Stari Glog may refer to:
Stari Jankovci is a village and a municipality in Vukovar-Syrmia County, Croatia
Dol may refer to:
Stari Grad may refer to:
Stari Ledinci also known simply as Ledinci is a suburban settlement of Petrovaradin, Novi Sad, Serbia.
Žednik or Zednik may mean:
Glog may refer to:
Gradina may refer to:
Gradec is a village located ~50 km from Zagreb, Croatia.
Novi Grad may refer to:
Glogster is a cloud-based (SaaS) platform for creating presentations and interactive learning. A platform that allows users, mostly students and educators to combine text, images, video, and audio to create an interactive, Web-based poster called glogs on a virtual canvas. Glogster facilitates the conveyance of social information in many different fields such as art, music, photography. Users also have access to a library of engaging educational content posters created by other students and educators worldwide. Glogster enables interactive, collaborative education and digital literacy.
Grabovac may refer to:
Novi Glog is a place name which may refer to:
Stari Glog is a village in the municipality of Vranje, Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village has a population of 44 people.
Trstenik is a South Slavic place name originating from the word trska which means reed. It may refer to:
Starigrad may refer to:
Vratnik may refer to:
Sveta Ana may refer to:
Stari Trg or Stari trg means "old square" or "old market town" in several South Slavic languages and may refer to:
Mladen Stojanović, known as Čakr-paša (Чакр-паша), was a Serb hajduk leader mostly active in the Ottoman territories of the Pčinja region and in the Kumanovo district, one of the most notable hajduks in the second half of the 19th century. A brigand since his teens, Čakr-paša deserted his guard service at the Serbian–Ottoman border in 1878 and became infamous in the following years for killing Ottoman officials, and also exploiting locals. Having survived the Serbian–Ottoman War (1876–78), Kumanovo Uprising (1878) and Brsjak Revolt (1880–81), his end came in 1885, after years on the run from both Ottoman soldiers and gendarmerie, and Serbian border guards, when his comrade slit his throat. After his death there were local stories of him as a fearless, stone-cold and raw individual, and also epic poems holding him a brave and sly hero.
Novi Glog is a village in the municipality of Trgovište, in southeastern Serbia. According to the 2002 census, the village had a population of 137 people.