Dimitrije Bratoglic

Bratoglić attended the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna in the 1780s.

The paintings on the north and south doors and the icons in the archbishop's throne of the Church of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Novi Sad, were painted by Dimitrije Bratoglić from Zemun or Mihajlo Jeftić from Sremski Karlovci.

[5] In 1830, the icons on the iconostasis at the Monastery of the Holy Archangel Gabriel in Zemun that were also credited to Dimitrije Bratoglić, but recent research shows that the majority of the icons were painted by his assistant, Konstantin Lekić.

[6][7][8] The Zemun monastery church first served as a quarantine on the Military frontier, border of Turkey and Austria.

Dimitrije Bratoglić often crossed over to the Turkish side to work on private commissions and when he returned immediately reported the military movements of the Turks to Serbs before and during the First Serbian Uprising[2] Dimitrieje Bratoglić died in 1931, aged 67.