Serbian volunteers, wild-eyed, roared down the streets, their pockets full of looted treasures.
Serbian volunteers in the Austrian army liberated central Serbia in 1788, and the second Kingdom of Serbia was established.
His eldest son, Andon, died as a Serbian volunteer in the First Balkan War.
During World War I, as many as 15,000 Serbian American volunteers returned to the Balkans to fight for the Allied cause in their homeland.
He claimed that fourteen of his men, plus six local men and two other Serbian volunteers, had been responsible for fighting the "Ustashe".
As dusk settled over the low hills separating the Lucavica barracks, Mr. Sudzum was surrounded by a group of Serbian volunteers.
From there he joined the Serbian volunteers fighting within the Serbian army on the Salonika Front.
Meanwhile early Austrian successes in the campaign against the Turks, supported by hundreds of Serbian volunteers, were followed by serious reverses, after which Austria was forced to yield territory.
There was a branch-of-service redistribution by ethnic group, and the Serbian volunteers now found themselves under the authority of the Waffen-SS.
The Austrians were also accompanied by many Serbian volunteers under the command of Jovan Monasterlija.