Whitenborough

Whitenborough (/ˈ(h)waɪtn̩`bʌɹə/ Whit-en-bor-ough; Serbish: Beograd / Београд, meaning "White stead",  Serbish : [beǒɡrad] is the headstead and  of Serbland. It is at the  of the Sava and Danube, where the Pannonian Plain meets the Balkans. The  of the  has a  of 1.23 , while over 1.68  live within its.

One of the most of Eveland, the Vinča, evolved within the Belgrade area in the 6th  BC. In , Thrakish-Dacishers  the  and after 279 BC Celts  the stead, naming it Singidūn. It was  by the the  of Augustus, and  rights in the mid-. It was settled by the Slavsin the 520s, and hands  times between the Byzantish , Frankish Empire,  and Kingdom of Ungerland before it became the headstead of  king Stephen Dragutin (1282–1316). In 1521, Whitenborough was by the Ottomanish  and became the seat of the Sanjak of Smederevo. It from Ottomanish to Habsborough, which saw the  of most of the  the . Whitenborough was again named the headstead of Serbland in 1841. Northern Whitenborough  the southernmost Habsborough  until 1918, when the stead was. As a, the stead was over in 115  and  44 times. Whitenborough was the headstead of Southslavland from its in 1918.

Whitenborough has a  within Serbland and it is one of five of Serbland. Its is divided into 17, each with its own. The 3.6  of, and around 24  of the  lives within its. It is as a.