Ivanović
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ivanović (son of Ivan) is a common Serbian, Croatian and Montenegrin surname. Notable people with this name include:
- Ana Ivanovic (born 1987), Serbian tennis player
- Božidar Ivanović (born 1946), Montenegrin chess grandmaster and politician
- Božina Ivanović (1931–2002), Montenegrin anthropologist and politician
- Branislav Ivanović (born 1984), Serbian footballer
- Cristoforo Ivanovich (1620–1689), music historian, poet, librettist
- Duško Ivanović, (born 1957), Montenegrin basketball player and coach
- Ivan Rikard Ivanović (born Ivan Kraus; 1880–1949), Croatian politician
- Josef Ivanović (born 1973), former German football player and coach
- Marin Ivanović (born 1981), Croatian rapper better known by his stage name Stoka
- Mihailo Ivanović (1874–1949), Montenegrin politician
- Milan Ivanović (born 1960), Serbian-born Australian footballer
- Nikanor Ivanović (1825–1894), metropolitan of Montenegro and seaside hills 1858–1860
- Saša Ivanović (born 1984), Montenegrin footballer
- Tina Ivanović, (born 1974), Serbian singer and model
- Vane Ivanović (1913–1999), Yugoslav diplomat, athlete and philanthropist
- Velimir Ivanović (born 1978), Serbian footballer
Ivanovich
Ivanovich (Russian: Иванович) is a Russian patronymic meaning son of Ivan. Since "Ivanov" means "Ivan's" (or John's as an English variant), Ivanov"-ich" means "John's/Ivan's son" or "Johnson/Ivanson". Since Ivan is one of the most common names in Russia, innumerable people have Ivanovich or its feminine form Ivanovna (Ивановна) as part of their name. It is also transliterated as "Ivanovitch".
See also
This page or section lists people with the surname Ivanović. If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name(s) to the link. |
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