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  1. Article ; Online: Serbs on Corsica in the Great War. Part 1

    Popović-Filipović Slavica

    Srpski Arhiv za Celokupno Lekarstvo, Vol 146, Iss 7-8, Pp 470-

    2018  Volume 476

    Abstract: Historians and historical research of the role of the Serbian nation in the Great War give ample respect and recognition of the great battles and great victories. However, the exodus of the Serbian people and its armies out of Serbia is also not ... ...

    Abstract Historians and historical research of the role of the Serbian nation in the Great War give ample respect and recognition of the great battles and great victories. However, the exodus of the Serbian people and its armies out of Serbia is also not forgotten. Neither are the Salonika Front, nor other battlefronts. Less well known and researched is the fate of 35,000 young Serbian recruits, the young people dispersed to distant lands. This research is concentrated on the fate of the Serbian refugees in Corsica, on those who helped them, looked after them, and treated them to recovery, and who themselves came there from other parts of the world. Those Serbian refugees in Corsica were looked after by the representatives of diplomatic, humanitarian, and medical missions from Serbia, France, and Great Britain. The life of the Serbian refugee colony in Corsica was organized, financed, and supported by the Royal Serbian Government in exile in France, the French Relief Committee for the wounded, sick, and refugees, the Serbian Relief Fund, the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service, the local authorities, and numerous individuals in Corsica. We have paid particular attention to the Scottish Women’s Hospital in Corsica that provided a special hospital unit called “Corsica Unit,” situated in Ajaccio, with the isolation ward in Lazaret, and ambulances and dispensaries located in various villages, where the Serbian refugees were billeted. At the time of centennial commemorations of the Great War, we want to express our profound gratitude to the humanitarian and medical assistance from all quarters, and in particular to the Scottish Women’s Hospitals, and Dr. Elsie Inglis, the founder and the leader of this medical mission.
    Keywords World War I ; French medical help ; Serbian Red Cross ; Serbian Relief Fund ; Scottish Women’s Hospital ; Corsica ; Serbia ; Inglis E ; Medicine ; R
    Subject code 941
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Serbian Medical Society
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  2. Article ; Online: Srbi na Korzici u Velikom ratu - 2. deo

    Popović-Filipović Slavica

    Srpski Arhiv za Celokupno Lekarstvo, Vol 146, Iss 9-10, Pp 599-

    2018  Volume 606

    Abstract: Historians and historical research of the role of the Serbian nation in the Great War give ample respect and recognition of the great battles and great victories. However, the exodus of the Serbian people and its armies out of Serbia is also not ... ...

    Abstract Historians and historical research of the role of the Serbian nation in the Great War give ample respect and recognition of the great battles and great victories. However, the exodus of the Serbian people and its armies out of Serbia is also not forgotten. Neither are the Salonika Front, nor other battlefronts. Less well known and researched is the fate of 35,000 young Serbian recruits, the young people dispersed to distant lands. This research is concentrated on the fate of the Serbian refugees in Corsica, on those who helped them, looked after them, and treated them to recovery, and who themselves came there from other parts of the world. Those Serbian refugees in Corsica were looked after by the representatives of diplomatic, humanitarian, and medical missions from Serbia, France, and Great Britain. The life of the Serbian refugee colony in Corsica was organized, financed, and supported by the Royal Serbian Government in exile in France, the French Relief Committee for the wounded, sick, and refugees, the Serbian Relief Fund, the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service, the local authorities, and numerous individuals in Corsica. We have paid particular attention to the Scottish Women’s Hospital in Corsica that provided a special hospital unit called “Corsica Unit,” situated in Ajaccio, with the isolation ward in Lazaret, and ambulances and dispensaries located in various villages, where the Serbian refugees were billeted. At the time of centennial commemorations of the Great War, we want to express our profound gratitude to the humanitarian and medical assistance from all quarters, and in particular to the Scottish Women’s Hospitals, and Dr. Elsie Inglis, the founder and the leader of this medical mission.
    Keywords World War I ; French medical help ; Serbian Red Cross ; Serbian Relief Fund ; Scottish Women’s Hospital ; Corsica ; Serbia ; Inglis E ; Medicine ; R
    Subject code 941
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Serbian Medical Society
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  3. Article ; Online: Elsie Inglis (1864-1917) and the Scottish women’s hospitals in Serbia in the Great War. Part 1

    Popović-Filipović Slavica

    Srpski Arhiv za Celokupno Lekarstvo, Vol 146, Iss 3-4, Pp 226-

    2018  Volume 230

    Abstract: The news about the great victories of the Gallant Little Serbia in the Great War spread far and wide. Following on the appeals from the Serbian legations and the Serbian Red Cross, assistance was arriving from all over the world. First medical missions ... ...

    Abstract The news about the great victories of the Gallant Little Serbia in the Great War spread far and wide. Following on the appeals from the Serbian legations and the Serbian Red Cross, assistance was arriving from all over the world. First medical missions and medical and other help arrived from Russia. It was followed by the medical missions from Great Britain, France, Greece, The Netherlands, Denmark, Switzerland, America, etc. Material help and individual volunteers arrived from Poland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Norway, India, Japan, Egypt, South America, and elsewhere. The true friends of Serbia formed various funds under the auspices of the Red Cross Society, and other associations. In September 1914, the Serbian Relief Fund was established in London, while in Scotland the first units of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service were formed in November of the same year. The aim of this work was to keep the memory of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals in Serbia, and with the Serbs in the Great War. In the history of the Serbian nation during the Great War a special place was held by the Scottish Women’s Hospitals - a unique humanitarian medical mission. It was the initiative of Dr. Elsie Maud Inglis (1864-1917), a physician, surgeon, promoter of equal rights for women, and with the support of the Scottish Federation of Woman’s Suffrage Societies. The SWH Hospitals, which were completely staffed by women, by their participation in the Great War, also contributed to gender and professional equality, especially in medicine. Many of today’s achievements came about thanks to the first generations of women doctors, who fought for equality in choosing to study medicine, and working in the medical field, in time of war and peacetime.
    Keywords World War I ; Scottish Women’s Hospitals ; Physicians ; Women ; Scotland ; Serbia ; Inglis E ; Medicine ; R
    Subject code 941
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Serbian Medical Society
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  4. Article ; Online: Elsie Inglis (1864-1917) and the Scottish women’s hospitals in Serbia in the Great War. Part 2

    Popović-Filipović Slavica

    Srpski Arhiv za Celokupno Lekarstvo, Vol 146, Iss 5-6, Pp 345-

    2018  Volume 350

    Abstract: The news about the great victories of the Gallant Little Serbia in the Great War spread far and wide. Following on the appeals from the Serbian legations and the Serbian Red Cross, assistance was arriving from all over the world. First medical missions ... ...

    Abstract The news about the great victories of the Gallant Little Serbia in the Great War spread far and wide. Following on the appeals from the Serbian legations and the Serbian Red Cross, assistance was arriving from all over the world. First medical missions and medical and other help arrived from Russia. It was followed by the medical missions from Great Britain, France, Greece, the Netherlands, Denmark, Switzerland, America, etc. Material help and individual volunteers arrived from Poland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Norway, India, Japan, Egypt, South America, and elsewhere. The true friends of Serbia formed various funds under the auspices of the Red Cross Society, and other associations. In September 1914, the Serbian Relief Fund was established in London, while in Scotland the first units of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals for Foreign Service were formed in November of the same year. The aim of this work was to keep the memory of the Scottish Women’s Hospitals in Serbia and with the Serbs in the Great War. In the history of the Serbian nation during the Great War, a special place was held by the Scottish Women’s Hospitals – a unique humanitarian medical mission. It was the initiative of Dr. Elsie Maud Inglis (1864–1917), a physician, surgeon, promoter of equal rights for women, and with the support of the Scottish Federation of Woman’s Suffrage Societies. The Scottish Women’s Hospitals, which were completely staffed by women, by their participation in the Great War, also contributed to gender and professional equality, especially in medicine. Many of today’s achievements came about thanks to the first generations of women doctors, who fought for equality in choosing to study medicine, and working in the medical field, in time of war and peacetime.
    Keywords World War I ; Scottish Women’s Hospitals ; Scotland ; Serbia ; Inglis E ; Medicine ; R
    Subject code 941
    Language English
    Publishing date 2018-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Serbian Medical Society
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  5. Article ; Online: Hannah Jessie Hankin-Hardy, in medical and humanitarian mission in Serbia during the great war

    Popović-Filipović Slavica

    Archive of Oncology, Vol 18, Iss 4, Pp 136-

    2010  Volume 139

    Abstract: The Studenica Monastery, built in 1186 A.D., the royal mausoleum of the Nemanjic Dynasty, is considered the forerunner of the Serbian statehood and conscience because in it the first school and hospital were established. It is also where the first book ... ...

    Abstract The Studenica Monastery, built in 1186 A.D., the royal mausoleum of the Nemanjic Dynasty, is considered the forerunner of the Serbian statehood and conscience because in it the first school and hospital were established. It is also where the first book was written in Serbian language. Studenica, as the cradle of the Serbian medicine, produced - and through the following eight centuries, nurtured many educators and iconic figures of the Serbian cultural tradition. Among them was St. Sava, the first Serbian Archbishop, whose name is also borne by one of the highest Serbian civilian orders, which is awarded for extreme dedication and philanthropy in Serbia and worldwide. This here is an attempt to preserve the memory of the philanthropist Hannah Henkin Hardy, who was also personally awarded one of these Serbian orders. Hannah Henkin Hardy (1886-1944) was born in Worchester, U.K., completed a medical school in Melbourne, Australia, and arrived in Serbia in January 1915 together with the first Scottish Women's Hospitals. In Kragujevac, together with the Serbian physicians, and the 'Kolo srpskih sestara,' Mrs. Hardy established the League of Serbian Women to jointly fight the great typhus epidemic. She also founded the out-patients ambulances for the poor in Kragujevac, as well as the soup kitchens, and took part in various humanitarian activities. Mrs. Hardy and her husband Samuel Hardy, together with some other philanthropists, repaired the war-damaged Church of St. George in Topola. She joined the Serbian refugees in their escape from the invading enemy forces to the Adriatic Coast through the dangerous snowbound mountains of Albania and Montenegro. She remembered the suffering of the Serbian people and the dedicated humanitarian activities of the Serbian medical corps and foreign medical missions for the rest of her life. Mrs. and Mr. Hardy dedicated their lives to philanthropy and humanitarian work, helping small and suffering peoples and nations.
    Keywords Famous Persons ; History of Medicine ; History ; 20th Century ; World War I ; Physicians ; Medical Missions ; Official ; Serbia Non MeSH Hannah Hankin-Hardy ; Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ; RC254-282
    Subject code 941
    Language English
    Publishing date 2010-01-01T00:00:00Z
    Publisher Institute of Oncology, Sremska Kamenica, Serbia
    Document type Article ; Online
    Database BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (life sciences selection)

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  6. Book: Iz postojbine javora

    Popović-Filipović, Slavica

    Kanadsko-britanska medicinska i humanitarna pomoć Srbiji u Prvom svetskom ratu = From the homeland of maple tree : the Canadian-British medical and humanitarian help to Serbia in the First World War

    2013  

    Title variant From the homeland of maple tree :
    Institution Srpsko lekarsko društvo,
    Author's details Slavica Popović Filipović ; prevodi: Bob Filipović, Slavica Popović Filipović
    MeSH term(s) Medical Missions, Official ; World War I ; Hospitals, Military ; Relief Work
    Keywords Serbia ; Canada ; Great Britain
    Language Serbian ; English
    Size 352 pages :, illustrations, portraits ;, 23 cm
    Document type Book
    Note In Serbian and English.
    ISBN 9788660610388 ; 8660610385
    Database Catalogue of the US National Library of Medicine (NLM)

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  7. Article: [On 130th anniversary of Military Hospital in the town of Nis: January, 1878--January, 2008].

    Denić, Nebojsa / Cirić, Slavisa / Popović-Filipović, Slavica

    Vojnosanitetski pregled

    2008  Volume 65, Issue 1, Page(s) 69–80

    MeSH term(s) History, 19th Century ; History, 20th Century ; History, 21st Century ; Hospitals, Military/history ; Hospitals, Military/organization & administration ; Military Medicine/history ; Yugoslavia
    Language Serbian
    Publishing date 2008-01
    Publishing country Serbia
    Document type Biography ; Historical Article ; Journal Article ; Portraits
    ZDB-ID 123795-0
    ISSN 0042-8450
    ISSN 0042-8450
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  8. Article ; Online: Large-scale migration into Britain during the Middle to Late Bronze Age.

    Patterson, Nick / Isakov, Michael / Booth, Thomas / Büster, Lindsey / Fischer, Claire-Elise / Olalde, Iñigo / Ringbauer, Harald / Akbari, Ali / Cheronet, Olivia / Bleasdale, Madeleine / Adamski, Nicole / Altena, Eveline / Bernardos, Rebecca / Brace, Selina / Broomandkhoshbacht, Nasreen / Callan, Kimberly / Candilio, Francesca / Culleton, Brendan / Curtis, Elizabeth /
    Demetz, Lea / Carlson, Kellie Sara Duffett / Edwards, Ceiridwen J / Fernandes, Daniel M / Foody, M George B / Freilich, Suzanne / Goodchild, Helen / Kearns, Aisling / Lawson, Ann Marie / Lazaridis, Iosif / Mah, Matthew / Mallick, Swapan / Mandl, Kirsten / Micco, Adam / Michel, Megan / Morante, Guillermo Bravo / Oppenheimer, Jonas / Özdoğan, Kadir Toykan / Qiu, Lijun / Schattke, Constanze / Stewardson, Kristin / Workman, J Noah / Zalzala, Fatma / Zhang, Zhao / Agustí, Bibiana / Allen, Tim / Almássy, Katalin / Amkreutz, Luc / Ash, Abigail / Baillif-Ducros, Christèle / Barclay, Alistair / Bartosiewicz, László / Baxter, Katherine / Bernert, Zsolt / Blažek, Jan / Bodružić, Mario / Boissinot, Philippe / Bonsall, Clive / Bradley, Pippa / Brittain, Marcus / Brookes, Alison / Brown, Fraser / Brown, Lisa / Brunning, Richard / Budd, Chelsea / Burmaz, Josip / Canet, Sylvain / Carnicero-Cáceres, Silvia / Čaušević-Bully, Morana / Chamberlain, Andrew / Chauvin, Sébastien / Clough, Sharon / Čondić, Natalija / Coppa, Alfredo / Craig, Oliver / Črešnar, Matija / Cummings, Vicki / Czifra, Szabolcs / Danielisová, Alžběta / Daniels, Robin / Davies, Alex / de Jersey, Philip / Deacon, Jody / Deminger, Csilla / Ditchfield, Peter W / Dizdar, Marko / Dobeš, Miroslav / Dobisíková, Miluše / Domboróczki, László / Drinkall, Gail / Đukić, Ana / Ernée, Michal / Evans, Christopher / Evans, Jane / Fernández-Götz, Manuel / Filipović, Slavica / Fitzpatrick, Andrew / Fokkens, Harry / Fowler, Chris / Fox, Allison / Gallina, Zsolt / Gamble, Michelle / González Morales, Manuel R / González-Rabanal, Borja / Green, Adrian / Gyenesei, Katalin / Habermehl, Diederick / Hajdu, Tamás / Hamilton, Derek / Harris, James / Hayden, Chris / Hendriks, Joep / Hernu, Bénédicte / Hey, Gill / Horňák, Milan / Ilon, Gábor / Istvánovits, Eszter / Jones, Andy M / Kavur, Martina Blečić / Kazek, Kevin / Kenyon, Robert A / Khreisheh, Amal / Kiss, Viktória / Kleijne, Jos / Knight, Mark / Kootker, Lisette M / Kovács, Péter F / Kozubová, Anita / Kulcsár, Gabriella / Kulcsár, Valéria / Le Pennec, Christophe / Legge, Michael / Leivers, Matt / Loe, Louise / López-Costas, Olalla / Lord, Tom / Los, Dženi / Lyall, James / Marín-Arroyo, Ana B / Mason, Philip / Matošević, Damir / Maxted, Andy / McIntyre, Lauren / McKinley, Jacqueline / McSweeney, Kathleen / Meijlink, Bernard / Mende, Balázs G / Menđušić, Marko / Metlička, Milan / Meyer, Sophie / Mihovilić, Kristina / Milasinovic, Lidija / Minnitt, Steve / Moore, Joanna / Morley, Geoff / Mullan, Graham / Musilová, Margaréta / Neil, Benjamin / Nicholls, Rebecca / Novak, Mario / Pala, Maria / Papworth, Martin / Paresys, Cécile / Patten, Ricky / Perkić, Domagoj / Pesti, Krisztina / Petit, Alba / Petriščáková, Katarína / Pichon, Coline / Pickard, Catriona / Pilling, Zoltán / Price, T Douglas / Radović, Siniša / Redfern, Rebecca / Resutík, Branislav / Rhodes, Daniel T / Richards, Martin B / Roberts, Amy / Roefstra, Jean / Sankot, Pavel / Šefčáková, Alena / Sheridan, Alison / Skae, Sabine / Šmolíková, Miroslava / Somogyi, Krisztina / Somogyvári, Ágnes / Stephens, Mark / Szabó, Géza / Szécsényi-Nagy, Anna / Szeniczey, Tamás / Tabor, Jonathan / Tankó, Károly / Maria, Clenis Tavarez / Terry, Rachel / Teržan, Biba / Teschler-Nicola, Maria / Torres-Martínez, Jesús F / Trapp, Julien / Turle, Ross / Ujvári, Ferenc / van der Heiden, Menno / Veleminsky, Petr / Veselka, Barbara / Vytlačil, Zdeněk / Waddington, Clive / Ware, Paula / Wilkinson, Paul / Wilson, Linda / Wiseman, Rob / Young, Eilidh / Zaninović, Joško / Žitňan, Andrej / Lalueza-Fox, Carles / de Knijff, Peter / Barnes, Ian / Halkon, Peter / Thomas, Mark G / Kennett, Douglas J / Cunliffe, Barry / Lillie, Malcolm / Rohland, Nadin / Pinhasi, Ron / Armit, Ian / Reich, David

    Nature

    2021  Volume 601, Issue 7894, Page(s) 588–594

    Abstract: Present-day people from England and Wales have more ancestry derived from early European farmers (EEF) than did people of the Early Bronze ... ...

    Abstract Present-day people from England and Wales have more ancestry derived from early European farmers (EEF) than did people of the Early Bronze Age
    MeSH term(s) Archaeology ; Europe ; Farmers ; France ; Genome, Human/genetics ; Human Migration/history ; Humans ; Infant ; United Kingdom
    Language English
    Publishing date 2021-12-22
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 120714-3
    ISSN 1476-4687 ; 0028-0836
    ISSN (online) 1476-4687
    ISSN 0028-0836
    DOI 10.1038/s41586-021-04287-4
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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