bg Bitola

Alexov Family House

- Shirok Sokak Street 45 -
The three-story residential and commercial building was built according to a project of an unknown architect somewhere at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century. The building was owned by the Alexov family who housed their first ever pharmacy in Bitola on the first floor, which was run by the merchant Risto Alexov and his younger sister pharmacist Rajna Alexova. Rajna, was born on January 5, 1883, in Bitola as a child of father Alexo and mother Santa. After finishing the French High School in , in 1902, she left for Switzerland by train, where she enrolled at the Faculty of Pharmacy in . She graduated four years later, on July 17, 1906, and became the first Macedonian female pharmacist, as well as the first female pharmacist in the Balkans.
Rajna Alexova
Immediately after graduation, she was supposed to open her own pharmacy, but Turkish laws did not allow women to practice the profession of pharmacy. While awaiting approval from the Turkish authorities, she took a job as a Sister of Mercy at the state hospital in . In June 1907 she was moved to a hospital in , where she worked until February 1908. Then she left and worked as a teacher in the Women's High School in , and in 1909 she received a permit to work as a pharmacist and started working in her brother's pharmacy. She later bought the pharmacy from her brother and worked in it until her retirement in 1941.
Roksani
Risto's daughter Roksani, also worked in the same pharmacy, together with her aunt Rajna, until 1936, when she got married and moved to Slovenia. After the , she returned to Bitola, and during her absence, her younger sister Elpiniki worked in the pharmacy, who ran it independently, together with their younger brother Trajan. Roksani was born in Bitola on February 23, 1906, and after completing her high school education in 1925, she studied pharmacy in Lausanne where she graduated on March 22, 1928. Elpiniki was born in Bitola on June 28, 1913, where she completed her high school education, and then enrolled at the Faculty of Pharmacy in . After graduating in 1939, she returned to work in the family pharmacy in Bitola, where she worked until her retirement.
Elpiniki
A broken segmental , as well as a , are placed above the third floor windows of the symmetrical building, which is built in the Neo-Renaissance style. The , which are abundant present on the third and second floors, are crowned with either a Doric or a Corinthian . Above some of the second floor windows, you can see pointed pediment supported by two , or one large straight pediment supported by four corbels. The wrought iron railing, as well as the five wrought iron corbels, which are part of the central balcony, are lavishly decorated with .
The building is visible in an old postcard