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Ethnic group in Germany
Ethnic group
Serbs in Germany
304,741 of Serbian ancestry (2014)
[1]
241,374 Serbian nationals (2013)
Munich ,
Berlin ,
Stuttgart ,
Frankfurt ,
Hamburg ,
Düsseldorf ,
Mannheim ,
Augsburg ,
Nuremberg ,
North Rhine-Westphalia ,
Baden-Württemberg ,
Bavaria ,
Düsseldorf ,
Stuttgart
German and
Serbian
Serbian Orthodox Church
Serbs in Austria
Cathedral of Saint Sava in
Düsseldorf , seat of the
Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Düsseldorf and all of Germany
Serbs in Germany (
Serbian : Срби у Немачкој ,
romanized : Srbi u Nemačkoj ;
German : Serben in Deutschland ) refers to persons living in
Germany who have total or partial
Serbian ancestry . They form the seventh largest group of foreigners in Germany.
[2]
Demographics
The majority (64%) of the Serbian population is concentrated in three federal states:
North Rhine-Westphalia ,
Baden-Württemberg and
Bavaria . Within the three states the Serbs are numerous in
Düsseldorf ,
Stuttgart and especially
Munich .
[3]
Ulm had the highest share of migrants from Serbia in 2011 according to German Census data.
[4] But a considerable part of the Serbian Migrants was not included, because it still went under former nationalities (
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ,
Serbia and Montenegro , Serbia until 2008) at the time of the census.
According to the
Federal Statistical Office , at the end of 2015 the number of foreigners with Serbian nationality in Germany stood at 230,427. Another 29,785 foreigners living in Germany with the citizenship of the former
Serbia and Montenegro have not yet decided on one of the possible new citizenships.
[2]
Official data:
1925: 14,067 (Yugoslav nationality)
[5]
1935: 17,258 (Yugoslav nationality)
[5]
1939: 58,240 (Yugoslav nationality)
[5]
1968: 99,000 (workers)
[3]
1971: 469,000 (workers)
[3]
1973: 471,000 (workers)
[3]
1988: 295,000 (workers)
[3]
1989: 300,000 (workers)
[3]
1990: 652,500 (Yugoslav nationality)
[5]
1994: 420,000 (
Serbia and Montenegro )
[3]
1995: 418,000 (Serbia and Montenegro)
[3]
2001: 304,000 (Serbia and Montenegro)
[3]
2003: 568,240 (Serbia and Montenegro); 112,507 Germany-born Serbian nationals
[3]
2011: 197,984 (Serbian nationals)
2013: 241,374 (Serbian nationals)
2015: 313,198 (Serbian ancestry)
[6]
Number of Serbs in larger cities
#
City
People
1.
Berlin
20,109
2.
Munich
14,283
3.
Frankfurt
9,404
4.
Hamburg
7,405
5.
Stuttgart
5,844
6.
Cologne
5,627
7.
Essen
3,774
8.
Bremen
3,405
9.
Offenbach
3,156
10.
Nuremberg
3,027
11.
Hanover
2,748
12.
Mainz
2,639
13.
Gelsenkirchen
2,582
14.
Duisburg
2,488
15.
Oberhausen
2,090
16.
Bielefeld
2,037
17.
Wuppertal
1,997
18.
Münster
1,885
19.
Wiesbaden
1,827
20.
Freiburg
1,761
Notable people
Danko Bošković , footballer
Marko Djurdjević , illustrator
Dejan Janjatović , footballer, Croatian Serb
[7]
Slobodan Komljenović , footballer
Srđan Maksimović , footballer
Marko Marin , footballer, Bosnian Serb
[8]
Tamara Milosevic , documentary filmmaker
Zvjezdan Misimović , footballer, Bosnian Serb parentage
[9]
Nikola Mladenović , footballer
Wolfgang Nešković , politician
Dragan Paljić , footballer, Bosnian Serb parentage
[10]
Andrea Petkovic , female tennis player, Bosnian-born, Serb father
[11]
Marjan Petković , footballer
Aleksandro Petrović , footballer, Bosnian-Serb
Iván Petrovich , actor, silent screen star, Serbian-born
Petar Radenković , footballer
Vladimir Ranković , footballer
[12]
Michael Rensing , footballer, Serbian mother
[13]
Sreto Ristić , retired footballer
Christina Sampanidis , female footballer, Serbian mother
[14]
Marko Savić , water poloist
Kristian Sprećaković , footballer
Aleksandar Stevanović , footballer
Predrag Stevanović , footballer
Neven Subotić , footballer, Bosnian Serb
[15]
Stefan Kapičić , actor, German born
Branko Tomović , actor, Serbian parents
David Vržogić , footballer
[16]
Marc Vucinovic , footballer
Konstantin Grcic , world renown industrial designer
See also
References
^
"Publikation - Bevölkerung - Ausländische Bevölkerung - Statistisches Bundesamt (Destatis)" . destatis.de. Retrieved 2015-08-30 .
^
a
b
"Statistisches Bundesamt: Bevölkerung und Erwerbstätigkeit - Ausländische Bevölkerung - Ergebnisse des Ausländerzentralregisters" (PDF) . Retrieved 2017-04-17 .
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j de Luna-Martinez, J.; Endo, I.; Barberis, C. (2006).
The Germany-Serbia Remittance Corridor: Challenges of Establishing a Formal Money Transfer System . World Bank.
ISBN
9780821366592 . Retrieved 2015-08-30 .
^
"Kartenseite: Serben in Deutschland - Landkreise" . kartenseite.wordpress.com. 2017-03-26. Retrieved 2017-04-22 .
^
a
b
c
d
"Svi Srbi sveta: Nemačka" . svevesti.com. Retrieved 2015-08-30 .
^
"Migration und Integration" (in German). Retrieved April 10, 2021 .
^
"Srbi u tuđini" (in Serbian). Sportal. 26 July 2010. Archived from
the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 5 July 2014 .
^
"Introducing… Marko Marin" . Goal . 22 August 2008. Retrieved 9 May 2010 .
^ Porzucki, Nina (June 13, 2014).
"Even if they lose, Bosnia-Herzegovina's national team has already won" .
Public Radio International . Retrieved May 27, 2021 .
^
"Dragan Paljić: Želja mi je igrati za BiH" (in Bosnian). sportin.ba. Archived from
the original on March 17, 2010.
^
"Getting To Know... Andrea Petkovic" .
Women's Tennis Association . Archived from
the original on 18 April 2012. Retrieved 20 August 2011 .
^
"Bayern-Bubi Rankovic kommt im Sommer zu 96" [Bayern-Lad Rankovic Joins 96 in Summer] (in German). bild.de. 21 February 2014. Retrieved 17 November 2015 .
^
"Bayern in Belgrade" . fc-redstar.net. 24 October 2007. Archived from
the original on 26 October 2007. Retrieved 26 October 2007 .
^
Hristina Sampanidis – ZFK Masinac PZP
Archived 2012-02-25 at the
Wayback Machine
^
"Neven Subotić: Spreman za Rumune" (in Serbian). 15 March 2009. Retrieved 29 March 2009 .
^
"Srbi u tuđini" . Sportal. July 26, 2010. Archived from
the original on July 14, 2014.
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