Vračar is an affluent urban area and municipality of the city of Belgrade known as the location of many embassies and museums. According to the 2022 census results, the municipality has a population of 55,406 inhabitants.
Vračar plateau 2023
National Library of Serbia
Karađorđe and Church of Saint Sava, on the Vračar plateau, where the Turks burned the remains of Saint Sava
The Beograđanka, one of the symbols of Belgrade is located in the western corner of the Vračar municipality
Serbia's capital city of Belgrade is divided into 17 municipalities.
Belgrade City Hall
House at 10 Cara Dušana Street, the oldest house in Belgrade and the only surviving part of German Town, administrative neighborhood of Belgrade from the 1730s
Nikola Hristić, mayor who divided Belgrade into quarters in the 1860s
Belgrade Fortress in 1914, while it was still populated and made one of the city quarters