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The mansion was built between 1765 and 1805, combining until 1770 four older buildings, and then in 1805 another one. The facade was redesigned in the neoclassicist style in 1798.[2] The monumental stone portal dates to 1589 and was made by the manson Abondio di Donino for the building of the town warehouse. It was redesigned in the 18th century, except for the keystone that has been built into facade left of the main entrance.[3] It bears a relief of the coat of arms of the town that has also been ascribed to Donino.[4] Right of the main entrance, there is a bronze bust of Sigmund Zois from 1993, work by the sculptor Mirsad Begić. In the mansion's yard stands an old fountain. Zois's tombstone is etched into the wall facing the yard.[3]
Between the 1780s and the first decade of the 19th century, the mansion was used as the venue of the Slovene intellectual elite, which included the playwright and historian Anton Tomaž Linhart, poet and journalist Valentin Vodnik, philologists Jurij Japelj and Blaž Kumerdej, and linguist Jernej Kopitar.
^ abGerm, Tine (2010). "Zoisova palača v Ljubljani" [Zois Mansion in Ljubljana]. DEDI - enciklopedija naravne in kulturne dediščine na Slovenskem (in Slovenian). Retrieved 9 October 2015.
^Lubej, Uroš (1988). "Mestni grb na pročelju nekdanje Zoisove palače" [The Town Coat of Arms on the Front Facade of the Former Zois Palace]. Kronika: časopis za slovensko krajevno zgodovino (in Slovenian). 36 (1/2). Zveza zgodovinskih društev Slovenije, sekcija za krajevno zgodovino: 74–76. ISSN0023-4923. COBISS7443714.
External links
Media related to Zois Mansion at Wikimedia Commons