Ljubica Luković

[1] He also passed on his love of language and learning to his children, including his son Sima, who would become a politician and writer; and his daughters, Ljubica, Milica, and Olga.

When the Serbo-Turkish War broke out in 1876, the organization established hospitals in cooperation with the Red Cross to assist the military medical corps and Avramović volunteered as a nurse.

One such organization, the Princess Ljubica Society, was founded in Belgrade in 1899 and for which Luković served as vice president and comptroller, collected funds and clothing to help churches and monasteries in Serbia and Macedonia.

Luković joined the newly established Circle of Serbian Sisters, a humanitarian organization aimed to provide help "regardless of ethnic or religious background" to Serbs.

Luković and her friend Delfa Ivanić also approached the Chief of Sanitation of the Military Ministry with plans to found a hospital in the Vračar neighborhood.

Ivanić and Luković undertook a letter writing campaign across Europe entreating embassies, consuls, newspapers and Serbians to contribute funds.

[6] Then during the Second Balkan War, she organized, at the request of the Surgeon General, respites throughout the country along the main railway lines for the troops, to provide them with soup and milk and a place to warm themselves.

[2] Organizing women in Belgrade, Lapovo, Mladenovac, Niš, Paracin, and Stalać, Luković had a network of aid stations and the staff to run them set up within one day.