The Karađorđev park extends between Bulevar oslobodjenja and Nebojša Street. At this site, during the attack on Belgrade in 1806, he was one of the rebel militia. The park is a prominent place of great importance.
The Serbs who stayed in Vracar in the First Serbian Uprising and disappeared during the struggle against the Turks from November 30, 1806 to the beginning of 1807, were buried in that area, except for Vasa Carapic.
Prince Alexander Karadjordjevic raised the monument in the military cemetery in 1848 with the inscription: "In honor and honor of the Serbian heroes for the impoverishment of the bravely disappeared in 1806, the monument to this is taken up." At the very top of the monument there is a cross with the year 1806 and the text from whom it is learned that it was rebuilt in 1889 during the reign of King Alexander Obrenovic, which is also the first public monument built in Belgrade.
Not far from it there are 12 tombstones placed on the graves of the mouthpiece. Within the Karađorđevo Park, monuments to treasurers from 1923, the author of Stamen Đurđević, the monument to Lamartin, the author Lojza Dolinar, are a monument to the International Brigades formed in Spain.
The park began to form after the erection of the monument, and it was considerably expanded in 1903 and 1904, when a crib was built, which is still present on a small hill. Before the Second World War, a shelter was made in which, on April 6, 1941, during the German bombing, a 192 innocent Belgrade citizen found death. The stone slab at that place resembles a tragic event.