Oktobra on the south, Vrtlatska while on the north the border is marked by the Savska street and the complex of the Clinical Hospital "Zemun".
[4][5] List of notables held at Kontumac at various times includes rebellion leader Karađorđe, linguist Vuk Karadžić, writer Joakim Vujić, French poet Alphonse de Lamartine and Danish author Hans Christian Andersen.
Originally, it was subordinated to another Kontumac, in Banovci, Two quarantines were connected with the deeply dug trench, large enough to be travelled by freight and passenger carts.
In 1746, empress Maria Theresa ordered expansion of Zemun's Kontumac, which began to develop in the pattern of Roman-style limes, as a system of the hard-built lookouts and cabins.
As part of the preparations for the upcoming war with the Ottomans, the complex was further fortified with the high wall, with loopholes and gates, leaving only four entrances into the cantonment.
All passengers, goods and postal shipments coming from the Ottoman Empire were first checked in the so-called Outer Kontumac.
Healthy passengers were kept in the quarantine, too, but the length of their containment depended on how close the outbreak of the disease was to the compound.
It had three rooms, kitchen, taproom, grocery store, lard storage, wine cellar with the capacity of 16 tons, bakery and barn for 12 cattle.
Surviving contract from 1818 shows that the innkeeper was allowed to serve food and drink both the citizens of Zemun and residents of Kontumac (Kontumaši).
They didn't pay to the innkeeper directly, instead the money was thrown in the vinegar-filled vessel, and latov collected it with slotted spoon.
Coffee, rice and other grainy goods were unpacked and placed outdoors, under the canopy for three weeks of aeration.
Wool, fur, raw silk, yarn, fabric, leather, etc., were kept up to six weeks as the "diseases easily caught on it".
Instead, the letters were later opened and held above the vinegar vapor which allowed Austrian state to spy on every correspondence claiming quarantine laws.
The construction began in 1880 when the green area around the Great Realschule (modern Zemun Gymnasium) was formed.
[4] The reconstructed area occupies 2.38 ha (5.9 acres) and covered the reconstruction of all pathways, fences and stairways replacement of the benches, decorative lights on additional monuments and construction of another children's playground which will be separated from the rest of the park with the newly formed wall of hedge.
In 1946, two Partisan monuments were erected, commemorating the fightings with the German occupational forces during the World War II: the "Bombard" (by Vanja Radauš) and the "Hostage" (by Boris Kalin).
[6] The monument, in the form of a traditional Armenian memorial stele with carved crosses, was sculptured by Ruben Nalbandian.
Rim of the lid is ornamented with sculptured human heads on the each corner and on the mid-lengths of the longer sides.
[14] There are three drinking fountains in the park and several protected individual trees of European yew and four groups of Caucasian walnuts.
[2][3][4][15] Both churches were built in the temperate Baroque style for the people who were spending time in the Kontumac and were protected as the cultural monuments in 1966.
Deeper digging proved unfeasible because of the high level of underground waters due to the proximity of the Danube.
The area and the subsequent neighborhood and the main street in it ar today called Tošin Bunar ("Toša's Well") after him.
Mićović obtained the permit to demolish the church completely and build a new temple covering 3,000 m2 (32,000 sq ft) instead.