Alexander Wittek


Alexander Wittek was an Austrian-Hungarian architect and chess master.
Wittek died in a lunatic asylum in Graz in 1894, having been diagnosed with a "paralytic mental disorder" the previous year. Contradictory sources attribute his death to either suicide or tuberculosis.

Career

As an architect, Wittek worked in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Austro-Hungarian Empire. His most well-known works in Sarajevo are the City Hall building called "Vijećnica" which later became the National Library and the Sebilj public fountain, and in Mostar Hotel Neretva, all designed and built in the pseudo-Moorish style.
Wittek was also a chess master. He tied for 5–6th at Berlin 1881, and was in 9th place at Vienna 1882. In 1882 he was ranked 9th in the world.

Death in a lunatic asylum

Wittek died in a lunatic asylum in Graz in 1894, having been diagnosed with a "paralytic mental disorder" the previous year. One source says that he committed suicide but another cites tuberculosis.