The Ethnographic Museum in Belgrade was founded in 1901, when the Ethnographic Department was separated from the
National Museum of Serbia. The inauguration of the first permanent exhibition of the museum was organized on 20 September 1904, during the centennial of the
First Serbian Uprising. During the first years of its work, the activities of the Ethnographic Museum were focused on the purchase of museum items and the presentation of the
Kingdom of Serbia abroad. In
World War I, a large number of museum items were destroyed, as well as the documentation and the library. The museum library was re-established in 1920. Today, its holdings contain about 60,000 publications: 33,000 books and about 27,000 journals dealing with
ethnology,
anthropology and related scholarly disciplines. During
World War II, museum objects were packed and removed from the building in which the museum was housed at that time. The Nazi occupiers looted the jewelry collection, the collection of metalwork, and other valuable items from the Ethnographic Museum in Belgrade. After the war, the museum was moved into the building of the
Belgrade Stock Exchange at No. 13 Studentski Trg (Square). The museum collections currently contain about 200,000 items, 56,000 of which are ethnographic objects. == Building of the Museum ==