- Dimic, Trifun
- (1945-2002)Serbia. Writer. He translated the New Testament and the Epic of Gilgamesh into Romani. He also wrote and produced a first reader for Gypsy children.
Historical dictionary of the Gypsies . Donald Kenrick.
Historical dictionary of the Gypsies . Donald Kenrick.
Bibliography — I. INTRODUCTION The bibliography is arranged by classes and subclasses. With very few exceptions, only works published after 1945 have been included. For historical works, one should consult George Black s A Gypsy Bibliography (Edinburgh:… … Historical dictionary of the Gypsies
List of Serbs — This is a list of prominent ethnic Serbs and people from Serbia. Serbs Rulers, Politicians and Knights Historical * Unknown Archont (knez, also translated Prince, led the Serbs to the Balkans during the reign of Byzantine emperor Heraclius, 610… … Wikipedia
Roma people of Vojvodina — Roma people are one of ethnic groups in the Serbian province of Vojvodina. According to the 2002 census, there were 29,057 Roma in Vojvodina or 1.43% of the population. The largest concentration of Roma could be found in the municipalities of… … Wikipedia
Roma people in Serbia — Roma people are one of ethnic groups in Serbia. According to the 2002 census, there were 108,193 Roma in Serbia or 1.44% of the population. Of those, 79,136 Roma are concentrated in Central Serbia and 29,057 in Vojvodina. Another 40,000 Roma are… … Wikipedia
Serbia — Estimated population (including Voivodina and Kosovo but excluding Montenegro): 600,000. It is likely that the first Gypsies to reach Serbia were shoemakers who lived in Prizren some time around 1348. Under the Ottoman Empire (from 1459), the… … Historical dictionary of the Gypsies
Voivodina — Estimated Roma population: 65,000, including recent immigration from Kosovo; the official returns in the 1971 census showed 7,760 Roma, but by 1991 the figure had reached the more realistic total of 24,895. A province formerly of Yugoslavia… … Historical dictionary of the Gypsies