The Bokar Fortres
The Pile Gate, the main entrance into Dubrovnik
The existing city walls were built between the C13th and C17th, and run an uninterrupted course of over 6000 ft, completely encircling the old town.The main wall on the land side ranges from 13 to 20 ft thick and in some places 80 ft high. The walls were reinforced by one large bastion and nine further smaller ones. A moat and 120 large cannons further protected the walls.
Croatia has great pride in its heritage and our guide, Boris, exemplified it, going to great pains to show every bullet and shell wound to its ancient walls. Shell damage has been covered up with fresh stone, which in time will weather but is clear enough to see when pointed out. Bullet holes remain, a sign of pride as much as anything else.
We did have the option of climbing up to its walls, but it was quite pricy, took one and a half hours to explore, the steps were many and steep, and it was a baking hot day. The case for the defence rests, m’lud. And so, we went for coffee instead.
The restaurant was near the city gate and overlooked the walls of Dubrovnik. Instead of coffee, I settled for a glass of Croatian red and a plate of Croatian cheese. The various cheeses looked much the same and in fairness tasted much the same, but none actually unpleasant. Soon my attention was called by the small figure trapped high in the wall (see pics below)
The harbour for King's Landing
It was in fact the patron saint of Dubrovnik, St Blaise. A fine way to treat a patron saint. And why is he a patron saint? Blaise was a hermit, renowned throughout Cappadocia and martyred by the Emperor Licinius in 316 AD. His martyrdom was not without some technical hitches. When they tried to drown him, he walked on the water. Finally, to have done with it, they beheaded him.
But why was he the patron saint of Dubrovnik? Blaises is also the saint of ‘sore throats’ because, according to legend, he save a young boy from choking on a fishbone. To this day, his devotees have their throats blessed on his feast day, and has become the patron saint of Otorhinolaryngologists. But why of Dubrovnik, too?
In the C10th Venetian traders landed in Dubrovnik seeking fresh water and supplies. In fact, they were spies probing Dubrovnik’s defences before a Venetian attack. The city authorities were warned by a local priest who had been visited by St Blaise in the guise of an old, grey-haired man with a long beard, a bishop’s cap, and with a long stick in his hand – as you see him now portrayed on the wall.
February 3rd is both St Blaise’s and Dubrovnik day——if you are of Croatian heritage and have a sore throat.
Croatia fought for its independence from the failing Yugoslavia, which under Tito had held Croats, Serbia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Montenegro and Slovenia in an uneasy federation—one largely controlled by the dominant Serbs. The war 1991-1995 ended in victory for Croatia which retained its territorial integrity and gained full independence. At a cost: 15007 dead and 3000 displaced. When you see Dubrovnik today, you realise that a lot can happen in thirty years
But Dubrovnik’s history goes well beyond its most recent spat with Serbia and its allies.
There is evidence of an ancient settlement, but Dubrovnik burst on to the scene as the Republic of Ragusa. Initially it was a protectorate of the Byzantine empire, later falling under the sway of the Republic of Venice followed by a loose arrangement with the Ottomans. This allowed them to play off the Ottomans and Venice against the other while they developed their own trading networks stretching from India to North Africa and even America. With such wealth and surrounded by such powerful and avaricious rivals, it is no wonder their walls and defences were so strong.
According to Boris, our guide, C15th Dubrovnik was sufficiently enlightened to hire Italy’s best architects and artisans for major projects, and paying top dollar attracted them. It’s exemplified by the ‘Spanish Steps’ shown in the picture below. Descending from the Jesuit Church of St Ignatius, completed in 1725, the steps are an exact copy of the original Spanish Steps in Rome. They also illustrate the guile and business acumen of the new Croatian State. Aware of what they have to offer they’ve successfully sold themselves to Hollywood film makers who can no longer afford Hollywood itself.
Dubrovnik is, in another world, King's Landing, the capital of the Seven Kingdoms in Game of Thrones. Here you can see the Red Keep and the Iron Throne.
After persuading the makers of Game of Thrones to film many of their scenes here, Dubrovnik has since developed a nice side hustle in tourism – aficionados of the series taking selfies in key places noted in the photographs above and below. It is on these steps that shaven-haired Cersei Lannister walked her steps of shame.
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