Karadžić


Karadžić is a Serbo-Croatian surname, derived from karadža, a colloquial Serbo-Croatian term for "black ox" or generally for "an animal with black fur or dark complexion", itself derived from Turkish karaca meaning "roe deer". The Karadžić family name was derived from a progenitor who was called karadža, a nickname found in Serbia since the second half of the 15th century. The surname is widespread over former Yugoslavia. It may refer to:

Drobnjaci

The Karadžić brotherhood in Drobnjaci, according to tradition, ultimately descends from three brothers that lived prior to 1700 in Vasojevići, from where they migrated to Drobnjaci. Indeed, the ancestors of the Karadžići migrated from Lijeva Rijeka in Vasojevići in the mid-17th century. In 1930, there were 28 households of Karadžić in Petnjica, 3 in Malinsko, 3 in Gornja Bukovica, 5 in Pašina voda, and 19 in Palež. Anthropologist Andrija Luburić said that the Karadžić were "born with the gift of gusle playing". The Karadžić brotherhood in Drobnjaci has the slava of Aranđelovdan, while they have the prislava of Đurđevdan.
Vuk Stefanović Karadžić's grandfather Joksim migrated from Šavnik to Serbia.
The Divjanović family in the Jahorina region hailed from Drobnjaci and was previously surnamed Karadžić, according to epic poet and guslar Ilija Divjanović whose poems were collected by Bogoljub Petranović.

Negotinska Krajina

In the early 20th century, there was a Karadžić family in Sikole with the slava of Nikoljdan, and hailed from Montenegro. In Jasenica, there were two households of a Karadžić family which had the slava of Jovanjdan, and according to tradition descended from some "Ciganče" who had been brought by an ancestor of the Belobrečić in the 19th century.