Gajde (f) (plurale tantum)
original: гајде
With a relatively large chanter bell; Azbukovina; District Boljevac; Caribrod (and district); Dragačevo; Jadar; Kragujevačka Jasenica; Krajina region (on the border with Romania; Rajac); Parish Kruševac, Temnić area [W of Paraćin] (Šumadija region, central Serbia); Prov. Niš; Pirot (and district); Prokuplje; Rađevina; Ribare [SSE of Svrljig]; Svrljig; Trnava; Prov. Užice; Valjevska Kolubara; It was more popular there than the "common" Gaida; According to Širola the first Gajde of this type was manufactured ca. 1900 in Ribare (NB¹: ➺ Širola's quite explicit remark to Tokar); Traditionally common at weddings, it was loosing ground in 1937; NB²: ➺ homonyms, &c. (incl. Gaida and Gaita).
Širola, Božidar: Sviraljke s udarnim jezičkom [Aerophones with a beating tongue]. Zagreb, 1937, p.118-119, 120 (»Đorđević; »Manojlović), 175, 374 (Stara Srbija [Old Serbia]), 375 (Sjeverna Srbija [Northern Serbia]).
Jakovljević, Rastko Stevan: Marginality and cultural identities: Locating the bagpipe music of Serbia. Durham, 2012, p.288* (»Vukosavljević).