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Eustahija Arsić (Serbian Cyrillic: Еустахија Арсић; 14
March 1776, in Irig – 17
February 1843, in Arad) was a
Serbian writer, translator, and salonist...
- Arsa and Arso (themselves
diminutives of ****nije). It may
refer to:
Eustahija Arsić (1776-1843),
Serbian writer Jovica Arsić (born 1968),
Serbian basketball...
-
Television series Jelena Gavanski 1982 Lina
Television film Vuk Karadžić 1987
Eustahija Radovanović TV
series Tears for Sale Čarlston za
Ognjenku 2008 Velika...
- (1872–1930,
Russian E/USSR, nf) Hr****h
Arshagyan (1887–1905,
Ottoman E, p)
Eustahija Arsić (1776–1843, Austria-Hungary, nf)
Ahmed Ibrahim Artan (living, Somalia...
- have been
modified so that the
award can only be
given to
women poets.
Eustahija Arsić Ana
Marija Marović
Princess Anka Obrenović
Staka Skenderova Draga...
-
Montenegrin throne is her descendant. Obrenović
family tree Ana
Marija Marović
Eustahija Arsić
Milica Stojadinović-Srpkinja
Staka Skenderova Draga Dejanović Note:...
- nv. &
politician Suzanne Arruda (living,
United States),
mystery nv.
Eustahija Arsić (1776–1843, Serbia), wr.
Antonia Arslan (b. 1938, Italy), critic...
- be
published in
Serbia Smilja Avramov (1918–2018),
nonfiction writer Eustahija Arsić (1776–1843),
writer Jelena Balšić (1365/1366–1443), her
three epistles...
-
Princess Anka Obrenović
Milica Stojadinović-Srpkinja
Staka Skenderova Eustahija Arsić
Portret prethodnice:
Draga Dejanović.PDF. Živan
Milisavac (1971)...
- teachers'
college and the last
Serbian Orthodox Bishop of Budapest. Poet
Eustahija Arsić in a book of
poems entitled Sovet'
Meterni (A Mother's Advice) is...