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My name is Jugoslava. (cue all the Yugoslavia jokes )
I am of mixed ethnic and religious background, 35, married, grew up in Yugoslavia, been living in Hungary for almost seven years now.
I speak my mother tongue ( at the time I learned it the name was Serbo-Croatian) and a few more - Hungarian, German...and English. I also know Latin and Old Church Slavonic. Unfortunatelly, even though I lived for a brief period in Romania, my knowledge of that language is best described as basic - I am planning to correct that some day.
Whenever I have time, apart from my regular duties of being a full time mother of three and part-time ESL teacher, I thrawl the genealogy boards and correct badly spelled family names, give research advice and direct people where to look for answers.
I wish I had more time to do translations and travel .
SGS Rodoslovlje have been kind enough to make me one of their team members last year.
You are welcome to contact me via email or send me a message if you have any questions or need any assistance. And please, be patient, even if I dive straight into your query and start contacting people and archives right away, it takes a lot of time to find someone willing to answer the phone or reply on the other end. ))
my surname research list:
RogiÄ. PrÄiÄ, Tumbas, MikoviÄ, Jacek, AlimpijeviÄ, SekuliÄ, BodiÅ”, StipanoviÄ, StjepanoviÄ, MaraviÄ, Boca, IvoÅ”eviÄ, TomiÄ, MrvoÅ”, RaduloviÄ
places:
PƩcs, CsikƩria, (HU)
Bikovo, Aleksandrovo, Bajmok, Subotica, Mokrin, Zminjak, Beograd, (SRB)
Gomirje, Drežnica, LjuboŔina, Ogulin, PlaŔki, Jasenak, Brezno, Otok (CRO)
Jugoslava,
IvoÅ”eviÄ, isn't that name from Dalmatia? BTW, I am re-doing the SGS Team profile page and will add you to it. Its unpublished at the moment. I've been working on getting the pedigree system online :-s
Regards,
Sergej
It probably is - it is not listed among the founding families that settled in Gomirje in 1596. and I would need to look more specifically to date their arrival.
Based on the fact that same surname among ethnic Bunjevci is documented to have migrated to Subotica, confirmed in 1689. vital records there, the initial migrations had to have happened some time inbetween these two years. ( A number of early *fixed* surnames that originated in Dalmatia and Herzegovina follows the pattern - one area of origin - two confessions - Eastern Orthodox Serbian migrations further up the coast and settling in the Military Krajina, Roman Catholic migrations of Bunjevci settling in Vojvodina - both migrations during the XVII century.
For the period documented by the individual vital records in Gomirje, 1750 - 1875 I have not seen any occurence of two IvoÅ”eviÄ families intemarrying, even from other nearby parishes (PlaÅ”ki, Drežnica) , so that means that all IVOÅ EVIÄ clans there were blood related.
Earliest individual vital record, year 1784:
My IvoÅ”eviÄ great-grandmother :
Ok, I am wondering if there is a link with the town of Mali Ivosevci. If so, both you and Viki(my wife, she has Ugrcic and Arambasic in the family) have something to talk about
Regards,
Sergej
As soon as the pedigre system is up I will upload the Ugrcic tree and we can see if there any links
Evo zasto kucam na engleskom ne znam :-p
Poz
Regards,
Sergej
Hi,
If you are going to visit PanÄevo you can also research your ancestors in the state archive in PanÄevo - so plan for an extra day there and I will organize either someone who will take you there and help register, or arrange it with the archive that you get help from their staff.
send me an email on [email protected] and share details of your planned visit.