bg Novi Sad

Marta Kuzmanović House

- Zmaj Jovina 23 -
The two-story residential and commercial building was built somewhere around 1852, after a project that was signed by the builder Jožef Čik in 1852. The design was approved by the architect Johan Rotter and was commissioned by Marta Kuzmanović. It was constructed on a plot where a building stood, which was destroyed during the in 1949. The journalist and politician Jaša Tomić lived in this building for some time. He was born on October 23, 1856, in , in a Serbian Orthodox Christian family, who had thrived significantly from trade in the region. He attended elementary school in Vršac, then gymnasium in and . He became a volunteer in the , after which he attended medical faculties in and , but later transferred to the faculty of philosophy and philology. Later on, he became the editor of two magazines and founder of the People's Freethinker Party. In 1918, he became president of the Serb National Council in Novi Sad, where at the Great People's Assembly of Banat, Bačka, and Baranja from November 25, he proclaimed the secession of these regions from the Kingdom of Hungary and their unification with the Kingdom of Serbia. Jaša Tomić died on October 22, 1922, in Novi Sad at the age of 65.
Jaša Tomić
Underneath the that separates the attic from the rest of the building, which is built in the styles Neo-Baroque and Biedermeier, you'll alternatingly see and , which are adorned with foliage. The central part contains a that contains two , and a balcony, which is supported by one , as well as two and two marble pillars, all of which are crowned with an Ionic . The pilasters that are located on the second floor, are crowned with a capital that's adorned with either acanthus foliage or . A straight is placed above the second floor windows, all of which are supported by two corbels.
An old postcard shows the building on the left