Central Serbia (), also referred to as Serbia proper (), is the region of Serbia lying outside the autonomous province of Vojvodina to the north and the disputed Kosovo region to the south. Central Serbia is a term of convenience, not an administrative division of Serbia as such, and does not have any form of separate administration.
Broadly speaking, Central Serbia is the historical core of modern Serbia, which emerged from the Serbian Revolution and subsequent wars against the Ottoman Empire. In the following period, Serbia gradually expanded south, acquiring Southern Serbia, Kosovo, Sandžak, and Vardar Macedonia, and in 1918 – following the unification and annexation of Montenegro and unification of Austro-Hungarian areas left bank of the Danube and Sava (Vojvodina) – it merged with other South Slavic territories into the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. The current borders of Central Serbia were defined after World War II, when Serbia became a republic within the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, with Kosovo and Vojvodina as its autonomous provinces.
Some notable geographical regions located in central Serbia are: Šumadija, Southern Serbia, Mačva, the Timok Valley (including the Negotin Valley), Pomoravlje, Podunavlje, Posavina, Podrinje, Zlatibor, and Raška.
In the Balkan Wars (1912–13), Serbia further expanded its borders to the south, taking control of much of present-day Kosovo and North Macedonia. Further territorial gains were made in the north (today's Vojvodina) and south-west (Sandžak region) in 1918, after World War I. Serbia became part of the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes on December 1, 1918. Serbia proper did not have a separate political status within the Kingdom; in 1929, when new provinces of the Kingdom were formed, Serbia proper was divided between five banovine, one of which (Morava Banovina) was established in the east with its capital in Niš.
Between 1941 and 1944, most of the territory was part of the area governed by the Military Administration in Serbia under German Wehrmacht occupation with a Serbian puppet government. The southwestern region of Sandžak was occupied by Italy and annexed to the neighbouring Italian governorate of Montenegro; southern Kosovo was annexed to Albania while southeastern parts annexed by Bulgaria.
The Axis occupation ended in 1944 with the liberation of Yugoslavia by the Yugoslav Partisans; Serbia was formed as one of the republics of the new socialist SFRY. In 1945, Vojvodina and Kosovo became autonomous provinces within Serbia, thus the part of Serbia that was outside these two regions became known as uža Srbija ("Serbia proper"). At the beginning of the 1990s, the term uža Srbija was replaced with the new term Centralna Srbija ("Central Serbia") which was used in all official publications of the Serbian government that referred to the region.
With the formation of statistical regions of Serbia in 2009–10, three statistical regions: Belgrade, Šumadija and Western Serbia, and Southern and Eastern Serbia are located within Central Serbia.
| Belgrade |
| Valjevo |
| Šabac |
| Čačak |
| Jagodina |
| Kruševac |
| Kraljevo |
| Kragujevac |
| Užice |
| Bor |
| Požarevac |
| Leskovac |
| Niš |
| Vranje |
| Pirot |
| Smederevo |
| Prokuplje |
| Zaječar |
| 1,298,661 |
| 182,797 |
| 146,315 |
| 71,462 |
| 69,598 |
| 59,261 |
| 58,338 |
| 57,432 |
| 56,059 |
| 53,746 |
| 51,163 |
| 50,954 |
| 48,539 |
| 42,530 |
| 34,942 |
| 34,892 |
| 32,448 |
| 28,822 |
| 27,635 |
| 25,380 |
| 24,627 |
| 23,109 |
| 22,881 |
| 22,349 |
| 22,346 |
| 20,345 |
| + !Ethnicity !Population (2022) !Percentage | ||
| Serbs | 4,169,454 | 85% |
| Bosniaks | 153,083 | 3.1% |
| Romani people | 90,998 | 1.8% |
| Albanians | 59,752 | 1.2% |
| Others | 119,047 | 2.4% |
| Undeclared | 65,859 | 1.3% |
| Unknown | 248,580 | 5% |
Most of the municipalities of Central Serbia had an ethnic Serb majority, three municipalities (Novi Pazar, Tutin, and Sjenica) had a Bosniak majority, two municipalities (Bujanovac and Preševo) had an Albanian majority and two municipalities (Bosilegrad and Dimitrovgrad) had a Bulgarian majority. Ethnic groups of Central Serbia according to the 2022 census:
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