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Read More About Most Popular Croatian Cities

According Lonely Planet's Croatia edition written by Jeanne Oliver, Croatian Top destinations : Dubrovnik, Hvar , Split , Korcula , Brela , Plitvice Lakes , Baska on island Krk , Pula , Rovinj , Samobor , Zagreb, Varazdin, Brac, Cavtat, Trogir, Makarska, Losinj, Orebic, Porec, Rab, Sibenik, Vis, Opatija, Jelsa

 

About Pula

The first tourist excursions to Pula were recorded at the beginning of the 19th century. Giovanni Carrara, a conservator of antiquities in Pula, guided the sightseeing tours for distinguished personalities and organized groups in 1828. In 1832 Pula was visited by the Austrian emperor Ferdinand I. The first tourist guide on Pula (Cenni al forestiero che visita Pola - Tips for a Foreigner Visiting Pula), published by the Austrian Lloyd from Trieste, compiled by Pietro Kandler, was printed in 1845...

General information

The first tourist excursions to Pula were recorded at the beginning of the 19th century. Giovanni Carrara, a conservator of antiquities in Pula, guided the sightseeing tours for distinguished personalities and organized groups in 1828. In 1832 Pula was visited by the Austrian emperor Ferdinand I. The first tourist guide on Pula (Cenni al forestiero che visita Pola - Tips for a Foreigner Visiting Pula), published by the Austrian Lloyd from Trieste, compiled by Pietro Kandler, was printed in 1845. The first public beach, Bagno Polese, for the citizens and tourists, located between the islet of Ulja-nik and the administration building on the coastal promenade, was opened in 1885. After that, two other beaches were constructed, "Sakordana" and the marine officers' beach on the islet of St. Peter, where men and women could swim at different times of the day. During the First World War the Zelenika beach was opened, and in 1936 the Stoja beach (Stabilimento bagni di Stoia). The first modern hotel in Pula - Hotel Riviera - was opened in 1908. Under the Italian rule, the hotels Miramare, Bologna, Milano and Centrale were operating as well as the children's summer camps Principe di Piemonte on Stoja and Sandro Mussolini on Vargarola. In the 1930s Pula had several travel agencies. Tourism in Pula experiences its peak in the 1960s, when on the beautiful, well-indented and green coast south of Pula the construction of modern tourist resorts was initiated (Zlatne Stijene, Ribarska Koliba, Verudela).

Today Pula offers a variety of excellent opportunities for tourists. Together with well-equipped hotels and other types of accommodation facilities, the tourist offer includes many sports grounds, recreational facilities and entertainment programs, terraces with live music, discotheques, casinos, inns and restaurants, as well as diverse excursions. The town disposes of two marinas, so that yachting tourism is increasingly developing. Pula is also a well-known congress centre (the large congress hall in Hotel Histria). The town can be reached by various means of transport, and there is an airport in the immediate vicinity of Pula (6 km), constructed to meet the requirements of international air traffic.

Events: the Croatian Film Festival has been organized traditionally every year since 1954 in Arena (July), the Pop Music Festival "Arena" is also held in Arena (July), Art & Music Festival - the rock music festival (in August).

Pula is also a centre of sport tourism because domestic and international sports teams and athlets find the favourable climate, quality sports facilities (tennis courts, sports halls, football stadiums, football fields, track-and-field courses, indoor and outdoor swimming pools, water sports facilities, etc.) suitable for winter training season. Apart from the traditional sports on the ground, there are opportunities to enjoy a variety of water sports.

Pula ACI Marina has 294 berths in the sea and 100 places on the land, provided for the vessels of a length between 6 and 18 m; Veruda Marina has 610 berths in the sea and 150 places on the land; vessel length between 6 and 15 m.



www.pulainfo.hr
PULA, a town and port in the south-western part of Istria. Situated in the inner part of a bay, divided by the islands of St. Catherine, St. Andrew and Uljanik into three port basins. According to the size of the con-structed coast and level of equipment, Pula is the most important and biggest port in Istria, and the well-protected Pula Bay places it among the best natural harbours on the Adriatic. Due to its size, exposed location, two accesses (the one directly from the sea and the other through the Fazana Strait), low coastline and easy construction of fortification systems, provided the Pula Bay a special strategic importance. The landscape of Pula includes low and open relief largely covered by red soil. The original forests of oak have been reduced to low shrubs; the surroundings of Pula was reafforested with pine. The average air temperature in January reaches 5 °C and in July 23.2 °C; the average annual rainfall attains around 800 mm. In winter, the bora and the sirocco blow; the bora is sometimes extremely strong, and blows in the outer port. Pula is the economic centre with developed shipbuilding industry (Uljanik), textiles, metal industry and building trades as well as glass manufacturing. Tourist centre (marina). The importance of Pula as a traffic intersection in the whole Istria has particularly increased by the modernization of the airport. Situated on the main road (M2, E751), and connected with Divaca by a railroad

History

Developed out of a hill-fort (18th to 10th c. BC); the name Pola is of Illyrian origin. The end of the 1st century BC marked the beginning of the Roman colonization; around 43 BC. Pula attained the status of a Roman colony. In the early Middle Ages it was included in the Ravenna exarchate, and from AD 788 it was under the Frankonian rule. After having changed several sovereigns, it fell under the rule of the Aquileian patriarch in 1230, and after 1331 under the protection of Venice all up to the collapse of Venice (1797), when it came under the Austrian rule. Except for a short period of the French rule (1805-1813), Pula was part of Austria, i.e. the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy (until 1918). The construction of the large shipyard in 1886 made Pula the major Austrian military port; the economic boom, in particular in the field of trade, occurred at the end of the 19th century. Pula saw the end of the First World War occupied by Italy (1918). According to the Treaty of Rapallo (1920), Pula was ceded to Italy, and after the fall of Italy in 1943, the German troops occupied the town. At the end of the Second World War Pula was in the hands of the Allied Forces; annexed to the parent country, Croatia, in 1947

Heritage

The Romans restored and expanded the system of the Illyrian hill-forts, and the top of the hill, on which the capitol rose, together with several public institutions and temples, had its own fortification system. In the Middle Ages, the town walls were reinforced, and some of the Roman temples were turned into Christian churches. In the 13th century a fortified town, Kastel, was built on top of the hill. The town walls were renovated in the 15th century, and in 1631 a new fortress (on the hill) was constructed. From the second half of the 19th century a large number of utility (Arsenal) and representative buildings were built, predominantly in historic styles (the neo-classicist Admiralty, then the Officers' Casino, now the Centre of the Croatian Patriotic War Soldiers). Pula suffered heavy devastation during the Second World War.

The Roman Amphitheatre (commonly called Arena), from the 1st and 2nd centuries, occupies a dominant position above the harbour. It has an elliptic ground-plan (132.45 x 105.10 m), the walls are 30.45 m high; it could seat 23,000 spectators. It is the world's sixth largest preserved amphitheatre. The legend has it that it was built by Emperor Vespasian on the initiative of his Pula-born girl friend Cenida. In the 15th century the Venetians transported several stone seats from the Amphitheatre's interior to use them as building material for their palaces. The Ny-mp-h-a-eum leads to the southwest, with a way branching off to the Twin Gate (Porta gemina) from the 2nd century; an inscription is built-in above the Gate. The Twin Gate leads to the Archaeological Museum of Istria, with a park, in which exhibits are placed, in front of it. The ruins of the Roman theatre, with preserved fragments of the orchestra and amphitheatrically arranged seats, are behind the Museum. A part of the town wall running from the Twin Gate to the Hercules' Gate (Porta Herculea, from the mid-1st c. BC) has been preserved; the Gate is crowned by the bearded head of Hercules. The richly adorned Triumphal Arch of the Sergi, erected some time after 31 BC near the inner part of the main town gate (Porta aurea, collapsed in 1829), is reached from the Portarata Square. A large Roman graveyard was located in front of the town gate, which Dante mentions in his Inferno (Canto IX); several marble sarcophaguses from the graveyard are housed at the Museo civico Correr in Venice. Monte Zaro Park contains the ruins of the Roman theatre (Theatrum Juliae); the columns of the theatre were used in the construction of the St. Mark Library and the church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice. Arsenalska Street leads from the park to the church of Our Lady of the Sea, built between 1891 and 1898.

Through the Triumphal Arch of the Sergi one enters Sergi Street, the busiest street in the old part of the town. Clerisseau Street leads to the Dante Square, where a 15th-century Gothic church, reconstructed on several occasions, stands. Flacius Street leads to the Byzantine memorial chapel from the 6th century, which was a part of the collapsed, grandiose basilica Santa Maria Formosa (Canneto), built around AD 556; the marble ornamentation and columns of the basilica were used in the construction of the San Marco Basilica in Venice. In the interior of the chapel, the fragments of the 6th-century mosaics and mural paintings were preserved. From Sergi Street down Matetic Ronjgov Street the way leads to the early mediaeval, now Christian Orthodox church of St. Nicholas, reconstructed in the 13th and 18th centuries; the wooden iconostasis with several Venetian icons dates back to the 16th and 17th centuries. The street called Strmi Uspon sv. Franje Asiskog (Steep Ascent of St. Francis of Assisi) leads to the church of St. Francis from 1314, with a richly decorated Romanesque portal and octagonal Romanesque rose window; the church keeps an engraved polyptych from the end of the 14th century, made under the influence of the Vivarini School, one of the most valuable pieces of the Gothic wooden plastics in Istria. A Gothic cloister with Renaissance adaptations is attached on the church; the cloister and the area in front of the church entrance accommodate stone collection of mediaeval monuments and a collection of copies of mural paintings from Istria. Sergi Street terminates at Forum, which is located on the former Roman forum. The Temple of Augustus (of the goddess Romae and Emperor Augustus) from the 1st century is located on the northern side of the square, on an elevated base, with a portico comprising six Corinthian columns and a closed cella. The Town Hall is near the temple, attached in 1296 to the Roman temple (of Diana); the back of the temple has been preserved. The eastern façade of the Town Hall has rich late Romanesque ornamentation, and the façade facing the square, with a portico (loggia) on the ground-floor, was restored in 1653. Kandler Street, passing by the Town Hall, leads to the three-nave cathedral of St. Mary, built in the 5th century, restored in the 15th century and extended in 1640. The main front was built in the Renaissance style. A Roman sarcophagus from the 3rd century is used as the main altar; the floor reveals fragments of the 5th and 6th-century mosaics. The Renaissance south portal was made in 1456. The late Gothic Demartini palace (Kandler Street 12) is not far from the cathedral. From the cathedral a path leads to Kastel on the top of the hill. Kastel has four protruding bastions built by the Venetians in 1631; under the Napoleon rule, Kastel was annexed, and restored in 1830. Today it houses the Historical Museum of Istria.

The Archaeological Museum of Istria was established in 1902. It contains the finds from the area of Istria, the islands of Cres and Losinj, dating from the antique and early mediaeval periods, as well as a collection of ancient and early mediaeval sculptures. The Museum comprises the following collections: one in the Temple of August (Roman busts), one in Arena (olive growing and viniculture) and the stone collection in the monastery of St. Francis. Kastel houses the Historical Museum of Istria, founded in 1955. It includes ten-odd collections of various exhibits (documents, photographs, photo-plates, graphics, records).

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