British Serbs
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British Serbs

Flag of the United Kingdom Flag of Serbia

Total population

Est. 70000[1]

Regions with significant populations
London, Southeastern United Kingdom and Leeds
Languages
English, Serbian
Religion
Serbian Orthodox Church
Part of a series on
Flag of Serbia

By region or country
Homelands
Serbia (Kosovo • Vojvodina)
Bosnia and Herzegovina (Republika Srpska •
Brčko • Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina)

Montenegro · Croatia
Diaspora
Local
Albania · Greece · Republic of Macedonia
Romania · Slovenia
Elsewhere in Europe
Austria · France · Germany · Hungary
Switzerland
North America
Canada · United States
Oceania
Australia · New Zealand
South America
Argentina · Brazil · Chile
By town or city
Europe
Budapest · Dubrovnik · Istanbul · London
Mostar · Osijek · Paris · Sarajevo
Szentendre · Trieste · Vienna · Zagreb
North America
Chicago · Los Angeles · Toronto

Subgroups · Closely-related peoples
Bokelji · Bosniaks · Bunjevci · Croats
Ethnic Muslims · Goranci · Krashovani
Macedonians · Montenegrins · Shopi
Šokci · Torlaks · Užičans · Yugoslavs

Culture
Literature · Music · Art · Cinema
Epic poetry · Clans · Slava · Costume
Religion · Kinship · Cuisine · Sport

Serbian Orthodox Church
Patriarchs · Monasteries · Saints

Languages and dialects
Serbian · Serbo-Croat
Romano-Serbian · Shtokavian
Torlakian · Šatrovački · Užičan
Church Slavonic (Old) · Slavoserbian
Serbian / Croatian / Bosnian distinctions

History
Origins · Timeline · Monarchs

Persecution
Serbophobia · World War II (Jasenovac)

Other topics
Serbian-Greek friendship

v  d  e

British Serbs are Serbs who have migrated to or were born in the United Kingdom.

Contents

History and Settlement

Many Serbs fled to Britain after the Second World War, with another wave arriving in the late 80s/early 90s. The Serbian community in London was mainly settled here immediately after World War II by Britain’s ex-combatant Serbian allies who stayed in Britain, not wishing to be repatriated to the communist regime at home. There was a new influx of Serbian people mainly fleeing the recent wars and disintegration of Yugoslavia. Most Serbs in the UK are now second or third generation, whose parents relocated from 1963 after being issued with passports which enabled them to move, live and work freely outside, although some did arrive after 1991.

Notting Hill is the community's main focus, with the Orthodox Church and the Serbian-Croatian Community Centre. Leeds also has a large community.

Famous British Serbs

See also

External links

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