Pula, a place to invest in property in Croatia
Pula is situated at the southeast end of the Istrian peninsula and has been in existence since 3 thousand years.
During the Roman reign, the colony was named "Pietas Iulia", and later Colonia Iulia Polentia Herculanea, under the protection of legendary Hercules. The town, situated on the main hill, started to expand around the bay and developed into a cultural and entertainment nucleus for Roman emperors, renaissance poets and painters, Venetian senators, French generals. Pula's history was influenced by the Roman Empire, the Eastern Goths, and later by Byzantium. The Franks, Venetians, Austrians, Hungarians, Italians and Slavs acclaimed the town.
In the 13th century new political forces emerged. Over a century Venetians have gradually taken the western part of the Istrian peninsula.
Thus Pula remained bound to the Venetian economical and political aims for the next centuries. During the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries Pula was being attacked and conquered by Genoa, Croatian-Hungarian and Habsburg armies, causing the devastation of numerous medieval villages and towns. Besides the war calamity, the population of Pula and Istria was reduced by the numerous plague, malaria, typhoid and chicken pox epidemics. In those past centuries, Pula became a typical medieval town, in Romanesque-Gothic style.
During World War II, under the fascist
rule, Pula was known as an antifascist town that organized its
battle for the future while experiencing bomb raids, devastation, as well
as repressions over the defeated. After the War against the German occupation
Pula came under the Anglo-American administration. In 1947 Pula
finally turned to its natural hinterland - Croatia (according to
the 1943 Resolution), and therefore Yugoslavia. This caused still another
exodus of the malcontent Italian citizens. That was the beginning of a
new period in the history of Pula that lasted till Croatia
gained independence.
Home: Property in Croatia Property in Istria Property on sale at CroatiaProperties.Biz