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・ List of Seraph of the End characters
・ List of Seraph of the End episodes
・ List of Serb countries and regions
・ List of Serb members of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina
・ List of Serbia Davis Cup team representatives
・ List of Serbia international footballers (including predecessor teams)
・ List of Serbian actors
・ List of Serbian Americans
・ List of Serbian architects
・ List of Serbian centenarians
・ List of Serbian composers
・ List of Serbian consorts
・ List of Serbian films
・ List of Serbian flags
・ List of Serbian folk songs
List of Serbian football champions
・ List of Serbian football transfers summer 2009
・ List of Serbian football transfers summer 2010
・ List of Serbian football transfers summer 2011
・ List of Serbian football transfers summer 2012
・ List of Serbian football transfers summer 2013
・ List of Serbian football transfers summer 2014
・ List of Serbian football transfers summer 2015
・ List of Serbian football transfers winter 2009–10
・ List of Serbian football transfers winter 2010–11
・ List of Serbian football transfers winter 2011–12
・ List of Serbian football transfers winter 2012–13
・ List of Serbian football transfers winter 2013-14
・ List of Serbian football transfers winter 2014-15
・ List of Serbian historians


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List of Serbian football champions : ウィキペディア英語版
List of Serbian football champions
The Serbian football champions indicates all past winners of the top-tier football leagues in which clubs from Serbia were inserted in. It includes the Serbian SuperLiga and chronologically all the predecessor leagues.
==History==
Football first came to Kingdom of Serbia in the late 1890s but the first organised championships started being played after 1918, when the country was already part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. They were organised by the Serbian Football Association and had two editions: 1919-20 and 1920-21. In the meantime in Croatia a separate league was also being played, and all agreed to begin with a Yugoslav National Championship in 1923.
The Yugoslav Football Championship was played until the beginning of the Second World War. The only interruption happened in 1929 due to disagreements between the sub-associations of Belgrade and Zagreb when the Yugoslav Football Association Assembly was dissolved. Its last edition before the war was the 1939–40 season. In the following season and during the war, a separate Serbian and Croatian leagues were played.
At the end of the war the new authorities formed, disbanded and renamed numerous clubs, and the first season, the 1945 Yugoslav Football Tournament, was played by representative teams, instead of clubs, however, since the 1946–47, the old league model played between the top national clubs was restored. The Yugoslav First League was played without interruptions, being the top league of the Socialist Yugoslavia. However, the league suffered changes with the breaking-up of the country by the early 1990s. The last season in which the clubs from Croatia and Slovenia competed was the 1990–91. The following season, 1991–92 was the last in which clubs from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Macedonia competed. All these 4 former Yugoslav Republics became independent, and they formed their own separate football leagues.
The league was named, just as the country, to First League of FR Yugoslavia and was formed of clubs from Serbia and Montenegro, although a club from Bosnia, FK Borac Banja Luka kept on playing in the FR Yugoslav league system. As the country changed its name again in 2003, the league was renamed to First League of Serbia and Montenegro. In 2006 Montenegro declared independence, so Montenegrin clubs formed their own league, leaving the newly named SuperLiga formed only with clubs from Serbia.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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