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Inđić
Inđić, also transcribed as Indjić, is a Serbian surname. Notable people with the surname include: * Aleksandar Inđić (born 1995), Serbian chess grandmaster * Đorđe Inđić (born 1975), Bosnian football manager and former footballer * Eugen Indjic (1947–2024), Serbian-born American pianist * Trivo Inđić (1938–2020), Serbian sociologist {{surname Surnames of Serbian origin ...
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Aleksandar Inđić
Aleksandar Inđić (born 24 August 1995) is a Serbian chess grandmaster. He is a four-time Serbian Chess Champion and the 2024 European Chess Champion. Chess career Born in 1995, Inđić earned his international master title in 2012 and his grandmaster title in 2013. He won the Serbian Chess Championship in 2014, 2018, 2020 and 2023. In February 2018, he won the Portugal Open, scoring 7½/9. Anton Demchenko also scored 7½/9, but Inđić had the best tiebreak score. Also in February, he participated in the Aeroflot Open. He finished 38th out of 92, scoring 5/9 (+3–2=4). In March 2018, he competed in the European Individual Chess Championship The European Individual Chess Championship is a chess tournament organised by the European Chess Union. It was established in 2000 and has since then taken place on a yearly basis. Apart from determining the European champions (open and women's) .... He placed 133rd, scoring 5½/11 (+4–4=3). He is the No. 1 ranked Serbian player ...
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Trivo Inđić
Trivo Inđić, (1938 — 10 May 2020) was a Serbian academic, diplomat, and political advisor who served as an official Advisor to the President of Serbia for political issues, appointed by Boris Tadić. Early life and education Inđić was born in Lušci Palanka near Sanski Most, Kingdom of Yugoslavia (modern Bosnia & Herzegovina), orphaned during WW2. After the war, he spend some time in orphanage in Split before moving to live with a relative in Belgrade. He wanted to study chemistry, building a small lab in the basement of Čika Ljubina Street 17, but family insisted that he read law for better employment prospects. He was a graduated lawyer, and earned a master's degree in social studies. He reached the upper echelons of Yugoslav Youth politics, travelling to Latin America in early 1960s. He was expelled from the Communist Party after joining the student protests in 1968 and became a member of a dissident group Praxis School, with Ljubomir Tadić, for which he was expell ...
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Đorđe Inđić
Đorđe Inđić (, born 1 March 1975) is a Bosnian football manager and former player that played as midfielder. He is an ethnich Serb. Playing career Club During his career he played with Bosnian clubs FK Borac Banja Luka, FK Laktaši and FK Sloboda Mrkonjić Grad, Serbian FK Zemun, Slovenian NK Maribor, Ukrainian FC Chernomorets Odesa and FC Spartak Sumy and in France. Managerial career After retiring he became coach, and by August 2014 he was coaching FK Sloboda Mrkonjić Grad in the First League of the Republika Srpska The First League of the Republika Srpska ( / ) is a Association football, football league in Republika Srpska, Bosnia and Herzegovina. Together with the First League of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, it forms the second level of footb ....
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Eugen Indjic
Eugen Indjic (March 11, 1947 – February 28, 2024) was a Yugoslav-born French-American pianist. Biography Eugen Indjic was born in Belgrade on March 11, 1947. His father was a Serb Yugoslav army general serving under King Peter II of Yugoslavia. Emigrating to the United States with his Russian mother, an amateur pianist, at the age of four, he there became fascinated by the piano four years later after hearing a recording of Chopin’s Fantaisie-Impromptu and Polonaise in A flat major. Moved by a desire to master these pieces, he took systematic piano lessons with Georgian pianist, Liubov Stephani. Indjic made his first public performance at the age of nine, appearing with the Springfield, Mass. Youth Orchestra in Mozart’s D-minor Piano Concerto. After two years, Mrs. Stephani introduced her young pupil to Alexander Borovsky, the eminent Russian pianist, pupil of Anna Yesipova and classmate of Serge Prokofiev, who taught him in Boston University for the next five years ...
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