Terazije Square covers the area from Sremska street to king Milan street.
The most famous is the Belgrade square. It began to be formed in the first half of the 19th century, in the 1840s, Prince Miloš Obrenović ordered that the Serbian craftsmen, especially blacksmiths and police officers, move from the town to the vicinity, where they were mixed with the Turkish people, and that their houses and shops have been built on the site of today's Terazije. Ilija Carapic, the son of Vasa Carapic, who was also president of the Belgrade municipality for some time, had a special task to share these craftsmen with placards in Terazije, whoever agreed to enclose the wages received it free of charge.