Coat of arms of the National Council of the Czech National Minority in Serbia | |
Total population | |
---|---|
1,824 (2011) | |
Languages | |
Serbian and Czech | |
Religion | |
Roman Catholicism, Protestantism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Slovaks, other West Slavs |
According to the 2011 census, Czechs (Serbian: Чеси / Česi) in Serbia number 1,824 of population. National Council of the Czech National Minority in Serbia have seat in Bela Crkva in Vojvodina.
Demographics
Part of a series on |
Czechs |
---|
DiasporaEurope
North America South America Oceania |
Subgroups |
Culture |
History |
Language |
Related nations |
Czechs form a majority in Češko Selo ("Czech Village") in the Eastern Danube part of Southern Banat in Vojvodina.
Year | Czechs |
---|---|
1948 | 6,760 |
1953 | 5,948 |
1961 | 5,133 |
1971 | 4,149 |
1981 | 3,225 |
1991 | 2,675 |
2002 (excl. Kosovo) | 2,211 |
2011 (excl. Kosovo) | 1,824 |
Notable people
- Aleksandar Mašin, military officer and participant of the May Coup
- Ivan Bek, Yugoslav football player
- Ludmila Frajt, composer
- Emil Hájek, composer and pianist
- Rudolf Nováček, military composer
- Zlatko Krasni, poet
- Aleksandar Lifka, European cinematographer
- Vladislav Titelbah, rural painter
- František Zach, military theorist
See also
References
- "Попис у Србији 2011". Archived from the original on 2020-05-09. Retrieved 2017-01-27.
- Borislav Jankulov, Pregled kolonizacije Vojvodine u XVIII i XIX veku, Novi Sad - Pančevo, 2003.
External links
- Nacionalni savet češke nacionalne manjine | savetceha.rs (in Czech and Serbian)
Ethnic groups in Serbia | |
---|---|
Serbs (Vojvodina, Kosovo) | |
Larger ethnic minorities | |
Smaller ethnic minorities | |
|
Czech diaspora | |
---|---|
Africa | |
Asia | |
Americas | |
Europe | |
Oceania |
This Serbia-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |