Group portrait of the Horstig and Bojović families Visualizing Family, Gender Relations, and the Body. The Balkans approx. 1860-1950 Ana Djordjevic editor Centre for Southeast European History, University Graz Centre for Information Modelling in the Humanities, University Graz o:vase.1242 Muzej Primenjene Umetnosti Museum of Applied Art 20174 Special Garments Clothing Clothing Manufacture Clothing Adornment Architecture Structures Marketing Banking Finance Personal Names Individuation and Mobility Status, Role, and Prestige Individuation and Mobility Social Stratification Interpersonal Relations Familiy Kinship State Government Activities Political Behavior Armed Forces Uniform and Accouterment Military Technology War Philanthropic Foundations Health and Welfare Infancy and Childhood Adolescene, Adulthood, and Old Age Gender Roles and Issues Serbia Belgrade Belgrade 20.46513,44.80401 Photograph Photographer 1909 Milan Jovanović Jovanović, Milan Framed studio photograph of a group of ten people. There are three seated women and one seated man. Another three man, one woman and two girls are standing. All of the women are dressed in dark, floor-length dresses. Two of the men are wearing plain clothes, while the other two are dressed in uniforms with insignia of honor and rank. The girls are both dressed in sailor dresses. Sitting (from left to right): Zorka Horstig, Bosiljka Bojović (née Horstig) and probably Pavle Horstig (Paul von Horstig) and his wife. Pavle moved to Serbia after the Franco-Prussian War, where he became representative of Krupp and allegedly also one of the founders of freemasonry in Serbia ('Pobratim'– i.e., blood brother – Masonic Lodge). Jelena Bojović is standing next to them. She later married the architect Rade Mihailović. In the second row: Zora Horstig, née Pavlović (daughter of Mihajlo Pavlović, who was the owner of one of the greatest textile factories of his time in Belgrade and also Governor of the National Bank), her husband Kosta Horstig, an unknown man, Marta Bojović, who was educated in Great Britain and later married twice (first Miloš Čarapić and then Milan Dimitrijević). The last person standing on the right is Marta's and Jelena's father Colonel Radivoj Bojović. Not specified Not specified 280 355 200 275 Serbia Belgrade