WRITER

Stanislava Staša Zajović

1953 - Today

Photo of Stanislava Staša Zajović

Icon of person Stanislava Staša Zajović

Stanislava Staša Zajović (Cyrillic: Станислава Сташа Зајовић; born 25 January 1953) is a peace activist and feminist writer. She is the co-founder and coordinator of Women in Black in Belgrade, Serbia. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in different languages on Wikipedia. Stanislava Staša Zajović is the 5,867th most popular writer (up from 6,460th in 2019), the 73rd most popular biography from Montenegro (up from 84th in 2019) and the 7th most popular Montenegrin Writer.

Memorability Metrics

Loading...

Page views of Stanislava Staša Zajović by language

Loading...

Among WRITERS

Among writers, Stanislava Staša Zajović ranks 5,867 out of 7,302Before her are Gjorgji Abadžiev, Lady Charlotte Guest, Paul-Eerik Rummo, Flora Nwapa, Daniel Goldhagen, and James Hogg. After her are Charlotte Mary Yonge, Karim Rashid, Charles Wilkins, Oliverio Girondo, Göran Sonnevi, and Horacio Guarany.

Most Popular Writers in Wikipedia

Go to all Rankings

Contemporaries

Among people born in 1953, Stanislava Staša Zajović ranks 447Before her are Bernard Tchoullouyan, Paweł Janas, Yekta Uzunoglu, Lucinda Williams, Peter Garrett, and Matthias Platzeck. After her are Christian Lopez, Dina Rubina, M. K. Stalin, Stuart Baxter, Bernt Johansson, and Mehdi Cerbah.

Others Born in 1953

Go to all Rankings

In Montenegro

Among people born in Montenegro, Stanislava Staša Zajović ranks 73 out of 142Before her are Dejan Dabović (1944), Stefan Savić (1991), Stevan Jovetić (1989), Borka Pavićević (1947), Zoran Simović (1954), and Miodrag Božović (1968). After her are Nina Žižić (1985), Žarko Varajić (1951), Ivica Kralj (1973), Nenad Maslovar (1967), Milojko Spajić (1987), and Knez (1967).

Among WRITERS In Montenegro

Among writers born in Montenegro, Stanislava Staša Zajović ranks 7Before her are Petar II Petrović-Njegoš (1813), Mihailo Lalić (1914), Miodrag Bulatović (1930), Borislav Pekić (1930), Ćamil Sijarić (1913), and Mirko Kovač (1938).