Jan Tadeusz Papee ID: 3

Jan Tadeusz Papee ID: 3

1865-1927

Medical doctor, public figure.

Dr. Jan Tadeusz Papee (1865-1927), physician specilising in skin and veneral diseases, social activist, director-in-chief of the General Polyclinic in Lemberg, member of the Provincial Health Council, head of the Doctors Chamber. In 1910, Papee was a free practicing doctor, and a head-in-chief of the Doctors Chamber.

Related buildings and spaces

  • Vul. Akademika Bohomoltsia, 3 – residential building

    A three-storied house was built in 1906 under a project designed at Ivan Levynskyi's (Jan Lewiński) bureau for doctor Jan Papee and his wife Maria. The house is one of the six buildings surrounding a green square in the center of the street. It is an example of the early Modernist residential townhouse of the 1900s designed in the Secession (Art Nouveau) style, which was influenced by the architectural school of Otto Wagner. It is an architectural monument of local significance (protection number 3). Today the building is mainly used as a residential one.

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  • Vul. Mechnikova – Lychakivskyi (Lychakiv) cemetery

    Lychakivsky (Lychakiv) cemetery is situated close to Mechnykova street; its territory occupies the Lychakiv plateau and its vicinities. As for today, this is the oldest preserved cemetery in Lviv which was officially opened in 1786. It is one of the best known European necropolises containing a lot of artistic monuments. The cemetery has been declared a historical, archaeological and artistic monument of national significance. There one can see the graves of many prominent persons, military burial places belonging to the times of the First and Second World Wars etc.

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  • Vul. Akademika Bohomoltsia, 3 – residential building

    Vul. Akademika Bohomoltsia, 3 – residential building
  • Vul. Mechnikova – Lychakivskyi (Lychakiv) cemetery

    Vul. Mechnikova – Lychakivskyi (Lychakiv) cemetery

Sources

  1. S. S. Nicieja Cmentarz Łyczakowski we Lwowie. (Wrocław, 1989. S. 359s)
  2. Skorowidz krolewskiego stołecznego miasta Lwowa (1910).

Author(s): Iryna Kotlobulatova