Studio portrait of King Petar I of SerbiaVisualizing Family, Gender Relations, and the Body. The Balkans approx. 1860-1950Ana DjordjeviceditorCentre for Southeast European History, University GrazCentre for Information Modelling in the Humanities, University Grazo:vase.1273Miloš JurišićMiloš Jurišićkralj petar I karadjordjevic _0005Special GarmentsClothingAdornmentPersonal NamesIndividuation and MobilityStatus, Role, and PrestigeIndividuation and MobilitySocial StratificationStateGovernment ActivitiesPolitical BehaviorArmed ForcesUniform and AccoutermentMilitary TechnologyWarGender Roles and IssuesSerbiaBelgradeBelgrade20.46513,44.80401PostcardPhotographer1900 afterMilanJovanovićJovanović, MilanUpper body shot of an older man in three-quarter profile. He is wearing a uniform adorned with a cross of merit and an army officer's cap. There are two studio stamps on the verso.Petar I Karađorđević (1844–1921) was the King of Serbia from 1903 until 1918 and subsequently the ruler of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes from 1918 until his death. He was born in Belgrade to Prince Aleksandar of Serbia and his consort, Princess Persida Nenadović. He spent much of his life in exile in France, where he received an education and fought for the French Army in the Franco-Prussian War of 1871. In 1883 he married Princess Ljubica-Zorka of Montenegro, daughter of Montenegro's King Nicholas I Petrović. They had five children: Jelena, Milena, Ɖorđe, Aleksandar and Andrija.Not specifiedCarte de visite10150SerbiaBelgrade