bg Zilina

Villa Andrej Bacher

- Hodžova 20 -
The two-story city corner villa was built somewhere in the 1890s for the then well-known Žilina lawyer Ján Milec, who was born on May 9, 1847, in . He participated in the establishment of the Mutual Aid in Žilina, which he later led as an administrator. He was one of the founders and shareholders of the Ružombersk Loan Participation Association. In the field of banking, his activity peaked in the years between 1884 and 1886, when, together with Rudolf Krupec, he was actively involved in the founding of the Tatra Bank in . He became an influential member of the board and directorate and served in these capacities until his death on August 28, 1901. He was also at the birth of several Žilina industrial enterprises, especially the Žilina cement plant in . Ján Milec and his wife Oľga, the daughter of the important businessman from , Peter Makovický, raised a son, Ivan, a Slovak diplomat, and daughters who married important figures in Slovak history, including Andrej Bacher. The building was originally a post office and also served as a prayer room for Žilina’s Lutherans from 1902 until 1904. Once the new post office was built in 1908, it housed a branch of the Ružomberok Úverová Banka from 1911.
Ján Milec
In 1919 the bank changed names to become Slovenská Banka, whose director was Andrej Bacher, an important citizen of Žilina and a Slovak national figure. He was born in 1885 in and his parents raised him in the traditions of Slovakia and Slavic thought. He actively participated in all national events, and he was also very active in literature, later, he was mainly engaged in activities in economic organizations. He was one of the founding members of the National Council in Žilina at the time of the establishment of the first Czechoslovak Republic and the disintegration of Austria-Hungary and was extremely involved in the city. After 1918, he mainly devoted himself to national economic work and was a member of all national and humanitarian associations in Žilina. Andrej Bacher married Edita, the daughter of Ján Milec, with whom they then bought this building from the other heirs of Ján Milec. Andrej Bacher was not only an important Slovak nationalist, patriot, and politician, but also a skilled banker and publicist, who died in Žilina in 1945.
Andrej Bacher around 1927
The , placed underneath the roof of the Eclectic building, is supported by a lot of . The placed on the second floor are crowned with a Doric . A straight is placed above the second floor windows, which are supported by two corbels adorned with foliage, and between these corbels, a garland can be admired. The fragment that can be seen underneath the first and second floor windows is embellished with two each. The , which are placed above the first floor windows, are decorated with a depicting the Greek god . The two balconies that are placed on the second floor are supported by two more corbels and secured with a lovely curved wrought iron railing. The entrance portal on the western side of the building consists of two columns and pilasters crowned with a Doric capital, a with incorporated and two globes, corbels, a keystone, and a wrought iron entrance door embellished with .
The building is visible in an old postcard