Cannabis Indica October 12, 2016October 12, 2016 thcscience_admin Czechs in SerbiaЧеси у СрбијиČesi v Srbsku Coat of arms of the National Council of the Czech National Minority in SerbiaTotal population1,824 (2011)LanguagesSerbian and CzechReligionRoman Catholicism, ProtestantismRelated ethnic groupsSlovaks, other West Slavs According to the 2011 census, Czechs (Serbian: Чеси / Česi) in Serbia number 1,824 of population.[1] National Council of the Czech National Minority in Serbia have seat in Bela Crkva in Vojvodina. Demographics[edit] Part of a series onCzechs DiasporaEurope Austria Vienna Bulgaria Croatia France Poland Romania Serbia United Kingdom North America United States Baltimore Nebraska South Dakota Texas Canada Mexico South America Argentina Brazil Venezuela Oceania Australia Subgroups Moravians Silesians Culture Literature Music Art Cinema Cuisine Dress Sport Religion History History of the Czech lands Rulers Language Czech Moravian Related nations Austrians Germans Poles Silesians Slovaks West Slavs Czechs form a majority in Češko Selo ("Czech Village") in the Eastern Danube part of Southern Banat in Vojvodina. Year Czechs 1948 6,760 1953 5,948 1961 5,133 1971 4,149 1981 3,225 1991 2,675 2002 (excl. Kosovo) 2,211 2011 (excl. Kosovo) 1,824 Notable people[edit] Aleksandar Mašin, military officer and participant of the May Coup Ivan Bek, Yugoslav football player Ludmila Frajt, composer Emil Hájek, composer and pianist Rudolf Nováček, military composer Zlatko Krasni, poet Aleksandar Lifka, European cinematographer Vladislav Titelbah, rural painter František Zach, military theorist See also[edit] Czech Republic–Serbia relations References[edit] ^ "Попис у Србији 2011". Archived from the original on 2020-05-09. Retrieved 2017-01-27. Borislav Jankulov, Pregled kolonizacije Vojvodine u XVIII i XIX veku, Novi Sad - Pančevo, 2003. External links[edit] Nacionalni savet češke nacionalne manjine | savetceha.rs (in Czech and Serbian) Ethnic groups in SerbiaSerbs (Vojvodina, Kosovo)Larger ethnic minorities Hungarians Bosniaks Romani Albanians Kosovo Slovaks Croats Romanians Vlachs Ethnic map without Kosovo (2011)Smaller ethnic minorities Yugoslavs Montenegrins Macedonians Russians Ethnic Muslims Bulgarians Bunjevci Rusyns Gorani Ukrainians Germans Czechs Belarusians Jews Poles Greeks Turks Šokci Aromanians Armenians Chinese Arabs See also Demographic history of Serbia Czech diasporaAfrica Kenya South Africa Asia Israel Americas Argentina Brazil Canada Mexico United States Baltimore Nebraska South Dakota Texas Venezuela Europe Austria Vienna Bulgaria Croatia France Germany Italy Poland Romania Serbia Ukraine United Kingdom Oceania Australia Portals: Czech Republic Serbia