Đorđe Stratimirović (Novi Sad, 7 February 1822 - Vienna, 15 December 1908) was the commander of the Serbian army in the Serb uprising of 1848-49 and later a major general in the Austrian Armed Forces of the 19th century.
The idyllic life of the nobles, however, was interrupted by the turbulent 1848 Hungarian Revolution, whose supporters would deal with the conservative nobility and clergy.
At the May Assembly in Sremski Karlovci, where Đorđe Stratimirović represented Kulpin, he was elected president of the Main Board of the Serbian people, which was supposed to lead the uprising.
Until the arrival of Voivode Stevan Šupljikac, he led all military affairs and was the central figure of the Serbian movement.
[4] Standing at the head of progressive, democratic and anti-Austrian circles in Serbian citizenship, he came into conflict with Patriarch Josif Rajačić, the so-called "manager of the people".
With the victory of the counter-revolutionary and conservative current, led by Rajačić, Stratimirović's role in the second period of the movement was less significant.
In the Serbian-Turkish war of 1876, he put himself at the disposal of the Serbian government, though suspected of working for the interests of Austria, he was obliged to leave Serbia.