Dubrovnik
Dubrovnik is a city in Croatia on the Dalmatian coast. More than 500 years ago it was called "Ragusa". The Italian name of the city is still "Ragusa". This sometimes leads to confusion because there is also a city named Ragusa on Sicily. It is on the Adriatic Sea. About 50,000 people lived there in 2001. Because of its age and unique buildings, the old city of Dubrovnik has been declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
History
The old city of Ragusa was started by Greeks who left Illirya after their home was invaded in the sixth century. They had been part of the Holy Roman Empire. Ragusa in Dalmatia grew to be an important country on the sea, called the Republic of Ragusa. This republic lasted until Napoleonic times.[1][2]
Ragusa was once the only city in Dalmatia with Roman influence not controlled by the Republic of Venice. After the Middle Ages more and more Croats and Serbs from inland areas of Bosnia-Herzegovina moved to the area. They had started the neighbouring town of Dubrovnik, which eventually joined Ragusa. The original population (the Dalmatian Italians) was reduced to the few people of the ruling class: in the 19th century nearly all the people living in Ragusa were Croats and Serbs. Ragusa officially changed its name to "Dubrovnik" (a Croatian name) after 1918, when the city became part of the newly created country of Yugoslavia.
Today Dubrovnik is one of the main tourist sites in Croatia. Dubrovnik is famous for its Old Town - this is an ancient fortress with large stone walls, which helped Dubrovnik keep its freedom for many centuries. There was a major earthquake in 1667 that destroyed many buildings, but the people living there were able to rebuild the town.
Dubrovnik has been used as a filming location for Star Wars: Episode VIII The Last Jedi, where it was used as the city Canto Bight, on the planet Cantonica.[3]
Dubrovnik Media
Medieval fortresses, Lovrijenac and Bokar, Dubrovnik
A 1900 photochrom of the Big Onofrio's fountain (1438)
Aerial view of Lazareti complex
Monuments of art in Dalmatia, edited by Georg Kowalczyk, with an introduction by Cornelius Gurlitt.*132 light printing plates based on natural photographs by the editor Georg Kowalczyk and copper from the works of Robert Adam:*RAGUSA,1667 (today's Dubrovnik) [not the ruins of the palace of the emperor Diocletian at Spalat(r)o, 1764!] Vienna, 1910, publisher of Franz Malota
Dubrovnik's former Jesuit college and Jesuit stairs c. 1900
Related pages
Other websites
- Old City of Dubrovnik - UNESCO World Heritage Centre
- Flags of Ragusa
- Storia e monetazione di Ragusa, oggi Dubrovnik (in Italian)
- Dalmatia and Montenegro by John Gardner Wilkinson, on Google Books
Further reading
- Harris, Robin. Dubrovnik, A History. London: Saqi Books, 2003. ISBN 0-86356-332-5
- Scotti, Giacomo. Ragusa, la quinta repubblica marinara. LINT Editoriale, Trieste, ISBN 88-8190-231-1
References
- ↑ "Old city of Dubrovnik". UNESCO. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
- ↑ "Dubrovnik history". Dubrovnik city. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
- ↑ "Cantonica - Star Wars The Last Jedi". Star Wars Places. Retrieved 2022-10-17.