Belgrade Grand Prix

The Belgrade Grand Prix is a former grand prix from the Grand Prix motor racing era - precursor to Formula One. Only one championship event was held, won in 1939 by Tazio Nuvolari. The Kalemegdan Park circuit is no longer operational.

The race, held on September 3, 1939, was sponsored by King Peter II of Yugoslavia, generating major interest among the Belgraders as more than 100,000 (quarter of the city's entire population at the time) came out to see the world famous racers such as Tazio Nuvolari and Manfred von Brauchitsch.

Considering it capable of showing the King in good historical light, Yugoslavia's post-war communist authorities did their best to erase this race event from collective national memory. As a result, later generations in Serbia, even the most ardent Formula One fans among them, have almost no knowledge about this major event in not-too-distant local history.

The 1939 Belgrade race also holds distinction as the only Grand Prix event to be held during World War II, which had begun two days before with Nazi Germany's invasion of Poland. It is also significant for being the very last win of the great Tazio Nuvolari's illustrious career. He was 46 at the time.

Famous quotes containing the word grand:

    That grand drama in a hundred acts, which is reserved for the next two centuries of Europe—the most terrible, most questionable and perhaps also the most hopeful of all dramas.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)