Political scientist Sabrina P. Ramet writes that Serbophilia in France during the 1990s was "traditional", partly as a response to the closeness between Germany and Croatia. Business ties continued during the war and fostered a desire for economic normalization.[2]
Pavel Jozef Šafárik— Slovakian philologist, poet, literary historian, historian and ethnographer in the Kingdom of Hungary. He was one of the first scientific Slavistics.[citation needed]
Ján Kollár— Slovakian writer (mainly poet), archaeologist, scientist, politician, and main ideologist of Pan-Slavism.[citation needed]
Dimitrios Karatasos— Greek armatolos who participated in the Greek War of Independence, and several other rebellions, seeking to liberate his native Greek Macedonia.[25]
Herbert Vivian— British journalist and author of Servia: The Poor Man's Paradise and The Servian Tragedy: With Some Impressions of Macedonia.[26]
Alexander Kolchak— Imperial Russian admiral, military leader and polar explorer.[27]
"War". The Atlantic. Atlantic Monthly Company. 1946. p.184. There are also certain American Serbophiles who will hear no evil of Mihailovich, and who repudiate as Communist-inspired any suggestion that he ever collaborated with the enemy. Ruth Mitchell, author of The Serbs Choose War, is one of them.
Kurapovna, Marcia.Shadows on the Mountain: The Allies, the Resistance, and the Rivalries that Doomed WWII Yugoslavia. John Wiley & Sons, 2009, pp. 71–72.
Theodoulou, Christos A. (1971). Greece and the Entente, August 1, 1914-September 25, 1916. p.151. Sir Henry Bax - Ironside, who was considered Serbophil..