Republic of Croatia Square

Coordinates: 45°48′34″N 15°58′12″E / 45.80944°N 15.97000°E / 45.80944; 15.97000
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Aerial view of Republic of Croatia Square
Republic of Croatia Square
Map
Coordinates45°48′34″N 15°58′12″E / 45.80944°N 15.97000°E / 45.80944; 15.97000
University of Zagreb Faculty of Law (1856)
Museum of Arts and Crafts (1880)
Croatian School Museum (1889)
Miroslav Krleža Lexicographical Institute (1891)
Croatian National Theatre
(1895)
Academy of Dramatic Art
Zagreb Academy of Music

Republic of Croatia Square (

Croatian National Theatre building at its centre. It is sometimes billed as the "most beautiful square in Zagreb".[1]

The present-day square was formed in the period between 1856 (when the former hospital was built on its northern side) and 1964 (when the Ferimport building was erected on the western side). However, the majority of buildings overlooking the square were built in the late 19th century in the historicist style of architecture.

Republic of Croatia Square was the first in line of three squares which form the west wing of the so-called

Lenuci's horseshoe (Croatian: Lenucijeva potkova), a U-shaped belt of squares and parks designed by engineer Milan Lenuci in the late 19th century which frames the core part of Zagreb's city centre. The east wing of the belt is formed by the King Tomislav, Strossmayer and Zrinski
squares, and the west wing by the Marulić, Mažuranić and Republic of Croatia squares, with the Botanical Garden connecting the two. The square is home to several cultural and educational institutions and several landmark sculptures.

Timeline

Sculptures

St. George Killing the Dragon by Anton Dominik Fernkorn
  • St. George Killing the Dragon by Anton Dominik Fernkorn[2] located in the southwest corner; made in 1853 in Vienna, the sculpture was bought and brought to Zagreb by Juraj Haulik in 1867, when it was placed at the entrance of Maksimir Park. In 1884 it was handed over to the City of Zagreb and then moved first to Strossmayer square before being moved again and installed at its current location in 1907.
Well of Life by sculptor Ivan Meštrović
  • Well of Life, designed by sculptor Ivan Meštrović in front of the Croatian National Theatre building; created in 1905 and installed in 1912.
  • History of Croats by Ivan Meštrović, in front of the Faculty of Law; created in 1932.
  • Monument to Đuro Deželić (1838-1907), writer and politician and founder of firefighting in Croatia, on the west side of the square, in front of the Ferimport building; designed by sculptor Frane Cota and commissioned by the Croatian Firefighting Association, the monument was erected in 1937.[3]

Former names

Being one of the most prominent squares in Zagreb its name was often changed in accordance to political circumstances of the time. The last change happened in 2017, as citizens' groups were lobbying for another name change on the grounds that Josip Broz Tito is a negative historical personality, due to his involvement in the many deaths during the rule of his communist regime.[4] The following is a complete list of names the square carried throughout its history.[5]

  • 1878–1888 Sajmišni trg (Fairground Square)
  • 1888–1919 Sveučilišni trg (University Square)
  • 1919–1927 Wilsonov trg (Woodrow Wilson Square)
  • 1927–1941 Trg kralja Aleksandra I. (King Alexander I Square)
  • 1941–1945 Trg I. (Square No. 1)
  • 1945–1946 Kazališni trg (Theatre Square)
  • 1946–2017 Trg maršala Tita (Marshal Tito Square)
  • 2017–present Trg Republike Hrvatske (Republic of Croatia Square)

Name change controversy

In February 2008 about 2000 protesters, dressed in red aprons, gathered at the Marshal Tito Square, as it was known at the time, demanding the square to be renamed Theatre Square. Some 200 supporters of Marshal Tito also assembled at the opposite end of the square. The police prevented the two groups from coming in contact with each other. Zagreb's Mayor Milan Bandić said that there is no historic reason to change the name of the square.[6][7] However, in June, 2017, the same mayor stated that he would suggest the square to be renamed and that the new name would be the Republic of Croatia Square. [8][9][10] The Square was officially renamed by the City of Zagreb Assembly, and adopted its new name on 1 September 2017.[11]

References

  1. ^ Tresmontant, Emmanuel (6 October 2008). "Zagreb, the beautiful Croatian city". ViaMichelin.co.uk. ViaMichelin. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  2. ^ "Na današnji dan - Anton Dominik Fernkorn" (in Croatian). Croatian Radiotelevision. Archived from the original on 29 December 2007. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  3. ^ "Vatrogastvo na tlu Hrvatske" (in Croatian). DVD Garčin. 1 June 2009. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  4. ^ "Inicijativa Krug za trg na Trgu maršala Tita: "Ni jedno mjesto se ne smije zvati njegovim imenom"" (in Croatian). Index.hr. 6 June 2009. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  5. .
  6. ^ New Europe Brussels team. "Marshal Tito Square brings Controversy". neurope. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  7. ^ AFP. "Thousands of Croatians rally against Tito Square". b92. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
  8. ^ "Bandić predlaže da se TRG maršala Tita preimenuje u TRG Republike Hrvatske".
  9. ^ "Bandić: Predlažem da TRG maršala Tita postane TRG Republike Hrvatske".
  10. ^ "Vijesti, najnovije vijesti iz Hrvatske i svijeta".
  11. ^ Odlučeno je Trg se više ne zove po maršalu Titu

External links