Every year on the Statehood Day, the Library
will present the general public with a virtual exhibition on lives and works of
the people who contributed immensely to the development of Serbia.

A virtual exhibition Djordje Stanojevic – Rector Who Lit up Belgrade is the collection of digital materials about
Djordje Stanojevic (1858–1921), rector of the University of Belgrade
and a pioneer of electrification of Serbia.
Owing to his effort and work, in 1893 Belgrade was one of the first
capitals in the world with electric street lighting.
In addition to various materials, this
bilingual exhibition in Serbian and English will present the general public
with the digitized copies of Djordje Stanojevic’s books. Some of these books
are the real treasure of Serbian cultural heritage.
The virtual exhibition Djordje
Stanojevic – Rector Who Lit up
Belgrade will be available
from February 14th 2014 on the following link:
http://www.unilib.rs./o_nama/izlozbe/oni_su_gradili_srbiju/djordje_stanojevic/index.php?lang=en
Djordje Stanojevic – Rector Who Lit
up Belgrade
This virtual exhibition represents a
comprehensive collection of digital materials about Djordje Stanojevic (1858–1921).
The exhibition portrays the academic work of Djordje Stanojevic and his pioneer
activities in the fields of electrification, astronomy and photography. The
visitors will be able to browse through the bibliography which includes all the
contents about this prominent and versatile man which are available on the
internet at the moment. Moreover, they will be able to search through the selected
bibliography of the printed materials such as books and articles which are
available at the University Library and other libraries around Serbia. The
exhibition is available in Serbian and English and it will be translated into
Russian.
Digitized versions of Djordje Stanojevic’s
books, some of which are less known to general public and which are the real
treasure of Serbian cultural and scientific heritage, will be presented at the
exhibition. Serbia in Pictures is the
first Serbian photomonography. Starry Sky
of Independent Serbia is our first popular scientific book on astronomy. Bombing of the University of Belgrade, a
monography in French printed in Paris, is one of the most important testaments
to the destruction of the University of Belgrade in WWI which is available to
general European public.
Djordje Stanojevic was the rector of the
University of Belgrade (1913–1921) during the most glorious and at the same
time the most difficult period in its history. Nikola Tesla was Stanojevic’s
friend and he organized Tesla’s only visit to Belgrade. He earned all the
merits for the construction of the first hydroelectric power plant in Serbia, only five years after the hydroelectric power had been
built on the Niagara waterfalls, and also for the introduction of electric
street lighting and electric power in Belgrade. Stanojevic introduced electric
power in many cities around Serbia. He participated in the construction of the
thermal power plant in Cacak, and hydroelectric power plants near Zajecar, Sokobanja,
Nis, Veliko Gradiste, Ivanjica and Vlasotine. He considered the construction of
the hydroelectric power plant on Djerdap. Djordje Stanojevic was a physicist, an astronomer, a meteorologist and a popularizer
of science in the modern sense of the word. He was the Serbian pioneer in
numerous areas of his almost renaissance activity. He was the first Serbian astrophysicist, the
first writer of university coursebooks in physics, the author of the first
photomonography in Serbia, the author of the first Serbian book about
aeronautics, the first man in Serbia who set up the first radio connection and
he also made the first X-ray snapshot.
“Scientific
game is open to all, without any exceptions.It is open to Serbs as well.But we have to admit that we have not participated much. I
don’t want to say that we haven’t participated at all. It is not the people who
are to blame. We do have many skillful people, but scientific research is very
expensive and we don’t have the money. It is not that we lack money because we
are poor and we live in misery, no, that’s not the case. The fact is that we
spend our people’s money on futile, useless, and not only that, but also
evidently harmful political fights and agitations.”
(An excerpt from the lecture at the University of Belgrade held on
March 16th 1893 when Stanojevic was elected a professor to the Physics
Department).