situated about 18 km (11 mi) south of Potsdam, on the rim of the Zauche glacial sandur plain. The town is surrounded by extended pine woods of the Nuthe-Nieplitz Nature Park.
Located on an old trade route from Berlin to Leipzig, today the Bundesstraße 2, it also has access to the Bundesautobahn 9 at the Beelitz-Heilstätten and Beelitz junctions. Train service to Potsdam and Berlin via the Berlin-Blankenheim railway line is available at Beelitz Stadt and Beelitz-Heilstätten stations.
History
A 997 deed by Emperor Otto III mentions a settlement with the Slavic name Belizi, though this denotation may also refer to the nearby town of Belzig.
The Saint Mary and Saint Nicholas parish church was first mentioned in a 1247 report of a Jewish host desecration, and bleeding host miracle, that made Beelitz a medieval pilgrimage site. Since 1370 the host was kept in a small chapel adjacent to the church. The reason for the former name of the Judenberg (renamed Friedensberg after 1945) before the Mühlentor is not confirmed, though tradition indicates it was the site of the burning of Jews.
When in 1731 King Frederick William I of Prussia billeted a hussar regiment, Beelitz became a garrison town and today is home to a Bundeswehr command. The cultivation of asparagus was first documented in 1861.
The village of Kanin, a subdivision of Beelitz since 2001, had been an exclave of the Electorate of Saxony until 1815 and therefore a notorious smuggling area as well as a destination for deserters from the Prussian army. Its fieldstone church was erected about 1138 and today is the oldest preserved one within the Brandenburg state.
In 1928, the Telefunken company erected a radio station in the subdivision of Schönefeld for the wireless communication with North America. Together with the Nauen Transmitter Station, it was incorporated by the Reichspost in 1932. After World War II, the station was used by the Deutsche Post of the GDR until it finally went out of service in 1991.
Demography
Beelitz-Heilstätten
Beelitz-Heilstätten (), a district of the town, is home to a large hospital complex of about 60 buildings including a cogeneration plant erected in 1898 according to the plans of architect Heino Schmieden. Originally designed as a sanatorium by the Berlin workers' health insurance corporation, the complex from the beginning of World War I on was a military hospital of the Imperial German Army. During October and November 1916, Adolf Hitler recuperated at Beelitz-Heilstätten after being wounded in the leg at the Battle of the Somme.
In 1945, Beelitz-Heilstätten was occupied by Red Army forces, and the complex remained a Soviet military hospital until 1994, well after the German reunification. In December 1990, Erich Honecker was admitted to Beelitz-Heilstätten after being forced to resign as the head of the East German government.
Following the Soviet withdrawal, several attempts were made to privatise the complex, but they were not entirely successful. Some sections of the hospital remain in operation as a neurological rehabilitation centre and a centre for research and care for victims of Parkinson's disease. The remainder of the complex, including the surgery, the psychiatric ward, and a rifle range, was abandoned in 1994. As of 2007, none of the abandoned hospital buildings or the surrounding area were secured, giving the area the feel of a ghost town.
In popular culture
The hospital complex has made Beelitz-Heilstätten a destination for curious visitors and a film set for films like The Pianist in 2002, the Rammstein music video "Mein Herz brennt", the films Valkyrie in 2008, Men & Chicken in 2015, A Cure for Wellness in 2016, and the Netflix series 1899 in 2022.
Beelitz-Heilstätten is a popular location for urban exploration, providing a suitably eerie photographic subject for artistic photography.
International relations
Beelitz is twinned with:
Ratingen, North Rhine-Westphalia since 1990
Alfter, North Rhine-Westphalia
Personalities
Sons and daughters of the city
Götz Dieter Plage (1936–1993), nature film–maker
(born 1985), volleyball player
People connected to the city
(1881 – after June 1, 1942), teacher, head of the Jewish home for children with special needs
Wolfgang Schmidt (born 1966), serial killer, also known as "Rosa Riese"
See also
Riebener See
References
External links
History, maps, and photos of the buildings early 2008 (English)
Neurologische Rehabilitationsklinik Beelitz-Heilstätten (in German)
Photo gallery of the abandoned hospital buildings (in German)
The Abandoned Hospital (gallery and history) (in Polish)
Urban Exploration report of Beelitz-Heilstätten (photo gallery and history) (in English)
Localities in Potsdam-Mittelmark |
Yongin FS () is the South Korean futsal club based in Yongin, Gyeonggi-do. The club was founded in November 2009.
Name History
2009 : Founded as Yongin TMT Futsal Club
2010 : Renamed Yongin FutSal
Honors
FK Cup
Runners-up (1) : 2011
References
Futsal clubs in South Korea
Sport in Gyeonggi Province
Futsal clubs established in 2009
2009 establishments in South Korea
Sport in Yongin |
In mathematics, the Freidlin–Wentzell theorem (due to Mark Freidlin and Alexander D. Wentzell) is a result in the large deviations theory of stochastic processes. Roughly speaking, the Freidlin–Wentzell theorem gives an estimate for the probability that a (scaled-down) sample path of an Itō diffusion will stray far from the mean path. This statement is made precise using rate functions. The Freidlin–Wentzell theorem generalizes Schilder's theorem for standard Brownian motion.
Statement
Let B be a standard Brownian motion on Rd starting at the origin, 0 ∈ Rd, and let Xε be an Rd-valued Itō diffusion solving an Itō stochastic differential equation of the form
where the drift vector field b : Rd → Rd is uniformly Lipschitz continuous. Then, on the Banach space C0 = C0([0, T]; Rd) equipped with the supremum norm ||·||∞, the family of processes (Xε)ε>0 satisfies the large deviations principle with good rate function I : C0 → R ∪ {+∞} given by
if ω lies in the Sobolev space H1([0, T]; Rd), and I(ω) = +∞ otherwise. In other words, for every open set G ⊆ C0 and every closed set F ⊆ C0,
and
References
(See chapter 5.6)
Asymptotic analysis
Stochastic differential equations
Theorems in statistics
Large deviations theory
Probability theorems |
First National Bank (FNB; ) is one of South Africa's "big four" banks. It is a division of FirstRand, a large financial services conglomerate, which trades on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE), under the symbol: FSR. FNB is also listed on the Botswana Stock Exchange under the symbol FNBB and is a constituent of the BSE Domestic Company Index.
Overview
FNB is one of the three major divisions of the FirstRand Group, and the others being Rand Merchant Bank and Wesbank. First National Bank maintains banking subsidiaries which it owns wholly or in part, in Botswana, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Eswatini, Tanzania, Zambia, Ghana, India, Lesotho and Guernsey. FNB is also actively pursuing expansion plans in Angola and Nigeria Media reports in May 2012, indicated that the bank is also making plans to expand into Kenya, Rwanda and Uganda.
History
FNB is the oldest bank in South Africa. It traces its origins back to the Eastern triocrees Province Bank, which was formed in Grahamstown in 1838. At that time the bank financed the wool export boom in the district. By 1874, the bank had four branches – at Grahamstown, Middelburg, Cradock and Queenstown. Due to a recession the bank was bought out in 1874 by the Oriental Bank Corporation (OBC). However, as a result of financial difficulties that the Oriental Bank Corporation was experiencing in India, it decided to withdraw from South Africa and thus the Bank of Africa was formed in 1879 to take over the OBC's business in South Africa.
At about the same time, the government of the South African Republic desired to create a local commercial bank, due to the discovery of gold in Barberton and the Witwatersrand. The government thus created a bank through a concession agreement. The task of the bank was to focus primarily on financing agricultural development. A state mint was also established as part of the concession. The Nationale Bank der Zuid-Afrikaansche Republiek Beperk (National Bank of the South African Republic Limited) was registered in Pretoria in 1891 and opened for business on 5 April of the same year. After the conclusion of the Second Anglo-Boer War in 1902, the name of this bank was changed to the National Bank of South Africa Limited.
Due to another recession, the Bank of Africa was bought out by the National Bank in 1912, which had already bought out another bank, the National Bank of the Orange River Colony in 1910. The Natal Bank, which was founded in 1854 to fund the Natal Colony's sugar industry, also suffered financial difficulties and was taken over in 1914. By this time, the National Bank was now one of the strongest and largest banks in South Africa.
However, by the early 1920s, the National Bank was suffering from bad debt and heavy losses. It consequently merged with the Anglo-Egyptian Bank and the Colonial Bank in 1925 to form Barclays Bank (Dominion, Colonial and Overseas). In 1971 Barclays restructured its operation and its South Africa operation was renamed Barclays National Bank Limited.
Due to a disinvestment campaign against South Africa because of its apartheid policies, Barclays was forced to reduce its shareholding and sold its shareholding in the bank in 1986. The bank was renamed "First National Bank of Southern Africa Limited" in 1987 and became a wholly South African owned and controlled entity.
In 1998, the financial services interests (which included their shareholding in First National Bank) of Rand Merchant Bank Holdings and Anglo-American Corporation were merged to form FirstRand, which is listed on the JSE Securities Exchange. In consequence, FNB became a wholly owned subsidiary of FirstRand Limited; it currently trades as a division of FirstRand Bank Limited.
In 1999, the First National Bank was mentioned in the 'Ciex Report' that summarised a two-year long investigation into the theft of R26 billion from the state during the apartheid era. The investigators claimed that FNB unlawfully received hundreds of millions of Rands from the SARB. The money was disguised as 'lifeboats' for covering bad loans. True to 2017 the stolen funds have yet to be recovered.
FirstRand Group
The FirstRand Group was established in 1998, by the merger of First National Bank of South Africa, Rand Merchant Bank and Momentum Insurance & Asset Management. FirstRand is listed as a "locally controlled bank" by the South African Reserve Bank, the national banking regulator. , the group had total assets valued at US$90.3+ billion (ZAR:698 billion) (2011) with subsidiaries in seven sub-Saharan countries and in Australia and India. Expansion plans in another six African countries are underway.
Controversies
Safety deposit box victims
During September 2015 it was reported in the Sunday Times that FNB stated "a small number" of safety deposit boxes where stolen from the Sunnyside branch in Pretoria.
Later in the same year, 360 boxes were stolen in a daring overnight break-in at the Randburg, Johannesburg branch.
On New Year's Eve, the third and final break-in occurred at the FNB Parktown branch. It was reported at the time that the value was approximately R1.7 Million out of 30 deposit boxes in the branch.
In 2018, reports surfaced that 60 victims were going ahead with a damages claim against First National Bank (South Africa) reported to amount to R121 Million.
See also
FirstRand
Wesbank
Absa Bank Limited
Standard Bank
List of banks in South Africa
Economy of South Africa
References
External links
Official FNB website
Website of FirstRand Limited
FNB Bank Branch Codes
Banks of South Africa
Companies based in Johannesburg
Banks established in 1838
1838 establishments in the Cape Colony
FirstRand |
Raymond Monsour Scurfield (born 1943) is an American professor emeritus of social work, The University of Southern Mississippi, Gulf Coast. He retired in November, 2021 from private practice (with Rivers Psychotherapy Services in Gulfport MS). He has continued as the external clinical consultant to the Biloxi VA Vet Center since 2011. He has been recognized for his expertise in war-related and natural disaster Psychological trauma and in meditation. He has published books and articles exploring the effects of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in both combat veterans and disaster survivors, including a trilogy of books about war’s impact. The trilogy’s third installment, War Trauma: Lessons Unlearned from Vietnam to Iraq, was published in October 2006. His three newest books are Scurfield, R.M. & Platoni, K.T. (Eds.). War Trauma & Its Wake. Expanding the Circle of Healing. New York & London: Routledge (2012); Scurfield, R.M. & Platoni, K.T. (Eds).Healing War Trauma. A Handbook of Creative Approaches. New York & London (2013); and Faith-Based and Secular Meditation: Everyday and Posttraumatic Applications. Washington, D.C.: NASW Press (2019)(see review on Amazon.com books).
Scurfield has also written substantially about the impact of Hurricane Katrina, and helpful interventions to address post-Katrina mental health recovery. Scurfield was recognized as a "Hero of Katrina" by the University of Southern Mississippi (2006), the 2006 Mississippi Social Worker of the Year by the Mississippi Chapter of the National Association of Social Workers, the 2006 and 2007 College of Health Distinguished Teaching Awards and 10 additional awards and recognitions during his tenure at Southern Miss. He received the 2012 Mississippi Lifetime Achievement Award from the Mississippi chapter, National Association of Social Work, and the NASW National Lifetime Achievement Award. NASW PRESS RELEASE :Raymond Monsour Scurfield, DSW, ACSW - Lifetime Achievement Award. In his 50+ year career, Scurfield has a distinguished reputation in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a clinician, innovative therapy and program developer, educator, and researcher publishing on topics such as Vietnam War and other war-related trauma, post-disaster interventions, race-related trauma, and experientially-based therapy. [see video at: www.youtube.com/watch?v=R41_MFijjl]
Scurfield holds a bachelor's degree in Sociology/Anthropology in 1965 and was a Distinguished Military Graduate, Army ROTC, at Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA), and both a master's degree in social work (1967) and doctorate in social work (1979) from the University of Southern California.
Background
Scurfield was born in Chicago, Illinois, on August 3, 1943, and raised in Elizabeth, Pennsylvania, about 16 miles outside of Pittsburgh. In 1961 Scurfield enrolled at Dickinson College in Carlise, Pennsylvania. Scurfield was commissioned in the Army Medical Service Corps upon his graduation from Dickinson College in 1965.
Scurfield served four years on active duty in the Army (1967–71) as a social work officer. His first duty assignment was as outpatient clinic social worker at William Beaumont General Hospital in El Paso, Texas. He then was deployed to Nha Trang, South Vietnam, in March 1968, and was the social work and administrative officer on a psychiatric team treating psychiatric casualties from I and II Corps of South Vietnam. Scurfield was promoted from 2nd Lt. to First Lt, and then to Captain, during his deployment to Vietnam. His next duty assignment was as a chief social worker, psychiatric ward, Army Valley Forge General Hospital outside of Philadelphia, for four months. His final assignment was to Okinawa, where he served first as the social work officer and then the Chief, Army Community Service. He was discharged from active duty in May 1971.
Work history
During 1971–72 and 1974–82, Scurfield held several positions at the Brentwood (West Los Angeles) VA Medical Center, including director of the Vietnam Veterans Resocialization Unit and supervisor of the Veterans-in-Prison Program. He was a community social worker with the Queen Liliuokalani Children's Center in Hilo and lower Puna on the Big Island of Hawaii (1972–73). Scurfield was appointed to the national-level position of National Associate Director for Clinical Services from 1982 to 1985 with the VA's Readjustment Counseling Service (the Vet Center Program) at VA HQ in Washington, D.C. Scurfield spent seven years (1985 to 1991) in the Gig Harbor/Tacoma/Seattle area, founding and directing the Post Traumatic Stress Treatment Program at the American Lake VAMC that received national and international attention for innovative trauma healing strategies (helicopter ride therapy; Outward Bound river rafting and rappelling ventures; sweatlodge and Pow-Wow warrior recognition American-Indian-led healing rituals; and then five years (1992 to 1997) in Hawaii, founding and directing the Pacific Islands Division, VA National Center for PTSD that pioneered the inclusion of culturally-sensitive Native Hawaiian healing elements and a focus on Asian-Pacific Islander veterans throughout the Pacific, to include establishing the first VA outreach PTSD service in America Samoa. In 1997, he served in a one-year position with the VA's National Center for PTSD and was outstationed at the Gulfport Division of the Biloxi VA in Mississippi.
In 1998, he retired from the VA and accepted a tenure track position at the University of Southern Mississippi School of Social Work, based at Long Beach. During his 13-year faculty tenure, he received some 15 awards for teaching and service (to include being the 2006 Mississippi Social Worker of the Year (by NASW) and designated as a "Hero of Katrina" by the University of Southern Mississippi—both awards in recognition of his leadership and counseling/debriefing services to displaced faculty, staff and students. And then he was appointed as a Professor Emeritus of Social Work upon his retirement in 2011. He has made 400+ professional presentations nationwide and numerous media appearances, to include 60 Minutes, Nightline, National Public Radio, New York Times, Boston Globe and many other newspaper and media interviews.
Scurfield was a pioneer in returning to Vietnam with veterans with PTSD to help in their healing process. In 1989 he co-led, with April Gerlock, the first return trip to Vietnam by a therapy group of veterans with PTSD. This trip was filmed by PBS and produced as a documentary in 1990, entitled Two Decades and a Wake-up. This return trip also was a focus in Scurfield's first book about Vietnam in 2004 (A Vietnam Trilogy. Veterans and Post-Traumatic Stress, 1968, 1989 & 2000). Scurfield then co-led the first university-based study abroad course to Vietnam (in 2000, with Andy Wiest and Leslie Root). This trip was a major focus of Scurfield's second book about Vietnam: Healing Journeys: Study Abroad with Vietnam Veterans (2006).
Scurfield's two most recent books are: Scurfield, R.M. & Platoni, K.T. (2013). Healing War Trauma. A Handbook of Creative Approaches (Routledge); and Scurfield, (2019), Faith-Based & Secular Meditation: Everyday and Posttraumatic Applications (Washington, DC: NASW Press) and is a vailable on Amazon and from NASW Press.
References
(School of Social Work, University of Southern Mississippi (Gulf Coast
Barnes & Noble book review
1943 births
Living people
Academics from Chicago
American social workers
Dickinson College alumni
USC Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work alumni
University of Southern Mississippi faculty |
Phyllonorycter turanica is a moth of the family Gracillariidae. It is known from Afghanistan, North Macedonia, Armenia, Iran, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, the Caucasus, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
There are up to five generations per year.
The larvae feed on Cerasus, Crataegus laciniata, Cydonia species (including Cydonia oblonga), Malus species (including Malus domestica), Prunus dulcis and Pyrus species. They mine the leaves of their host plant. They feed mainly on parechymatous tissue below the upper leaf surface, leaving the veins and upper cuticle intact. Full-grown larvae overwinter in fallen leaves.
References
turanica
Moths of Asia
Moths described in 1931 |
Zsira is a village in Győr-Moson-Sopron county, Hungary.
External links
Street map (Hungarian)
Populated places in Győr-Moson-Sopron County |
Gassam is a department or commune of Nayala Province in western Burkina Faso. Its capital is the town of Gassam. According to the 2019 census the department has a total population of 44,132.
Towns and villages
Gassam (6 176 inhabitants) (capital)
Balanso (493 inhabitants)
Djimbara (1 900 inhabitants)
Dièrè (2 342 inhabitants)
Djin (824 inhabitants)
Goni (830 inhabitants)
Korombéré (630 inhabitants)
Kossé (1 900 inhabitants)
Koussiba (341 inhabitants)
Koussidian (881 inhabitants)
Laraba (1 486 inhabitants)
Larè (1 086 inhabitants)
Léry (1 294 inhabitants)
Lesséré (933 inhabitants)
Moara-Grand (1 515 inhabitants)
Moara-Petit (693 inhabitants)
Soni (734 inhabitants)
Soroni (694 inhabitants)
Soro (1 537 inhabitants)
Téri-Rimaïbé (418 inhabitants)
Téri-Samo (342 inhabitants)
Tissi (1 528 inhabitants)
Toubani (651 inhabitants)
Warou (633 inhabitants)
Zaba (2 012 inhabitants)
References
Departments of Burkina Faso
Nayala Province |
In computer science, specifically in algorithms related to pathfinding, a heuristic function is said to be admissible if it never overestimates the cost of reaching the goal, i.e. the cost it estimates to reach the goal is not higher than the lowest possible cost from the current point in the path.
It is related to the concept of consistent heuristics. While all consistent heuristics are admissible, not all admissible heuristics are consistent.
Search algorithms
An admissible heuristic is used to estimate the cost of reaching the goal state in an informed search algorithm. In order for a heuristic
to be admissible to the search problem, the estimated cost must always be lower than or equal to the actual cost of reaching the goal state.
The search algorithm uses the admissible heuristic to find an estimated
optimal path to the goal state from the current node.
For example, in A* search the evaluation function (where
is the current node) is:
where
= the evaluation function.
= the cost from the start node to the current node
= estimated cost from current node to goal.
is calculated using the heuristic
function. With a non-admissible heuristic, the A* algorithm could
overlook the optimal solution to a search problem due to an
overestimation in .
Formulation
is a node
is a heuristic
is cost indicated by to reach a goal from
is the optimal cost to reach a goal from
is admissible if,
Construction
An admissible heuristic can be derived from a relaxed
version of the problem, or by information from pattern databases that store exact solutions to subproblems of the problem, or by using inductive learning methods.
Examples
Two different examples of admissible heuristics apply to the fifteen puzzle problem:
Hamming distance
Manhattan distance
The Hamming distance is the total number of misplaced tiles. It is clear that this heuristic is admissible since the total number of moves to order the tiles correctly is at least the number of misplaced tiles (each tile not in place must be moved at least once). The cost (number of moves) to the goal (an ordered puzzle) is at least the Hamming distance of the puzzle.
The Manhattan distance of a puzzle is defined as:
Consider the puzzle below in which the player wishes to move each tile such that the numbers are ordered. The Manhattan distance is an admissible heuristic in this case because every tile will have to be moved at least the number of spots in between itself and its correct position.
The subscripts show the Manhattan distance for each tile. The total Manhattan distance for the shown puzzle is:
Optimality proof
If an admissible heuristic is used in an algorithm that, per iteration, progresses only the path of lowest evaluation (current cost + heuristic) of several candidate paths, terminates the moment its exploration reaches the goal and, crucially, never closes all optimal paths before terminating (something that's possible with A* search algorithm if special care isn't taken), then this algorithm can only terminate on an optimal path. To see why, consider the following proof by contradiction:
Assume such an algorithm managed to terminate on a path T with a true cost Ttrue greater than the optimal path S with true cost Strue. This means that before terminating, the evaluated cost of T was less than or equal to the evaluated cost of S (or else S would have been picked). Denote these evaluated costs Teval and Seval respectively. The above can be summarized as follows,
Strue < Ttrue
Teval ≤ Seval
If our heuristic is admissible it follows that at this penultimate step Teval = Ttrue because any increase on the true cost by the heuristic on T would be inadmissible and the heuristic cannot be negative. On the other hand, an admissible heuristic would require that Seval ≤ Strue which combined with the above inequalities gives us Teval < Ttrue and more specifically Teval ≠ Ttrue. As Teval and Ttrue cannot be both equal and unequal our assumption must have been false and so it must be impossible to terminate on a more costly than optimal path.
As an example, let us say we have costs as follows:(the cost above/below a node is the heuristic, the cost at an edge is the actual cost)
0 10 0 100 0
START ---- O ----- GOAL
| |
0| |100
| |
O ------- O ------ O
100 1 100 1 100
So clearly we would start off visiting the top middle node, since the expected total cost, i.e. , is . Then the goal would be a candidate, with equal to . Then we would clearly pick the bottom nodes one after the other, followed by the updated goal, since they all have lower than the of the current goal, i.e. their is . So even though the goal was a candidate, we could not pick it because there were still better paths out there. This way, an admissible heuristic can ensure optimality.
However, note that although an admissible heuristic can guarantee final optimality, it is not necessarily efficient.
References
See also
Consistent heuristic
Heuristic function
Search algorithm
Heuristics
Artificial intelligence |
Rainbow Lakes is a census-designated place (CDP) located in Parsippany-Troy Hills, Morris County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey. It is in the western part of the township and consists of housing built around Rainbow Lake (or "Rainbow Lakes" on federal maps), plus a zone of commercial buildings to the east of the lakes. It is bordered to the east by Parsippany proper, to the north by the borough of Mountain Lakes, and to the west by Denville Township. The northern edge of the CDP is formed by U.S. Route 46 and the NJ Transit Montclair-Boonton Line, and Interstate 80 forms the southern edge. It is northwest of Newark and west of the George Washington Bridge over the Hudson River.
Rainbow Lakes was first listed as a CDP prior to the 2020 census.
Demographics
As of the 2020 United States census, the population of the area was 1,255.
References
Census-designated places in Morris County, New Jersey
Census-designated places in New Jersey
Parsippany-Troy Hills, New Jersey |
Kleandro Lleshi (born 9 October 1999) is an Albanian footballer who plays as a central midfielder for Spanish Segunda División RFEF club Mar Menor.
Club career
Born in Lezhë, Lleshi started his career at his home country before moving to Portugal in 2016 and joining C.F. Os Belenenses. In September 2017, he moved to CD Leganés and was initially assigned to the under-20 squad.
Lleshi made his senior debut with Leganés' B-team on 11 February 2018, playing the last 13 minutes in a 1–2 Tercera División away loss against RSD Alcalá. He scored his first goal fourteen days later, netting the opener in a 5–0 away routing of CDF Tres Cantos.
In August 2019, after being a regular starter for Leganés B during the 2018–19 season, Lleshi was loaned to Segunda División newcomers CF Fuenlabrada for one year. He made his debut for the club on 17 December, starting in a 1–0 away win against Peña Sport FC for the season's Copa del Rey.
On 22 January 2020, Lleshi was loaned to Recreativo de Huelva in Segunda División B until the end of the campaign. On 10 August, he signed a one-year deal with FC Cartagena, newly-promoted to the second division, on a free transfer.
Lleshi made his professional debut on 27 March 2021, coming on as a late substitute for Pablo Clavería in a 1–1 home draw against Málaga CF. After another two first team appearances, he left the Efesé in July 2021 as his contract expired.
On 18 January 2022, Lleshi signed with Segunda División RFEF club Mar Menor FC, as a free agent.
References
External links
1999 births
Living people
Sportspeople from Lezhë
Albanian men's footballers
Men's association football midfielders
Segunda División players
Segunda División B players
Segunda Federación players
Tercera División players
CD Leganés B players
CF Fuenlabrada footballers
Recreativo de Huelva players
FC Cartagena footballers
FC Cartagena B players
Racing Cartagena Mar Menor FC players
Albania men's youth international footballers
Albanian expatriate men's footballers
Albanian expatriate sportspeople in Portugal
Albanian expatriate sportspeople in Spain
Expatriate men's footballers in Portugal
Expatriate men's footballers in Spain |
Mullamangalath Parameshwaran Bhattathiripad (23 September 1908 – 10 August 1998), commonly known as M. P. Bhatathirippad or Premji, was a social reformer, cultural leader and actor from Kerala state, India. Premji joined Yogakshema Sabha and worked with V. T. Bhattathiripad, E. M. S. Namboodiripad and his brother M. R. Bhattathiripad in the fight against the casteism and conservatism that existed in the Nambudiri community. Premji was also a noted stage and film actor who won the National Film Award for Best Actor for the film Piravi.
Biography
Premji was born on 23 September 1908 in Vanneri, Malappuram, Kerala. It was a time when Kerala was experiencing a social uprising. The effect of that was visible in Premji's family and life as well. His elder twin brother M. R. Bhattathiripad, popularly known as MRB was a prominent figure in Malayalam professional plays. Premji joined Yogakshema Sabha and worked with V. T. Bhattathiripad, E. M. S. Namboodiripad and MRB in the fight against the casteism and conservatism that existed in the Nambudiri community. Premji got married at the age of 40 to Arya Antharjanam (28 years old) from Karuvat Illam, Kanjany, Trichur, who was a widow since the age of 17. This was when widow-marriages were completely prohibited in Nambudiri community. This was the second widow marriage in the modern Kerala history, after the marriage of his brother MRB with Uma Antharjanam nine years earlier.
Premji started his professional life as a proof editor in Mangalodayam press Thrissur when he was 19. He soon launched his acting career with Adukkalayil Ninnu Arangathakku, a play by eminent dramatist V. T. Bhattathiripad. Later, he acted in various plays: MRB's Marakkudakkullile Mahaanarakam, Moothiringode Bhavathrathan Namboothiripad's Apphante Makal, Cherukad's Nammalonnu and Snehabimbangal and P. R. Warrier's Chavittikkuzhacha Mannu are some of them. He won gold medal from the Government of Kerala for his performance in the play Shah Jahan, produced by Kalakaumudi Nataka Koottayma. He was also awarded a fellowship by the Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi. With his expertise in plays, he ventured into film industry.
He debuted in Minnaminungu and went on to act in about 60 films including Thacholi Othenen, Kunjali Marakkar, Lisa, Yaagam, Uttarayanam and Piravi. He won the National Film Award for Best Actor as well as Kerala State Film Award and also won Filmfare Award for Best Malayalam Actor for his performance as a father in search of his missing son in Piravi (1989), directed by Shaji N. Karun. In addition to the much acclaimed play Ritumathi Premji has 4 collected verses to his credit as well, namely Sapakthni, Nalkalikal, Raktha Sandesam and Premji Padunnu. He died on 10 August 1998, aged 90.
Awards
National Film Awards:
Best Actor - 1989 - Piravi
Kerala State Film Awards:
Best Actor - 1989 - Piravi
Filmfare Awards South:
Filmfare Award for Best Actor - Malayalam - 1989 - Piravi
Filmography
Piravi (1988) as Chakyar
Padippura (1989)
Bhagavan (1986)
Kochu Themmadi (1986)
Anu Bandham (1985) as Valiya Nampoothiri
Mangalam Nerunnu (1984)
Sreekrishna Parundu (1984)
Oru Thira Pinneyum Thira (1982)
Yagam (1982)
Thrishna (1981) as Sankar Menon
Sanchari (1981) as Vaidyar
Sathyam (1980) as Sekharan Nair
Vilkkanundu Swapnangal (1980) as Sridevi's Valyammavan
Sandhyaragam (1979)
Lisa (1978) as Bhavithradan Namputhirippadu
Aanapappachan (1978)
Jagadguru Adisankaran (1977)
Thulavarsham (1976)
Chennay Valarthiya Kutti (1976)
Samasya (1976)
Niramala (1975)
Utharayanam (1975)
Thumbolarcha (1974)
Ponnapurakotta (1973)
Theerthayathra (1972)
Sindooracheppu (1970) as Thirumeni
Othenente Makan (1970) as Thacholi Valiya Kurup
Mindappennu (1970) as Kittunni Nair
Kunjali Marakkar (1966) as Zamorin of Calicut
Pakalkkinavu (1966)
Thacholi Othenan (1964) as Thacholi Valiya Kurup
Moodupadam (1963)
Shymala Chechi (1965)
Ammu (1965)
Thira, Veendum Oru Thira
Minnaminungu (1957)
Neelakuyil (1954)
References
External links
Premji at MSI
1908 births
1998 deaths
Indian social reformers
Indian male stage actors
Male actors from Kerala
Malayalam-language writers
Indian male film actors
Male actors in Malayalam cinema
Best Actor National Film Award winners
Kerala State Film Award winners
20th-century Indian male actors
People from Malappuram district
Writers from Kerala
Recipients of the Kerala Sangeetha Nataka Akademi Fellowship |
Marià Josep Maria Bernat Fortuny i Marsal (; ; June 11, 1838 – November 21, 1874), known more simply as Marià Fortuny or Mariano Fortuny, was the leading Spanish painter of his day, with an international reputation. His brief career encompassed works on a variety of subjects common in the art of the period, including the Romantic fascination with Orientalist themes, historicist genre painting, military painting of Spanish colonial expansion, as well as a prescient loosening of brush-stroke and color.
Biography
He was born in Reus, near Tarragona, Catalonia. His father died when he was an infant, and his mother by the time he was 12. Thus, Marià was raised by his grandfather, a cabinet-maker who taught him to make wax figurines. At the age of 9, at a public competition in his town, a local painter, teacher and patron, Domènec Soberano, encouraged further study. At the age of 14 he moved to Barcelona with his grandfather.
The sculptor Domènec Talarn secured him a pension allowing him to attend the Escola Provincial de Belles Arts (the Escola de la Llotja). There he studied for four years under Claudi Lorenzale and Pau Milà i Fontanals, and in March 1857 he gained a scholarship that entitled him to two years of studies in Rome starting in 1858. There he studied drawing and grand manner styles, together with Josep Armet i Portanell and Ricardo de Madrazo, at the Academia Gigi.
In 1859, he was called by the Government of the Province of Barcelona (Diputació de Barcelona) to depict the campaigns of the Spanish-Moroccan War. He went to Morocco from February to April of that year, making sketches of landscapes and battles, which he showed in Madrid and Barcelona when he returned. These would later serve him as preliminary sketches for his monumental piece, The Battle of Tetuan (La batalla de Tetuan, 1862–64, Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya).
In 1870, the artist and his family moved to Granada. Originally, this was to be a stage in an extended tourist trip that had taken the group to different localities in Andalusia. However, after arriving in Granada, Fortuny felt compelled to settle down there and work. They arrived in the Summer of 1870 and remained until the autumn of 1872 – a stay of some two and half years. According to several of his biographers, Fortuny established an atelier, known as Estudio de los Mártires, in Granada. The exact location of this studio has remained a mystery.
However, recent scholarship has revealed that the location was a house known as Casa de Buena Vista, situated in the neighborhood of the Realejo, at the modern entrance of the Matamoros alley, between the current esplanade of the Alhambra Palace hotel and the Cross of the Martyrs.
Since the days of Velázquez, there had been a tradition in Spain (and throughout Europe) of memorializing battles and victories in paint. On the basis of his experiences, Fortuny was commissioned by the Council of the Province of Barcelona (Diputació de Barcelona) to paint a large canvas diorama of the capture of the camps of Muley-el-Abbas and Muley-el-Hamed by the Spanish army. He began his composition of The battle of Tetuan on a canvas 15 metres long; but, though he worked on it off and on during the next decade, it was never finished.
The greater influence of this travel on Fortuny was his subsequent fascination with the exotic themes of the world of Morocco, painting both individuals and imagined court scenes. He visited Paris in 1868 and shortly afterwards married Cecilia de Madrazo, the daughter of Federico de Madrazo, who would become curator of the Prado Museum in Madrid. Cecelia was a sister of Fortuny's friend, the Orientalist artist, Ricardo de Madrazo, who had previously accompanied Fortuny on travels through Europe.
Fortuny and Cecelia had a son, Mariano Fortuny y Madrazo, who became a well-known fashion and tapestry designer. Another visit to Paris in 1870 was followed by a two years' stay at Granada, but then he returned to Rome, where he died somewhat suddenly on November 21, 1874, from an attack of tertian ague, or malaria, contracted while painting in the open air at Naples and Portici in the summer of 1874.
After Fortuny's death, his brother-in-law, Ricardo de Madrazo, took care of his studio; cataloguing his works and arranging for an auction at the Hôtel Drouot.
Legacy
Fortuny paintings are colorful, with a vivacious iridescent brushstroke that at times recalls the softness of Rococo painting but also anticipates impressionist brushwork.
Fortuny often painted scenes where contemporary life had still not shaken off the epaulets and decorations of ancient traditions such as the Burial of a matador and couples signing marriage contracts (La Vicaria). Each has the dazzle of bric-a-brac ornamentation, but as in his painting of the Judgement of the Model, that painterly decorative air of Rococo and Romanticism was fading into academicism and left to confront the naked reality of the represented object. He inherited Goya's eye for the paradox of ceremony and reality.
Gallery
Paintings
Works on paper
See also
List of Orientalist artists
Orientalism
Palazzo Fortuny in Venice, Italy
List of Marià Fortuny's Paintings (in Catalan)
Bibliography
Entry for Marià Fortuny i Marsal in Gran Encicplopèdia Catalana (in Catalan).
Charles Davillier, (Paris, 1875).
Charles Yriarte, Fortuny (Artistes célèbres series) (Paris, 1889).
References
External links
Sources
1838 births
1874 deaths
People from Reus
Painters from Catalonia
19th-century Spanish painters
19th-century Spanish male artists
Spanish male painters
Deaths from malaria
Orientalist painters |
Sex-positive feminism, also known as pro-sex feminism, sex-radical feminism, or sexually liberal feminism, is a feminist movement centering on the idea that sexual freedom is an essential component of women's freedom. They oppose legal or social efforts to control sexual activities between consenting adults, whether they are initiated by the government, other feminists, opponents of feminism, or any other institution. They embrace sexual minority groups, endorsing the value of coalition-building with marginalized groups. Sex-positive feminism is connected with the sex-positive movement. Sex-positive feminism brings together anti-censorship activists, LGBT activists, feminist scholars, producers of pornography and erotica, among others. Sex-positive feminists generally agree that prostitutes themselves should not be criminalized.
Key ideas
Gayle Rubin summarizes the conflict over sex within feminism. She says that one feminist stream criticizes the sexual constraints and difficulties faced by sexually active women (e.g., access to abortion), while another stream views sexual liberalization as an extension "male privilege".
Sex-positive feminists reject the vilification of male sexuality that many attribute to radical feminism, and instead embrace the entire range of human sexuality. They argue that the patriarchy limits sexual expression and are in favor of giving people of all genders more sexual opportunities, rather than restricting pornography. Sex-positive feminists generally reject sexual essentialism, defined by Rubin as "the idea that sex is a natural force that exists prior to social life and shapes institutions". Rather, they see sexual orientation and gender as social constructs that are heavily influenced by society.
Some radical feminists reject the dichotomy of "sex-positive" and "sex-negative" feminism, suggesting that instead, the real divide is between liberal feminism and radical feminism.
Sex-radical feminists in particular, come to a sex-positive stance from a deep distrust in the patriarchy's ability to secure women's best interest in sexually limiting laws. Other feminists identify women's sexual liberation as the real motive behind the women's movement. Naomi Wolf writes, "Orgasm is the body's natural call to feminist politics." Sharon Presley, the National Coordinator of the Association of Libertarian Feminists, writes that in the area of sexuality, government blatantly discriminates against women.
The social background in which sex-positive feminism operates must also be understood: Christian societies are often influenced by what is understood as 'traditional' sexual morality: according to the Christian doctrine, sexual activity must only take place in marriage, and must be vaginal intercourse; sexual acts outside marriage and 'unnatural sex' (i.e. oral, anal sex, termed as "sodomy") are forbidden; yet forced sexual intercourse within marriage is not seen as immoral by a few social and religious conservatives, owing to the existence of so-called 'conjugal rights' defined in the Bible at 1 Corinthians 7:3-5.
Such organization of sexuality has increasingly come under legal and social attack in recent decades.
In addition, in certain cultures, particularly in Mediterranean countries influenced by Roman Catholicism, traditional ideas of masculinity and female purity. This has led to what many interpret as a double standard between male and female sexuality; men are expected to be sexually assertive as a way of affirming their masculinity, but for a woman to be considered 'good', she must remain pure. Indeed, Cesare Lombroso claimed in his book, The Female Offender, that women could be categorized into three types: the Criminal Woman, the Prostitute, and the Normal Woman. As such, highly sexed women (prostitutes) were deemed as abnormal.
Feminists "ranging from Betty Friedan and Kate Millett to Karen DeCrow, Wendy Kaminer and Jamaica Kincaid" supported the right to consume pornography. Feminists who have advocated a sex-positive position include writer Kathy Acker, academic Camille Paglia, sex educator Megan Andelloux, Susie Bright, Rachel Kramer Bussel, Diana Cage, Avedon Carol, Patrick Califia, Betty Dodson, Nancy Friday, Jane Gallop, Laci Green, porn performer Nina Hartley, Josephine Ho, Amber L. Hollibaugh, Brenda Howard, Laura Kipnis, Wendy McElroy, Inga Muscio, Joan Nestle, Marcia Pally, Carol Queen, Candida Royalle, Gayle Rubin, Annie Sprinkle, Tristan Taormino, Ellen Willis, and Mireille Miller- Young.
Sex positivity
According to sexologist and author Carol Queen in an interview with researcher and professor Lynn Comella, she said, "[sex positivity] is the cultural philosophy that understands sexuality as a potentially positive force in one's life, and it can be [...] contrasted with sex-negativity, which sees sex as problematic, disruptive, dangerous. Sex-positivity allows for and [...] celebrates sexual diversity, differing desires and relationships structures, and individual choices based on consent... [negative sexual experiences caused by lack of information, support, and choices] are the cultural conditions that sex-positivity allows us to point out as curtailers of healthy, enjoyable sexual experience."
She also added, "This sense that many of us were being denied space and credentials to speak for ourselves and speak about issues within our community is what [...] led to the efflorescence of sex-positive feminism. And it is why there is a sex-positive feminism and not just sex-positivity."
Historical roots
Authors such as Gayle Rubin and Wendy McElroy see the roots of sex-positive feminism stemming from the work of sex reformers and workers for sex education and access to contraception, such as Havelock Ellis, Margaret Sanger, Mary Dennett and, later, Alfred Kinsey and Shere Hite. However, the contemporary incarnation of sex-positive feminism appeared more recently, following an increasing feminist focus on pornography as a source of women's oppression in the 1970s.
The rise of second-wave feminism was concurrent with the sexual revolution and rulings that loosened legal restrictions on access to pornography. In the 1970s, radical feminists became increasingly focused on issues around sexuality in a patriarchal society. Some feminist groups began to concern themselves with prescribing what proper feminist sexuality should look like. This was especially characteristic of lesbian separatist groups, but some heterosexual women's groups, such as Redstockings, became engaged with this issue as well. On the other hand, there were also feminists, such as Betty Dodson, who saw women's sexual pleasure and masturbation as central to women's liberation. Pornography was not a major issue during this era; radical feminists were generally opposed to pornography, but the issue was not treated as especially important until the mid-1970s.
There were, however, feminist prostitutes-rights advocates, such as COYOTE, which campaigned for the decriminalization of prostitution.
The late 1970s found American culture becoming increasingly concerned about the aftermath of a decade of greater sexual freedom, including concerns about explicit violent and sexual imagery in the media, the mainstreaming of pornography, increased sexual activity among teenagers, and issues such as the dissemination of child pornography and the purported rise of "snuff films". (Critics maintain that this atmosphere amounted to a moral panic, which reached its peak in the mid-1980s.). These concerns were reflected in the feminist movement, with radical feminist groups claiming that pornography was a central underpinning of patriarchy and a direct cause of violence against women. Robin Morgan summarized this idea in her statement, "Pornography is the theory; rape the practice."
Andrea Dworkin and Robin Morgan began articulating a vehemently anti-porn stance based in radical feminism beginning in 1974, and anti-porn feminist groups, such as Women Against Pornography and similar organizations, became highly active in various US cities during the late 1970s. As anti-porn feminists broadened their criticism and activism to include not only pornography, but prostitution and sadomasochism, other feminists became concerned about the direction the movement was taking and grew more critical of anti-porn feminism.
This included feminist BDSM practitioners (notably Samois), prostitutes-rights advocates, and many liberal and anti-authoritarian feminists for whom free speech, sexual freedom, and advocacy of women's agency were central concerns.
One of the earliest feminist arguments against this anti-pornography trend amongst feminists was Ellen Willis's essay "Feminism, Moralism, and Pornography" first published in October 1979 in the Village Voice. In response to the formation of Women Against Pornography in 1979, Willis wrote an article (the origin of the term, "pro-sex feminism"), expressing worries about anti-pornography feminists' attempts to make feminism into a single-issue movement, arguing that feminists should not issue a blanket condemnation against all pornography and that restrictions on pornography could just as easily be applied to speech that feminists found favorable to themselves.
Rubin calls for a new feminist theory of sex, saying that existing feminist thoughts on sex had frequently considered sexual liberalization as a trend that only increases male privilege. Rubin criticizes anti-pornography feminists who she claims "have condemned virtually every variant of sexual expression as anti-feminist," arguing that their view of sexuality is dangerously close to anti-feminist, conservative sexual morality. Rubin encourages feminists to consider the political aspects of sexuality without promoting sexual repression. She also argues that the blame for women's oppression should be put on targets who deserve it: "the family, religion, education, child-rearing practices, the media, the state, psychiatry, job discrimination, and unequal pay..." rather than on relatively un-influential sexual minorities.
McElroy (1995) argues that for feminists in the 1970s and 1980s, turning to matters of sexual expression was a result of frustration with feminism's apparent failure to achieve success through political channels: in the United States, the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) had failed, and abortion rights came under attack during the Reagan administration.
Scholar Elaine Jeffreys observes that the 'anti-prostitute' position gained increased critical purchase in China during the establishment of the international movement for prostitutes in 1985, demanding recognition of prostitutes' rights as an emancipation and labor issue rather than of criminality, immorality or disease.
By the 2000s, the positive-sex position had driven various international human rights NGOs to actively pressure the Chinese government to abandon its official policy of banning prostitution in post-reform China and recognize voluntary prostitution as legitimate work.
Related major political issues
Pornography
The issue of pornography was perhaps the first issue to unite sex-positive feminists, though current sex-positive views on the subject are wide-ranging and complex. During the 1980s, Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon, as well as activists inspired by their writings, worked in favor of anti-pornography ordinances in a number of U.S. cities, as well as in Canada. The first such ordinance was passed by the city council in Minneapolis in 1983. MacKinnon and Dworkin took the tactic of framing pornography as a civil rights issue, arguing that showing pornography constituted sex discrimination against women. The sex-positive movement response to this argument was that legislation against pornography violates women's right to free speech. Soon after, a coalition of anti-porn feminists and right-wing groups succeeded in passing a similar ordinance in Indianapolis. This ordinance was later declared unconstitutional by a Federal court in American Booksellers v. Hudnut.
Rubin writes that anti-pornography feminists exaggerate the dangers of pornography by showing the most shocking pornographic images (such as those associated with sadomasochism) out of context, in a way that implies that the women depicted are actually being raped, rather than emphasizing that these scenes depict fantasies and use actors who have consented to be shown in such a way. Sex-positive feminists argue that access to pornography is as important to women as to men and that there is nothing inherently degrading to women about pornography. However, anti-pornography feminists disagree, often arguing that the very depiction of such acts leads to the actual acts being encouraged and committed.
Feminist curators such as Jasmin Hagendorfer organize feminist and queer porn film festivals (e.g. PFFV in Vienna).
Prostitution and sex workers
Some sex-positive feminists believe that women and men can have positive experiences as sex workers and that where it is illegal, prostitution should be decriminalized. They argue that prostitution is not necessarily bad for women if prostitutes are treated with respect and if the professions within sex work are destigmatized.
Other sex-positive feminists hold a range of views on prostitution, with widely varying views on prostitution as it relates to class, race, human trafficking, and many other issues. All feminists generally agree that prostitutes themselves should not be criminalized or penalized.
Sex workers are adults who receive money (or other goods) in exchange for consensual sexual services. In the United States, sex work is legal. The sex workers' rights movement started in the 1970s, and one of the founding groups was COYOTE. The goal of the sex workers activist is to fight for workers by having a better work environment/ conditions, reducing negative fed back, and stopping prohibition.
Carol Leigh is an American woman who is an artist, filmmaker, and sex worker rights activist. Carol Leigh was the first woman to use the term "sex worker". She wanted to educate others about the understanding of sex workers as well as the rights they should have. In an interview, she stated how she sees her own sex work and the sex work of others as having the possibility to serve a higher, spiritual function in society.
BDSM
Sadomasochism (BDSM) has been criticized by anti porn feminists for eroticizing power and violence and for reinforcing misogyny (Rubin, 1984). They argue that women who choose to engage in BDSM are making a choice that is ultimately bad for women. Sex-positive feminists argue that consensual BDSM activities are enjoyed by many women and validate these women's sexual inclinations. They argue that feminists should not attack other women's sexual desires as being "anti-feminist" or internalizing oppression and that there is no connection between consensual sexually kinky activities and sex crimes.
While some anti-porn feminists suggest connections between consensual BDSM scenes and rape and sexual assault, sex-positive feminists find this to be insulting to women. It is often mentioned that in BDSM, roles are not fixed to gender, but personal preferences. Furthermore, many argue that playing with power (such as rape scenes) through BDSM is a way of challenging and subverting that power, rather than reifying it.
While the negativities about BDSM are discussed a lot, sex-positive feminists are focusing on safety in the BDSM community. Consent is the most important rule when it comes to BDSM.
Cara Dunkley and Lori Brotto discuss the importance of consent in their journal:Consent represents an ongoing interactive and dynamic process that entails several precautionary measures, including negotiations of play, open communication of desires and boundaries, mutually defining terms, the notion of responsibility and transparency, and ensuring protection from harm through competence and skill.Critics discuss that communication with sexual partners is very important.
Sexual orientation
McElroy argues that many feminists have been afraid of being associated with homosexuality. Betty Friedan, one of the founders of second-wave feminism, warned against lesbianism and called it "the lavender menace" (a view she later renounced). Sex-positive feminists believe that accepting the validity of all sexual orientations is necessary in order to allow women full sexual freedom. Rather than distancing themselves from homosexuality and bisexuality because they fear it will hurt mainstream acceptance of feminism, sex-positive feminists believe that women's liberation cannot be achieved without also promoting acceptance of homosexuality and bisexuality.
Gender identity
Some feminists, such as Germaine Greer, have criticized transgender women (male-to-female) as men attempting to appropriate female identity while retaining male privilege, and transgender men (female-to-male) as women who reject solidarity with their gender. One of the main exponents of this point of view is Janice Raymond. In The Whole Woman, Greer went so far as to explicitly compare transgender women to rapists for forcing themselves into women's spaces.
Many transgender people see gender identity as an innate part of a person. Some feminists also criticize this belief, arguing instead that gender roles are societal constructs, and are not related to any natural factor. Sex-positive feminists support the right of all individuals to determine their own gender and promote gender fluidity as one means for achieving gender equality. Patrick Califia has written extensively about issues surrounding feminism and transgender issues, especially in Sex Changes: Transgender Politics.
Debates
Like feminism itself, sex-positive feminism is difficult to define, and few within the movement (particularly the academic arm of the movement) agree on any one ideology or policy agenda.
An example of how feminists may disagree on whether a particular cultural work exemplifies sex-positivity is Betty Dodson's critique of Eve Ensler's The Vagina Monologues. Dodson argues that the play promotes a negative view of sexuality, emphasizing sexual violence against women rather than the redemptive value of female sexuality. Many other sex-positive feminists have embraced Ensler's work for its encouragement of openness about women's bodies and sexuality.
Statutory rape laws
There is debate among sex-positive feminists about whether statutory rape laws are a form of sexism. As illustrated by the controversy over "The Little Coochie Snorcher that Could" from the Vagina Monologues, some sex-positive feminists do not consider all consensual activity between young adolescents and older people as inherently harmful. There has been debate among feminists about whether statutory rape laws benefit or harm teenage girls and about whether the gender of participants should influence the law's treatment of sexual encounters. Some sex-positive feminists argue that statutory rape laws were made with non-gender neutral intentions and are presently enforced as such, with the assumption that teenage girls are naive, nonsexual, and in need of protection.
Sex-positive feminists with this view believe that "teen girls and boys are equally capable of making informed choices in regard to their sexuality" and that statutory rape laws are actually meant to protect "good girls" from sex. Other feminists are opposed or ambivalent about strengthening statutory rape statutes because these preclude young women from entering consensual sexual relationships, even if competent to consent.
These feminists view statutory rape laws as more controlling than protective – and of course part of the law's historic role was protecting the female's chastity as valuable property. One writer also noted that, at that time, in some states, the previous sexual experience of a teenager could be used as a defense by one accused of statutory rape. She argued that this showed that the laws were intended to protect chastity rather than consent.
Critiques
Works that critique sex-positive feminism includes those of Catharine A. MacKinnon, Germaine Greer, Andrea Dworkin, and the essays by Dorchen Leidholdt, among others. Their main arguments are that certain sexual practices (such as prostitution and pornography) exploit women and have historically benefited men rather than women and that the indiscriminate promotion of all kinds of sexual practices merely contributes to female oppression.
Catharine A. MacKinnon, for example, argues that any concept of sexual liberation must be understood within the framework of male domination in society, in the context of an imbalance of power between men and women, and with due regard to the history of male and female sexuality; she writes: "Men have eroticized the idea that their sexuality has been denied, but their sexuality has been nothing but expressed and expressed and expressed. Sexual liberation, from this perspective, looks like a male rationalization for forcing sex on women." Andrea Dworkin argues thusly: "Lost in the simple-minded prosex chauvinism of Right and Left is the real meaning of affirmation, or any consciousness of the complexity—the emotional tangledness—of a human life... There is no imagination in fetishlike sexual conformity; and no questions are being asked in political discourse on sex about hope and sorrow, intimacy and anguish, communion and loss."
In her 2005 book Female Chauvinist Pigs, Ariel Levy also critiques sex-positive feminism. While not opposed to sex-positive feminism per se, nor wishing specifically to prescribe certain forms of sexual behavior, she sees a popularized form of sex-positivity as constituting a kind of "raunch culture" in which women internalize objectifying male views of themselves and other women. Levy believes it is a mistake to see this as empowering and further holds that women should develop their own forms of sexual expression. The response by sex-positive feminists to Levy's book has been mixed; Susie Bright viewed the book quite favorably, stating that much of what can be seen as "raunch culture" represents a bastardization of the work of earlier sex-positive feminists such as herself.
Others, such as Rachel Kramer Bussel, see Levy as largely ignoring much of the female-empowered sexual expression of the last 20 years, or misinterpreting it as internalization of male fantasy. Kara Jesella argued that sex-positivity may not necessarily be empowering, but it may also not be disempowering.
Dorchen Leidholdt argues that "sex" (the way sexuality is expressed in society) must be understood as a social construct defined by patriarchal social structures, and therefore must be scrutinized; she writes, "If you understand that sex is socially constructed—which we do—and if you see that male supremacy does the constructing—which we see—and if the sex in question is the sex men use to establish their dominance over women, then yes we're against it." According to Ann Ferguson, sex-positive feminists' only restriction on sexual activity should be the requirement of consent, yet she argues that sex-positive feminism has provided inadequate definitions of consent. Criticism of the consent paradigm is that the idea that consent is not only necessary but also sufficient to legitimize a practice is a fallacy, and is not applicable in other areas of life (eg. people cannot consent to give themselves into slavery) because consent does not make an inherently exploitative practice acceptable.
Also, in an effort to reconcile radical and libertarian feminism, Ferguson argues that sexual behavior should be either basic, risky, or forbidden, specifying that forbidden sexual practices "include incest, rape, domestic violence, and sexual relations between very young children and adults," as well as any other activities for which there is evidence of resulting subordination. This evidence is key for Ferguson in identifying a forbidden sexual activity.
Sheila Jeffreys argues that the "sexual revolution" on men's terms has contributed less to women's freedom than to their continued oppression. She argues that existing traditional ideas about heterosexual sexual relations, such as male sexual entitlement within marriage, are aggravated by sex-positive ideology. Criticism of sex-positive feminism includes the fact that sex-positive feminism purports to be progressive, and to promote practices that are new and revolutionary, when in fact many of the practices that it promotes are actually traditional, conservative and even religious, such as a man having sexual relations with several women (polygyny, which is an archaic practice), or other forms of male sexual libertine behaviors that women are expected to approve of, which are in fact practices that were accepted in the past; for example, before 1923, in the UK, a woman could not divorce her husband solely on the ground of adultery; she had to prove additional fault e.g. adultery and cruelty (while a man could divorce her only due to adultery).
bell hooks argues that one problem with sexual liberation movements is that they focus on the right to engage in sexual activity, but often ignore the right to refuse to engage in sexual acts. Another criticism is that what is often presented as feminist ideas are in fact ideas originating in male-dominated sexology. Sex-positive feminism is criticized for focusing on young women, but ignoring middle-aged and elderly women who are unable or unwilling to direct most of their energy into sexuality.
One criticism of unrestrained sexual liberation is that it may have unintended severe consequences, by opening the door to serious forms of sexual abuse, as has been the case with the placing of foster children in the homes of convicted pedophiles in the late 20th century in Germany, and to the proliferation of sexual abuse of children in countries that have libertarian social views on sexuality; in 2019, the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) found that the Netherlands hosted 71% of the child pornography URLs content found by the IWF. In the 1970s, large amount of child pornography was produced in Scandinavia, and "[t]he relaxed and tolerant policies of the Swedish government towards pornography occasionally create embarrassments for the nation."
More to review and/or consider
Authors and activists who have written important works about sex-positive feminism, and/or contributed to educating the public about it, include Kathy Acker, Megan Andelloux, Susie Bright, Rachel Kramer Bussel, Diana Cage, Avedon Carol, Patrick Califia, Betty Dodson, Nancy Friday, Jane Gallop, Nina Hartley, Josephine Ho, Amber L. Hollibaugh, Brenda Howard, Laura Kipnis, Wendy McElroy, Inga Muscio, Joan Nestle, Erika Lust, Carol Queen, Candida Royalle, Gayle Rubin, Annie Sprinkle, Tristan Taormino and Ellen Willis. Several of these have written from the perspective of feminist women working in the sex industry.
Information on formal organizations that endorse sex-positive feminism seems lacking but one major outpost of sex-positive feminism is the former cooperative business Good Vibrations founded by Joani Blank in 1977 in order to sell sex toys and publications about sex in an environment welcoming to women. Blank also founded Down There Press which has published various educational publications inspired by sex-positivity. There are a number of other sex-positive feminist businesses who thrive on a combination of sex toy sales and distribution of educational materials. Good For Her, a woman-owned sex-toy shop in Toronto, Ontario, holds an annual Feminist Porn Awards.
Nonprofit groups supporting sex-positive feminism include the currently defunct Feminist Anti-Censorship Task Force associated with Carole Vance and Ann Snitow, Feminists for Free Expression, founded by Marcia Pally, and Feminists Against Censorship associated with anti-censorship and civil liberties campaigner Avedon Carol.
Feminist pornography is a small but growing segment of the pornography industry. A Feminist Porn Award was established in 2006. The equivalent in Europe is the PorYes award for feminist porn, established in 2009. The magazine On Our Backs was founded in 1986 to promote a more positive attitude towards erotica within the community of lesbian and bisexual women. It flourished until 1994, struggled with financial problems and changing ownership and the final edition was published in 2006.
See also
Sex-positive literature
Girl Heroes
The Ethical Slut
Notes
References
Further reading
Pdf.
External links
Advocacy of sex-positive feminism
Articles
Archived at Susie Bright's Journal (website)).
Archived at WendyMcElroy.com (website).
Organizations
Feminism and pornography
Feminism and prostitution
Feminism and sexuality
Third-wave feminism
Feminist movements and ideologies
Human sexuality
Liberal feminism
Second-wave feminism
Sexual revolution
Women and sexuality |
The Damned: Don't You Wish That We Were Dead is a 2015 American documentary film about the British rock band The Damned. It was directed by Wes Orshoski and premiered at the SXSW Film Festival.
Summary
The film is a mix of archival, interview and contemporary footage of The Damned and other musicians and fans. The film discusses the rivalry between members Captain Sensible and Rat Scabies with their disagreement over unpaid royalties.
Production
The film was directed by Wes Orshoski, who was also the film's producer, writer, cinematographer and editor. It was the filmmaker's follow-up to his previous documentary Lemmy. The Damned provided the music for the film. The film was shot over a three-year period.
Release
The film premiered at the SXSW Film Festival on 19 March 2015. At the screening, The Damned's lead guitarist Captain Sensible shouted commentary in the auditorium whenever a moment or a former Damned member he did not like appeared in the film. Damned frontman Dave Vanian did not attend the premiere.
The film received its premier in the United Kingdom on 3 June at the Prince Charles Cinema. Rat Scabies and Brian James were present for the London premiere of the film, where Scabies stated that he hopes the film will bring closure between himself and Captain Sensible.
The film was released on Blu-ray (which also included the DVD) on 20 May 2016.
Reception
Variety gave the film a positive review, stating that even an audience unfamiliar with the group may find sufficient entertainment value in the documentary, noting "the Damned's unpredictability only endeared them further to a diehard fan base, and it makes this documentary all the more entertaining". The Hollywood Reporter opined that the director "struggles to impose dramatic shape on a sprawling subject, but at least he finds an emotional hook in the decades-old rift between Sensible and Scabies"
References
External links
American documentary films
2015 documentary films
2015 films
Documentary films about musical groups
Documentary films about punk music and musicians
2010s English-language films
2010s American films |
Under the Dunham classification (Dunham, 1962) system of limestones, a packstone is defined as a grain-supported carbonate rock that contains 1% or more mud-grade fraction. This definition has been clarified by Lokier and Al Junaibi (2016) as a carbonate-dominated lithology containing carbonate mud (<63 μm) in a fabric supported by a sand grade (63 μm to 2 mm) grain-size fraction and where less than 10% of the volume consists of grains >2 mm.
The identification of packstone
A study of the adoption and use of carbonate classification systems by Lokier and Al Junaibi (2016) identified three common problems encountered when describing a packstone:
Failure to identify the fabric as supported by the sand grade grain-size fraction - resulting in misidentification as wackestone.
Packstones with very small volumes of carbonate mud may be misclassified as grainstone.
Incorrectly estimating the volume of the component grains >2 mm.
References
Limestone |
Aouf is a town and commune in Mascara Province, Algeria. According to the 1998 census it has a population of 7,326.
References
Communes of Mascara Province |
Grangeville is an unincorporated community in St. Helena Parish, Louisiana, United States. The community is located northwest of Pine Grove and west of Montpelier.
Etymology
In 1916 the New Orleans, Natalbany and Natchez Railway built a line that terminated in the community. The railroad was being used for transporting local timber southeast to a large sawmill in Natalbany. A local barn was converted into a cooperative business that housed a general store, blacksmith, two doctors, a pharmacy and a brickyard. The railroad named the community after the barn that was converted into a store. The name of the community is borrowed from the word grange which means 'barn' and is derived from Old French.
References
Unincorporated communities in St. Helena Parish, Louisiana
Unincorporated communities in Louisiana |
Cremo may refer to:
Cremo, West Virginia, an unincorporated community in Calhoun County
Michael Cremo, an American freelance researcher |
Natalia Evgenyevna Ovchinnikova, married surname: Korelina () is a former competitive figure skater for the Soviet Union. She is the 1983 Winter Universiade champion, 1982 Golden Spin of Zagreb silver medalist, 1982 Nebelhorn Trophy bronze medalist, and 1983 Karl Schäfer Memorial bronze medalist. She was coached by Igor Ksenofontov and Marina Obodyannikova.
Competitive highlights
References
Soviet female single skaters
Universiade medalists in figure skating
Living people
Year of birth missing (living people)
Place of birth missing (living people)
FISU World University Games gold medalists for the Soviet Union
Competitors at the 1983 Winter Universiade |
The Museum Centre of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan is a building located in Baku, Azerbaijan near Boulevard. The classical and conceptual art exhibitions of modern Azerbaijan, anniversary and personal exhibitions of famous artists, debut creativity of new artists are demonstrated here.
The Museum Centre of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan includes:
Azerbaijan State Museum of Musical Culture
Azerbaijan State Theatre Museum
Independence Museum of Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan State Museum of History of Religion
An art gallery
A circular ceremonial hall
An assembly hall
History
The Baku branch of the V.I.Lenin Center Museum was founded on the basis of the Museum of History of Azerbaijan Bolshevik Organizations named after I.V.Stalin on August 4, 1954, based on the decision of the Soviet Communist Party and opened in April 1955 to the public. With four memorials, historical-revolutionary museums (Museum of Nina's Secret House, Meshadi Azizbekov's House-Museum, Sergey Kirov's House Museum, Union of Oil Industry Workers and museum of “Gudok Newspaper”), it was one of the ideological business centers of promoting Leninism in the republic and educating laborers on the example of Lenin's life and activity. More than 9,000 different exhibits, including Lenin's manuscripts, were presented at the exposition. The new building for the museum was built on the site of the former Petrov Park in 1957 by Azerbaijani architect Hasan Majidov for the 90th anniversary of V.I Lenin and commissioned in 1961 as a branch of the Moscow Museum named after V.I Lenin. In 1991, after the collapse of the USSR, the building was transferred to the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Azerbaijan and renamed to the Museum Center. Director of the Museum Center is Liana Vezirova.
Structure
The building of the Museum Center consists of four floors. On the ground floor there is a foyer and a museum kiosk. The assembly hall and the State Museum of Musical Culture of Azerbaijan are on the second floor. On the third, there are the Museum of Independence of Azerbaijan and the Azerbaijan State Theater Museum named after Jafar Jabbarly. The Directorate, the Round Hall, the Art Gallery, the Information Center, and the Russian Museum Information Survey Center are located on the fourth floor.
Art Gallery
The Art Gallery consists of five halls, the total area of which is 400 m2. Since its inception, the gallery has been used as an exhibition space. In 1961, the gallery hosted the first exhibition, which was dedicated to Yuri Gagarin, the first man to go into space. In the late 1980s, the Komsomol Museum of the Komsomol Central Committee was opened in the gallery. In 1991, the gallery reverted to its original appearance.
Since 2006, the gallery has held such exhibitions such as “The Wings of Time, The Seasons”, “Autumn Colors”, “Spring. Woman. Love”, “Impression of Summer”, “Harmony of Winter”, and “Rainbow of Love”. The Gallery also hosted the exhibition of five destinations by German photographer Klaus Wikrat, the solo exhibition by Bulgarian artist Emil Stoychev, the photo illumination “Illumination” by the representative of the school of contemporary American photography Tuba Oztekin Coymen.
Round Hall
The area of the Round Hall is 230 m2 and located under the glass cupola of the building. Presentations, official receptions, ceremonial opening, collegiums of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, signing of agreements on cultural cooperation, and fashion shows of Azerbaijani designers are usually held in the round hall.
Cooperation
The Museum Center of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the Republic of Azerbaijan closely cooperates with the museums of Russia, Georgia, USA, France, and Germany.
Various kinds of events, conferences of international organizations of UNESCO, UN, TURKSOU, seminars, memorial evenings to famous people, press conferences, etc. are held in the museum center. The Department of Cultural Development and International Relations was opened in the Museum Center in 2005 and the purpose of creating this department was the development of new cultural programs.
A delegation of Norwegian Museum of Archaeological Museum in Stavanger visited Azerbaijan on September 23, 2007. The sides signed the agreement on "Cooperation between the museums of Azerbaijan and Norway". The project was based on the "Caravan - Fireside Land of Azerbaijan" exhibition by Azerbaijani and Norwegian sides and was based on mutual interest in further development and strengthening of ties and cooperation between museums of Azerbaijan and Norway and facilitating future cultural relations and cooperation between the two countries.
See also
List of museums in Azerbaijan
References
Museums in Baku
1991 establishments in Azerbaijan
Museums in Azerbaijan |
Loimia is a genus of annelids belonging to the family Terebellidae.
The genus has cosmopolitan distribution.
Species:
Loimia annulifilis
Loimia arborea
Loimia armata
Loimia bandera
Loimia batilla
Loimia bermudensis
Loimia borealis
Loimia brasiliensis
Loimia contorta
Loimia crassifilis
Loimia decora
Loimia grubei
Loimia ingens
Loimia juani
Loimia keablei
Loimia macrobranchia
Loimia medusa
Loimia megaoculata
Loimia minuta
Loimia montagui
Loimia nigrifilis
Loimia ochracea
Loimia pseudotriloba
Loimia ramzega
Loimia salazari
Loimia savignyi
Loimia triloba
Loimia tuberculata
Loimia turgida
Loimia variegata
Loimia verrucosa
Loimia viridis
References
Annelids |
On 19 March 2016, a suicide bombing took place in Istanbul's Beyoğlu district in front of the district governor's office. The attack occurred at 10:55 (EET) at the intersection of Balo Street with İstiklal Avenue, a central shopping street. The attack caused at least five deaths, including that of the perpetrator. Thirty-six people were injured, including seven whose injuries were severe. Among those injured were twelve foreign tourists. Among those killed, two were of dual Israel-US nationality. On 22 March, the Turkish interior minister said that the bomber had links with ISIL.
Background
The bombing was the fourth suicide bombing in Turkey in 2016, and occurred six days after a bombing in Ankara that left 37 people dead. The United States embassy in Ankara had issued a terrorism warning to its citizens the day before the bombing for Istanbul, Ankara, İzmir and Adana. The German embassy had also issued a security warning to its citizens three days before the bombing. Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoğlu had called the warnings "normal". Germany had also closed its consulate on the avenue on Thursday and Friday as a security measure.
According to BBC, residents of Istanbul had already been vigilant before the attack due to the recent explosion in Ankara and were wary of going out. Following the bombing, according to Cumhuriyet, the Turkish government received heavy criticism on social media for defects in its security.
Attack
The bombing took place on İstiklal Avenue, a shopping area popular with tourists and considered the busiest avenue in Turkey. However, the bombing took place at a time when the avenue was relatively quiet. The site of detonation was a few hundred metres away from a place where police buses are usually parked. According to an eyewitness, the bomber detonated the bomb whilst passing by a group of tourists. Hundreds of people reportedly ran away from the site of attack in panic after the explosion. Nails and small pieces of metal were reportedly scattered in the area due to the attack. Following the bombing, the avenue was closed off to the public. According to a CNN Türk reporter on the scene, the suicide attacker was on his way to the actual target when the bomb went off in front of a restaurant. Another account from a Turkish official (cited by Reuters) states the bomber was "deterred" from his or her actual target by the police and set off the bomb "out of fear". Initial findings pointed to Kurdish perpetrators.
Victims
Two of the killed victims were American-Israeli citizens, one was Israeli and one was Iranian. One of the victims that died in the explosion was a child. Two of the tourists injured were also children.
Israeli authorities identified the three Israeli victims as Yonatan Suher (40 years old) from Tel Aviv, Simcha Dimri (60) from Dimona, and Avraham Goldman (69) from Ramat Hasharon.
The Iranian fatalities were identified as Ali Razmkhah (dead) and Zhila Shariat, Azam Razmkhah and a 1-year-old, Diana Razmkhah, were injured.
The Başaran family from Adana was among those injured in the blast. The family of four had come to Istanbul as tourists and were shopping and sightseeing in the Istiklal Avenue when the blast occurred. 2.5-year-old Asya Başaran was hit by a metal fragment in the head, whilst her mother, Çilem Başaran, was hit in the shoulder and the groin. They were both life-threateningly injured.
Perpetrator
While the authorities were quick to blame the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) given the Ankara bombing in February, only upon further investigation in the afternoon, the Turkish authorities changed their initial assessment, now instead holding the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) accountable. According to Milliyet, Turkish authorities never ruled out ISIL as suspects early on. According to the newspaper, the fact that the attack occurred near a group of tourists indeed suggested an ISIL involvement. PKK umbrella organization KCK said it opposed targeting civilians and condemned attacks on them.
The next day, Turkish authorities announced that Mehmet Öztürk was reliably identified by DNA tests to be the suicide bomber of the Istanbul attack. Born 1992 in Gaziantep Province and thought to be affiliated with ISIL, he was one of two Turkish suspects the authorities were investigating. The day before, Sabah had named Özturk and 33-year-old ISIL militant Savaş Yıldız from Adana, who is also thought to be involved in the October 2015 Ankara bombings killing more than 100 civilians. In the night, authorities arrested Yıldız' parents, but they were released later. Öztürk had reportedly left his house in Gaziantep in 2013, and he was linked to ISIL by authorities after he was reported missing. He had reportedly visited his family one month before the attack. On 18 March, he bought a bus ticket to Istanbul from Adıyaman and arrived in Istanbul on the day of the attack in a bus he took from Adıyaman.
See also
January 2016 Istanbul bombing
February 2016 Ankara bombing
March 2016 Ankara bombing
List of Islamist terrorist attacks
List of terrorist incidents, January–June 2016
References
March
2016 murders in Turkey
Suicide bombings in 2016
ISIL terrorist incidents in Turkey
Islamic terrorist incidents in 2016
March 2016 crimes in Europe
March 2016 events in Turkey
Mass murder in 2016
Mass murder in Turkey
2016 03
Terrorist incidents in Istanbul
Terrorist incidents in Turkey in 2016
Beyoğlu
Building bombings in Turkey
Attacks in Turkey in 2016 |
The Sign of the Coyote (Italian: Il segno del coyote) is a 1963 Italian-Spanish western adventure film directed by Mario Caiano and starring Fernando Casanova, María Luz Galicia and Jesús Tordesillas.
The film's sets were designed by the art director Piero Filippone.
Synopsis
Following the Conquest of California, a local adventurer battles against the new American authorities and their unjust actions against the people.
Cast
References
Bibliography
Eugenio Ercolani. Darkening the Italian Screen: Interviews with Genre and Exploitation Directors Who Debuted in the 1950s and 1960s. McFarland, 2019.
External links
1963 films
Spanish historical adventure films
Italian historical adventure films
Italian Western (genre) films
Spanish Western (genre) films
1963 Western (genre) films
1960s historical adventure films
1960s Italian-language films
Films directed by Mario Caiano
Films set in the 19th century
Films set in California
Spaghetti Western films
1960s Italian films
Mexican–American War films |
Rav Assi (), or Assi (I), was a rabbi of Babylonia, of the first generation of the amoraim.
Identification
Rav Assi should not be confused with the Amora sage of the land of Israel, Rabbi Assi, who was of the third generation of the Amora era, and is recorded many times both in the Babylon and the Jerusalem Talmud.
In the Jerusalem Talmud Rav Assi is recorded merely as Issi or Assa, without the title "Rav" or "Rabbi", much like other amoraim of the first generation.
Biography
He was a Kohen. He originated from Hutzal, located near Nehardea in Babylonia. He was a "Fellow Student" of Rav. He was a colleague of Rav, Samuel of Nehardea and Rav Kahana I. The Talmud records him disagreeing with Rav many times. Rav and Samuel would honor Rav Assi by not entering into a Brit milah event before Rav Assi did.
He was a teacher of R. Judah ben Ezekiel.
He died shortly after Rav died.
Quotes
The son of David (i.e. the Messiah) shall not come until all the souls have been depleted from the body. (i.e. until all persons who were meant to be born are born)
References
Talmud rabbis of Babylonia |
Lalandia is the name of three Danish holiday resorts owned by Parken Sport & Entertainment. The original Lalandia Rødby is located in Rødbyhavn, with additional activity centres in Billund (2009) and Søndervig (2022).
Lalandia Rødby
Lalandia Rødby mainly consists of a giant indoor water park, with four body slides and a wild river. The Aquadome is the major focal point of Lalandia where children and adults can participate in many water activities in 7,400 m² of heated pools. There are three large indoor pools for swimming and water play. One of the pools, the Wave Pool, produces waves once an hour for the enjoyment of bathers. Other activities include: soccer, indoor skating, miniature golf, badminton, tennis and other sport activities. In July 2013, the Aquadome Lalandia Rødby was listed as Denmark's tenth most popular attraction with 512,000 visitors in 2012. Lalandia Billund came in sixth with 620,000 visitors.
History
Lalandia Rødby was established in 1988 in Rødby. Since the establishment it has been expanded several times with more vacation houses. Lalandia is named after the island of Lolland in Denmark on which it is situated.
Lalandia Billund
Lalandia Billund opened on 24 April 2009. The Lalandia Aquadome in Billund is Scandinavia's largest waterpark measuring 10,000 m². The water slides include "Tornado" that uses 4-person dinghys, head-first racing "Octopus Racers" and 102-metre "Twister".
Lalandia Søndervig
Lalandia Søndervig opened in 2022 with an Aquadome and other attractions.
References
External links
Official homepage
Tourist attractions in the Region of Southern Denmark
Billund Municipality |
Cole County Courthouse and Jail-Sheriff's House is a historic courthouse, jail and sheriff's residence, located in Jefferson City, Cole County, Missouri. It was built in 1896-1897 and is a three-story, Romanesque Revival style, stone building. It measures 107 feet by 69 feet and features corner pavilions and a central clock tower.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. It is located in the Missouri State Capitol Historic District.
References
County courthouses in Missouri
Individually listed contributing properties to historic districts on the National Register in Missouri
Courthouses on the National Register of Historic Places in Missouri
Romanesque Revival architecture in Missouri
Government buildings completed in 1897
Buildings and structures in Jefferson City, Missouri
National Register of Historic Places in Cole County, Missouri |
is a 1997 OVA directed by Koji Morimoto and released by Japanese animation studio, Studio 4°C. The film is about the daily life of a group of six very different strangers who, for scientific purposes, are brainwashed into believing that they are a family. The family is filmed and to recoup scientific expenses the distribution rights for the footage are sold to a television station for broadcast as a domestic soap opera called Eternal Family. The show becomes highly popular in the outside world so when a plumbing disaster results in the family accidentally escaping, the television station and the residents of Champon City spare no expense to retrieve them.
The story was written jointly by Morimoto and Dai Sato. Eternal Family represents Sato's debut as an anime screenwriter, and Morimoto's first foray into the field of broadcast media. In 2004 the OVA was collected for release on one DVD.
Plot
The storyline follows an actor named Ben and a group of six unrelated men and women who have been implanted with false memories that they are his family. They live together in a capsule with a pet dog and chicken and apart from Ben, none of them know anything about the outside world. The outside world, however, is intimately acquainted with their lives, as the artificial drama is broadcast live as a real-life soap opera in the simulated community of Champon City.
After the show has become popular, a plumbing disaster occurs that shatters the capsule and sends the family out into the real world, which they explore as the world around them searches for them in order to return them to the show. With the use of high-tech equipment and with a reward of ¥2 million for the return of each member, the family is soon rounded up and returned to a new capsule where they are again brainwashed.
Cast
Ben Hanada (Masashi Hirose) - The patriarch of the family. He is the only member of the family who has not been brainwashed and who knows that the family is being broadcast on television. He carries a blow-up doll that serves to hold a hidden camera for the TV station.
Akiko (Yūko Mizutani) - The eldest daughter. Highly given to dramatics, Akiko is a pyromaniac in search of her "darling" (presumably her ex-husband).
Tamasaburo - The family dog. Endowed with copious amounts of hair, Tamasaburo's explosive bark is much worse than his bite.
Michael (Wasabi Mizuta) - The baby of the family. Michael is given to animal cruelty and enjoys being cold. He plays with scissors and often cuts people's pants off.
Sasuke Tamasaburou (Kappei Yamaguchi) - The eldest son. Extremely violent, Sasuke owns a machine gun that he often fires indiscriminately. He enjoys spray painting graffiti and huffing paint fumes.
A-ko (Ako Mayama under the pseudonym Lin Suwon) - The mother of the family and Ben's wife. A-ko is frequently constipated. She loves the stars although she never has an opportunity to see them.
Sae (Tie Kumashiro) - The youngest daughter. Sae is very introverted and withdrawn. She speaks through the use of a hand puppet with whom she often argues.
Chicken - An offering of live food that arrives from the food dispenser for the family to eat. The family instead adopts it as a pet. The chicken often wears clothing because Michael had cut and plucked off most of its feathers.
Xavier (Ken'ichi Ogata) - The head of the television station. Dressed as St. Francisco de Xavier (just as all other members of the TV station), Xavier was the one who hired Ben. It is Xavier's job to head the round-up effort when the eternal family escapes.
Staff
Director, character design, setting/world view: Koji Morimoto
Series content: Shinichi Matsumi
Writer: Koji Morimoto, Sato Hiroshi
Animation director: Takamitsu Kondou
Art director: Hiroshi Katou
Director: Kusumi Naoko
Producer: Eiko Tanaka
Animation Production: Studio 4°C
References
External links
The Official Eternal Family Website
1997 anime OVAs
Anime with original screenplays
Comedy anime and manga
Gainax
Seinen manga
Studio 4°C
Films directed by Kōji Morimoto |
Zakładowy Klub Sportowy Stal Stalowa Wola, shortly ZKS Stal Stalowa Wola or simply Stal Stalowa Wola, is a Polish multi-sports club based in Stalowa Wola, Poland. It operates a men's soccer (training youths), men's basketball and women's basketball sections.
History
In 1938, , who was the director of Huta Stalowa Wola, established the Klub Sportowy Stalowa Wola (Sports Club Stalowa Wola). At that time, the club had a pitch without running tracks and stands. The players were amateurs. During this period, training sessions took place after finishing work, and the matches were played on Sunday. The first match took place on May 4, 1939, in the Saint Florian's Day who is the patron saint of steelworkers.
Olympian Lucjan Trela was part of the boxing section of the club.
Sections
Current
Stal Stalowa Wola (basketball)
Stal Stalowa Wola (youth football)
Historical
Stal Stalowa Wola (football) (disbanded, playing as a separate entity)
Stal Stalowa Wola (ice hockey)
References
External links
ZKS Stal Stalowa Wola website
Multi-sport clubs in Poland
Sports clubs and teams in Poland
Sports clubs and teams established in 1938 |
Gostkowo is a settlement in the administrative district of Gmina Polanów, within Koszalin County, West Pomeranian Voivodeship, in north-western Poland.
References
Gostkowo |
The Bombala River, a perennial river of the Snowy River catchment, is located in the Monaro region of New South Wales, Australia.
Course and features
The Bombala River rises within the Kybeyan Range, part of the Great Dividing Range, on the southwestern slopes of Brown Mountain. The river flows generally southwest, joined by eight tributaries including the Undowah River and the Coolumbooka River, before reaching its confluence with the Delegate River approximately west of Bombala. The river descends over its course.
In its upper reaches, the Bombala River is crossed by the Snowy Mountains Highway near Brown Mountain; while the Monaro Highway crosses the meandering river at several locations north of Bombala.
The name of the river is derived from the Aboriginal word meaning "meeting of the water", presumably referring to the confluence of the Bombala River with the Coolumbooka River, at Bombala; and the confluence with the Undowah River, a few kilometers upstream.
See also
Rivers of New South Wales
List of rivers of New South Wales (A–K)
List of rivers of Australia
References
Rivers of New South Wales |
Varstu Parish () was a rural municipality of Estonia, in Võru County. It had a population of 1,272 (as of 1 January 2009) and an area of 170.63 km².
In 2017, it merged with Rõuge Parish, Haanja Parish, Mõniste Parish, and Misso Parish to create a new entity. It retained the Rõuge Parish name.
Settlements
Small borough
Varstu
Villages
Hintsiko - Kangsti - Kõrgepalu - Krabi - Laurimäe - Liguri - Lüütsepa - Matsi - Metstaga - Mutemetsa - Paganamaa - Pähni - Punsa - Raudsepa - Soolätte - Tagakolga - Vana-Roosa - Viru
References
External links
Former municipalities of Estonia |
Adobe Acrobat Sign (formerly EchoSign, eSign & Adobe Sign) is a cloud-based e-signature service that allows the user to send, sign, track, and manage signature processes using a browser or mobile device. It is part of the Adobe Document Cloud suite of services.
Adobe Sign also supports Sandbox environment for Enterprise tier customers to test templates, customer workflows, and more. These objects can be moved from production to the sandbox for updates in a safe environment, then moved back to production once the updates are verified and ready for deployment.
History
On July 18, 2011, Adobe Systems announced its acquisition of the web-based electronic signatures company EchoSign which would become the basis for the Adobe Sign product. By December of that year, Adobe Systems released a mobile application of the product for iOS. In 2016 Adobe Sign was introduced as a way to request, receive, and submit e-signatures. The product offers integrations with Dropbox, Salesforce, Workday, Box and Microsoft OneDrive.
In October 2020, Adobe signed a deal with online notarization provider Notarize to integrate the company's remote online notarization capability into Adobe Sign.
In September 2021, a 30-day Enterprise trial on Adobe.com with full enterprise capabilities and guided in-product feature discovery (including video tutorials) was launched.
Products
Adobe Sign is sold in subscriptions at the individual, small business, or enterprise level. Some of the services available are:
Sign forms with an electronic signature or digital signature
Request e-signatures
Create branded forms
Track responses, get email notifications, and send reminders for e-signatures
Create workflows to gather signatures from multiple users
Adobe Sign is continuously maintained with new releases that feature refreshes of legal forms, security updates, and other product enhancements.
See also
DocuSign
Electronic signature
Handwriting recognition
Title 21 CFR Part 11
Uniform Electronic Transactions Act
References
Sign |
Anworth Mortgage Asset Corporation was a mortgage real estate investment trust. In 2021, it was acquired by Ready Capital Corporation.
History
The company was formed in October 1997. On March 17, 1998, the company commenced operations and became a public company via an initial public offering.
In August 2007, the company's subsidiary, Belvedere Trust Mortgage Corporation, received a notice of default.
In March 2021, the company was acquired by Ready Capital Corporation.
References
1997 establishments in California
1998 initial public offerings
2021 mergers and acquisitions
Companies formerly listed on the New York Stock Exchange
Real estate companies established in 1997 |
Hjularöd Castle () is a manor house at Eslöv Municipality in Scania, Sweden.
History
The estate was first mentioned in 1391. The main house was built in 1894–1897 for chamberlain Hans Gustaf Toll. French medieval castles, the château de Pierrefonds in particular, were inspiration for the manor when architects Isak Gustaf Clason (1856 –1930) and Lars Israel Wahlman (1870–1952) designed it.
The manor has been owned by members of the Bergengren family since 1926 and is not open to the public.
Outside scenes from the 1996 Swedish SVT Christmas Calendar production Mysteriet på Greveholm were filmed in the courtyard of the manor.
See also
List of castles in Sweden
References
External links
Official webpage
Castles in Skåne County
Water castles |
Sredniye Chudi () is a rural locality (a village) in Nikolo-Ramenskoye Rural Settlement, Cherepovetsky District, Vologda Oblast, Russia. The population was 21 as of 2002.
Geography
Sredniye Chudi is located 87 km southwest of Cherepovets (the district's administrative centre) by road. Nikolo-Ramenye is the nearest rural locality.
References
Rural localities in Cherepovetsky District |
West crater is a small crater in Mare Tranquillitatis on the Moon, east of the Apollo 11 landing site, which is known as Tranquility Base. The name of the crater was formally adopted by the IAU in 1973.
The Apollo 11 astronauts Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin landed the Lunar Module (LM) Eagle approximately 550 meters west of West crater on July 20, 1969. During the descent, West crater was a major landmark. The lunar lander flew over the crater at an altitude of about 100 meters. The boulder field that Armstrong saw a need to avoid during the descent was the ejecta of West crater. Just beyond this ejecta was Little West crater which also had to be avoided.
At the time of Apollo 11, the words “east” and “west” were used to describe directions on the Moon from the perspective of an observer on Earth. The crater was therefore named “West Crater” even though it appears to the east of the landing site on modern lunar maps.
References
Impact craters on the Moon
Apollo 11 |
Juan Alfaro may refer to:
Juan Ignacio Alfaro (born 2000), Costa Rican footballer
Juan Pablo Alfaro (born 1979), Mexican footballer |
Bear River is the largest Pacific coastal drainage basin between the Mattole River and the Eel River. Bear River drains the ranch pastures and forests of California Coast Ranges south of the Bear River Ridge extending easterly from False Cape along the False Cape shear zone of the Russ Fault. The river channel through undivided Cretaceous marine formations exposes younger Neogene, namely middle or lower Pliocene, marine sedimentary and metasedimentary rocks near the mouth, but lacks the well defined offshore submarine canyons of the Eel River to the north and the Mattole River to the south. Bear River reaches the Pacific after flowing westerly approximately from elevations above along the ridge above the Bull Creek drainage of Humboldt Redwoods State Park. Bear River provides the recreational and industrial water supply for the community of Capetown, California, and wildlife habitat including cold freshwater habitat for fish migration and spawning.
Bear River was named from the numerous bears seen there by early settlers. Alternatively, it was named after Lewis Keysor Wood of the Gregg party was mauled by a wounded bear near the river in 1850.
References
See also
List of rivers in California
Rivers of Humboldt County, California
Rivers of Northern California |
Epiplatys sexfasciatus or six-barred panchax is a species of fish in the family Aplocheilidae that can be found in West and Central Africa. The fish is a timid surface dwelling predator. The six-barred panchax is up to long and closely resembles Epiplatys longiventralis.
This is the type species of the genus Epiplatys and was described by Theodore N. Gill in 1862 with the type locality given as Gabon.
Sub-species
There are three recognized sub-species:
Epiplatys sexfasciatus rathkei Radda, 1970
Epiplatys sexfasciatus sexfasciatus T. N. Gill, 1862
Epiplatys sexfasciatus togolensis Loiselle, 1971
References
sexfasciatus
Cyprinodontiformes
Taxa named by Theodore Gill
Fish described in 1862
Freshwater fish of Africa |
Parish Gallery was a Washington, DC art gallery located in the Georgetown neighborhood of Washington. It was active from 1991 to 2013.
History
The Parish Gallery was founded by Norman Parish in 1991. Parish had moved to Washington, DC from Chicago in 1988, and opened the Parish Gallery in 1991. The gallery was described by The Washington Post as an art gallery "that spotlighted African American artists at a time when few other galleries concentrated on showing their work." The gallery closed in 2013 upon Parish's death.
Artists represented
In the 22 years that the gallery operated, it generally focused on African-American artists and artists of color, but overall exhibited the work of more than 170 artists from the United States, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Ghana, South Africa, Morocco, Haiti, Greece, Turkey, Brazil, Spain, England, Russia, and France, including notable artists such as Sam Gilliam, Richard Mayhew, Willard Wigan, Lou Stovall, Percy Martin, Evangeline Montgomery, Victor Ekpuk, Lois Mailou Jones, Romare Bearden, Herbert Gentry, Bruce McNeil, and Wadsworth Jarrell.
Notable exhibitions
In a 1992 review, The Washington Post art critic noted that "It's all too seldom one gets the chance in Washington to see the work of Jamaican or other Caribbean artists in the intimate setting of a private gallery. It's therefore a treat to get acquainted with the works of Cecil Cooper, Kofi Kayiga and Bryan McFarlane at the Parish Gallery this month." In 1995, a different Washington Post art critic, in reviewing a show by New York artist Lorenzo Pace, wrote that "This is a remarkably effective exhibition, particularly given the small space and a medium that often appeals to the head rather than the heart." The same art critic also wrote in a different 1995 review that "Minimalism's antithesis, abstract expressionism, can be seen in recent paintings by Kathryn Henneberry being exhibited at Parish Gallery. They are wonderfully exuberant works, big, vivid fields of color that convey a sense of spontaneity and freedom. If minimalism comes mainly from the mind, Henneberry's works come from the heart and soul."
The Washington Post's 1996 review of Wadsworth Jarrell observed that "Jarrell's works still pulse with the repetitious rhythms, vibrant colors and geometric symbols that Africobra drew from African art."
A 2012 article about artist Maria-Lana Queen quotes a collector as stating that "When I looked at her work for the first time I was blown away by the color from this abstract artist." A review of British artist Willard Wigan that same year stated that "he works of groundbreaking British artist Willard Wigan inspire awe because they are so tiny."
References
Art museums and galleries in Washington, D.C.
Art galleries established in 1991
1991 establishments in Washington, D.C.
Contemporary art galleries in the United States
African-American art dealers |
The White Barn Theatre was a theater founded in 1947 by actress and producer Lucille Lortel on her property in Norwalk, Connecticut. The theater premiered numerous plays by established playwrights that often continued to successful Broadway and Off-Broadway runs.
Lortel founded the theater on her estate at the corner of Cranbury Road and Newtown Avenue. The property is in both Norwalk and Westport, Connecticut, with about in Norwalk and in Westport. The location was sometimes referred to as Westport, which has more theater than Norwalk. Lortel later donated much of her memorabilia to the Westport Public Library.
The theater was created from an old horse barn on the estate, and seated 148. Lortel's aim was to present unusual and experimental plays, promote new playwrights, composers, actors, directors and designers, and to help established artists develop new directions outside of commercial theater.
Plays
Plays produced at the White Barn include:
George Wolf and Lawrence Bearson's Ivory Tower, featuring Eva Marie Saint (1947)
Seán O'Casey's Red Roses for Me (1948)
Hugo Weisgall's The Stronger (1952)
Sean O'Casey's adapted by Arnold Perl I Knock at the Door (play) (1956)
Eugène Ionesco's The Chairs (1957)
Archibald MacLeish's This Music Crept by Me Upon the Waters (1959)
Edward Albee's Fam and Yam (1960)
Samuel Beckett's Embers (1960)
Murray Schisgal's The Typists (1961)
Adrienne Kennedy's The Owl Answers (1965)
Norman Rosten's Come Slowly Eden (1966)
Paul Zindel's The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (1966)
Terrence McNally's Next (1967)
Nathan Teitel's The Initiation, featuring Armand Assante and Lori March (1969)
Ahmed Yacoubi's The Night Before Thinking (1974, produced by La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club)
Paul Hunter's How Do You Live with Love (1975)
Barbara Wersba's The Dream Watcher, featuring Eva Le Gallienne (1975)
June Havoc's Nuts for the Underman (1977)
David Allen's Cheapside, featuring Cherry Jones (Lortel later co-produced this play at London's Half Moon Theatre)
Lynn Rogoff's Love, Ben Love, Emma starring Penny Allen (1984)
Douglas Scott's Mountain (1988)
Jerome Kilty's Margaret Sanger: Unfinished Business, starring Eileen Heckart (1989)
Transfers to Off-Broadway:
Fatima Dike's Glasshouse
Casey Kurtti's Catholic School Girls
Diane Kagan's Marvelous Grey
Hugh Whitemore's The Best of Friends
Transfers to Broadway:
Cy Coleman and A.E. Hotchner's Welcome to the Club (premiered at White Barn as Let 'Em Rot)
Lanford Wilson's Redwood Curtain (later on television as a Hallmark Hall of Fame 1995 production)
Langston Hughes' Shakespeare in Harlem
Dos Pesso's USA
Katherine Anne Porter's Pale Horse, Pale Rider
Tennessee Williams' The Purification
Writing for The New York Times about an event at the White Barn, Alvin Klein wrote that the August 25, 1996 gala, exhibition opening, stage performances, and reception was "the night of the year... memories are made of this!"
At another gala a year later (August 31, 1997), in celebration of the theater's fifty years and Lortel's career as a producer, Klein wrote in the Times, "[O]ver the years, Ms. Lortel — now in her 90s — has often been quoted as saying she won't take on another White Barn season. After Sunday's celebration she could be overheard inviting two well-known performers to 'put something together and come up to The Barn next summer.'"
The Dublin Players of Ireland performed at the theater for several seasons with Milo O'Shea.
On September 26, 1992, the White Barn Theater Museum was created by renovating a small area of the theater formerly used for storage.
After Lortel's death
Lortel bequeathed the property to her foundation, which later proposed building a housing development and a school. This proposal was opposed by the Save Cranbury Association.
In 2005, the State of Connecticut granted $450,000 to the Norwalk Land Conservation Trust to help preserve the property, which contains a pond, fields, wetlands, and woodland. Stony Brook, a Class A stream, runs through the property into a nearby aquifer.
In 2006, the property was sold for $4.8 million to 78 Cranberry Road LLC, according to Westport Now magazine.
In 2008, the property was purchased by the Connecticut Friends School in nearby Wilton. The school planned to expand their campus onto the property. The Connecticut Friends School was not able to raise the money for their expansion.
Jim Fieber of Special Properties II submitted a plan in 2015, to build a 21-home conservation development on the property. Fieber subsequently amended the plan to a 15-home conservation development.
As of 2015, the Norwalk Zoning Commission was still considering the proposal, including demolition of the theater. Local historians were attempting to save visual art they believe to have been done in the theater by Geoffrey Holder.
The White Barn Theatre was demolished July 17, 2017, after the most recent two-year effort to save it from development.
References
External links
Lucille Lortel Foundation
https://www.broadwayworld.com/article/Lucille-Lortels-Historic-White-Barn-Theatre-Demolished-20170724
Theatres in Connecticut
Culture of Norwalk, Connecticut
Westport, Connecticut
Buildings and structures in Norwalk, Connecticut
Barn theatres |
Waxy keratosis of childhood (also known as "Kerinokeratosis papulosa") is a keratotic, flesh-colored papule that is either sporadic or familial, and may be generalized or segmental.
See also
Epidermis
Skin lesion
References
Epidermal nevi, neoplasms, and cysts |
Eurasia Foundation Central Asia is a publicly funded, privately managed grant maker and program implementer working to mobilize public and private resources with the goal of strengthening the ability of organizations and communities in Kazakhstan, the Kyrgyz Republic, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan to represent their social and economic interests and to participate in civil society.
A public-private partnership, EFCA is managed by an international board of trustees and is supported by the U. S. Agency for International Development (USAID), as well as governments, foundations, corporations, intergovernmental organizations, universities, and individuals.
Local projects
International development agencies
The Eurasia Foundation of Central Asia implemented the “Reforming Legal Aid For the Vulnerable in Kazakhstan” project funded by the European Union. The project helped enhance the protection of individual rights of vulnerable people, in particular in the wider criminal and civil justice systems, through improving access to government funded legal aid. The budget of the project was 280,072 EUR.
References |
Raphitoma curta is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Raphitomidae.
This species is a nomen dubium.
Description
Distribution
This species occurs in the Mediterranean Sea.
References
Fenaux A. (1942). Mollusques nouveaux du littoral occidental de la Méditerranée. Bulletin de l'Institut Océanographique 825-826-827: 2-3
External links
curta
Gastropods described in 1942 |
OPS 5118, also known as Navstar 6, GPS I-6 and GPS SVN-6, was an American navigation satellite launched in 1980 as part of the Global Positioning System development programme. It was the sixth of eleven Block I GPS satellites to be launched.
Background
Global Positioning System (GPS) was developed by the U.S. Department of Defense to provide all-weather round-the-clock navigation capabilities for military ground, sea, and air forces. Since its implementation, GPS has also become an integral asset in numerous civilian applications and industries around the globe, including recreational used (e.g., boating, aircraft, hiking), corporate vehicle fleet tracking, and surveying. GPS employs 24 spacecraft in 20,200 km circular orbits inclined at 55°. These vehicles are placed in 6 orbit planes with four operational satellites in each plane.
Spacecraft
The first eleven spacecraft (GPS Block 1) were used to demonstrate the feasibility of the GPS system. They were 3-axis stabilized, nadir pointing using reaction wheels. Dual solar arrays supplied over 400 watts. They had S-band communications for control and telemetry and Ultra high frequency (UHF) cross-link between spacecraft. They were manufactured by Rockwell Space Systems, were 5.3 meters across with solar panels deployed, and had a design life expectancy of 5 years. Unlike the later operational satellites, GPS Block 1 spacecraft were inclined at 63°.
Launch
OPS 5118 was launched at 22:00 UTC on 26 April 1980, atop an Atlas F launch vehicle with an SGS-1 upper stage. The Atlas used had the serial number 34F, and was originally built as an Atlas F. The launch took place from Space Launch Complex 3E at Vandenberg Air Force Base, and placed OPS 5118 into a transfer orbit. The satellite raised itself into medium Earth orbit using a Star-27 apogee motor.
Mission
By 16 May 1980, OPS 5118 had been raised to an orbit with a perigee of , an apogee of , a period of 717.94 minutes, and 62.8° of inclination to the equator. The satellite had a design life of 5 years and a mass of . It broadcast the PRN 09 signal in the GPS demonstration constellation, and was retired from service on 6 March 1991.
References
Spacecraft launched in 1980
GPS satellites |
The London and Lake Erie Railway and Transportation Company is a defunct Interurban railway that operated in Ontario, Canada from 1902 to 1918. Originally chartered as the South Western Traction Company, the line was renamed the London and Lake Erie Railway in 1909. Throughout its short life, the line was always referred to locally as "The Traction Line".
The South Western Traction Company
In 1902, a group of London, Ontario residents led by Thomas Purdom and Alfred E. Welch chartered an electric railway based in London. Unlike the municipally-owned London and Port Stanley Railway, the South Western Traction Company was chartered primarily as a passenger hauling line. Lines were planned to several other municipalities in the area, but ultimately, the line was a 28-mile meandering route between London and Port Stanley. The line began construction in 1903 southward from London to Lambeth. Construction stopped in 1904 when the company ran out of funds but resumed after additional capital was secured from the Canadian Electric Traction Company, a joint venture between Canadian and British investors. The generating equipment and rolling stock were supplied by Bruce Peebles & Co. Ltd. of Edinburgh, Scotland. The equipment on the South Western Traction Company used a Three phase AC electric overhead traction system designed by Ganz of Budapest, Hungary. The new traction line and was the only railroad in North America to use this system.
The powerhouse was built in Chelsea Green, a suburb of London, near its chief competitor the London & Port Stanley Railway (L&PS).
The route of the line continued southward towards St. Thomas, passing through the villages of Scottsville, Tempo and Lynhurst. Tracks reached St. Thomas in July 1906. The Traction Line used the tracks of the St. Thomas Municipal Railway to navigate through the city streets. The line entered town on the west end and exited southward on the east end, crossing over the London and Port Stanley Railway via the street railway on Talbot Street in the process. Continuing southward, the line passed through the village of Union and entered Port Stanley via Colborne Street. The Traction Line station was on the east side of Port Stanley harbour, compared to the more extensive L&PS yards on the west side. The station was located directly off Colborne Street and still exists today. There was a spur line that ran behind the station down to the dock for loading fish and passengers. The line entered London via Baseline Road, and curved north towards downtown. A long trestle carried the line over the Thames River valley before terminating at the company's station on Horton Street.
There had been various issues with the Ganz A/C overhead system, and this prompted the line to switch to D/C operation in early 1907. The company ordered six D/C motor cars from the Ottawa Car Company in Ottawa, Ontario in March 1907. The line was dealt a major blow on August 10, 1907, when a fire caused by crossed wires destroyed the company's car barns in London. The company's six British built cars were in the barns at the time, and five were destroyed. Four of the new Ottawa cars were in St. Thomas, but hadn't had their motors or equipment installed. The losses for the railway were pegged at over $160,000. The following year, six additional cars were purchased from Preston Car and Coach in Preston, Ontario. The first train arrived in Port Stanley in October 1907. Plans for expansions to Delaware and Aylmer, Ontario were looked at in 1907 as well., but for several reasons, these extensions were never built. The year 1908 brought about receivership and with it, a change in ownership.
In 2012, the South Western Traction Line was inducted to the North America Railway Hall of Fame. The South Western Traction Line was recognized for its contribution to railroading as the only three-phase AC electric railroad in North America, and one of only a few in the world. The line was inducted in the "Community, Business, Government or Organization" class in the "Local" category (pertaining specifically to the area in and around St. Thomas, Ontario.)
The London and Lake Erie Railway and Transportation Company
In 1908, the South Western Traction Company was in receivership and was purchased at auction by J. MacDougall of London. A consortium of businessmen led by G.B Woods of Toronto purchased the line from Mr. MacDougall and formed the London and Lake Erie Railway and Navigation Company. The first manager of the company was Mr. S.W. Mower. The company prospered, with both freight and passenger revenues up. In 1911, the company was dealt another blow when Sunday service was suspended by the Province under the Lord's Day Act. The London and Lake Erie, operating as a provincial charter, was not exempt from the act. Sunday cars were viewed as strictly recreational, and as the line did not provide an essential link, was forced to discontinue Sunday service. This was not reinstated until 1913. S.W. Mower resigned as manager in 1912, and was replaced by William Nelson Warburton.
Warburton had worked with several other interurban railways in Ontario including the Niagara, St. Catharines and Toronto Railway and the Chatham, Wallaceburg and Lake Erie Railway. Streamlining of the stops between London and Port Stanley was done shortly after Warburton assumed his position. Business was so good, the company also ordered two motor cars and two trailer cars from the Niles Car Company. The company also experimented with generating more freight service during this period. Fish from the dock in Port Stanley was the main commodity hauled, but never panned out into the big revenue generator the company hoped for. The tight curves and steep grades of the London and Lake Erie Railway, while satisfactory for interurban cars, was not conducive to effective freight operations. An interchange was established in St. Thomas around 1913 with the Michigan Central Railroad. In 1915, the Niles cars were sold to the Niagara, St. Catharines and Toronto Railway. Talks were held in Aylmer in 1915 as well, the company seriously looking at extending the line. The plan was to extend to Port Burwell via Aylmer, but that never came to pass. The London and Lake Erie's lack of a rail connection in London was a major factor in this decision.
In July, 1915, the London and Port Stanley Railway was electrified. That, combined with the ever-growing threat of the automobile, eventually spelled the end for the London and Lake Erie Railway.
Decline and Sale
Throughout the next few years, the London and Lake Erie struggled for survival. The outbreak of World War I did little to improve the line's fortunes. Traffic was up, but revenues were not. The beach area in Port Stanley was very developed as well, but the London and Lake Erie, being on the opposite side of the harbour, lost out on the majority of the tourist traffic. The London and Lake Erie retired its London generating station in 1915 in favour of purchasing power from Ontario Hydro. Management was increasingly cutting power to cut costs, often stranding cars out on the line, much to the chagrin of passengers. A record 726,799 passengers were carried in the 1916-1917 fiscal year, but it was too little, too late. The equipment was under increasing pressure, but revenue wasn't available to perform the necessary repairs. The winter of 1917 was exceptionally harsh. Wartime demands had reduced the amount of coal available, and service had to be drastically cut back due to no heat being available for the cars. Beginning in 1916, management began looking at options to sell the railway.
Both London and St. Thomas expressed interest in purchasing portions of the line, but neither were willing to pay the full $600,000 asking price. Sir Adam Beck, Ontario Hydro visionary and former mayor of London, suggested that the City counter with just over $300,000, but this was declined by management. London was only interested in the portion southward to Talbotville and intended to operate it as commuter railway extension of the London Street Railway. The actual physical appraisal of the line in 1918 was $360,000. A buyer could not be found however, and the decision was made to scrap the line.
On October 28, 1918, a statement was issued by manager Warburton that the London and Lake Erie Railway had ceased operations. Service was first cut back from Port Stanley to St. Thomas, with the remaining service discontinued shortly thereafter. Over the next few years, the assets of the company were liquidated. Most of the company's rolling stock went to the Niagara, St. Catharines and Toronto Railway, with four cars going to the Oshawa Railway.
The right of way inside the London city limits was sold to the municipality. Belgrave Avenue south of Tecumseh Street follows the old traction line grade. The bridge over the Thames River remained until it was moved to the west to carry Richmond Street over the river. The London station building was sold to the Salvation Army and was demolished in the early 1950s when it was replaced. The remaining station buildings were dismantled over the years, save for Port Stanley. The grade can also be seen in various places, mainly south of St. Thomas.
See also
List of Ontario railways
List of defunct Canadian railways
References
External links
Website on the history the London and Lake Erie Railway
Defunct Ontario railways
Railway companies established in 1902
Railway companies disestablished in 1918
1902 establishments in Ontario
1918 disestablishments in Ontario |
Kolossi ( []) is a village on the outskirts of Limassol, Cyprus. It lies partly in the Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia. Its population in 2011 was 5,651.
Kolossi is known for its medieval castle.
References
Geography of Akrotiri and Dhekelia
Communities in Limassol District |
Konrad Hartvig Isak Rosenvinge Nielsen (28 August 1875 – 27 November 1953) was a Norwegian philologist. He spent most of his career as a professor at the Royal Frederick University (University of Oslo) as a lecturer, textbook writer, lexicographer and translator. His specialty was Sami languages, also called Lapp languages in his day.
Personal life and education
He was born in Vik i Helgeland as a son of politician Sivert Andreas Nielsen (1823–1904) and his wife Jonette Cornelie Falch Heide (1833–1925). In December 1924 he married Gudrun Augusta Agnes Müller (1889–1954). He was the father of diplomat Sivert Andreas Nielsen.
Nielsen's family moved from Vik to Bodø when Nielsen was eight years old. He finished his secondary education in 1892, and graduated from the Royal Frederick University with the cand.theol. degree in 1896. However, he changed his specialty to Fennic languages. In 1897 and 1898 he took exams in Kven and Sami languages, and from 1898 to 1899 he studied at the University of Helsinki.
Career
In July 1899 Nielsen was appointed as a lecturer in Kven and Sami at the Royal Frederick University. In 1903 he took the dr.philos. degree at the University of Helsinki with the thesis Die Quantitätsverhältnisse im Polmak-lappischen, about the language in Polmak. He was promoted to professor of Finno-Ugric languages in 1911. He ultimately retired as a professor in 1946, but had several absences of leave between 1911 and 1946. Among others, he sat in Copenhagen as a member of the Reindeer Grazing Commission between 1913 and 1917. He was succeeded in 1947 by Knut Bergsland.
His main works were in the Norwegian language. He released the textbook Lærebok i lappisk in three volumes between 1926 and 1929, and the dictionary Lappisk ordbok – Lapp Dictionary in three volumes between 1932 and 1938. In addition, he was a translator. He also helped the Norwegian Geological Survey with Sami place names.
After the stay in Copenhagen, Nielsen lived with his family in Vettakollen. He also learned Turkish and Hungarian.
Awards
He was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, and held an honorary degree at the University of Tartu. He was decorated as a Knight, First Class of the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav in 1946, was a Commander of the Finnish Order of the White Rose and the Estonian Order of the Cross of the Eagle, and a Knight of the Swedish Order of the Polar Star. He died in November 1953 in Oslo.
References
1875 births
1953 deaths
Norwegian philologists
Norwegian lexicographers
Norwegian translators
University of Oslo alumni
University of Helsinki alumni
Academic staff of the University of Oslo
Members of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters
Members of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Knights of the Order of the Polar Star
Recipients of the Military Order of the Cross of the Eagle, Class III |
Terra Lago, Indio is a gated community located in Riverside County, California, of the Coachella Valley, approximately east of Palm Springs. Its address is 42-900 Lago Vista, 92203
Indio, California. The community is inside area codes 442 and 760. As of 2014, it was managed by Desert Resort Management, a company owned by Associa.
The community consists of approximately 520 homes built in the villa style by five architects and developers under a unified master plan. The community surrounds a lake, used for canoeing, sailing and fishing.
The Golf Club at Terra Lago features two 18-hole championship courses, known as The North & South Courses. This is another separate community.
The community has a recreation center, a fitness center, an outdoor Olympic style swimming pool and hot tub, and a 100-seater ballroom which hosts parties and entertainment.
References
Communities in Riverside County, California
Gated communities in California
Indio, California |
The Australian War Records Section was an Australian military unit of World War I responsible for collecting and preserving records and artifacts relating to Australia's experiences in the war. The section was formed on 16 May 1917 under the command of Captain John Treloar and eventually grew to a strength of over 600 military and civilian personnel. It collected over 25,000 objects as well as paper records, photographs and works of art. In 1919 the Australian War Memorial was formed on the basis of the section's collection and Treloar was appointed its director the next year. As such, the Australian War Records Section is considered to be Memorial's parent organisation.
References
Military history of Australia during World War I |
Mayflower II is a reproduction of the 17th-century ship Mayflower, celebrated for transporting the Pilgrims to the New World in 1620.
The reproduction was built in Devon, England during 1955–1956, in a collaboration between Englishman Warwick Charlton and Plimoth Patuxet (at the time known as Plimoth Plantation), a living history museum. The work drew upon reconstructed ship blueprints held by the American museum, along with hand construction by English shipbuilders using traditional methods.
Mayflower II was sailed from Plymouth, Devon on April 20, 1957, recreating the original voyage across the Atlantic Ocean, under the command of Alan Villiers.
According to the ship's log, Mayflower II arrived at Plymouth on June 22; it was towed up the East River into New York City on Monday, July 1, 1957, where Villiers and crew received a ticker-tape parade. The ship was listed on the US National Register of Historic Places in 2020.
The ship was built at the Upham Shipyard in Brixham and financed by private donations in England and Plimoth Plantation. It represented the alliance between the United Kingdom and the United States for collaboration during the Second World War. The ship is considered a faithful generic reproduction within a few details (electric lights added and ladder replaced with a lower-deck staircase), with solid oak timbers, tarred hemp rigging, and hand-coloured maps. It is long by wide, 236 tons displacement, three masts (mainmast, foremast, mizzen), a bowsprit and 6 sails.
The ship is seaworthy and sailed to Providence, Rhode Island in 2002. In December 2012, Mayflower II was towed to dry dock at Fairhaven Shipyard in Fairhaven, Massachusetts for Coast Guard inspection as well as repairs. The repairs took longer than originally planned because unexpected damage was discovered during the inspection. Repairs were eventually completed and Mayflower II returned to her berth in Plymouth, Massachusetts, on August 7, 2013. In December 2015, the ship arrived at the Henry B. duPont Preservation Shipyard in Mystic, CT for restoration. The ship returned temporarily to Plymouth for the 2016 summer season and has returned permanently in 2020, just in time for the 400th anniversary of the pilgrims' arrival.
History
In August 1954, Warwick Charlton, conceived the idea to construct a reproduction of Mayflower to commemorate the wartime cooperation between the United Kingdom and the United States. He had served alongside many American allies in the North African theatre during World War II. Project Mayflower was created in 1955 to build a replica of Mayflower in England and sail the ship to the United States as a symbol of Anglo-American friendship.
The project's sponsors wanted to ensure proper siting of the ship after it reached the United States. They were aware that earlier reproduction vessels had rotted away after interest in their initial voyages faded. Project Mayflower learned of the Plimoth Plantation museum, and John Lowe of Project Mayflower, came to the United States in March 1955. He met with representatives of Plimoth Plantation to gain assistance in future berthing and exhibition of Mayflower II.
Plimoth Plantation had planned years earlier to add a replica of Mayflower to its exhibits. In 1951, the museum had already commissioned plans for a Mayflower II from naval architect William A. Baker of MIT. Baker's detailed plans had been finished by the time that Project Mayflower announced its goals. A waterline model of the vessel's hull had also been built, but nothing more.
By the spring of 1955, the two organizations negotiated an agreement:
in exchange for using Baker's design plans and advice, plus the Plimouth Plantations' guarantee to maintain and exhibit the vessel permanently, Project Mayflower agreed to build Mayflower II and sail her across the Atlantic, visiting various East Coast ports to exhibit the ship. The Project would then release it to Plimoth Plantation.
The construction of Mayflower II was conducted at the Upham shipyard in Brixham, Devon, England. The ship's keel was laid on July 27, 1955, and William A. Baker was sent by Plimoth Plantation to advise the builders and view the progress of the ship's construction.
The ship was replicated as accurately as possible, with carefully chosen English oak timbers, hand-forged nails, hand-sewn linen canvas sails, hemp cordage, and the Stockholm tar of the type used on 17th-century ships. Mayflower II has the brown hull and the dark-red strapwork ornamentation of 17th-century merchant ships, based on analysis of the traditional colors and designs of English merchant ships illustrated in Dutch and English paintings. Carved into the stern of Mayflower II is a blossom of a hawthorne or English mayflower. In England, the skills of elderly traditional workmen were employed to build a vessel that reflected Baker's detailed research which could sail the Atlantic as securely as the original ship.
Mayflower II was launched on September 22, 1956, a rainy day. The ceremony was based on knowledge about christenings of 17th-century vessels. The ship was toasted from a gold loving cup that was afterward thrown into the water, and then quickly retrieved by an underwater diver, in the traditional manner. The ship slid gracefully down the ways to enter Brixham harbor with a large splash.
She was towed round to Plymouth, Devon, and on April 20, 1957 towed from there to begin her transatlantic voyage. Her captain, Commander Alan Villiers, soon decided that with her somewhat slender spars and authentic 17th century rigging, which lacked the later bobstay to hold the bowsprit steady, she might not make a direct route against the Atlantic storms without being dismasted. He altered course southwards and followed the trade winds in a wide southerly loop before sailing up the east coast of America, where on June 8 off Bermuda she met the one real gale of the crossing. She lay to all night and weathered it without loss, and made land at Provincetown, where the original Mayflower had first put in on June 12. Among the crew was Peter Padfield, who went on to become a naval historian.
Since 1957, Mayflower II has been a pier side tourist attraction, moored at Long Wharf near the site of Plymouth Rock. The ship has been a popular attraction near Boston; it has become the site of national and state celebrations.
On Thanksgiving 1970 (the 350th anniversary of Mayflower landing), members of the American Indian Movement (AIM) led by Russell Means seized Mayflower II in protest of the United States government's failure to abide by treaties with American Indians and its poor treatment of them.
Recent events
In December 2012, Mayflower II was towed to dry dock in Fairhaven Ship Yard in Fairhaven, Massachusetts, where shipbuilders and U.S. Coast Guard inspectors called for extensive repairs. This was the first in a number of scheduled repairs over the next seven years to restore Mayflower II to pristine condition for the 400th anniversary of the English settlement of Plymouth in 2020. Expected costs for these repairs were expected to exceed two million dollars.
Starting in December 2014 and continuing until 2020, Mayflower II spent its summers in Plymouth on display and winters at the Mystic Seaport being restored. It left Plymouth on November 1, 2016 and again sailed through the Cape Cod Canal. On September 7, 2019, the ship was launched in a public ceremony, and spent several further months at the shipyard before its first voyage, to Boston, in May 2020.
See also
Ship replica (including a list of replicas)
References
External links
Official Site
All about the Mayflower and Plymouth, UK
Mayflower II Tour – My Big Adventure (72 Images)
"The Mayflower" Popular Mechanics, April 1957, pp. 90–91 cutaway drawing.
Mayflower II repairs underway
The Harwich Mayflower Project – A separate project building its own Mayflower replica
Life Magazine June 17, 1957 and Life Magazine June 24, 1957 Articles about voyage and arrival.
1956 ships
Ships built in Devon
Plymouth, Massachusetts
Replica ships
Individual sailing vessels
Sailing ships
Museum ships in Massachusetts
History of the Thirteen Colonies
Replications of ancient voyages
Mayflower
National Register of Historic Places in Plymouth County, Massachusetts |
Scout's Safari is an American teen comedy-drama television series that aired on Discovery Kids and Saturday mornings on NBC. The series was created by Thomas W. Lynch (The Secret World of Alex Mack, Caitlin's Way).
Premise
The show revolves around Jennifer "Scout" Lauer, a teenage girl who lives the simple life in New York City until her photographer father is sent on year-round trip around the world and she is forced to live with her know-it-all mother (Cheryl) and her new husband (Roger) at a resort in South Africa. While she is there she is exposed to a new world, goes to a new school, and reunites with her other best friend named Bongani, who believes strongly in his Zulu culture, lives with his Uncle C.B., a veterinarian. Bongani is often the voice of reason for Scout. While still keeping in contact with her best friend Sherna via webcam, she has to deal with her stepdad's bratty and Know-it-All young son Tyler. During the course of the series Scout eventually becomes more comfortable in her new surroundings.
Cast
Main
Anastasia Baranova as Jennifer "Scout" Lauer
Freedom Hadebe as Bongani
Jarred Uys as Tyler Shickler
Chantell Stander as Cheryl Lauer-Shickler
Ashley Dowds as Roger Shickler
Hlomla Dandala as Carlton "C.B." Boone
Supporting
Dana de Agrella as Sherna Puckett
Ma Afrika Kekana as Nandi Ngwenyo
Roxanne Burger as Sophie Turner
Episodes
Season 1 (2002–03)
Season 2 (2003–04)
External links
2000s American comedy-drama television series
2000s American teen drama television series
2000s American teen sitcoms
2002 American television series debuts
2004 American television series endings
American educational television series
English-language television shows
Discovery Kids original programming
Television series about teenagers
Television shows set in South Africa |
The Cricket Annual was a compact cricket annual publication published in 1961 and 1962. This was the final name of a cricket annual that had first appeared in 1895, and was before it was re-named to become the re-styled Playfair Cricket Annual.
In 1962 the Playfair titles (including the Playfair Cricket Annual) were acquired by Dickens Press which had just published The Cricket Annual. In November 1962 editor Roy Webber died suddenly and the decision was made to combine the two annuals so that in 1963, Dickens published a new style Playfair Cricket Annual, using the same name but basing the size, format and price on The Cricket Annual.
Background
The Cricket Annual was one in a long line of publications starting in 1895, with many different titles but with a continuity of format and style. They are pocket book size (approx 9.8 x 13.6 cm) but pre-1928 inaccurately trimmed and size varies (1906 is 8.9 x 13 cm). Pre-1915 books usually contained 96 pages (1908 = 80). From 1904-1914 they were edited by Alfred Gibson (Rover) and then for one year in 1921 by 'Mentor'. From 1922 until 1939 the editor was Frank Thorogood, in 1946 Percy Rudd, and then Crawford White until 1957 when he was joined by Roy Webber. Good quality copies prior to 1921 are rare and the 1895-1899 Star and Leader Cricket Manuals is difficult to find in any condition. The early annuals (pre-1914) sold for one penny (1d). When they reappeared after the First World War the price was 4d (1923 2d) and then in 1929 reduced to 3d until 1939. Post-1946, as the number of pages grew, the cost rose in increments from 6d to one shilling and six pence (1/6) by 1957.
Titles
1895-1899 Star and Leader Cricket Manual
1900-1908 Morning Leader Cricket Annual
1909-1911 Morning Leader Cricket and Sports Annual
1912 Morning Leader Cricket Annual
1913-1914 Daily News and Leader Cricket Annual
1921-1926 Daily News Cricket and Tennis Annual
1927-1930 Daily News Cricket Annual
1931-1939 News Chronicle Cricket Annual
1946-1956 News Chronicle Cricket Annual
1957-1958 News Chronicle & Daily Dispatch Cricket Annual
1959-1960 News Chronicle Cricket Annual
1961-1962 The Cricket Annual
1963-date Playfair Cricket Annual
Details
Editions produced since 1928:-
For editions of the annual 1963-present see the Playfair Cricket Annual.
References
Defunct cricket magazines
Annual magazines published in the United Kingdom
Magazines established in 1961
Magazines disestablished in 1962
Sports magazines published in the United Kingdom
Defunct magazines published in the United Kingdom |
Proposition 37 was a California ballot measure rejected in California at the statewide election on November 6, 2012. This initiative statute would have required labeling of genetically engineered food, with some exceptions. It would have disallowed the practice of labeling genetically engineered food with the word "natural." This proposition was one of the main concerns by the organizers of the March Against Monsanto in May 2013.
Details
Section 2 of Proposition 37, the "Statement of Purpose", reads "The purpose of this measure is to create and enforce the fundamental right of the people of California to be fully informed about whether the food they purchase and eat is genetically engineered and not misbranded as natural so that they can choose for themselves whether to purchase and eat such foods. It shall be liberally construed to fulfill this purpose".
The proposed law also includes several exceptions, such as products that are certified organic, made from animals fed or injected with genetically engineered material (but not genetically engineered themselves), processed with or containing only small amounts of genetically engineered ingredients, administered for treatment of medical conditions, sold for immediate consumption such as in a restaurant; and alcoholic beverages.
Grocery stores and other retailers would be primarily responsible for ensuring that their food products are correctly labeled. For foods that are exempt, retailers would have to provide records either directly from the provider of the product, or by receiving independent certification from third parties. Farmers, food manufacturers, and every other party in the product's supply chain would also have to maintain such records.
Potential impact
According to the California Attorney General, the measure would "increase annual state costs ranging from a few hundred thousand dollars to over $1 million to regulate the labeling of genetically engineered foods". It would also incur "Potential, but likely not significant, costs to state and local governments due to litigation resulting from possible violations of the requirements of this measure. Some of these costs would be supported by court filing fees that the parties involved in each legal case would be required to pay under existing law."
Arguments for and against
Proponents argue that "Proposition 37 gives us the right to know what is in the food we eat and feed to our families. It simply requires labeling of food produced using genetic engineering, so we can choose whether to buy those products or not. We have a right to know."
Opponents argued that "Prop. 37 is a deceptive, deeply flawed food labeling scheme, full of special-interest exemptions and loopholes. Prop. 37 would: create new government bureaucracy costing taxpayers millions, authorize expensive shakedown lawsuits against farmers and small businesses, and increase family grocery bills by hundreds of dollars per year."
Opponents said Proposition 37 labeling requirements would increase grocery costs by as much as $400 per year based on a study by Northbridge Environmental Consultants and the non-partisan California Legislative Analyst's Office fiscal impact study.
Proponents on the other hand, said that some organic US food processors argued that the changes in labeling will have no effect on consumer costs because companies change their labeling all the time, as it is, and changing labels is a regular cost already built into the price consumers pay for products. “We, as with most manufacturers, are continually updating our packaging. It is a regular cost of doing business - a small one at that - and is already built into the price consumers pay for products,” said Arran Stephens, president and founder of Nature's Path.
Proponents believed that if the proposition is accepted in California, it would increase the likelihood that other states will also adopt the same rules. In turn, if enough states do decide to adopt GMO labeling laws, it is possible that the national government will become involved and take action.
Opponents claimed Prop 37 backers real intent was to ban GMOs via labeling schemes removing consumer choices, citing claims by proponents like Jeffrey M. Smith that labeling requirements in California would cause food companies to source only non-GMO foods to avoid having labels that consumers would perceive as warnings.
During the campaign, both sides made allegations of campaign improprieties.
Campaign donations
The organization in support is "California Right to Know" and the organization against is "NO Prop. 37, Stop the Deceptive Food Labeling Scheme". As of November 6, 2012, the total donations to each side were $9.2 million in support, and $46 million in opposition. The top 10 donors to each side are as follows:
Supporters
Mercola Health Resources $1,199,000
Kent Whealy $1,000,000
Dr. Bronner's Magic Soaps $620,883
Nature's Path Foods $610,709
Organic Consumers Fund $605,667
Ali Partovi $288,975
Mark Squire $258,000
Wehah Farm $251,000
Amy's Kitchen $200,000
The Stillonger Trust (Mark Squire, Trustee) $190,000
Opponents
Monsanto Company $8,112,867
E.I. Dupont De Nemours & Co. $5,400,000
PepsiCo, Inc. $2,585,400
Grocery Manufacturers Association $2,002,000
Kraft Foods $2,000,500
BASF Plant Science $2,000,000
Bayer Cropscience $2,000,000
Dow AgroSciences $2,000,000
Syngenta Corporation $2,000,000
Coca-Cola North America $1,700,500
Result
Proposition 37 was defeated, gaining 48.6% of voters at the polls in 2012. If it had passed, California would have been the first state to require GMO labeling.
See also
Genetically modified food
Genetically modified food controversies
Regulation of the release of genetic modified organisms
Oregon Ballot Measure 27 (2002)
References
External links
Official CA Voter Information Guide - Proposition 37
Official Yes on Prop 37 website
Official No on Prop 37 website
Academic evaluation of genetically engineered food labeling (Colorado State University)
2012 California ballot propositions
Ecolabelling
Environmental issues in California
Genetic engineering in the United States
Initiatives in the United States |
Artem Shmakov (; born March 6, 1990, in Chelyabinsk) is a Russian curler.
At the national level, he is a two-time Russian men's champion curler (2013, 2014) and a 2018 Russian mixed champion.
Teams
Men's
Mixed
Mixed doubles
References
External links
ШМАКОВ Артем | Российские спортсмены и специалисты | Спортивная Россия
Video:
Living people
1990 births
Sportspeople from Chelyabinsk
Curlers from Saint Petersburg
Russian male curlers
Russian curling champions |
The women's mass start competition in speed skating at the 2022 Winter Olympics was held on 19 February, at the National Speed Skating Oval ("Ice Ribbon") in Beijing. Irene Schouten of the Netherlands won the event, her third gold and fourth overall medal at these Olympics. Ivanie Blondin of Canada won her first individual Olympic medal, the silver. Francesca Lollobrigida of Italy won the bronze medal.
The defending champion was Nana Takagi. She entered the competition, but fell in her semifinal and did not qualify to the final. The silver medalist, Kim Bo-reum, and the bronze medalist, Schouten, qualified for the Olympics as well. Marijke Groenewoud was the 2021 World Single Distances champion in mass start, with Blondin and Schouten being the silver and bronze medalists, respectively. Blondin was leading the 2021–22 ISU Speed Skating World Cup in mass start with three events completed before the Olympics, followed by Lollobrigida, Guo Dan, and Elizaveta Golubeva.
Qualification
A total of 24 entry quotas were available for the event, with a maximum of two athletes per NOC. All 24 athletes qualified through their performance at the 2021–22 ISU Speed Skating World Cup.
The qualification time for the event (2:10.00 (1500 m)) was released on July 1, 2021, and was unchanged from 2018. Skaters had the time period of July 1, 2021 – January 16, 2022 to achieve qualification times at valid International Skating Union (ISU) events.
Results
Semifinals
Final
References
Women's speed skating at the 2022 Winter Olympics |
Sheikh Tayebur Rahman is a Bangladesh Nationalist Party politician and the former Mayor of Khulna.
Early life
Rahman was born on 21 October 1936 in Bagerhat, East Bengal, British Raj.
Career
Rahman served as the forest and environment affairs secretary of the Bangladesh Nationalist Party. He served as the Mayor of Khulna of 17 years and ten months in three consecutive terms. He was a shareholder and director of Destiny-2000. He was disqualified from contesting in the 2008 Mayoral election of Khulna as he had been convicted of a crime and the election was won by the Awami League backed candidate Md. Moniruzzaman Moni. It was the first time since 1973, when M. A. Bari won, that an Awami League candidate was elected Mayor of Khulna City.
Corruption
On 3 November 2007, Rahman was arrested on corruption charges by Bangladesh Police. In 2008, he was sentenced to 17 years in jail in two extortion cases. He was sentenced to 10 years in jail on 26 May 2008 by a court in Khulna. On 30 December 2009, Anti-Corruption Commission sued him for illegally appointing extra employees while serving as the Mayor of Khulna.
Personal life
Rahman was married to Laila Rahman and they have three daughters and one son together.
Death
Rahman had a brain stroke on 1 January 2016 and was admitted to Nargis Memorial Clinic in Khulna, Bangladesh. He died on 3 January 2016.
References
Bangladesh Nationalist Party politicians
1936 births
2015 deaths
Mayors of Khulna |
In theoretical physics, in the context of M-theory, the action for the N=8 M2 branes in full is (with some indices hidden):
where [, ] is a generalisation of a Lie bracket which gives the group constants.
The only known compatible solution however is:
using the Levi-Civita symbol which is invariant under SO(4) rotations. M5 branes can be introduced by using an infinite symmetry group.
The action is named after Jonathan Bagger, Neil Lambert, and Andreas Gustavsson.
Notes
References
Lie 3-Algebra and Multiple M2-branes
String theory |
Pseudopostega floridensis is a moth of the family Opostegidae. It is only known from southern Florida, United States.
The length of the forewings is about 2.4 mm. Adults are mostly white with a variably distinct dark brown dorsal spot on forewing and dark brown apical spot. Adults have been collected in June and November.
Etymology
The species name is derived from the general type locality, Florida, and -ensis, a suffix denoting place, locality.
External links
A Revision of the New World Plant-Mining Moths of the Family Opostegidae (Lepidoptera: Nepticuloidea)
Opostegidae
Moths described in 2007 |
Pulaskifield is an unincorporated community located in Capps Creek Township, Barry County, Missouri, United States. The area was originally known as Bricefield (named for J. Brice Hudson whose father owned the land on which the general store of August Dombroski (first postmaster) was located and in which the post office was established in 1893); archaically misspelled Brassfield or Brycefield. The area was locally known under the community name of Pulaskifield, but officially changed to that name in 1930 by request of the large group of Polish immigrants who bought land and began farming, beginning in the late 1870s, in an approximate two-mile radius of the crossing point of Missouri Route 97 and Barry County Farm Road 2040. The community was renamed to honor Casimir Pulaski, a Polish nobleman and Revolutionary Continental Army Brigadier General remembered as a hero who fought for independence and freedom both in Poland and in the United States.
References
Polish-American culture in Missouri
Unincorporated communities in Barry County, Missouri
Unincorporated communities in Missouri |