Zagreb: A Cultural and Literary History

Portada
Signal Books, 2007 - 236 páginas
Situated at the foot of a range of hills on the edge of the great Pannonian Plain, for most of its history Zagreb has been a small town to which things happened. Administered from 1102 by Hungary and later absorbed into the Habsburg Monarchy, Zagreb was under threat from the advancing Ottomans until the late sixteenth century. From the mid-nineteenth century onwards Zagreb developed steadily into a modern city, reflecting all the important trends in Central European culture, architecture and fashion. Its pretty centre is laid out according to a plan incorporating trees and public gardens, forming a "green horseshoe" lined with imposing buildings. Celia Hawkesworth explores this central core and the atmospheric old town on a rise above it, finding a mix of old and modern building, a rich cultural tradition and a vibrant outdoor cafe life, in which many of the individuals who have contributed to creating the city's unique inner life are commemorated in statues in the streets and squares.
 

Páginas seleccionadas

Contenido

PART
1
PART
29
PART THREE
71
PART FOUR
127
Crafts Muzej za umjetnost i obrt 174 The Mimara Museum 175
175
PART FIVE
191
FURTHER READING
227
Derechos de autor

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página iv - Cities of the Imagination Buenos Aires by Jason Wilson Oxford by David Horan Mexico City by Nick Caistor Rome by Jonathan Boardman Madrid by Elizabeth Nash Venice by Martin Garrett Lisbon by Paul Buck Havana by Claudia Lightfoot New York City by Eric Homberger...

Información bibliográfica