BAN-MILOSAVLJEVIĆ PARK
Small dimensions, he bears the name of Svetislav Milosavljević (1882-1960), a Serbian politician who was the first Banovine du Vrbas Banovine ban between 1929 and 1934. Represented here as a statue, he was a particularly popular governor of the Bosno-Serbian population and was the origin of building several buildings, including the municipal palace and the Palace Palace.
Nearby - The park continues to the east with a public parking (paid) above which two skyroof roof dominates: that of the Hotel Talija (see "Accommodation") and that of the Catholic Church Marie-des-Etoiles (** Ркfischа Мариendre Е Зт Езде - Crkva Marije Zvijezde). The latter is located at N ° 24 of Srpska Street. Without great architectural interest, it was built in 1929 to serve as abbatial to a Trappist monastery, now extinct, and was burned by the bosno-Serb paramilitaries in 1995. A little further, still on the same street, at n ° 5, is the church of Christ-King (in the form of ркка Habitриста Царendre А - crkva Hrista Carja). Built in 2010, it is a shiny blue and bursting with bulbs. It belongs to the Ukrainian Catholic Church. Bringing together a small Ruthenic and Ukrainian community (less than 4,000 people in the country), it recognizes the Pope's authority, but practice the Byzantine rite (marriage of priests, liturgy of Saint John Chrysostome, etc.) with offices in Ukrainian or old Slavon.
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