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Jovan Stejić House

- Makedonska 23 -
The two-story residential building was built in 1845 for the Serbian writer, philologist, critic of 's reform, and medical doctor, Jovan Stejić. He was born in in 1803, and after receiving a scholarship from , he studied in , where he completed his secondary education. He studied at the Faculty of Medicine in and received his doctorate in in 1829. He became the first Serb Doctor of Medicine who came to work in the Principality of Serbia. He was Prince 's personal physician, founder of the Serbian Civil Medical Corps, and one of the founders of the Society of Serbian Letters, later known as the Serbian Academy of Science and Arts. He was the author of many scientific and literary works and publications. Upon his arrival organized civil health service in Serbia started to function. Jovan Stejić died in 1853 in Belgrade.

In 1931, the Jesuits bought it, with the intention of building a church there. After the purchase, they remodeled Stejić's garage as a temporary chapel and blessed it.
Jovan Stejić
The dormer, that's placed within the roof of the building, which was built in the Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Baroque style, is topped with a swan neck . The , which supports some of the roof , are decorated with foliage. The central , which is supported by a total of three corbels, is topped with a segmental pediment that's adorned with a . Above two of the second floor windows, you can see another pediment, which features an incorporated . The columns and , which are both present on the first and second floors, are either crowned with a Doric or an Ionic . The wooden entrance is, in addition to pointed pediments, also embellished with wrought iron and .
The building is visible in an old photo