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Jaša Dunđerski Palace

- Svetozara Miletića 10 -
The construction of the two-story building, which was built for residential purposes, took place somewhere in the 1920s and was built on a plot where a one-story building used to stand. The building is known for the fact that Jakov Jaša Dunđerski lived here for a while until his death. He was born in in the family of Aleksandar and Elyza Dunđerski.

Jaša was at the center of a scandal right at the time of his death. In November 1935, the Novi Sad police were looking for a young girl named Aranka Juhas, who was only 25 years old. She worked in the house of landowner Jaša Dunđerski and the then well-known merchant Sozdanić. One day she took a day off, but she did not return to work for several days. Mrs. Sozdanić went to the police with the story, that Aranka, while she was at work at Jaše Dunđerski, they entered into an intimate relationship and gave birth to a boy last year as a result of that relationship. Before giving birth, Aranka left her service with Jaše, and he undertook to financially provide for her and the child. However, before allegedly fulfilling his promise, Jaša traveled to and died there suddenly in 1935. And while the search for the girl continued, the entire Novi Sad press reported on this event, tarnishing the reputation of the recently deceased Jaša Dunđerski. After several days, Aranka came alone to Novi Sad, not knowing that she was being searched for. The defense representative was Dr. Fedor Adamović, a famous lawyer from Novi Sad who proved that Aranka was already receiving maintenance from a landlord from with whom she was employed before entering the service of Jaša Dunđerski. Immediately after the birth of her child in 1933 the owner from Bečej regularly paid child support for Aranka's child. They proved that it was simply blackmail by the former maid of the late Jaša Dunđerski.
The one-story building that used to stand in its place is visible in an old postcard
Jaša Dunđerski got married to Vera, the daughter of a lawyer from Novi Sad, with whom he had three sons, Bogdan, Aleksandar, and Đorđe. Their son Bogdan committed suicide in 1934, just seven months after he graduated as a mechanical engineer in . In this building, their son Aleksandar committed suicide by shooting himself in the head with a pistol in April 1936. Their third son Đorđe, became a tennis player who participated in the Olympic Games in 1924 in .
Đorđe Dunđerski standing on the left
The top of the Art Nouveau and Neo-Baroque building is lavishly decorated with , decorative vases, , motifs, and representing and the Greek god . Underneath the that separates the attic from the rest of the building, you can see loads of , garland wreaths, , and several more mascarons. The building contains a lot more cartouches, in all shapes and sizes, some of which are surrounded by foliage. The decorative bands on the first floor are either embellished with a wavy pattern or a lot of . A featuring another mascaron and another egg-and-dart motif is placed above the beautifully decorated wrought iron entrance gate.
The building is shown in an old photo