bg Osijek

Villa Julijo Batory

- Ulica Stjepana Radića 23 -
The detached one-story residential building was built on the property of the Union Steam Mill, which was founded in 1891 by Osijek landowners, industrialists, and bankers. The building, which was constructed according to the project, signed on June 26, 1906, by the builder Otto Struppi, was built for the director of the company, Otto Fellner. On April 13, 1928, the building became the property of Osijek's medical duo, Doctor Julijo Batory and Doctor Karl Weissmann. A few days after the purchase, they turned to the City Hall with a request to rebuild the villa for the purposes of a sanatorium, led by the Osijek construction duo Dlouhy and Fulla. They received the permit on August 23, 1928, and after the completion, it was equipped with 11 patient beds. As the sanatorium's need to increase space increased, on April 2, 1936, the owners requested a permit for expansion according to the attached plans of the builder Franjo Dlouhy. In a later period, ownership of the entire sanatorium was taken over by Doctor Batory.
Project of Dlouhy and Fulla
Julije Batory was born in Osijek in 1896, and after completing public school and high school in Osijek, he studied medicine in . After his return to Osijek, he specialized in surgery and gynecology at the hospital. He became respected in professional circles and known for his innovations in the fields he dealt with and the gentleness with which he treated patients and colleagues.

Karl Weissmann was born in on February 14, 1890, and he completed elementary school in Osijek, the Gymnasium education in , and he graduated from the Medical University of . During the , he was recruited into the Austro-Hungarian Army and was stationed in Albania. In 1921, he finished his specialization at the Charité - Universitätsmedizin . Upon completing specialization he returned to Osijek where he led an anti-tuberculosis dispensary. During the , as a Jew, he was persecuted and forced to leave Osijek. He escaped to where he worked as a physician from 1942 until 1945. After the war, he returned to Osijek where he died from a heart attack.
The building is shown in an old postcard
The Art Nouveau building features two both of which are covered with a bell-shaped dome on top of which a is placed. The octagonal turret is decorated on each side with a to which two are attached, which are hung up by a . If you look a bit further down, you can see some beautifully decorated frames, which are adorned with even more rosettes, as well as cartouches and . In some of the , you'll be able to see another cartouche, and some of these pediments are supported by , which, among other things, are embellished with .
An old painting in which the building is visible
The three top gables that enrich the appearance of the building are embellished with and female that are placed within a decorative shell. Some of the balustrades, under which in one case there is a embellished with , are also decorated with rosettes. The two entrances on the northwestern side of the building are part of a , which are supported by columns and that are crowned with a lavishly decorated Romanesque .
Another old postcard that shows the building