Sabor Palace Explained

Sabor Palace
Native Name: Palača hrvatskog sabora, Saborska palača
Style:Classicism, Neo-renaissance, Secession
Location Country:Croatia
Coordinates:45.8161°N 15.9742°W
Architect:Matthias Leonhart, Aleksandar Brdarić, Lav Kalda, Karlo Susan
Completion Date:1737 (first building)
1849 (second building)
1911 (final look and expansion)

Sabor Palace (Croatian: Saborska palača) is a historic building in Gornji Grad, Zagreb, which houses the Croatian Parliament, called Sabor. The place first housed the initial building for the parliament of Croatia, Dalmatia, and Slavonia in 1737, and the current building got its final expansion and overhaul in 1911.

History

First building

Prior to 1737, there was no permanent place for the joint congregation, or diets, of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia within the Habsburg monarchy. The nobility frequently changed places and used various administrative buildings or noble residences for this purpose.[1] A house was finally purchased in 1731 on St. Mark's Square, next to the two-storey building formerly used by Pavao Ritter Vitezović as an official printing residence.[2] The house was severely damaged in a fire during the same year, so a new plan was drawn up by a local builder Matija Leonhart, which envisioned a new baroque palace with a main hall suitable for diet sessions, which was first used on 6 May 1737.[3]

Expansion

From 1765, the building also took under its roof the office of the Zagreb county and the premises became more cramped over time, which gradually increased demand for more space and consequently forced temporary relocations of the sessions. So in 1807, the old building was sold by Ban of Croatia Ignác Gyulay to the Zagreb county, and a new building was purchased on the other side of the square.[4] The building did not meet the demands of the Sabor, but became a permanent residence of the ban, called Banski Dvori. The old parliament palace was demolished, new adjacent parcels were purchased, and a new larger and more spacious building was constructed following the plans of Aleksandar Brdarić in 1849.[1] The current building retains the floor plan of this phase, including the main hall, and sessions continued to take place there in spite of changing ownership.[3]

Final phase

At the beginning of the 20th century, the Land Government of Dalmatia, Croatia and Slavonia purchased all of the surrounding buildings in Opatička, Kamenita and Županijska streets, which formed a single urban block together with the existing parliament building.[1] A public tender to incorporate all of this into a single building was granted to architects and Karlo Susan, and was finalised in 1911. The Zagreb County returned the new building back to the Sabor during this occasion.[3]

The building was damaged during the 2020 Zagreb earthquake.[5]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://hrcak.srce.hr/file/327851 Povijest palače hrvatskog sabora
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=551sGYrx3pAC&dq=Saborska+pala%C4%8Da&pg=PA55 Zagreb: turistički vodič
  3. Web site: Hrvatski sabor . www.sabor.hr . 15 January 2022 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120504171647/http://www.sabor.hr/Default.aspx?sec=484 . 4 May 2012 . dead.
  4. Web site: Duga povijest Saborske palače na gornjogradskom Markovom trgu | Lice Grada.
  5. Web site: Zgrada Hrvatskog sabora ide u obnovu, dobili su 87 milijuna kuna iz EU.