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Milan Amruš

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Milan Amruš
Mayor of Zagreb
In office
1890–1892
Preceded byIgnjat Sieber
Succeeded byAdolf Mošinsky
In office
1904–1910
Preceded byAdolf Mošinsky
Succeeded byJanko Holjac
Personal details
Born
Milan Emil Amruš

(1848-10-01)1 October 1848
Brod na Savi, Kingdom of Slavonia, Austrian Empire
Died26 May 1919(1919-05-26) (aged 70)
Zagreb, Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
Political partyIndependent People's Party
Alma materJosephinum Vienna
University of Zagreb
OccupationSurgeon

Milan Emil Amruš (October 1, 1848 – May 26, 1919) was a Croatian physician, lawyer and politician, a two-term mayor of Zagreb.[1][2]

Amruš was born in Brod na Savi, where he completed grammar school. He studied at the gymnasiums in Vinkovci and Zagreb, and then enrolled at the Josephinum, the academy for military doctors in Vienna. Since 1872 he worked in military hospitals in Vienna and Zagreb. After the Austro-Hungarian annexation of Bosnia, he moved to Sarajevo. He returned to Zagreb in 1882, when he also enrolled at the Faculty of Law at the University of Zagreb.[1]

While in Zagreb, he joined the Independent People's Party and in 1889 he became a member of the Croatian Parliament where he would serve until 1903. He received a law doctorate in 1890.[1] The same year he was named the mayor of Zagreb. In his capacity as mayor, he brought Nikola Tesla back from the United States in an effort to get the city electric lighting, but was unsuccessful.[2] The Zagreb Main Station was built during this time. His first mayoral term ended in 1892.

In 1904, he was elected mayor again. His second term was much longer and much more fruitful than the first one. During it, the electrification of Zagreb was completed on October 17, 1907.[2] The city also got a new maternity hospital, and the first public restrooms. The gasworks was moved out of the city center, and during this time the company Zagrebački zbor was started, the precursor to the Zagreb Fair.[1]

In 1911, ban Nikola Tomašić named him his deputy for matters of religion and education. In that role, Amruš started an effort to found technical faculties at the Universities, but could not achieve that goal until the end of World War I in 1918.[1]

Amruš had no children and was in fact known as a hardfisted person,[2] but in his will he left everything, including two major mansions at Zrinjevac and a rural estate in Zdenčina near Klinča Sela, to the city. He died in Zagreb at the age of 70. He was named an honorary citizen of Zagreb in 1919.[3] His former estate was later turned into an orphanage, which was then named after him.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Josip Šarčević (2006-03-22). "Milan Emil Amruš". Poznati Vinkovčani - Biomedicinari. Archived from the original on 2012-03-15. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
  2. ^ a b c d Zvonimir Milčec. "Zagrebački gradonačelnici". Official web site (in Croatian). City of Zagreb. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
  3. ^ "Počasni građanin Grada Zagreba: 1918. - 1941. (Kraljevina Jugoslavija)" (in Croatian). City of Zagreb. Retrieved 2011-07-19.
Political offices
Preceded by Mayor of Zagreb
1890–1892
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mayor of Zagreb
1904–1910
Succeeded by