Europe Hotels
Croatia Hotels - Croatia's Best Travel Destinations Hotels Reservations
Croatia  Hotels Resorts Apartments Condotels
Croatia HotelsHotels in CrotiaCroatia
Croatia Hotels HOME Croatia Resorts Croatia Condotels Croatia Apartments CROATIA TRAVEL INFORMATION Croatia Travel Information Croatia Accommodations Croatia Lodging SITE MAP Croatia Travel Croatia Packages Croatia Adventure ABOUT US Croatia Hotels Resorts Croatia Condominiums Croatia Travel Packages CONTACT US Croatia Inns
Croatia  Hotels Resorts Apartments Condotels

Croatia Travel Information

About Croatia | Heritages | Croatian Cuisine | Food and Traditional Festivities

About Croatia

Croatia Travel InformationGeographical position: Croatia extends from the furthest eastern edges of the Alps in the north-west to the Pannonian lowlands and the banks of the Danube in the east; its central region is covered by the Dinara mountain range, and its southern parts extend to the coast of the Adriatic Sea.

Surface: the mainland covers 56,542 km2, and the surface of the territorial sea is 31,067 km2.

Population: 4,437,460 inhabitants; composition of population: the majority of the population are Croats; national minorities are Serbs, Slovenes, Hungarians, Bosnians, Italians, Czechs and others.

System of government: multi-party parliamentary republic.

Capital: Zagreb (779,145 inhabitants), the economic, traffic, cultural and academic centre of the country.

Coastline: 5,835 km of which 4,058 km comprise a coastline of islands, solitary rocks and reefs. Number of islands, solitary rocks and reefs: 1,185; the largest islands are Krk and Cres; there are 50 inhabited islands.

Highest peak: Dinara: 1,831 m above sea level.

Climate: There are two climate zones; a temperate continental climate, locally also a mountainous climate, prevails in the interior, whereas a pleasant Mediterranean climate prevails along the Adriatic coast, with an overwhelming number of sunny days, dry and hot summers, mild and humid winters; average temperature in the inland: January 0 to 2°C, August 19 to 23°C; average temperature at the seaside: January 6 to 11°C, August 21 to 27 °C; the temperature is about 12°C in winter, and 25°C in summer.

Currency: kuna (1 kuna = 100 lipa). Foreign currency can be exchanged in banks, exchange offices, post offices, travel agencies, hotels, camps, marinas; cheques can be cashed in banks.

Go to Top

Heritages

Croatia Travel InformationHistorical facts Croatia is indeed unique, not only for its crystal clear, clean blue sea, but also for a thousand years of different cultures that have replaced each other and sometimes assimilated in these areas. The Adriatic Sea is not only a deep gulf in the Mediterranean cut into the Continent of Europe thereby creating most economical trade route between Europe and the East, it is also the cradle of ancient civilizations. There is much material evidence about that which is finally beginning to come to light, from the depths of Adriatic caves and from the deep blue sea. The east coast of the Adriatic Sea was inhabited as early as the beginning of the early Stone Age, and there is proof that most of the accessible islands were also inhabited (archaeological findings in caves near the islands of Hvar and Palagruza, etc.).

Thanks to the favourable geographical characteristics of our coast, with its numerous bays, inlets and coves, the coastal belt has ever been a significant mercantile and nautical route.

Archaeological findings prove that in the 6th century BC the ancient Greeks had commerce with the Illyrians by means of the sea, and that they founded their colonies there (Pharos, today’s Starigrad, on the islands of Hvar and Issa – or Vis).

Later on, the Romans arrived, and they not only built palaces and summer residences but they also spent a considerable amount of time on the sea, and there are many underwater findings located between Pula and Cavtat which show this to be true. Such findings are mainly amphorae, which were at the time commonly used for storing everything from wine to wheat, oils and perfumes. Wherever you choose to go diving, you will find the remains of Antique ships and their cargoes. One of the most precious findings from that time are remains of pythos or dolias, large pottery vessels which were built into ships and used to transport bulk cargo (wheat, etc). One such site is near Cavtat, while another is near Murter.

A new era dawned with the arrival of the Slavs, a period characterized by constant struggle for supremacy and by defence against diverse enemies. Dubrovnik, eminent in its position as a republic, played a leading role in culture and trade. A 17th-century shipwreck bears witness to those times - a galley which sailed from Venice carrying muran glass, window glass, and other valuable objects, and was fitted with cannons. But during a storm it sank near the island of Olipe, off the coast of Dubrovnik.

In the 18th century, Napoleon ruled for a short period of time, after which he was replaced by the Austrian monarchy. During the next hundred years, Italy and Austria fought each other for supremacy of the east coast, culminating in the battle of Vis in 1866. The Austrian fleet, led by Admiral Tegetthoff, who commanded the battleship Erzherzog Ferdinand Max, was opposed by Admiral Persano, commander of the Italian fleet. In the battle, Persano, on his flag ship the battleship Re d’Italia, was roundly trounced by Tegetthoff, and the Italian fleet withdrew in defeat.

Testimony to those glorious times can be found not only on the mainland, but also under the sea in the shape of shipwrecks and remains of the detritus of great ships. The period of Austro- Hungarian rule commenced thereafter. Ports were built and fortified, trade and shipbuilding flourished. During the two World Wars, the Adriatic was one of the more important areas of battle, and there are many shipwrecks dating from those periods. Near Pula, for example, which at the time was a strategically vital naval harbour, twenty shipwrecks have been located, including a number of submarines, destroyers, and torpedo-boats The Adriatic Sea has always been an important maritime route between East and West, which can still be seen today because of the numerous relics, which remind us that the past should never be forgotten, but rather used as a lesson for the future.

Go to Top

Croatian Cuisine

Croatian cuisine is heterogeneous, and is therefore known as "the cuisine of regions". Its modern roots date back to Proto-Slavic and ancient periods and the differences in the selection of foodstuffs and forms of cooking are most notable between those on the mainland and those in coastal regions. Mainland cuisine is more characterized by the earlier Proto-Slavic and the more recent contacts with the more famous gastronomic orders of today - Hungarian, Viennese and Turkish - while the coastal region bears the influences of the Greek, Roman and Illyrian, as well as of the later Mediterranean cuisine - Italian and French.

A large body of books bears witness to the high level of gastronomic culture in Croatia, which in European terms dealt with food in the distant past, such as the Gazophylacium by Belostenec, a Latin-Kajkavian dictionary dating from 1740 that preceded a similar French dictionary. There is also Beletristic literature by Marulic, Hektorovic, Drzic and other writers, down to the work written by Ivan Bierling in 1813 containing recipes for the preparation of 554 various dishes (translated from the German original), and which is considered to be the first Croatian cookery book.

Go to Top

Food and Traditional Festivities

Many Croatian traditional festivities are distinctly linked with food independently of whether they are related to strenuous labour (crop harvesting or threshing, the grape harvest and Christening of wine, the completion of a house), religion (mostly Catholic - Christmas, Easter, pilgrimages, local saints days), or to memorable moments in an individual’s life (baptism, wedding, birthday, name-day, funeral wakes, etc.) Some festivities are typically of a public character, such as the Dionysian St. Martin s Day, celebrated in private farmhouses, wine cellars and restaurants; others are almost exclusively family reunions (weddings, baptism, Christmas Day, New Year’s Day, Easter, etc.)

Croatia Travel InformationEvery holiday has its typical dish. Pork and potato stew is eaten on pilgrimages and at fairs; cod is prepared for Christmas Eve and Good Friday; pork is eaten on New Year s Day; doughnuts are an inseparable part of carnival festivities, and in the south they prepare a similar fried sweet dish known as hrostule. Ham and boiled eggs with green vegetables are served at Easter, while desserts comprise traditional cakes (e.g. pinca). Kulen (hot-pepper flavoured sausage) at harvest time, goose for St. Martin s Day, turkey and other fowl, as well as sarma (meat-stuffed cabbage leaves), are served on Christmas Day. At weddings, a variety of dishes with dozens of cakes and biscuits are served, including breskvice, shortbread bear paws, gingerbread biscuits, fritule - plain fritters, etc.

The favourite meals of very many people on all occasions include spit-roasted lamb and suckling pig, grilled fish, calamari cooked in various ways, barbecue dishes - raznjici, cevapcici and mixed grill - prosciutto and sheep’s cheese, or smoked ham and cottage cheese with sour cream, fish stew, venison…

Go to Top

 

Home
Croatia Travel Info
Site Map
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Cancellation Policy
Travel Links
Travel Directory

Top Cities in Croatia

Dubrovnik Croatia HotelsDubrovnik
Medulin Croatia HotelsMedulin
Opatija Croatia HotelsOpatija
Pula Croatia HotelsPula
Rab Croatia HotelsRab
Rovinj Croatia HotelsRovinj
Split Croatia HotelsSplit
Supetar Croatia HotelsSupetar
Zagreb Croatia HotelsZagreb

Countries in Europe

Austria Europe HotelsAustria
Belgium Europe HotelsBelgium
Croatia Europe HotelsCroatia
Cyprus Europe HotelsCyprus
Czech Republic Europe HotelsCzech Republic
Denmark Europe HotelsDenmark
Estonia Europe HotelsEstonia
Finland Europe HotelsFinland
France Europe HotelsFrance
Germany Europe HotelsGermany
Greece Europe HotelsGreece
Hungary Europe HotelsHungary
Iceland Europe HotelsIceland
Italy Europe HotelsItaly
Latvia Europe HotelsLatvia
Luxembourg Europe HotelsLuxembourg
Malta Europe HotelsMalta
Spain Europe HotelsSpain
Sweden Europe HotelsSweden
Switzerland Europe HotelsSwitzerland

Popular Europe Destinations

Austria Hotels
Austria
Belguim Hotels
Belgium
Croatia Hotels
Croatia
Czech Republic Hotels
Czech Republic
Denmark Hotels
Denmark
Finland Hotels
Finland
France Hotels
France
Germany Hotels
Germany
Greece Hotels
Greece
Italy Hotels
Italy
Spain Hotels
Spain
Switzerland Hotels
Switzerland

Europe Hotels
Europe Hotels Resorts Apartments Condotels

Find the Lowest Hotel Rates Guaranteed! From Luxury Hotels to Budget Accommodations Worldwide.

philippine hotels & resorts » makati philippines hotels » makati city hotels » makati hotels » manila hotels » boracay resorts » World Hotels | Malaysia Hotels | Thailand Hotels » thailand resort hotel | India Hotels | Japan Hotels | Singapore Hotels | Maldives Hotels » maldives resorts | Sri Lanka Hotels | Siam Hotels | dubai hotels & resorts | europe all hotels | Spain | Croatia | Greece | Malta | Cyprus | Ireland | Sweden | Iceland | Norway | Belgium | France | Switzerland | Germany | Italy | Austria | Czech Republic | Morocco