Antonín Viktor Barvitius | |
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Antonín Viktor Barvitius
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Born | July 14, 1823 Prague |
Died | July 20, 1901 |
Occupation | Architect |
Buildings | Villa Lanna, Villa Grébovka |
Antonín Viktor Barvitius (born July 14, 1823 in Prague, died July 20, 1901), also known as Anton Barvitius, was a Czech architect working in Revivalism architecture.
Barvitius originally studied philosophy and law, but then switched his studies to the Academy of the Arts in Prague in 1843. He later studied architecture at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts. In 1854, he went on a scholarship to Rome where he worked on restoring renaissance monuments. His most significant work there was on the reconstruction of the Palazzo Venezia.
After returning to Prague, he worked on several building projects with his brother-in-law and fellow architect Vojtěch Ignác Ullmann. They worked together on the design of the Franz Josef train station in Prague (now called Praha hlavní nádraží), which was demolished in 1904 to make way for the current Art Nouveau building. They also worked together on the Villa Lanna.
Barvitius later worked for the Christian Academy and became its chairman. He was also chairman of the art department of the Association for the completion of St. Vitus' Cathedral, he was a monument conservator of the Central Commission in Vienna and a member of the Czech Academy of Sciences and Arts.
He was also active as an archaeologist, and in 1882 Pope Leo XIII awarded him the distinguished knightly order of St. Gregory for his expertise in Christian archeology.
Barvitius was the older of two brothers. His younger brother, Viktor Barvitius was a painter.
He is buried at Olšany Cemetery in Prague.