Studio portrait of actor Milorad Petrović in character as 'Miloš Obilić' from the eponymous playVisualizing 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.1383Muzej Pozorišne Umetnosti SrbijeMuseum of Theater Art of SerbiaII-333Special GarmentsClothingAdornmentDramaArtsMusical and Theatrical ProductionsCommercialized EntertainmentPersonal NamesIndividuation and MobilityStatus, Role, and PrestigeIndividuation and MobilitySocial StratificationUniform and AccoutermentMilitary TechnologyWarfareWarDeathGender Roles and IssuesSerbiaBelgradeBelgrade20.46513,44.80401PhotographPhotographer1898-1900MilanJovanovićJovanović, MilanUpper-body profile shot of a man dressed in a knight's armor.Miloš Obilić (Boj na Kosovu)' is a tragedy by Jovan Subotić (1817, Dobrinci – 1886, Zemun). The story is based on the allegedly historical figure of Miloš Obilić, a medieval Serbian knight in Prince Lazar's service during the invasion of the Ottoman Empire. Suppoedly, he was the legendary assassin of the Ottoman Sultan Murad I. in the 1389 Battle of Kosovo. Milorad Petrović (1865, Šabac – 1928, Skopje) was a Serbian actor who worked at the Royal Serbian National Theatre in Belgrade and played the leading role in the first Serbian silent film, "Life and Deeds of Immortal Vožd Karađorđe", in 1911.Not specifiedBoudoir211135SerbiaBelgrade