bg Zilina

Babušek Family House

- Horný Val 20 -
The two-story residential building, which belonged to the Babuškovic family, was built in 1892 and inhabited from 1894 to 1904 by the Slovak doctor, publicist, writer, and translator, Dušan Petrovič Makovický, who was the personal physician of the famous Russian writer . Dušan was born on December 10, 1866, in and began to study medicine at the Faculty of Medicine in , where he arrived on October 14, 1885. After a year and a half of unsuccessful exams, he continued in , from April 29, 1889, until March 15, 1890, in and he graduated in July 1891 in Prague. While still a student, he made his first trip to Russia, staying in from March 6, 1890 until May 1, 1890. In the years between 1891 and 1894, he worked as a secondary doctor in Innsbruck, in 1894 he went to , but that year he started working as a general practitioner in Žilina. Between 1915 and 1916, he was interned for opposing the war, in 1919 he fell ill with typhoid fever. A year later, together with his Russian wife, whom he had married in the meantime, they returned together to Ružomberok, where in 1921 he committed suicide.
Lev Tolstoy on the left and Dušan Makovický on the right around 1900
From 1905 until 1919, the Czech doctor, medical organizer, humanist, writer, publicist, translator, and teacher, Ivan Hálek, lived and worked in the building. He was born on November 11, 1872, in Prague, in the family of the Czech poet and Dorota Hálková. After completing his high school studies in Prague, he graduated from the medical faculty of Charles University in 1896. During his university studies, he was a follower of the teachings of Lev Tolstoy and became personally acquainted with Dušan Makovický and . From 1901 until March 1939, he worked as a doctor in northwestern Slovakia, including Žilina, and in 1939, he was forced out of the region. He returned to Prague with his wife Louisa Šrobárová-Hálková where he died on February 17, 1945, at the age of 72.
Ivan Hálek and his wife Louisa Šrobárová-Hálková
At the end of 1918 and at the beginning of 1919, when Žilina was temporarily the capital of Slovakia, Doctor Vavro Šrobár, then the Minister with full powers to govern Slovakia, lived in this house. Vavro was born on Augustus 9, 1867, in , in the family of Štefan Šrobár and Mária Šeferová-Dvorská. He was a student of , co-founder of Czechoslovakia in 1918. Vavro developed into the capital and set up an administration in Slovakia that had been governed from Hungary until 1918. After the , he was the first chairman of the Slovak Freedom Party, founded in 1946. He was Minister of Finance from 1945 until 1947, and Minister of the Unity of Laws of Slovakia from 1948 until 1950. Vavro Šrobár died on December 6, 1950, a few days after an operation for a malignant tumor of the esophagus in the hospital in , when, despite the successful operation, his state of health remained serious due to associated diseases.
Vavro Šrobár
The top gable on the western side of the building, built in the Historicism style, is embellished with a containing the year of completion and . The roof underneath it features some underneath it adorned with floral ornamentation. A straight is placed above the second floor windows, which in some cases is supported by two corbels, while above some of the first floor windows, you'll be able to see a with a richly decorated in its midst. Another keystone is placed above the main entrance door on the southern side of the building, which contains an extremely detailed . Another cartouche can be admired underneath some of the first floor windows, which is surrounded by floral decorations.
The building is shown in an old photo