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Premantura,
  Centar 127

tel.++385 52 575 632
fax:++385 52 575 545


Pješčana Uvala,
  II ogranak 36

tel.++385 52 397 178
fax.++385 52 397 179

   


 
PULA


Welcome to Pula! The largest town of the Istrian Peninsula offers a diversity of attractions to lovers of culture.
While strolling through Pula you will come across numerous monuments of Roman architecture; the Triumphal Arch of the Sergii from the 1 St century BC, The Amphitheatre-Arena, Hercules Gate and Twin Gates, the Temple of Augustus and small theatre in the town centre.

A unique experience will be moments of relaxation in the main town square, which has managed to retain its role as the meeting place since the Augustian Age.
The area of Pula is magnificent, with country stone houses, buildings of modern architecture, and the view to the culture of the mankind.


In nowadays during the summer, Pula has twice as much inhabitants as it has usually. Along the 190 km of beautiful coast and very abounding natural harbours, in hotels, camps and private accommodation reside more than 50 thousand tourists. Therefore Pula cannot be avoided.
We shall be glad to find you a comfortable place and help you to learn more about the city.

Do you remember a tale about Argonauts?
It describes a pursuit of a boat Argo and a stolen golden fleece. The subjects of the king of Kolhida gave up the pursuit after their kings son had died. For fear they should be punished for the prince's death and the failure of the pursuit if they returned to Kolhida they had decided to settle down in the place where had died.
The most famous geographer in the ancient world Strabo - affirms that in this way Pula was founded.
According to this legend, Pula was founded about 3,000 years ago.

- - - - - - - - -
The Illyrian Pula - then but a "spring of living water" - merely vegetated in the shadow of Nesactium, the nearby dominant political, administrative, military and religious centre.

The arrival of the Roman legions in 177 BC, which imposed a new rule that resulted in intensive colonisation and the creation of both a commercial centre and military encampment, by 40 BC had elevated the city to the status of a colony.
With Augustus it become the divine town, "pleasure of the rich, happiness to the middle class"...


From the mid-twelfth century, Pula swore an oath of allegiance to the Queen of the Seas, accepting the status of a vassal state, paying tributes, building and fitting out gallons, participating in wars, pursuing and capturing "sea-pirates plying the waters between Medulin and Rovinj and handing them over to the Venetian authorities.

In those past centuries, Pula became a typical medieval town, in Romanesque-Gothic style. Actually, the city palace is Romanesque- Gothic- Renaissance, built on the remains of a Roman temple of the goddess Diana, which speaks most eloquently of the passage of time and changing time and changing famous artists of their time visited Pula and left traces of Pula in their work, to name the most famous: Michelangelo and Dante.
Over the years Pula was gradually devastated.  Coupled with epidemics of plague and malaria, from a developed city, Pula was a place with 600 souls at the time of the Venetian fall. In 1799 the Venetian part of the Istrian peninsula was handed over to Austria (which already had the rest of Istria).
Austria decided in 1853, to establish Pula as its main naval port of the Hapsburg monarchy.

This period saw the transformation of a small city with fading antique splendour to an industrial port with a newly formed and growing working blue collar class.
The rate of population growth was considerable: in 1842 Pula had 1,126 inhabitants, by 1857 that number had increased seven-fold, and by the end of the century the population had risen to 40,000.

The Second World War was to draw Pula into dramatic maelstrom: the town suffered bombardment and destruction, although the defeated forces were ultimately subjected to harsh reprisals.

After the war, further result was a repeat of one of those long-term periods of "historic stagnation", a process which has endured up until the dramatic days of our most recent history and the present days.




   
   Military cemetery

   
   The Amphitheatre,
   1st century.

   
   

   
  The Chapel of Santa Maria
   Formosa,6th century