In year 2002, in a small basement in Vračar, we created the Byblos, house of Lebanese cuisine – a place where you can hear different languages, where you can smoke ‘Drina’ and nargile, and enjoy delightful food and oriental dancing. By subtle anthropological approach, sisters Jelena and Katarina Kovačević have been bringing Lebanese culture closer to Belgrade, thus creating one of the symbols of the city we have wished for. Being among those thirty people at that time, seemed like you were in London or Paris. The restaurant was named after the oldest permanently inhabited town in the world, situated on the north of Beirut, Paris of Middle East.When the old house in Vračar, where the restaurant used to be, was torn down, we moved to 6, Nebojšina street, into a new building in Vračar, hidden...
When he was a kid, he caught the "car fever," paving the way for his career as an editor for Top Speed and AutoBild, as well as his role as co-host of Lap76, the most popular automotive podcast in the...
Soccer club Red Star (Crvena Zvezda) has had the tradition of bestowing the title of 'Stars star" to the players who greatly influenced the club's history and who made the club famous around the world...
Hadji Mustafa Sinik-oglu who was the vizier of Belgrade between 1893 to 1801 was the fiercest opponent of the janissaries and fought against their return to power in Belgrade and Constantinople. Namel...