World War One Sites - The NETWORLD Database

Saint Elias Church with its Parish Office in Zenica, Bosnia and Herzegovina

The parish office and the church were built in 1836 and then modernized in the appearance that we can see today in 1909. The architect responsible for the church was Josip Vancaš, a famous Bosnian architect. It is 42 meters long and has a high tower of 40 meters. There are four altars in the church, one main and three secondary altars. The main altar was made from wood and it was made in Tyrol (Austria) in 1837. The church also owns organ pipes with 8 registers which have been brought to the church in 1933. There are no technical documents on the church every being restored and changed. In 2007, the church building, along with the Parish Office was declared a national monument of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Bosnia and Herzegovina, Zenica

Type of WWI-heritage

  • Church

Dimensions

It is 42 meters long and has a high tower of 40 meters.

State of repair/preservation

The Parish office, the church, and the records are in good shape, in other words, they are well preserved. The church has not changed its appearance. It has kept its initial appearance from the time of its construction.

Historical WWI Context

The church and the Parish office themselves were finished and inhabited in 1909, but 1917 is important because the famous writer, a Nobel prize winner, Ivo Andrić was held in house arrest in the church’s Parish Office at that time. The Nobel prize winner, Ivo Andrić was a close friend of Gavrilo Pricip, the young activist, rebel and a member of Young Bosnia, that assassinates Franz Ferdinand and his wife. Because of his closeness with Princip, Andrić was arrested and imprisoned first in Split, then transferred to Rijeka, and finally to Maribor. When the case against him was dropped, he was egziled to a village near Travnik called Ovčarevo, and from there on, he was transferred to Zenica. He spent some time in the Saint Elias Church’s Parish Office, and from there on to Zenica Prison.

At the time of the World War One, the church was doing the function of some kind of house arrest for the Nobel prize winner for literature Ivo Andrić.

State of legal protection

It is not protected by any local, regional, national or international law or agreement.

Owner

The Parish owns it.

Kind of cultural use of WWI

No data.

Opening

No data.

Entrance Fee

No data.

Information regarding cities, villages, other touristic attractions (non-WWI) nearby

Vranduk Fortress, Maglaj Fortress, Visoko Pyramids, etc.

Accomodation

No data.

Public Transport

No data.

Further information sources

No data.

Museums Private Collections

National Museum of BiH in Sarajevo

Location

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