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KotOR
*** Shopping-Tip: KotOR
: ''
KOTOR is also the acronym for the 2003 BioWare video game "Knights of the Old Republic."''
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image:Kotor Bay.jpg Gulf of Kotor.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|right|Panoramic view of [[Gulf of Kotor.html" title="Meaning of right|Panoramic view of [[Gulf of Kotor">thumb|right|Panoramic view of [[Gulf of Kotor">right|Panoramic view of [[Gulf of Kotor">thumb|right|Panoramic view of [[Gulf of Kotor
Image:Alley kotor.JPG thumb|Alley in Kotor
Image:Cathedral Kotor.JPG Cathedral.html"_title="Meaning of thumb thumb|[[Cathedral_of
Saint Tryphon (Sv. Tripun).html" title="Meaning of [[Cathedral">thumb|[[Cathedral of
Saint Tryphon (Sv. Tripun)">[[Cathedral">thumb|[[Cathedral of
Saint Tryphon (Sv. Tripun)
Image:View_from_one_of_the_beaches_of_Kotor.JPG thumb|View from one of the beaches
Image:Montenegro municipalities.png right|thumb|Map of the municipalities of Montenegro, showing the location of Kotor
'''Kotor''' (
Serbian language Serbian and {{lang-hr| ''Котор'' / Kotor}}; {{lang-it|Cattaro}}; {{lang-la|''Acruvium''}}) is a town in
Serbia and Montenegro, located in southwestern
Montenegro. The town has a population of 19,000, with a municipality-wide population of 23,481 (
2003).
The old
Mediterranean port of Kotor, surrounded by an impressive city wall, is very well preserved and protected by
UNESCO. Between
1420 and
1797, Kotor and its surroundings were under the rule of the
Republic of Venice and the Venetian influence remains among the architectural influences. The
Gulf of Kotor (Boka Kotorska), one of the most indented parts of the
Adriatic Sea is sometimes called the southern-most
fjord in Europe, although it is actually a submerged river canyon). With the nearly overhanging limestone cliffs of
Orjen and
Lovćen one of the great
Mediterranean landscapes is created.
In recent years, Kotor has seen a steady increase in tourists attracted by both the natural beauty of the Gulf of Kotor and the old town of Kotor itself.
History
Kotor, first mentioned in
168 BC, was settled during
Ancient Rome Ancient Roman times, when it was known as '''Acruvium''', '''Ascrivium''', or '''Ascruvium''' and was part of the
Roman province of
Dalmatia.
Kotor has been fortified since the early
Middle Ages, when Emperor
Justinian I Justinian built a fortress above Ascrivium in
Anno Domini AD 535, after expelling the
Goths, and a second town probably grew up on the heights round it, for
Constantine Porphyrogenitus, in the
10th century, alludes to Lower Cattaro. The city was plundered by the
Saracens in
840.
In
1002, the city suffered damage under occupation of the
First Bulgarian Empire, and in the following year it was ceded to
Serbia by the Bulgarian
Tsar Samuil, but the locals revolted, in alliance with
Dubrovnik Ragusa (Dubrovnik), and only submitted in
1184, as a protected state, preserving intact its republican institutions, and its right to conclude treaties and engage in war. It was already an episcopal see, and, in the
13th century,
Dominican Order Dominican and
Franciscan monasteries were established to check the spread of
Bogomilism.
In the
14th century the commerce of '''Cattaro''', as the city was then called, rivalled that of the nearby
Republic of Ragusa, and provoked the jealousy of
Venice. The downfall of
Serbia in
1389 left the city without a guardian, and, after being seized and abandoned by the
Republic of Venice and
Kingdom of Hungary in turn, it passed under Venetian rule in
1420.
Kotor was besieged by the
Ottoman Empire in
1538 and
1657, visited by the
Black Death plague in
1572, and nearly destroyed by
earthquakes in
1563 and
1667. Under the
Treaty of Campo Formio in
1797, it passed to the
Habsburg Monarchy, but in
1805, by the
Treaty of Pressburg , it was assigned to first to the
First French Empire French Empire's client state, the
Kingdom of Italy (Napoleonic) Kingdom of Italy, and was then united in
1810 with the French Empire's
Illyrian Provinces.
In
1814 it was restored to the new
Austrian Empire by the
Congress of Vienna. The attempt to enforce
compulsory military service, made and abandoned in
1869, but finally successful in
1881, led to two short-lived revolts among the people of
Krivošije on the western branch of mount
Orjen, during which Kotor was the Austrian headquarters.
In
World War I, Kotor was the site of some of the fiercest battles between local Montenegrin Slavs, and
Austria-Hungary. After
1918, Kotor became a part of
Yugoslavia and became known as '''Kotor'''. After 1945, it became a part of the then Socialist Republic of Montenegro within Yugoslavia's second incarnation.
Up until the beginning of the
20th century,
Croats (including
Bokeljs) constituted the majority in Kotor as well as in other places around the Gulf of Kotor, with the other major ethnic group being the
Serbs. During the last century the percentage of Croats in the area declined sharply and today,
Montenegrins make up the majority in all communities.
Kotor is still the seat of the Croatian
Catholic Roman Catholic Diocese of Kotor Bishopric of Kotor, which covers the entire gulf.
Surroundings
Places near the old town:
* Dobrota
* Muo
External links
-
Kotor historical and tourist information with a lot of pictures
-
Kotor historical and tourist information
-
UNESCO: Natural and Culturo-Historical Region of Kotor
-
Foundation for Culture and Tradition of Boka Kotorska "Project Rastko-Boka"
-
Foundation Rastko-Boka News
Category:Cities in Serbia and Montenegro
Category:Cities, towns and villages in Montenegro
Category:World Heritage Sites in Serbia and Montenegro
da:Kotor
de:Kotor
es:Kotor
fr:Kotor
it:Cattaro
ja:コトル
nl:Kotor
pl:Kotor
ru:Котор
sr:Котор
see
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic
see
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic
see
Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic
*** Shopping-Tip: KotOR