Tihomir Đorđević


Tihomir Đorđević was a Serbian ethnologist, folklorist, cultural historian and professor at the University of Belgrade.

Biography

He received his B.A. in History and Philology at the Grandes écoles in Belgrade. He pursued his post-graduate studies in Vienna and Munich, where he received his doctorate in 1902. Among the Munich alumnae were Miloje Vasić, Veselin Čajkanović and Dragutin Anastasijević, his contemporaries.
Đorđević's interests were very wide and varied, ranging from detailed analyzes of the folklife of Serbs through ethnographic research of the lives of other peoples in Serbia to folklore and sociological studies not only of Serbia, but also of the Balkan people in general.
Although not an anthropologist, he is the first Serbian scientist who explicitly pointed to the importance of paleoanthropology for history and ethnology. In 1908, while researching at the unknown cemetery in Žagubica, he demonstrated that old cemeteries, necropolises, are primary sources for data for many scientific disciplines. In his book Đorđević emphasized that the data, obtained through the study of skeletons and graves, represent the only source of material, appearance and way of life of a people in the past when written records are lacking.
He was elected a correspondent member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts on February 19, 1921, and regular member on 16 February 1937.

Major works