A Serbian VillageHarper & Row, 1967 - 358 pages |
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Page 119
... traditional covered head for the married woman . She usually wears a gay red or blue kerchief everyday and a starched white one for holidays , in the house as well as outdoors . Maidens generally have retained the traditional kike ...
... traditional covered head for the married woman . She usually wears a gay red or blue kerchief everyday and a starched white one for holidays , in the house as well as outdoors . Maidens generally have retained the traditional kike ...
Page 151
... traditional Petrović clan in the village . as long as the larger ones , but they have decreased in size because of fewer sons and greater emigration . The so - called traditional Orašac clans , those who have been in the village twenty ...
... traditional Petrović clan in the village . as long as the larger ones , but they have decreased in size because of fewer sons and greater emigration . The so - called traditional Orašac clans , those who have been in the village twenty ...
Page 253
... traditional village observances bear this out . Today the situation is completely different , the basis for the new policy having been proclaimed in Article 25 of the 1946 Constitution : Freedom of conscience and freedom of religion are ...
... traditional village observances bear this out . Today the situation is completely different , the basis for the new policy having been proclaimed in Article 25 of the 1946 Constitution : Freedom of conscience and freedom of religion are ...
Contents
The Setting | 1 |
FIGURES | 17 |
Serbia and Orašac in the Nineteenth Century | 21 |
Copyright | |
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agriculture Arandjelovac autobiography Belgrade boys brandy bread bride brothers Bukovik ceremony changes cheese church clan clothing Cooperative corn costume cows culture dance daughter dinars Dodola dress economic factors farm father feast Figure gazda girls grade grandfather guest gusle head hectares holiday homestead important income increase Jasenica Jelovik kafana kajmak kilos Kopljare Kragujevac labor land live livestock male marriage married Miloš Miloš Obrenović miners Misača mixed agriculturalists Mladenovac mother neighbors nineteenth century older Orašac population Orašac village Orašani parents Partisans Party pattern peasants percent period pigs plow plum priest pure agriculturalists rakija relatives Revolt Second World War Serbian Serbs sheep significant slava social starešina Stojanović Stojnik Šumadija Table taxes teachers town traditional Turkish Turks usually Venčac Village Council Vojvodina wedding wheat wife wine women wooden workers young Yugoslav Yugoslavia zadruga