Pula Travel Guide
Pula
(Croatia)This Pula travel guide includes all you need to know. Restaurants, cafes, bars, hotels, events, and much more. Read the guide below or download and print to take on your journey.
Contents: The City, Do & See, Cafés, Eating, Bars & Nightlife, Shopping, Sleeping, Essential Information
About This Travel Guide
Guide language: English
Updated: 2008-01-30
Format: PDF
File size: Approx. 4000kb / 4Mb
Guide language: English
Updated: 2008-01-30
Format: PDF
File size: Approx. 4000kb / 4Mb
Pula
Jewel of the verdant peninsula of Istria, Pula is the province’s largest city and forms a dramatic gateway to the seductive, crystalline waters of the Adriatic. Situated at the southernmost tip of the area which has come to be known as ’the new Tuscany’ for its bright medieval hilltop towns and ancient ruins, Pula boasts a rich and varied cultural heritage. The city is bordered by national parks remarkable for their astounding unspoilt natural beauty and is celebrated for its wonderfully preserved Roman amphitheatre and forum which form a dramatic backdrop for leisurely strolls from the old town to the coast.
The City
The ancient town of Pula has been inhabited since 1000BC, since which time barely a civilization has failed to leave its mark. Roman expansion into the peninsula in the first century AD has left the city with many of its most glorious monuments, including the world-renown amphitheatre which hosts the city’s annual opera festival every summer. After the fall of Rome, Pula passed through the hands of various warring groups including the Ostrogoths and the Francs before becoming part of the Venetian republic in the twelfth century leaving the port city with an eclectic mix of cultural influences which can be seen in the architecture of the city today.
Pula has a certain literary fame as well, mentioned in Dante’s fourteenth century classic the Divine Comedy and as the home of Irish author James Joyce who taught at the Berlitz school in 1905.
21st century Pula nestles snugly at the cusp of seven hills which open out into a wide natural harbour, which has been the bustling commercial hub of the city since the mid-19th century. The centre of the city can easily be explored on foot and many of Pula’s most exciting museums, restaurants and parks are within 10 minutes walk of each other.
If you have time, venture beyond the city and into the surrounding area where Roman ruins lie buried in the fertile farmland and numerous tiny picturesque villages cling to the glittering coastline. It’s a great area to walk in and the exquisite beauty of the nearby national parks is not to be missed. Read more about Pula:
The City, Do & See, Cafés, Eating, Bars & Nightlife, Shopping, Sleeping, Essential Information
Languages:
English,
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