Serbs of Sarajevo

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The Serbs of Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, numbered 157,526 according to the 1991 census, making up more than 30% of the city's population. Today, following the Bosnian War, few Serbs remain in Sarajevo. Most have either moved abroad, to Serbia, Canada or other countries, or moved to a new settlement on the outskirts of Sarajevo, located in the Republika Srpska, known as East Sarajevo (previously Srpsko Sarajevo).

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Serb Orthodox cathedral in central Sarajevo.
Serb Orthodox cathedral in central Sarajevo.

There are three main Serb Orthodox Christian places of worship in Sarajevo: the Old Orthodox Church (Serbian: Стара православна црква or Stara pravoslavna crkva), dating back to the 16th century,[citation needed] the Cathedral Church (Саборна црква or Saborna crkva), which was erected in the 1860s, and the church in Novo Sarajevo.

Poster from 1911 showing Sarajevo Serb philanthropists who donated to Prosvjeta Serb Cultural Society
Poster from 1911 showing Sarajevo Serb philanthropists who donated to Prosvjeta Serb Cultural Society

Notable Serbs who were born in or lived in Sarajevo include:

The Serb population of the district of Sarajevo, according to the 1921 Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes religious population census, amounted to 56.3%. In 1921 there were 8 municipalities Serbs comprised a majority in 5 municipalities: Ilidža, Koševo, Pale, Rajlovac, and Trnovo. The same year the City of Sarajevo had 78,173 inhabitants, of whom 18,630 (23.8%) were Serbian Orthodox Christians.

In 1991, there were 157,526 Serbs in Sarajevo and they made up about a third of the city's population. Their current proportion in the city's population is estimated at 5-12%, although no census has been conducted since the War in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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