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Thursday, 25 Apr 2024

Sights

Monumental Partisan Cemetery

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In the western part of the city, dominated by extensive green areas, there lies this magnificent Monumental Cemetery. It was built in 1965 (during the period of renewal and reconstruction following the end of World War II) by the architect Bogdan Bogdanovic, in memory of the partisans of Mostar who lost their lives during the war.The Cemetery has 661 tombstones and every stone has its own symbolic signifi cance, like the Monumental complex itself.

Orthodox Church

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The old Orthodox Church was built in 1834 in the area of Byelusine. An important example of sacred orthodox architec-ture, the Church guards a beautiful icon of the Virgin Mary, a wooden iconostasis with several Russian, Venetian and local icons dating back to between the 15th and 18th centuries. The new Church, located in a hilly part of the city was built between 1863 and 1873 according to the project of artist Spasoje Vulić. Due to a lack of understanding between Vulić and the people of Mostar, the work was finished by Andreja Damjanov who had just finished constructing the Orthodox Church of Sarajevo. The bombings of the last war destroyed almost all of this wonderful building and its artistic inheritance has been lost. Nowadays, governmental bodies are working hard to be able to proceed with its reconstruction.

Bjelušine b.b. (travel agencies can organize visits).

 

Catholic Church and Franciscan Monastery

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In Mostar, the Ottomans helped build a Catholic church in 1866. The church was destroyed during the 1992 war and the new, larger structure was erected in 2000 on the foundations of the previous building. The Complex is also proud of its library with its prestigious 50,000 ancient volumes of both the Western and Eastern worlds, and in fact it is the largest of all the libraries with such characteristics in the whole of Herzegovina. h e building also holds an important art collection with works of Italian Masters of the 16th and 17th centuries, apart from works of more contemporary art.

Ottoman Residences (16th -19th century)

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In order to breathe in the atmosphere of daily life during the Ottoman period, all one needs to do is visit one of the three Turkish dwellings still present in town: these are the houses of the influential Bišćević (1635), Kajtaz (18th century) and Muslibegović (end of 19th century). Intriguing and well-maintained antique dwellings testify in detail to the residential style and to the real flavour of domestic life in that period.

Each house is surrounded by high walls to protect the intimacy of Muslim family life. The delightful internal courtyards have characteristic decorations on the floors, romantic fountains, exotic plants, flowers and fruit trees. Comfort reigns supreme in these interiors, with objects of daily use, precious carpets and small libraries with rare texts. To visit a Turkish residence is a way to come into touch with a reality often only imagined and then to take it away with you, once you have returned home.

 






Bišćević House
Bišćevića ulica b.b.;
tel. +387 (0)36 550 677.
Opening times: every day from 8.00 am to 8.00 pm.

Kajtaz House
Gaše Ilića b.b.
Opening times:   every day from 10.00am to 4.00pm.

Muslibegović House
Osmana Đikića 41; tel. +387 (0)36 551 379 (www.muslibegovichouse.com).
Opening times: every day from 10.00 am to 6.00 pm.

Metropolitan Palace (1908)

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Built for the Bishop of the Orthodox Church, in 1908, during the Austrian-Hungarian monarchy, the Metropolitan is an interesting example of Neo-Baroque architecture. h e palace soars on a high point of the east sector of Mostar, on the left side of the Neretva River and off ers a romantic, panoramic view of the old city. The inestimable interior decorations and its unusual façade, with niches holding statues of saints, sculptures in shells and urns, render it a decidedly original monument in the local surroundings.

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