
Milunka Savić
Serbian soldier and humanitarian caregiver
of 100 · stable trend · Strong moral/spiritual alignment
Standing
72/100
Raw Score
62/85
Confidence
78%
Evidence
Medium high
About
Milunka Savić was a Serbian soldier in the Balkan Wars and World War I, later remembered as one of the most decorated women in wartime history.
The public record strongly supports courage, sacrifice for family and country, care for children, and resilience under poverty and wartime imprisonment. Religious practice is culturally and indirectly evidenced rather than richly documented, so belief and worship scoring remains cautious.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
Strong evidence for courage, family sacrifice, child care, and resilience; thinner direct evidence for personal worship and explicit theology.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
Culturally Serbian Orthodox context and value language are present, but direct personal statements are limited.
No strong contrary evidence; explicit eschatological belief is not well documented.
Religious-cultural context supports a cautious positive score with limited direct evidence.
Raised in a conservative moral setting; direct scripture-guided practice is not richly evidenced.
Christian cultural frame supports some positive inference, but direct modeling evidence is thin.
Contribution to Others
Enlisted in place of her ill brother according to repeated biographical accounts.
Raised adopted children and reportedly educated many children from her home village.
Hospital work and child care show repeated help to people in vulnerable conditions.
Care extended beyond immediate family, though stranger-specific evidence is less direct.
General helping pattern is strong; direct ask-response records are sparse.
Military defense, hospital work, and care for unsupported children support this dimension.
Personal Discipline
No reliable direct record of routine prayer found; score reflects low observability rather than contrary evidence.
Disciplined care is evident, but explicitly religious giving practice is not documented.
Reliability
Repeatedly honored military and family commitments under pressure.
Stability Under Pressure
Lived modestly and at times in poverty while continuing family responsibilities.
Endured wounds, divorce, neglect, and responsibility for children.
Battlefield service, wounds, Albanian retreat, and reported imprisonment support exceptional pressure resilience.
Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Enlisted in place of her ill brother
After Serbia mobilized, Savić joined under the name Milun Savić, reportedly to spare her weaker brother from service.
→ Began a combat career framed by family sacrifice and national service.
highWounded at Bregalnica and returned to service
She became known in the Second Balkan War, was wounded, identified as a woman in hospital, promoted, decorated, and returned to comrades while still recovering.
→ Evidence of courage and commitment under direct battlefield pressure.
highDistinguished in World War I combat
Accounts credit Savić with repeated wartime distinction, including the Battle of Kolubara, the Albanian retreat after a head injury, service on the Salonika front, and the capture of 23 Bulgarian soldiers at Crna Reka.
→ Built a record of exceptional combat effectiveness while surviving repeated wounds.
very_highRaised adopted children and helped educate many more
After marriage and divorce, she raised her daughter and three adopted children; later biographical accounts state she educated and raised many children from her home village.
→ Converts wartime courage into long-term care for unsupported young people.
very_highRan wartime hospital work and survived Banjica imprisonment
At the beginning of World War II, accounts say she helped run a military hospital in Belgrade treating rebels from different camps, was beaten, and was imprisoned at Banjica before release.
→ Shows care under occupation and resilience during captivity, though details depend largely on later biography.
highDeath followed by later public rehabilitation
Savić died in Belgrade in 1973. Later commemorations, including reburial and monuments, present her as a symbol of courage, sacrifice, and care.
→ Her record became more visible after decades of relative neglect.
mediumPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
Brother called up for war
1912Her ill brother was reportedly mobilized during the Balkan Wars.
Response: She enlisted under a male name and assumed the danger herself.
strong_positiveWounds and gender discovery
1913Hospital treatment revealed she was a woman after battlefield injury.
Response: She insisted on combat service and returned to her comrades.
strong_positiveOccupation and imprisonment
1941Biographical accounts report she treated wounded rebels, was beaten, and held at Banjica.
Response: She endured captivity and survived without public evidence of collaboration.
positive_with_medium_evidenceProgression
crisis years
Shifted from soldiering to child care, modest work, and endurance through poverty and World War II occupation.
stableearly years
Moved from rural family duty into extreme personal sacrifice for her brother.
improvinggrowth years
Repeatedly returned to service despite wounds and rejection.
strongBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Protective courage: repeatedly accepted personal risk for family, comrades, and country.
- • Care after conflict: adoption and education of children made care visible beyond military fame.
- • Steadiness in hardship: wounds, poverty, and captivity did not erase her service orientation.
Concerns
- • Evidence is strongest for public actions, weaker for private devotional life and interior beliefs.
Evidence Quality
3
Strong
4
Medium
1
Weak
Overall: medium_high
This profile evaluates public behavior and evidence patterns only; it does not judge hidden intention, soul, or salvation.