Karlovac
Karlovac is a city in central Croatia. According to the Croatian Bureau of Statistics, in 2018, its population was 51,447.
Karlovac is the administrative centre of Karlovac County. The city is located on the Zagreb-Rijeka highway and railway line, south-west of Zagreb and from Rijeka.
Name
The city was named after its founder, Charles II, Archduke of Austria. The German name Karlstadt or Carlstadt has undergone translation into other languages: in Hungarian it is known as Károlyváros, in Italian as Carlostadio, in Latin as Carolostadium, and in Kajkavian and Slovene as Karlovec.History
The Austrians built Karlovac from scratch in 1579 in order to strengthen their southern defences against Ottoman encroachments. The establishment of a new city-fortress was a part of the deal between the Protestant nobility of Inner Austria and the archduke Charles II of Austria. In exchange for their religious freedom the nobility agreed to finance the building of a new fortress against the Ottoman Empire. It was founded as a six-pointed star fortress built on the Zrinski estate near the old town of Dubovac at the confluence of the Kupa and Korana rivers. As the city later expanded, the urban area reached as far as the Mrežnica and Dobra rivers. The star shape can still be seen around the town. It was originally known as Karlstadt, after the ruling family, upon whose orders construction began on July 13, 1579. The architect of the city was Matija Gambon, whilst work on the new fortress was supervised by George Khevenhüller. It was intentionally built on terrain exposed to flooding and disease from unhealthy water, with the intent to hamper the Turkish advance.The fortress itself was largely complete by September 1580, while moats and ramparts were finished later, between 1582 and 1589. The first church was built in the central square in 1580, but all of the city buildings burned down in the fire of 1594. By 1610, moats and ramparts were repaired, and houses were rebuilt.
As a military outpost of the Habsburg Monarchy, Karlovac was the site of the trial and execution of the best-known leader of the rebel Uskoks from the coastal fort of Senj, Ivan Vlatković. He was executed in Karlovac on 3 July 1612 as an example to his troops who were creating difficulties for the Habsurgs by their piracy against Venetian shipping on the Adriatic Sea, and by marauding raids into the Ottoman hinterland. In 1615 their piracy went so far as creating an open war between Venice and Austria. When the Treaty of Paris was concluded in 1617, bringing an end to the war between Venice and the Habsburgs, under the terms of the treaty the Uskok families were forcibly removed from Senj and disbanded into the hinterland, most notably in the Žumberak hills near Karlovac.
The forces of the Ottoman Empire laid siege to Karlovac seven times, the last time in 1672, but failed to occupy it. The plague epidemic of 1773 also afflicted the city, killing almost half the population of the time.
Meanwhile, the fort was becoming too crowded for the city's expanding population and the Military Frontier government could not allow for its further growth. On December 6, 1693 the city received some limited self-government.
After the Treaty of Karlowitz and the Ottomans withdrawal, Karlstadt was of less military significance. By the end of the 18th century, the town was a major marketplace for wheat, corn, salt, timber and tobacco, and the source of supply for the Austrian army in Austro-Turkish Wars.
Queen Maria Theresa, after long insistence from the Croatian Diet, restored the towns of Karlovac and Rijeka to the Croatian crownland on August 9, 1776. Maria Theresa was also responsible for the founding of Gymnasium Karlovac, and later King Joseph II reaffirmed it as a free town with an official charter in 1781. This allowed the citizens to expand the city and exploit the potential of being at the crossroads of paths from the Pannonian plains to the Adriatic coast. The town blossomed in the 18th and 19th centuries with the development of roads to the seaside and waterways along the Kupa River. The construction of the Zidani Most-Zagreb-Sisak railway line in 1861, however, marked the end of the era of Karlovac as a major trade and transport center.
In the late 19th and early 20th century, Karlovac was a district capital in the Zagreb County of the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia within the Austro-Hungarian Empire.
20th century
Karlovac suffered damage during the Croatian War of Independence. The southern sections of the city found themselves close to the front lines between the Republic of Croatia and the Republic of Serbian Krajina, with shelling devastating the neighborhoods of Turanj, Kamensko, as well as parts of Mekušje, Mala Švarča and Logorište. The city center, the city hall, and numerous other buildings also suffered damage.The Karlovac City Museum has transformed the old Austrian military barracks of Turanj into a museum exhibition dedicated to the military history of Karlovac and in particular, through the exhibited weapons, of the Croatian War of Independence. A ticket for this site is also valid for City Museum, Galerija Vjekoslave Karas and Dubovac Castel.
Until the early 2000s, Karlovac's main industry consisted of brewing the beer "Karlovačko", produced by Karlovačka pivovara. By 2007, the rapidly growing firearms manufacturer HS Produkt had become the city's largest private employer. HS Produkt is arguably best known as the designer and manufacturer of the HS2000 pistol, sold in the United States as the Springfield Armory XD.
On 22 October 2016 Croatia's first freshwater aquarium, and the biggest in that part of Europe, named Aquatika was opened in Karlovac.
Description
Croatians know Karlovac as grad parkova and grad na četiri rijeke for its numerous green areas and four rivers, of which Mrežnica, Korana, and Kupa flow through built-up areas, and Dobra is a few kilometers outside the city centre. A documentary film made by Dušan Vukotić in 1979 on the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the founding of the city plays much on that theme, and shows pictures of happy bathers on the Korana's Fogina beach in the city centre.One of the rarer trees found in the parks is the Ginkgo biloba, which local primary school children are taken out to see as part of their classes on nature and society. Most of the parks are planted in the former trenches dug around the old military fort that were once filled with water as an added layer of protection from the marauding Ottoman armies. One part of the city centre maintains the name of Šanac after the old trenches which preserve the old hexagonal form of the historic centre.
Demographics
According to the 2011 census, Karlovac municipality had a total of 55,705 inhabitants. 49,140 of its citizens were Croats, 4,460 were Serbs, 250 were Bosniaks, 237 were Albanians, 72 were ethnic Macedonians, 49 were Montenegrins, and the rest were other ethnicities.Population by religion in 2011 was following: 45,876 Roman Catholics, 3,866 Orthodox Christians, 2,806 Atheists, 705 Muslims, 488 Agnostics, and others.
Much of the population of Karlovac has changed since the beginning of the 1991-95 Croatian War of Independence, with numerous families of Croatian Serbs leaving and being replaced by people who were themselves displaced from parts of Croatia that were held by rebel Serbs during the war, as well as by families of Bosnian Croats who started arriving during the war. The migration outflow was mostly towards Serbia, the Republika Srpska entity in Bosnia and Herzegovina, and to countries of Western Europe, North America and Australia.
Settlements
The list of settlements included in the administrative area of the city of Karlovac includes:- Banska Selnica, population 90
- Banski Moravci, population 68
- Blatnica Pokupska, population 31
- Brezova Glava, population 135
- Brežani, population 129
- Brođani, population 141
- Cerovac Vukmanićki, population 902
- Donja Trebinja, population 22
- Donje Mekušje, population 207
- Donji Sjeničak, population 69
- Gornja Trebinja, population 169
- Gornje Stative, population 385
- Gornji Sjeničak, population 150
- Goršćaki, population 119
- Husje, population 176
- Ivančići Pokupski, population 11
- Ivanković Selo, population 25
- Ivošević Selo, population 7
- Kablar, population 122
- Karasi, population 50
- Karlovac, population 46,833
- Klipino Brdo, population 14
- Kljaić Brdo, population 18
- Knez Gorica, population 111
- Kobilić Pokupski, population 43
- Konjkovsko, population 6
- Koritinja, population 113
- Ladvenjak, population 382
- Lipje, population 48
- Luka Pokupska, population 360
- Mahićno, population 522
- Manjerovići, population 32
- Okić, population 64
- Popović Brdo, population 224
- Priselci, population 96
- Rečica, population 538
- Ribari, population 108
- Skakavac, population 233
- Slunjska Selnica, population 78
- Slunjski Moravci, population 85
- Šebreki, population 0
- Šišljavić, population 457
- Tušilović, population 631
- Tuškani, population 216
- Udbinja, population 63
- Utinja, population 5
- Vodostaj, population 504
- Vukmanić, population 207
- Vukoder, population 1043
- Zadobarje, population 373
- Zagraj, population 63
- Zamršje, population 167
Culture
Karlovac Music School, one of the oldest educational music institutions from this part of Europe, is the home of Karlovac Piano Festival. Karlovac Piano Festival is typically held in mid-summer, and consists of master classes with renowned piano pedagogues as well as Karlovac International Piano Competition. Music school also hosts International guitar school, while in Karlovac theatre Zorin dom Croatian Flute Academy is traditionally held, so during summer months Karlovac is center of young artists of Europe. In the 20th century, Karlovac was a breeding ground for young rock bands, most notably Elektroni in the 1960s and Nužni Izlaz, Prije svega disciplina, Duhovna pastva and Lorelei in the 1970s and the 1980s. The city of Karlovac has memorial-sites dedicated to Croatian veterans of the nation's Homeland War.International relations
Twin towns
Karlovac is twinned with:Gallery
Notable people
- Boris Magaš, architect
- Josip Vaništa, painter
- Ivanka Boljkovac, opera singer
- Zrinka Cvitešić, actress
- Vlado Kalember, singer
- Vjekoslav Karas, painter
- Alfred Krupa, painter
- Gustav Krklec, writer
- Ana Vidović, classical guitarist
- Slavko Mihalić, poet
- Davor Gobac, singer
- Danijela Trbović, TV host
- Dejan Jaković, Canadian footballer of Serbian descent
- Jelena Popović, Serbian handball player, World Championship silver medalist
- Maksimilijan Vrhovac, Catholic bishop
- Većeslav Holjevac, Partisan
- Ivan Ribar, politician
- Gajo Petrović, marxist theorist
- Radoslav Lopašić, historian
- Dejan Lovren, Croatian footballer
- Paulina Matijević, benefactress
- Dušan Dančuo, singer
- Đorđe Petrović, painter
- Slavko Goldstein, publisher, historian and politician
- Đuro Zatezalo, historian