NIN Prize
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NIN Prize
Summary
NIN Prize is a literary award[1]. It draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (literary_award category, ranking #65 of 526).[2]
Key Facts
- NIN Prize won the Dobrica Ćosić[3].
- NIN Prize won the Mirko Božić[4].
- NIN Prize won the Oskar Davičo[5].
- NIN Prize won the Aleksandar Vučo[6].
- NIN Prize won the Branko Ćopić[7].
- NIN Prize won the Radomir Konstantinović[8].
- NIN Prize is in the country of Serbia[9].
- NIN Prize's instance of is recorded as literary award[10].
- NIN is named after NIN Prize[11].
- The location of NIN Prize was Belgrade[12].
- NIN Prize's Commons category is recorded as NIN Prize[13].
- 1954 marks the founding of NIN Prize[14].
- NIN Prize's topic's main category is recorded as Category:NIN Prize[15].
- NIN Prize's conferred by is recorded as NIN[16].
- NIN Prize's native label is recorded as {'lang': 'sr', 'text': 'НИН-ова награда'}[17].
- NIN Prize's category for recipients of this award is recorded as Q9606110[18].
Body
When and Where
NIN Prize took place at Belgrade[12]. It is in the country of Serbia[9].
Context
NIN Prize's instance of is recorded as literary award[10].
Why It Matters
NIN Prize draws 30 Wikipedia views per month (literary_award category, ranking #65 of 526).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19]
FAQs
What awards did NIN Prize receive?
Honors received include Dobrica Ćosić[3], Mirko Božić[4], Oskar Davičo[5], and Aleksandar Vučo[6].