Adriatic-Danubian Bank

[4]: 135 [5] It soon developed a network of branches on the Dalmatian coast and dominated the region's banking market.

1902) in Dubrovnik,[7] and also took over the Commercial Bank (Croatian: Trgovačka obrtna banka) in Ljubljana.

[9] Following World War I, the Adriatic Bank's head office in Trieste and operations in Fiume, Abbazia, and Zara, as well as its branch in Vienna where it had relocated head office functions during the war, became an Italian bank (Italian: Banca Adriatica),[5] which eventually failed in 1924.

[10]: 18  The bank's operations in the newly formed Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, initially managed from Ljubljana, were reorganized in 1921 by the same shareholders as Jadranska Banka a.d., headquartered in Belgrade.

[11]: 41 At that time, it had branches in Bled, Cavtat, Celje, Dubrovnik, Herceg Novi, Jelsa, Korčula, Kotor, Kranj, Ljubljana, Maribor, Metković, Prevalje, Sarajevo, Split, Šibenik, and Zagreb.

Former head office of the Adriatic-Danubian Bank in Belgrade , designed in 1921 by architect August Rheinfels for the Adriatic Bank and completed in 1924 [ 1 ]