Atlas of Serbia
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General maps
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Map of Serbia with Kosovo (as it is recognized by UN) |
| Map of Serbia |
| Map of Serbia |
| Administrative divisions of the Republic of Serbia |
| Administrative divisions of the Republic of Serbia |
| Statistical regions of Serbia |
| Statistical regions of Serbia |
| Districts of Serbia and Municipalities of Serbia |
| Districts of Serbia (in Serbian) |
| Districts of Serbia |
| Municipalities of Serbia |
| Official cities of Serbia |
| Main cities of Serbia |
| Main cities of Serbia |
| Flag map |
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Blank map |
| Blank map |
| Blank map |
| Blank map |
| Geographical regions in Serbia |
| Vojvodina within Serbia |
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Vojvodina within Serbia |
| Kosovo within Serbia |
| Kosovo within Serbia |
History maps
This section holds a short summary of the history of the area of present-day Serbia, illustrated with maps, including historical maps of former countries and empires that included present-day Serbia.
General history
| approximate extent of Pannonian Sea during the Miocene Epoch |
| approximate extent of Pannonian Sea during the Miocene Epoch |
| approximate extent of Pannonian Sea during the Miocene Epoch |
| detailed map of the south-eastern part of Pannonian Sea during the Miocene Epoch |
| detailed map of the south-eastern part of Pannonian Sea during the Miocene Epoch |
| Lepenski Vir culture (6700-5500 BC) |
| Starčevo culture (7th-5th milennium BC) |
| Neolithic Starčevo culture (5300-4400 BC) |
| Vinča culture (6th-5th milennium BC) |
| Copper Age Kostolac culture |
| Vučedol culture (3000-2400 BC) |
| Vatin culture (16th-13th century BC) |
| Bronze Age Dubovac-Žuto Brdo culture |
| Bronze Age Belegiš culture |
| Iron Age Bosut culture |
| Ethnic territory of the Illyrians and Illyrian tribes (8th-3rd century BC) |
| Iron Age Glasinac culture (around 300 BC) |
| Tribal State of the Scordisci (3rd century BC - 1st century BC) with capital in Singidunum (present-day Belgrade) |
| Territorial development of the Roman Empire 264 BC-192, including the conquest of present-day territory of Serbia |
| Roman Republic 100 BCE |
| Map of the Roman Empire in 50 |
The extent of the Roman Republic and Roman Empire;
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| Camps of the Roman Legions in 80 |
| Map of the Roman Empire in 116 |
| Dalmatia in the Roman Empire (116) |
| Moesia Superior in the Roman Empire (116) |
| Pannonia in the Roman Empire (116) |
| Dacia in the Roman Empire (116) |
| Roman Empire in 117 |
| Roman Empire in 117 |
| Roman provinces in the territory of present-day Serbia until 273 |
| Territory of emperor Galerius (whose capital was Sirmium) during the Tetrarchy, 3rd-4th century |
| Prefecture of Illyricum with capital in Sirmium, 318-379 AD |
| Prefecture of Illyricum in the 4th century |
| Prefecture of Illyricum in the 4th century |
| Roman provinces, 4th century |
| Roman Empire divided 395, showing the dioceses and praetorian prefectures of Gaul, Italy, Illyricum and Oriens (east), roughly analogous to the four Tetrarch zones of influence after Diocletian's reforms. |
| The division of the Empire after the death of Theodosius I, ca.395 AD superimposed on modern borders. |
| Invasions of the Roman Empire 100-500 |
| Invasions of the Roman Empire 100-500 |
| Division of the Roman Empire in 406 |
| Eastern Roman Empire and Western Roman Empire, c.476 |
| Kingdom of the Gepids in the 6th century (539-551) |
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Eastern Roman Empire |
| Eastern Roman Empire under emperor Justinianus |
| Eastern Roman Empire under emperor Justinianus |
| Byzantine Empire in 550 |
| Migration of the Slavs (5th-10th century) |
| People named Serbi in northern Caucasus (ancient Sarmatia) |
| People named Serbi in northern Caucasus (ancient Sarmatia) |
| People named Serbi in northern Caucasus (ancient Sarmatia) |
| People named Sirbi in northern Caucasus (ancient Sarmatia) |
| People named Sirbi in northern Caucasus (ancient Sarmatia) |
| White Serbia in the 6th century (around 560), according to the book of Francis Dvornik |
| Dervan's Serbia in present-day eastern Germany, 7th century |
| White Serbia located in Pannonia (according to one of the theories) |
| White Serbia located in Pannonia (according to one of the theories) |
| Hypothetical migrations of the Serbs from India (according to one of the theories about origin of the Serbs) |
| Migration of Serbs from Caucasus (according to Niko Županić) |
| Migration of Serbs from Caucasus |
| Hypothetical migration of the Serbs |
| Migration of Serbs to the Balkans from White Serbia (7th century) |
| Migration of Serbs to the Balkans from White Serbia (7th century) |
| Hypothetical migration of the Serbs |
| Migration of Serbs |
| Migration of Serbs |
| Areas where place names with word "Srb" appear |
| Slavic peoples (7th-8th century) |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | The "Sklavinias" in the Balkans, 7th - 8th century |
| Presence of South Slavic tribes c. 700 |
| Location of Great Moravia (9th century) in the territory of present-day Serbia according to the Peter Nagy Puspoki's theory |
| Serbia under Vlastimir |
| Serb lands in the 9th-10th century |
| Serb lands in the 9th-10th century |
| Serb lands in the 10th century |
| Serb lands in the 10th century |
| Serbian state in the 10th century |
| The Byzantine Empire under Basil II, c. 1025 |
| Byzantine Empire 1025 |
| South Slavic uprising of Peter Delyan (1040) |
| South Slavic uprising of Peter Delyan (1040-1041) |
| The Byzantine Empire at the accession of Alexios I Komnenos, c. 1081 |
| Serbian state in the 11th century |
| Serbian state in the 11th century |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Serbian state in the 11th century |
| Serbia in the 12th century |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Serbia in the 12th century |
| Serbian states in the middle 12th century |
| Serbia in the 12th century |
| Serbia in the 12th century |
| Serbian state, 1150-1220 |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Serbian state, 1168-1196 |
| Map of the Byzantine Empire under Manuel Komnenos, c.1170. |
| Byzantine Empire 1180 |
| Serbia in 1184 |
| Serbia in 1189 |
| Serbia in 1265 |
| Serbia in 1265 |
| Possession of Darman and Kudelin in the 13th century |
| Serbian states, 13th-14th century |
| Serbian states, 13th-14th century |
| Kingdom of Syrmia of Stefan Dragutin in 1282-1316 |
| Kingdom of Syrmia of Stefan Dragutin in 1282-1316 (according to the book of historian Stanoje Stanojević) |
| Medieval Serbian states |
| The despotate of Epirus and Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje from 1315 to 1358 |
| Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje in 1350 |
| Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje in 1350 |
| Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje in 1350 |
| Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje |
| conquests of Stefan Dušan |
| Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje in 1355 |
| Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje in 1355 |
| Serbian Empire of Stefan Dušan with capital in Skopje in 1355 |
| Map of the Serbian Empire in 1360 with territories of local rulers |
| Empire of the Romans (Greeks) and Serbs and whole Albania (Empire of Simeon Uroš - Siniša), 14th century. |
| State of župan Nikola Altomanović (1367-1373) |
| Serbian states in 1373-1395 |
| Realm of Prince Lazar in the 14th century |
| Realm of Prince Lazar |
| Realm of Prince Lazar in the 14th century |
| Realm of Prince Lazar in the 14th century |
| Serbia in 1400 |
| Serbia in the 15th century |
| Serbian despotate in 1422 |
| Serbian despotate in 1422 |
| Serbian despotate in the 15th century |
| Serbian despotate, 1455-1459 |
| Possessions of the Serbian despots in Syrmia, Bačka and Banat, 15th-16th century |
| Banate of Mačva and Banate of Belgrade in 1490 |
| Empire of Jovan Nenad, 1526-1527 |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Empire of Jovan Nenad (1526-1527) and Duchy of Radoslav Čelnik (1527-1530) |
| Duchy of Radoslav Čelnik, 1527-1530 |
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Growth of the Ottoman Empire |
| Development of the European part of the Ottoman Empire |
| Growth of the Ottoman Empire |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Map of the Ottoman Empire 1566 |
| Banat uprising in 1594 |
| Ottoman provinces in the 16th century |
| Serbian Patriarchate of Peć (16th-17th century) |
| Approximate territory that, according to various sources, was ethnographically named Rascia (Serbia) between 16th and 18th century |
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Location of the Ottoman Empire in 1683 |
| Great Serb migration in 1690 |
| Habsburg Kingdom of Serbia, 1718-1739 |
| Habsburg Kingdom of Serbia, 1718-1739 |
| Habsburg Kingdom of Serbia, 1718-1739 |
| The southern districts of the Banat of Temeswar in 1740 |
| Location map of New Serbia (1752-1764) and Slavo-Serbia (1753-1764) in modern-day Ukraine, where Serbs from modern-day north Serbia (Vojvodina) migrated in the middle of the 18th century |
| Location map of New Serbia (1752-1764) |
| Detailed map of New Serbia (1752-1764) with names of the settlements. Many of the settlement names are same as settlement names in north Serbia (Vojvodina) |
| Location map of Slavo-Serbia (1753-1764) |
| Detailed map of Slavo-Serbia (1753-1764) |
| Koča's frontier (area of anti-Ottoman rebellion) in 1788 |
| Pashaluk of Belgrade in 1791 |
| Pashaluk of Belgrade in the 18th century |
| Map of the Ottoman Empire 1801 |
| Karađorđe's Serbia during Serbian Revolution |
| Karađorđe's Serbia in 1809 |
| Karađorđe's Serbia in 1813 |
| Principality of Serbia in 1817 |
| Principality of Serbia - territorial annexions in 1833 |
| Principality of Serbia - territorial annexions in 1833 |
| Principality of Serbia in 1833 |
| Serbian Vojvodina in 1848 |
| Principality of Serbia and Serbian Vojvodina in 1848 |
| Principality of Serbia and Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar in 1849 |
| Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar in 1849-1860 |
| Districts of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar (1849-1850) |
| Districts of the Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar (1850-1860) |
| Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar in 1849-1860 |
| Voivodeship of Serbia and Banat of Temeschwar in 1849-1860 |
| Principality of Serbia according to the Treaty of San Stefano in 1878 |
| Principality of Serbia according to the Treaty of San Stefano in 1878 |
| The territory received by Serbia after the Russo-Turkish War (1877–1878) |
| Principality of Serbia after Berlin Congres in 1878-1882 and Kingdom of Serbia in 1882-1912 |
| Principality of Serbia after Berlin Congres in 1878 |
| Principality of Serbia after Berlin Congres in 1878 |
| Serbia between 1878 and 1912 |
| Balkans from 1856 to 1878 |
| Principality of Serbia in 1876-1878 |
| Principality of Serbia in 1879 |
| Sanjak of Novibazar in 1878 |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1888 |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1897 |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1898 |
| Balkan states in 1899 |
| Map showing the territorial claims over the Ottoman Empire in 1912 |
| Serbian territorial aspirations in 1912-1914 |
| First Balkan War in 1912 |
| First Balkan War in 1913 |
| First Balkan War in 1913 |
| First Balkan War in 1913 |
| Kingdom of Serbia after First Balkan War in 1912-1913 |
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Kingdom of Serbia after Second Balkan War in 1913 |
| Kingdom of Serbia after Second Balkan War in 1913 |
| Kingdom of Serbia after Second Balkan War in 1913 |
| Kingdom of Serbia after Second Balkan War in 1913 |
| Division of Macedonia in 1913 |
| Territorial development of Serbia (1817-1913) |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1913 |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1913 |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1913 |
| Serbia in World War I |
| Serbia in World War I |
| Serbia in World War I |
| Serbia in World War I |
| Serbia in World War I |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Lands offered to Serbia by the London agreement in 1915 |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1918 |
| Kingdom of Serbia in 1918 |
| Yugoslavia in 1919 |
| Lands gained from Bulgaria after 1919 |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | 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 |
| Banovinas in Yugoslavia |
| Banovinas in Yugoslavia |
| Banovinas in Yugoslavia |
| Banovinas in Yugoslavia |
| Danube banovina |
| Morava banovina |
| Drina banovina |
| Zeta banovina |
| Vardar banovina |
| Proposal for creation of Banovina of Serbia, 1939-1941 |
| German invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1944 |
| Banovinas of Nedić's Serbia in 1941 |
| Danube Banovina in 1941 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1944 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1944 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1944 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1943 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1943 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1943-1944 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1944 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1944 |
| Nedić's Serbia in 1941-1944 |
| Republic of Užice in 1941 |
| Republic of Užice in 1941 |
| Republic of Užice in 1941 |
| Republic of Užice in 1941 |
| Future Serbia in Greater Yugoslavia according to project of Stevan Moljević (1941) |
| Future Serbia according to project of Stevan Moljević (1941) |
| Territory controlled by the Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland (JVuO) in 1942 |
| "All Serbia", an enlarged Serbia proposed by Milan Nedić in 1943 |
| Areas of the Yugoslav Army in the Fatherland (JVuO) commanders, according to the truce treaties with the Germans (as of 1943) |
| Fascist genocide in Serbia in WW2 |
| Fascist concentration camps in Serbia in WW2 |
| Movement of JVuO troops in 1945 |
| Area under jurisdiction of the National Anti-Fascist Council of the People's Liberation of Sandžak (ZAVNOS), 1943-1945 |
| Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
| Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
| Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
| Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
| Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
| Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
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Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
| Serbia in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, 1945-1992 |
| Serbia inside Yugoslavia |
| Proposed division of Yugoslavia by the Pavelić-Stojadinović Agreement from 1954 |
| Greater Serbia, proposed by Vojislav Šešelj |
| Greater Serbia, proposed by Vojislav Šešelj |
| Greater Serbia, proposed by Vuk Drašković |
| An animated series of maps showing the breakup of the second Yugoslavia |
| Wartime 1992 |
| Wartime 1992 |
| Wartime Serbia, 1991-1995 |
| After the separation of Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Macedonia, Serbia and Montenegro continued as the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, renamed in 2003 into Serbia and Montenegro |
| Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1992-2003) and Serbia and Montenegro (2003-2006) |
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Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1992-2003) and Serbia and Montenegro (2003-2006) |
| Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1992-2003) and Serbia and Montenegro (2003-2006) |
| State of Balkania (proposed by Adem Demaçi in 1993) |
| Sites in southern Central Serbia where NATO aviation used forbidden munition with depleted uranium during 1999 bombing |
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Conflict in southern Serbia in 1999–2001 |
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Map of Serbia and Montenegro |
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Location of the FR of Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro) before dissolution |
| Map of Serbia in 2006 |
| Former Yugoslavia compared with the present borders (2006) |
| Former Yugoslavia compared with the present borders (2007) |
| Former Yugoslavia compared with the present borders (2009) |
| Central Balkans in 2010 (de facto situation). Note: Serbia does not recognizing Independence of Kosovo. |
Maps of the Kosovo conflict
| Kosovo within Serbia, see also Atlas of Kosovo |
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Kosovo within Serbia |
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Kosovo within Serbia |
Ethnic, linguistic and religion maps
Ethnic maps
| Ethnic map of the Balkan Peninsula (1861), including Central Serbia and Kosovo |
| Ethnic map of Eastern Serbia based on the 1866 census |
| Ethnographic map of the Balkans (1876) |
| Ethnic map of the Balkans (1880) |
| Ethnic map of Austria-Hungary (including Serbia), census 1880. German version |
| Ethnic map of the Balkan Peninsula (1881), including Serbia |
| Ethnic map of Austria-Hungary (including Serbia), census 1890. English version |
| Ethnographic map of the Balkans (1897) |
| Ethnic map of the Balkan Peninsula (1898), including Central Serbia and Kosovo |
| Ethnographic map of the Balkans (1918) |
| Serbs in Yugoslavia |
| Ethnic map, 1991 |
| Ethnic map, 1991 |
| Ethnic map of Serbia (by municipalities) - census 2002 |
| Ethnic map of Serbia (by municipalities) - census 2002 |
| Ethnic map of Serbia (by settlements) - census 2002 |
| Ethnic map of Serbia (by settlements) - census 2002 |
| Serbian population in Serbia (census 2002) |
| Bosniak population in Serbia (census 2002) |
| Hungarian population in Serbia (census 2002) |
| Roma (Gipsy) population in Serbia (census 2002) |
| Roma (Gipsy) population in Serbia (census 2002) |
| Macedonian population in Serbia (census 2002) |
| Ethnic map of Serbia (by municipalities) - census 2011 |
| Ethnic map of Serbia (by municipalities) - census 2011 |
| [[|border|251x400px]] | Ethnic map of Sandžak (1981) |
| Ethnic map of Sandžak (2002) |
| Ethnic map of Sandžak (2011) |
| Vlachs in Central Serbia (2002 census). Note: There are conflicting views about the issue whether Vlachs are separate ethnicity or part of Romanian ethnicity. |
Linguistic maps
| Serbo-Croatian language in Serbia (as of 2005) |
| Serbian language in the region (as of 2006) |
| Serbian language in the region (as of 2006) |
| Official recognition of the Serbian language in Serbia and neighbouring countries |
| Official recognition of the Serbian language in Serbia and neighbouring countries |
| Historical distribution of Serbo-Croatian dialects in Serbia (before 16th century migrations) |
| Shtokavian Serbo-Croatian dialects in Serbia |
| Shtokavian Serbo-Croatian dialects in Serbia |
| Shtokavian Serbo-Croatian dialects in Serbia |
| Torlakian dialect |
| Torlakian dialect |
| Romanian and Vlach language in Serbia (census 2002). Note: There are conflicting views about the issue whether Vlach is separate language or part of Romanian language. |
| Municipalities with official usage of Romanian language in Vojvodina (together with Serbian and other languages) |
Religion maps
| Religion map of the territory of present-day Serbia in 1054 |
| Organization of the Serbian Orthodox Church in Serbia |
| Organization of the Serbian Orthodox Church in former Yugoslavia |
| Organization of the Serbian Orthodox Church in former Yugoslavia |
| Organization of the Serbian Orthodox Church in former Yugoslavia |
| Orthodox Christians in Serbia |
| Muslims in Serbia |
| Organization of the Meshihat of the Islamic Community in Serbia, which is part of the Rijaset of the Islamic Community in Bosnia and Herzegovina (as of 2007) |
| Organization of the Rijaset of the Islamic Community of Serbia (as of 2007) |
| Organization of the Catholic Church in Serbia |
Political proposals
| Federalized Serbia (proposed by the League of Social Democrats of Vojvodina in 1999) |
| New regions in Serbia (proposed by the Democratic Party of Serbia in 2002) |
| New administrative divisions (regions) of Serbia (proposed by the League For Šumadija in 2004) |
| Proposed new ethnic autonomies in Serbia |
Regional maps
| Map of Bačka region |
| Map of Banat region |
| Map of Syrmia region |
| Map of Syrmia region |
| Map of Mačva region |
| Map of Mačva District in Central Serbia |
| Map of Šumadija region |
| Map of Sandžak region |
| Map of Sandžak region |
| Map of Timočka Krajina region in Central Serbia |
| Map of Timočka Krajina region in Central Serbia |
| Map of Šopluk region |
| Map of Pančevački Rit |
| Map of Šajkaška |
Municipalities and cities
- Municipalities of Belgrade
- Municipality of Zemun
- Municipality of Novi Beograd
- Municipality of Surčin
- Municipality of Palilula
- Municipality of Šabac
- Municipality of Bogatić
- Urban local communities in Zemun
- Urban local communities in Novi Beograd
- Urban local communities in Palilula
- Urban local communities in Borča
Other maps
| H1N1 presence in Serbia (25 June 2009) |
| H1N1 presence in Serbia (6 November 2009) |
| Map of Serbia with EU flag |
Satellite maps
| Satellite map |
Notes and references
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General remarks:
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