Max David
Max (Maximilian) David was engineer, born on December 7, 1859 in Alttitschein (Starý Jičín), Moravia (Austria-Hungary Empire).
Max David graduated from Technical College in Brno, which he attended twice – from 1877 to 1879 and then from 1880 to 1883. Max (Maximilian) David' initially worked as assistant lecturer at the Technical College in Brno, and then for a number of firms in Czechoslovakia. He worked in Bosnia and Herzegovina from May 21, 1890 in Mostar District and stayed there until 1907 when he moved to Tuzla.[1][2]
David's name (in the role of designer) is associated with Mostar's Bishop’s Ordinariate palace, District Court building (1891-1892), and an extension to the Girls' School of the Sisters of Mercy in Mostar, 1903.[3]
References
- Wiener Bauindustrie-Zeitung; Wien; Issue XX, 41; December 10, 1908; pg 390–391; cited February 17, 2012
- "National Monuments". Commission to Preserve National Monuments. Retrieved February 17, 2012. Archived March 3, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
- Krzovic, Ibrahim (1987). ARHITEKTURA Bosne i Hercegovine: 1878–1918. Umjetnička galerija Bosne i Hercegovine. pp. 21–23, 265. Retrieved February 16, 2012.
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