bg Novi Sad

Miloš Marić House

- Kisačka 20 -
The one-story residential building, which was constructed in 1907, was built according to a project of the architect Mihajlo Petljanski. The construction was commissioned by the Austro-Hungarian military officer of the Šajkaši battalion, Miloš Marić, who was born in 1846 and descending from Kać. Het got married to Marija Ružić-Marić, who was born in 1847 into a respectable and wealthy family from . Together they had three children, two daughters, Mileva and Zorka, and one son, Miloš.

Their eldest daughter Mileva, who was born on December 19, 1875, in Titel, became a physicist and mathematician and the first wife of from 1903 to 1919. In the first years of their relationship, the couple spent many hours discussing their shared interests and learning about topics in physics that the polytechnic school's lectures did not cover. Together they had three children, two sons, Hans Albert and Eduard, and one daughter, Lieserl, who was their first child but died when she was only 1 year old. In 1913 the family moved to , but this decision caused Mileva distress, and in 1914 the couple separated, and Mileva took their children to . The couple divorced in 1919, on the grounds of having lived apart for five years, and as part of the divorce settlement, Einstein agreed that if he were to win a Nobel Prize, he would give the money that he received to Mileva. Even though Albert gave a bigger part of his Nobel Prize money to Mileva, she spent most of it on the treatment of their son Eduard, who was diagnosed with schizophrenia. After a long chronicle illness, Mileva Marić-Einstein dies in Zürich in 1948, where she was buried in a shared grave.
Mileva Marić-Einstein and Albert Einstein in 1912
Mileva's brother, Miloš Marić, who was born on 20 April 1885, in , attended elementary school in , but his father, complaining of rheumatism, soon moved the family back to his native village of Kač, and a year later in 1896, to a new home in Novi Sad. In 1902 he graduated from the gymnasium and chose to study medicine at the Hungarian University in , where after his studies he worked in a psychiatric clinic for three years. At the beginning of the , he was mobilized in the Austro-Hungarian army as a battalion doctor. During the siege of the , he had to leave the fortress for a health inspection and decided to surrender himself to the Russians and provide them with vital information to capture the fortress with the least casualties possible which they did. He was sent to to work as a doctor at the Lefortovo Military Hospital, and continued to study and worked at the Moscow University Chair of Histology. Some Russian scientists are convinced that Milos Marić laid the foundations of the medical field that is now called cloning. Miloš Marić died on May 3, 1944, in , at the age of 59.
Miloš Marić
The building, which is built in the styles of Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Baroque, contains loads of , which are visible above the frieze. The frieze itself contains either some adorned with foliage, or air vents adorned with a , which are surrounded by . A is placed above the windows, which contains another mascaron, which in this case is surrounded by ornamental laurel twigs. Above the beautiful wooden main entrance door, which is flanked by that are both crowned with a Corinthian , you can see a that's flanked by the construction year 1907.
The building shown in an old photo