Kneza Miloša Street
Kneza Miloša Street (Serbian Cyrillic: Улица кнеза Милоша, romanized: Ulica kneza Miloša, lit. "Prince Miloš Street") is a street in downtown Belgrade, Serbia. It was the main city's korzo (promenade) and today is one of the major traffic arteries of the city, location of some of the most important national institutions and a street with the largest number of embassies in Belgrade. It stretches through the territory of three municipalities: Stari Grad, Vračar and Savski Venac. Previously known as Topčider Road, it was later named after prince Miloš Obrenović, the first ruler of modern Serbia (1815-1839 and 1858–1860).
Wikipage redirect
Andrićev Venac
Church of the Ascension, Belgrade
Dedinje
Gavrilo Princip Park
Hammam of Prince Miloš
Krunski Venac
London, Belgrade
Manjež
Ministry of Finance of Serbia Building
Ministry of Forestry and Mining and Ministry of Agriculture and Waterworks Building, Belgrade
Mostar interchange
National Museum of Serbia
Nemanjina Street
Pioneers Park, Belgrade
Prokop (Belgrade)
Senjak
Singidunum
Stanković Musical School
Terazije
Topčider
Topčidersko Brdo
West Vračar
Yugoslav Ministry of Defence building
1991 protests in Belgrade6th Division (Yugoslav Partisans)Bulevar kralja AleksandraDoctor's TowerFormer Army Headquarters Building (Belgrade)Guido VedovatoKneza Miloša streetList of streets and squares in BelgradeMinistry_of_Economy_(Serbia)Ministry_of_Finance_(Serbia)Ministry_of_Foreign_Affairs_(Serbia)Observation Post of the Serbian Army High Command on KajmakčalanPelivan, BelgradeTrams in BelgradeTransport in Belgrade
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
primaryTopic
Kneza Miloša Street
Kneza Miloša Street (Serbian Cyrillic: Улица кнеза Милоша, romanized: Ulica kneza Miloša, lit. "Prince Miloš Street") is a street in downtown Belgrade, Serbia. It was the main city's korzo (promenade) and today is one of the major traffic arteries of the city, location of some of the most important national institutions and a street with the largest number of embassies in Belgrade. It stretches through the territory of three municipalities: Stari Grad, Vračar and Savski Venac. Previously known as Topčider Road, it was later named after prince Miloš Obrenović, the first ruler of modern Serbia (1815-1839 and 1858–1860).
has abstract
Kneza Miloša (en serbe cyrilli ...... serbe contre les Turcs (1815).
@fr
Kneza Miloša Street (Serbian C ...... tial cultural-historical unit.
@en
Ulica Kneza Miloša (serb. Кнез ...... m II powstania antytureckiego.
@pl
location
Wikipage page ID
53,882,372
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,013,546,378
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
caption
Buildings of the Government of Serbia and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
@en
image size
Location
Belgrade
@en
map type
Serbia Belgrade
@en
name
Kneza Miloša street
@en
namesake
native name
Улица кнеза Милоша
@en
native name lang
sr
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
comment
Kneza Miloša (en serbe cyrilli ...... serbe contre les Turcs (1815).
@fr
Kneza Miloša Street (Serbian C ...... bia (1815-1839 and 1858–1860).
@en
Ulica Kneza Miloša (serb. Кнез ...... m II powstania antytureckiego.
@pl
label
Kneza Miloša Street
@en
Kneza Miloša
@fr
Ulica Kneza Miloša
@de
Ulica Kneza Miloša
@pl
wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
Kneza Miloša street
@en
Улица кнеза Милоша
@en