Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lovrijenac's use as a stage was a recent addition to the history of the fort, and the performance of Shakespeare's Hamlet has become the symbol of Dubrovnik Summer Festival. A production of A Midsummer Nights Dream was performed here as part of Midsummer Scene in the summer of 2017 and 2018.
Download QR code; In other projects Appearance. ... English: Looking at the walled city of Dubrovnik, Croatia From Fort Lovrijenac. Date: 3 June 2012, 04:44:19 ...
Since 1992, Croatia has been a member of the World Meteorological Organization, United Nations' agency specialized in weather, climate and water. It is important to say that, although DHMZ was founded in 1947, the oldest Croatian meteorological station operating continuously was Zagreb-Grič, established in 1861 and DHMZ has such invaluable ...
This image is a derivative work of the following images: Image:Croatia_location_map.svg licensed with Cc-by-sa-3.0, GFDL . 2008-08-29T08:00:53Z NordNordWest 1097x1062 (491312 Bytes)
The Dubrovnik-Neretva County (pronounced [dǔbroːʋniːk-něreːtʋa]; Croatian: Dubrovačko-neretvanska županija, pronounced [dǔbroʋat͡ʃko-nerěːtʋanskaː ʒupǎnija]) is the southernmost county of Croatia. The county seat is Dubrovnik and other large towns are Korčula, Metković, Opuzen and Ploče.
The Luža square in front of the palace is used for the opening ceremony of the Dubrovnik Summer Festival. Sponza Palace itself is also used as a performance venue. [2] The palace's atrium is the basis of the "Sponza Atrium" 3D computer graphics model, created for a rendering contest and now a widely used reference model for global illumination ...
[1] [2] [3] Today archive is located in the Sponza palace, and holds materials created by the civil service in the Republic of Ragusa, i.e. notary and secretarial services from the 13th century, and after the fall of the Republic in 1808 documents created by the offices and institutions in the city of Dubrovnik during the French, Habsburg ...
These quarantines were at first in the outdoors but since the weather conditions were almost as deadly as the diseases, the government decided to build few wooden dwellings (wooden so that it could be burned if needed). [1] This decision was made after Dubrovnik was struck by an outbreak of the plague in 1348 which killed a few thousand citizens.