Guidebook for Zadar

Natalia
Guidebook for Zadar

Parks & Nature

661 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Kornati
661 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
923 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Plitvička Jezera
923 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
2699 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Iphakamisa yaseKrka
2699 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Founded by Austrian commander Baron Franz Ludwig von Welden in 1829, a passionate botanist and admirer of Dalmatian flora, it was the first public park in Croatia (the park was opened on the 16th of September, 1829). To create a garden on top of a military object was an unusual move, but one Zadar is eternally grateful for. The first public park in Croatia, the Zadar Queen Jelena Madije Park on the Five Wells Square, bears a commemorative plaque which was set up as testimony of the opening of the city park 184 years ago. In the 19th century Zadar was surrounded by ramparts, with city gates that closed the fortifications so that the park on the high fortifications represented a real balcony, a beautiful city view-point.
83 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Iphakamisa yaseNkosi Jelena Madijevka
83 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Founded by Austrian commander Baron Franz Ludwig von Welden in 1829, a passionate botanist and admirer of Dalmatian flora, it was the first public park in Croatia (the park was opened on the 16th of September, 1829). To create a garden on top of a military object was an unusual move, but one Zadar is eternally grateful for. The first public park in Croatia, the Zadar Queen Jelena Madije Park on the Five Wells Square, bears a commemorative plaque which was set up as testimony of the opening of the city park 184 years ago. In the 19th century Zadar was surrounded by ramparts, with city gates that closed the fortifications so that the park on the high fortifications represented a real balcony, a beautiful city view-point.

Arts & Culture

413 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Museum of Ancient Glass
1 Poljana Zemaljskog odbora
413 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
155 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Arheološki muzej
155 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
77 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Narodni Muzej Zadar
2 Poljana Pape Aleksandra III
77 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
596 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
I-Church ye-St. Donatus
Grgura Mrganića
596 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
The exhibition "Gold and Silver of Zadar", initiated in 1951 by the Croatian writer Miroslav Krleza, was transformed in 1976 into a permanent display of the Permanent Exhibition of Ecclesiastic Art in the Benedictine Convent of St. Mary in Zadar, one of the first capital buildings of Croatian culture. On the occasion of the exhibition, Krleza wrote one of his best essays, in which he glorified the treasures of Zadar. The gold and silver of Zadar shine on a surface area of about 1200 m2 in 8 modernly equipped halls, including the reconstructed interior of the old Croatian Church of St. Nediljica from the 11th century. Also included are manuscripts, sculptures, embroideries, tapestry, reliefs, etc., as evidence of the rich past of Zadar from the 8th to 18th centuries, as a town which was an important cultural center, particularly in the Middle Ages. Joys, hopes, patience, suffering, and faith of the tumultuous era of this region´s history are woven into the relics and chalices, sculptures, paintings, and embroideries. This priceless treasure has been preserved by the Benedictine nuns throughout the years, as well as during the Patriotic Defense War, and some valuable exhibit items (lace, church fabrics embroidered with golden threads) were produced by the nuns´ hands. The particular preciousness, charm, and importance of the exhibited items is in the fact that they are, to a great extent, works of the locally known and unknown masters or are closely connected with Zadar and the Zadar region. The Permanent Exhibition of Ecclesiastic Art places Zadar among the great cultural capitals as such a collection of valuable and exquisite religious works of art all in one place can only be seen in the greatest European centers.
33 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Stalna izložba crkvene umjetnosti
1 Trg opatice Čike
33 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
The exhibition "Gold and Silver of Zadar", initiated in 1951 by the Croatian writer Miroslav Krleza, was transformed in 1976 into a permanent display of the Permanent Exhibition of Ecclesiastic Art in the Benedictine Convent of St. Mary in Zadar, one of the first capital buildings of Croatian culture. On the occasion of the exhibition, Krleza wrote one of his best essays, in which he glorified the treasures of Zadar. The gold and silver of Zadar shine on a surface area of about 1200 m2 in 8 modernly equipped halls, including the reconstructed interior of the old Croatian Church of St. Nediljica from the 11th century. Also included are manuscripts, sculptures, embroideries, tapestry, reliefs, etc., as evidence of the rich past of Zadar from the 8th to 18th centuries, as a town which was an important cultural center, particularly in the Middle Ages. Joys, hopes, patience, suffering, and faith of the tumultuous era of this region´s history are woven into the relics and chalices, sculptures, paintings, and embroideries. This priceless treasure has been preserved by the Benedictine nuns throughout the years, as well as during the Patriotic Defense War, and some valuable exhibit items (lace, church fabrics embroidered with golden threads) were produced by the nuns´ hands. The particular preciousness, charm, and importance of the exhibited items is in the fact that they are, to a great extent, works of the locally known and unknown masters or are closely connected with Zadar and the Zadar region. The Permanent Exhibition of Ecclesiastic Art places Zadar among the great cultural capitals as such a collection of valuable and exquisite religious works of art all in one place can only be seen in the greatest European centers.

Shopping

541 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Supernova Zadar
1 Ul. Akcije Maslenica
541 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
196 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
City Galleria
4 Polačišće ul.
196 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Fresh fish
27 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Ribarnica Zadar ( Fish Market)
bb Liburnska obala
27 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Fresh fish
Grocery store
7 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Konzum
14 Ulica bana Josipa Jelačića
7 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Grocery store

Drinks & Nightlife

232 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Harbor CookHouse & Club
6A Obala kneza Branimira
232 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
401 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Ledana Lounge Bar and Club
401 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
136 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Yachting Bar & Club
1 Obala kneza Domagoja
136 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
21 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
La Bodega
1 Široka ul.
21 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
13 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Hitch
Kolovare ulica
13 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni

Food Scene

48 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Groppo
22 Široka ulica
48 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
413 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Restoran Bruschetta
12 Ul. Mihovila Pavlinovića
413 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
32 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
Restaurant Malo Misto
3 Ul. Jurja Dalmatinca
32 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni

Sightseeing

The Sea organ (Croatian: Morske orgulje) is an architectural object, experimental musical instrument, which plays music by way of sea waves and tubes located underneath a set of large marble steps.
659 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
I-Sea Organ
Obala kralja Petra Krešimira IV
659 icetyiswa ngabantu basekuhlaleni
The Sea organ (Croatian: Morske orgulje) is an architectural object, experimental musical instrument, which plays music by way of sea waves and tubes located underneath a set of large marble steps.