Top 10 similar words or synonyms for sima_marković

petar_stambolić    0.810172

miloš_minić    0.796008

đuro_pucar    0.780979

протић    0.777166

skj_sr_slovenia    0.772885

hdz_bih    0.772686

skj_sr_montenegro    0.770527

žujović    0.768775

cemović    0.768268

mika_špiljak    0.766280

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for sima_marković

Article Example
4th Congress of the Communist Party of Yugoslavia The delegates attending the congress included Sima Marković, Milorad Petrović, Živojin Pecarski, and Kočo Racin.
League of Communists of Yugoslavia Those leaders remaining in Moscow were hit by the Stalin's Great Purge, in which many party members were arrested and shot, including the most prominent former leaders of Yugoslavia's Communists: Filip Filipović, Sima Marković, Jovan Mališić, as well as the current general secretary Milan Gorkić, who was deposed and shot in 1937.
Janko Katić He participated in all battles since the beginning: Belgrade, Rudnik, Vrbica, etc. He, Vasa Čarapić and Sima Marković commanded 4,000 soldiers that besieged Belgrade. Karđorđe sent him to the fighting in Mačva, in 1806, as help. He showed great skills, and after the burning of the Sovljak village, he killed 65 Turks and took what they had confiscated earlier. He died while fighting the Ottomans around Šabac, in the village of Krnić, just before the Battle of Mišar.
First Serbian Uprising The Ruling Council was established by recommendation of the Russian Minister for Foreign Affairs Chartorisky and on the proposal of some of the dukes (Jakov and Matija Nenadović, Milan Obrenović, Sima Marković). The idea of Boža Grujović, the first secretary, and Matija Nenadović, the first president, was that the council would become the government of the new Serbian state. It had to organize and supervise the administration, the economy, army supply, order and peace, judiciary, and foreign policy.
Revolutionary Serbia The Ruling Council was established by recommendation of the Russian Minister for Foreign Affairs Chartorisky and on the proposal of some of the dukes (Jakov and Matija Nenadović, Milan Obrenović, Sima Marković). The idea of Boža Grujović, the first secretary, and Matija Nenadović, the first president, was that the council would become the government of the new Serbian state. It had to organize and supervise the administration, the economy, army supply, order and peace, judiciary, and foreign policy.