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  1. State flag (top): horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and white, with coat of arms at the center. Civil flag (bottom): horizontal tricolor of red, blue, and white. 1882–1918. Kingdom of Serbia. State flag (top): horizontal tricolor of red, blue and white, with the royal coat of arms at the center.

    • General Facts
    • Government
    • Participation in The War
    • Military Forces
    • Casualties
    Population:4.5 million (1914)
    Capital:Belgrade (1914 population 90,000)
    Head of State:
    Head of Government: Prime Minister Nikola Pašić (12 September 1912 – 1 December 1918)
    Entered the war:28 July 1914 (Austria-Hungary declared war on Serbia)
    Ceased hostilities:11 November 1918 (armistice with Germany)
    Ended status as belligerent:4 June 1920 (Treaty of Trianon between the Allies and the newly-formed Republic of Hungary)

    Army

    1. Peacetime strength 1914: 90,000 2. Reserves 1914: 420,000 3. Mobilised 1914: 530,000 4. Total mobilised to October 1915: 710,000 In October 1915 the Central Powers launched their fourth invasion of Serbia. This time the intervention of Bulgaria proved decisive. Faced with certain defeat on their home soil, the Serbian government and high command decided to retreat to the Albanian coast and keep fighting rather than capitulate. At least 300,000 Serb soldiers and refugees attempted to cross...

    Military dead (all causes):450,000
    Civilian dead:650,000
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  3. Serbia used the red, blue and white tricolor as a national flag continuously from 1835 until 1918, when Serbia ceased to be a sovereign state after it joined the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, later known as Yugoslavia, the tricolor was a used as a Serbian civil flag, from 1918 to 1945.

    • 1835, 2004 (readopted), 2010 (standardized)
    • 2:3
  4. The Kingdom of Serbia ( Serbian: Краљевина Србија, Kraljevina Srbija) was a country located in the Balkans which was created when the ruler of the Principality of Serbia, Milan I, was proclaimed king in 1882. Since 1817, the Principality was ruled by the Obrenović dynasty (replaced by the Karađorđević dynasty for a short time).

    • RS
  5. MAPS. Serbia, 9th-10th Centuries (in Serbian) Serbia under Tsar Stefan Dushan, c. 1350 (in Serbian) Courants métanastasiques dans le peuplement des Pays serbes du 15e siècle à nos jours. Croatia, Slavonia & the Western Slavic Lands of the Ottoman Empire, 1844 (in German; H. Berghaus) Balkan States & Ottoman Empire, 1877-1878 (Stanford’s ...

  6. Apr 7, 2024 · After World War I, Serbia became in 1918 part of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, renamed into Yugoslavia in 1929. This is a map of Yugoslavia in 1930

  7. Table 1: Serbian Army losses 1914 to 1918. Prisoners of War ↑. Interwar Austrian data suggested that the toll of captives and deserters on the Serbian front, in other words those who were "lost in action", amounted to 80,276, According to Serbian data from January 1915, the POW command in Niš registered 568 officers and 54,906 soldiers, but the number would rise with the arrival of those ...

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