Timeline of Belgrade history

Timeline of the History of Belgrade
Political situation Events
Starčevo culture
Vinča culture
  • 5500–4500 BCE: Vinča culture is born in what is today Belgrade's suburb of Vinča. Within the coming two millennia it evolves into a dominant neolithic culture in Europe, especially influencing the Balkans. Sometimes this era is called the First Golden Age of Belgrade. By 3000 BC Vinča culture disperses into several sub-cultures.
Barbarian
Scordisci invasion
  • 279 BCE: Singidūn is founded by the Celtic tribe of Scordisci.
Roman Empire
Eastern Roman Empire
  • 395: Singidunum becomes a northwestern frontier city of the Eastern Roman Empire after the death of Theodosius I (r. 379–395)
Iranian/

Germanic/

Hunnic

invasions 5th century

  • 441: The Huns destroy the city. Attila resides in the city.
  • 450: Sarmatians are holding Singidunum.
  • 470: The Ostrogoths expel the Sarmatians.
  • 476: Western Roman Empire collapses. The city becomes a border-town towards the hostile Germanic tribes.
  • 488: The Gepids conquer Singidunum.
  • 504: The Goths capture it again.
Byzantine/

Frankish rule/

Serbian arrival

6–9th centuries

  • 510: A peace treaty handed over the city to the Byzantine Empire.
  • 535: Byzantine emperor Justinian I rebuilds Singidunum.
  • 584: The Avars conquer and sack it.
  • 592: Byzantine Empire regains the city.
  • 7th century: The Avars destroy it again.
  • 630: The Slavs conquer Singidunum.
Byzantine/

Bulgarian/ Hungarian rule

9th–11th centuries

  • 827: The Bulgarians control the fortress. The city is called by Western sources Alba Bulgarica.
  • Frankish Empire temporary annexes Taurunum, today's northern Belgrade.
  • 16 April 878: First known written record of the Slavic name Beligrad.
  • 896: Army of Hungarians attack Belgrade.
  • 1018: The Byzantine emperor Basil II seizes Belgrade from the Bulgarian Empire. Occasional clashes with Hungary.
  • 1072: Belgrade was retaken by Byzantine Empire.
  • 1096: The city was destroyed by Hungarians, but the Byzantine Empire remained in control of it.
Hungarian/Byzantine/Bulgarian rule 11th–12th centuries
  • 1096–1189: The Crusaders are passing through Belgrade.
  • 1127: Hungarian king Stefan II destroys Belgrade and used the obtained stones to build a fortress in Zemun.
  • 1154: Byzantine emperor Manuel I Comnenus destroys Zemun and takes the stones back to rebuild Belgrade.
  • 1182: Hungary attack and sacked the city.
  • 1185: Byzantine Empire regained it by diplomacy but loses to the newly reestablished Bulgarian Empire.
Serbian/Hungarian/Bulgarian rule 13th century
  • 1202: The Hungarians seize Belgrade.
  • 1203: The Bulgarians retake the city.
  • 1213: The city is given to Hungary by emperor Boril.
  • 1221: Belgrade is returned to Bulgaria.
  • 1246: The city becomes part of Hungary.
  • 1284: The Hungarians gift to the Serbian king Stefan Dragutin; this is the first time that Belgrade comes under Serbian rule.
Hungarian rule 14th–16th centuries
Ottoman/Austrian rule 16th–19th centuries
Ottoman/Serbian rule 1804–1878
  • 12 December [O.S. 30 November] 1806: Karađorđe Petrović captures Belgrade and makes it the capital of Serbia.
  • 1808: First Serbian Academy, the Great School, is established.
  • 1813: The Ottomans reconquer the city.
  • 1815: Miloš Obrenović started the Second Serbian Uprising and conquered Belgrade.
  • 1830: Mahmud II proclaimed charter on Serbian autonomy.
  • 1831: First printing works established.
  • 17 January [O.S. 5 January] 1834: The first newspaper (Novine srbske—"Serbian Newspaper") published.
  • 1840: The first post office in Belgrade.
  • 1841: Belgrade became the capital of the Principality of Serbia under Knez Mihailo Obrenović.
  • 1844: The National Museum of Serbia established.
  • 1855: First telegraph line in Serbia, Belgrade–Aleksinac, established.
  • 1862: After the conflict at Čukur česma, Belgrade was bombarded from the Kalemegdan fortress.
  • 1867: In Kalemegdan, the Ottoman commander of the fortress Ali Riza Pasha handed over the keys of Belgrade to Knez Mihailo Obrenović.
  • 10 June [O.S. 29 May] 1868: Knez Mihailo Obrenović is assassinated in the Košutnjak Forest.
Serbian rule 1878–1914
  • 1878: The Berlin Congress recognized the independence of Serbia in the Treaty of Berlin.
  • 1882: Belgrade is the capital of the Kingdom of Serbia.
  • 1883: The first telephone lines in Belgrade.
  • 1884: Railway stations and a railway bridge over Sava is constructed (and still in use).
  • 1892: The first modern water supply.
  • 1893: Electrification of the city.
  • 1894: The first electric tramway.
  • 11 June [O.S. 29 May] 1903: In a coup d'état, King Aleksandar Obrenović is assassinated, and King Petar I Karađorđević ascends the throne of Serbia.
Austro-Hungarian/Serbian rule 1914–18
Kingdom of Serbia 1918
  • 24 November 1918: The Assembly of Syrmia proclaims the secession of Syrmia from the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and unification with the Kingdom of Serbia, thus unifying Belgrade with Zemun in the same state.
  • 25 November 1918: The Great people's assembly of Serbs, Bunjevci and other Slavs proclaims the unification of Banat, Bačka and Baranja with the Kingdom of Serbia, thus unifying Belgrade and the settlements on the Danube's left bank in the same state.
Yugoslav Kingdom 1918–1941
  • 1 December 1918: Belgrade becomes the capital of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.
  • 28 January [O.S. 15 January] 1919: In order to coordinate the dating in different parts of the newly formed state, the territories of former Serbia and Montenegro adopt Gregorian calendar, which had already been in use in the other parts of the kingdom.
  • 1923: ParisBudapest air line extended to Belgrade.
  • 25 March 1927: The first Belgrade airport (Dojno polje Airport) opened.
  • 6 January 1929: King Aleksandar Karađorđević dissolved the National Assembly and started his dictatorship. Belgrade becomes the capital of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
  • 24 March 1929: Radio Belgrade started broadcasting.
  • 1934: Zemun becomes a municipality of the City of Belgrade.
  • 1935: The first bridge over the Danube, the Pančevački most (Bridge of Pančevo) is built.
  • 1937: Belgrade Fair opened.
  • 14 December 1939: Leftist students' protests against the government, poverty and war. During the police breakdown of the demonstrations, five to ten protesters are killed (depending on the sources).
  • 27 March 1941: Huge protests against joining the Axis.
  • 6 April 1941: Nazi Germany bombs Belgrade (Operation Retribution). 2,271-4,000 casualties, depending on the sources.
Nazi/Croatian rule 1941–1944
Yugoslav Republic 1944–1991
Second Yugoslav Republic 1992–2003
Serbia and Montenegro 2003–2006
Independent Serbia 2006–present
  • 6 June 2006: Belgrade becomes the capital of independent Serbia.
  • February 2008: "Kosovo is Serbia"-protests follow the 2008 Kosovo declaration of independence.
  • 20–24 May 2008: Belgrade hosts Eurovision Song Contest 2008.
  • 1 July to 12 July 2009: Belgrade hosts 2009 Summer Universiade, the largest sporting event ever to be organized by the city.
  • 20 December 2009: Government in Belgrade decides to apply for EU membership.
  • 21 April 2010: Avala Tower opened after the reconstruction, following its complete demolition during the NATO bombing campaign.
  • 13 December 2010: Belgrade’s application for the title of European Capital of Culture 2020 presented and submitted in Brussels.
  • 1 January 2012: Ada Bridge opened for traffic. The first new bridge built in Belgrade in 42 years.
  • May 2014: 2014 Southeast Europe floods make devastating damage. The Obrenovac suburb completely flooded.
  • 27 June 2014: City officials officially present Belgrade Waterfront, the € 3.1 billion worthy project of the renewal of the Sava banks and the old part of the city.
  • 18 December 2014: Pupin Bridge opened for traffic. The second Belgrade bridge over Danube and the first one connecting Zemun with the settlements on the Danube's left bank.

References

    See also

    External links