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Lastovo

Index Lastovo

Lastovo (Lagosta, Augusta, Augusta Insula, Ladestanos, Illyrian: Ladest) is an island municipality in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County in Croatia. [1]

117 relations: Action of 29 November 1811, Adriatic campaign of 1807–14, Adriatic Campaign of World War I, Adriatic Question, Adriatic Sea, Aftermath of World War I, Andrija Paltašić, Augusta, Balkans Campaign (World War I), Battle of Lastovo, Battle of the Barracks, Battle of the Dalmatian Channels, Bonino De Boninis, Chakavian, Church of Saints Cosmas and Damian, Lastovo, Croatia, Croatia during World War I, Croatian Navy, Croatian wine, Croatian-Venetian wars, D119 road, D410 road, D8 road (Croatia), Dalmatia, Dalmatian Italians, Dubrovnik, Dubrovnik-Neretva County, Duchy of Croatia, European Coastal Airlines, Evidence of common descent, French destroyer Bisson, French destroyer Magon, Genetic studies on Croats, Geography of Croatia, Governorate of Dalmatia, History of Dalmatia, History of the Republic of Venice, HMS Apollo (1805), HMS Imogen (1805), Hvar (city), Istrian-Dalmatian exodus, Italian Empire, Italian exonyms, Italian folk dance, Italian Front (World War I), Italian general election, 1921, Italian irredentism, Italian irredentism in Dalmatia, Italian wall lizard, Jakubinskij's law, ..., Johnny Mercer, Julian Venice and Dalmatia, Kingdom of Croatia (925–1102), Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia, Kingdom of Dalmatia, Korčula, Lagosta, Lastovo (disambiguation), Lastovo (town), Lastovo Poklad, Liburnia, Linđo, List of ancient geographic names in Croatia, List of European islands by area, List of German exonyms for places in Croatia, List of inhabited islands of Croatia, List of islands by name (L), List of islands in the Adriatic, List of islands in the Mediterranean, List of islands of Croatia, List of islands of Europe, List of Italian exonyms in Dalmatia, List of lighthouses in Croatia, List of national border changes since World War I, List of shipwrecks in 1820, List of shipwrecks in February 1941, Louis Vico Žabkar, Lumbarda, Mrčara, Municipalities of Croatia, Narentines, Pasadur, Pietro II Orseolo, Population transfer, Port of Split, Postup, Prežba, Protected areas of Croatia, Province of Zara, Republic of Ragusa, Saint Roch, Sazan Island, Skrivena Luka, Southeastern Chakavian, Spalato (Italian province), Split, Croatia, State Anti-fascist Council for the National Liberation of Croatia, Statute of Lastovo, Sušac, Suzana Stamenković, Tandonia lagostana, Television in Croatia, Timeline of Croatian history, Timeline of the Adriatic campaign of 1807–14, Tony Šantić, Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947, Treaty of Rapallo (1920), Trpanj, Uble, Ubli, Visovac Monastery, Yat, Yugoslav People's Army, Zadar, Zaklopatica, 1009, 17th meridian east. Expand index (67 more) »

Action of 29 November 1811

The Action of 29 November 1811 was a minor naval engagement fought between two frigate squadrons in the Adriatic Sea during the Adriatic campaign of the Napoleonic Wars.

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Adriatic campaign of 1807–14

The Adriatic campaign was a minor theatre of war during the Napoleonic Wars in which a succession of small British Royal Navy squadrons and independent cruisers harried the combined naval forces of the First French Empire, the Kingdom of Italy, the Illyrian Provinces and the Kingdom of Naples between 1807 and 1814 in the Adriatic Sea.

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Adriatic Campaign of World War I

The Adriatic Campaign of World War I was a naval campaign fought between the Central Powers and the Mediterranean squadrons of Great Britain, France, the Kingdom of Italy, Australia and the United States.

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Adriatic Question

In the aftermath of the First World War, the Adriatic Question or Adriatic Problem concerned the fate of the territories along the eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea that formerly belonged to the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

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Adriatic Sea

The Adriatic Sea is a body of water separating the Italian Peninsula from the Balkan peninsula.

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Aftermath of World War I

The aftermath of World War I saw drastic political, cultural, economic, and social change across Eurasia (Europe and Asia), Africa, and even in areas outside those that were directly involved.

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Andrija Paltašić

Andrija Paltašić (Andrea Paltasichi Latin Andreas de Paltasichis; Kotor 1440 – Venice 1500) was a Venetian printer and publisher who was active from 1476 to 1492.

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Augusta

Augusta may refer to.

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Balkans Campaign (World War I)

The Balkans Campaign, or Balkan Theatre of World War I was fought between the Central Powers, represented by Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, Germany and the Ottoman Empire on one side and the Allies, represented by France, Montenegro, Russia, Serbia, and the United Kingdom (and later Romania and Greece, who sided with the Allied Powers) on the other side.

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Battle of Lastovo

The Battle of Lastovo in 1000 was part of the campaign of Doge Pietro II Orseolo in southern Croatia and its bloodiest armed conflict between the citizens of Lastovo island and the army of the Venice.

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Battle of the Barracks

The Battle of the Barracks (Bitka za vojarne) was a series of engagements that occurred in mid-to-late 1991 between the Croatian National Guard (Zbor narodne garde – ZNG, later renamed the Croatian Army) and the Croatian police on one side and the Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska Narodna Armija – JNA) on another.

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Battle of the Dalmatian Channels

The Battle of the Dalmatian Channels was a three-day confrontation between three tactical groups of Yugoslav Navy ships and coastal artillery, and a detachment of naval commandos of the Croatian Navy fought on 14–16 November 1991 during the Croatian War of Independence.

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Bonino De Boninis

Bonino De' Boninis (also known as Dobrić Dobrićević) one of the pioneers of printing in Europe, was born in 1454 on the small Adriatic Island of Lastovo in the Republic of Ragusa (modern Croatia).

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Chakavian

Chakavian or Čakavian,, (čakavski, proper name: čakavica or čakavština, own name: čokovski, čakavski, čekavski) is a dialect of the Serbo-Croatian language spoken by a minority of Croats.

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Church of Saints Cosmas and Damian, Lastovo

The Church of Saint Cosmas and Damian (Sv Kuzma i Damjan) is a Roman Catholic church on Lastovo Island off the coast of Croatia.

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Croatia

Croatia (Hrvatska), officially the Republic of Croatia (Republika Hrvatska), is a country at the crossroads of Central and Southeast Europe, on the Adriatic Sea.

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Croatia during World War I

The Triune Kingdom was part of Austria-Hungary during World War I. Its territory was administratively divided between the Austrian and Hungarian parts of the empire; Međimurje and Baranja were in the Hungarian part (Transleithania), the Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia was a separate entity associated with the Hungarian Kingdom, Dalmatia and Istria were in the Austrian part (Cisleithania), while the town of Rijeka had semi-autonomous status.

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Croatian Navy

The Croatian Navy (Hrvatska ratna mornarica or HRM) is a branch of the Croatian Armed Forces.

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Croatian wine

Croatian wine (vino, pl. vina) has a history dating back to the Ancient Greek settlers, and their wine production on the southern Dalmatian islands of Vis, Hvar and Korčula some 2,500 years ago.

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Croatian-Venetian wars

The Croatian–Venetian wars were a series of periodical, punctuated medieval conflicts and naval campaigns waged for control of the northeastern coast of the Adriatic Sea between the City-state (later the Republic) of Venice and the Principality of Croatia (later turned to the Kingdom of Croatia, as well as the Kingdom of Croatia in personal union with Hungary), at times allied with neighbouring territories – the Principality of the Narentines and Zahumlje in the south and Istrian peninsula (then partially ruled by the German feudal families) in the north. First struggles occurred at the very beginning of the existence of two conflict parties (7th and 8th century), they intensified in the 9th century, lessened during the 10th century, but intensified again since the beginning of the 11th century. From the year 1000 Venetian forces managed to subjugate a lot of coastal towns of the Byzantine Theme of Dalmatia, which was ceded from the Byzantine Emperor to the Croatian King. From the 1030s however, after the fall of Doge Otto Orseolo, Croatian kings Stjepan I and his son Petar Krešimir IV succeeded in taking almost the whole coast back, so the latter carried the title King od Croatia and Dalmatia. Since 1085, following the agreement between Venice and Byzantine Empire, Venetians subsequently conquered the significant part of the Croatian coastline. During the 12th century, after Croatia entered a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary, Croato-Hungarian kings Coloman and Béla II managed to return a considerable territory of Dalmatia and Croatian Littoral to their kingdom, but occasional conflicts almost never ceased. Since that Croatian–Venetian wars were technically theaters of the more wider Hungarian–Venetian Wars. When Louis the Great, the new young king (ruled 1342–1382), decided to expel Venetians from his country, he launched a large campaign in 1356–1358 and forced them to withdraw from Dalmatia. Zadar Peace Treaty was signed on 18 February 1358 and the whole coast from eastern Istria to southern Dalmatia was set free. In 1409 the Republic of Venice used the opportunity of the dynastic struggle that occurred and bought Dalmatia for 100,000 ducats from the Croatian anti-king Ladislaus of Naples, establishing Venetian Dalmatia. Croatian Littoral and eastern Istria remained parts of Croatia, where Croats, together with their allies, rejected Venetian efforts to subject them and fought against Venetians in conflicts like War of the Holy League and Uskok War. Thus a couple of decades after the purchase of Dalmatia by Venice, the Croatian–Venetian Wars became part of larger conflicts of the world's Great powers and were turned into the Ottoman–Venetian wars and Habsburg–Venetian wars.

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D119 road

D119 is the main state road on island of Lastovo in Croatia connecting towns of Ubli and Lastovo to a ferry port in Lastovo, from where Jadrolinija ferries fly to the mainland, docking in Split and the D410 state road.

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D410 road

D410 branches off to the southwest from D8 in Split towards the Port of Split - ferry access to Supetar (D113), Bol and Milna on Brač Island, Stari Grad (D116) and Jelsa on Hvar Island, Vela Luka on Korčula Island (D118), Rogač on Šolta Island (D112), as well as to Vis (D117), Lastovo (D119), Drvenik Veli and Drvenik Mali islands.

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D8 road (Croatia)

The D8 state road is the Croatian section of the Adriatic Highway, running from the Slovenian border at Pasjak via Rijeka, Senj, Zadar, Šibenik, Split, Opuzen and Dubrovnik to the border with Montenegro at Karasovići.

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Dalmatia

Dalmatia (Dalmacija; see names in other languages) is one of the four historical regions of Croatia, alongside Croatia proper, Slavonia and Istria.

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Dalmatian Italians

Dalmatian Italians are the historical Italian national minority living in the region of Dalmatia, now part of Croatia and Montenegro.

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Dubrovnik

Dubrovnik (historically Ragusa) is a Croatian city on the Adriatic Sea.

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Dubrovnik-Neretva County

The Dubrovnik–Neretva County (Dubrovačko-neretvanska županija) is the southernmost Croatian county, located in south Dalmatia.

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Duchy of Croatia

"Duchy of Croatia" (also "Duchy of the Croats", Kneževina Hrvata; "Dalmatian Croatia", Dalmatinska Hrvatska; "Littoral Croatia", Primorska Hrvatska; Greek: Χρωβατία, Chrovatía), was a medieval Croatian duchy that was established in the former Roman province of Dalmatia.

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European Coastal Airlines

European Coastal Airlines was a Croatian seaplane operator headquartered in Split.

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Evidence of common descent

Evidence of common descent of living organisms has been discovered by scientists researching in a variety of disciplines over many decades, demonstrating that all life on Earth comes from a single ancestor.

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French destroyer Bisson

Bisson was the name ship of her class of destroyers built for the French Navy during the 1910s, entering service in 1913.

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French destroyer Magon

Magon was one of six s built for the French Navy during the 1910s.

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Genetic studies on Croats

Population genetics is a scientific discipline which contributes to the examination of the human evolutionary and historical migrations.

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Geography of Croatia

The geography of Croatia is defined by its location— it is described as being a part of southeastern Europe.

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Governorate of Dalmatia

The Governorate of Dalmatia (Governatorato di Dalmazia), was a territory divided in three Provinces of Italy during Italian Kingdom and Italian Empire epoch, created in April 1941 at the start of World War II in Yugoslavia from the existing Province of Zara together with occupied Yugoslav territory annexed by Italy after the invasion of Yugoslavia by the Axis powers and the signing of the Rome Treaties.

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History of Dalmatia

The History of Dalmatia concerns the history of the area that covers eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea and its inland regions, from the 2nd century BC up to the present day.

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History of the Republic of Venice

The Republic of Venice (Repùblica Vèneta; Repubblica di Venezia), traditionally known as the Most Serene Republic of Venice (Serenìsima Repùblica Vèneta; Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia), was a sovereign state and maritime republic in northeastern Italy, which existed for a millennium between the 8th century and the 18th century.

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HMS Apollo (1805)

HMS Apollo, the fifth ship of the Royal Navy to be named for the Greek god Apollo, was a fifth-rate frigate of the ''Lively'' class, carrying 38 guns, launched in 1805 and broken up in 1856.

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HMS Imogen (1805)

HMS Imogen (or Imogene) was a British Royal Navy 16-gun brig-sloop of the ''Seagull'' class launched in July 1805.

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Hvar (city)

Hvar (local Croatian dialect: Hvor or For, Greek: Pharos, Pharus and Pharina, Lesina) is a city and port on the island of Hvar, part of Split-Dalmatia County, Croatia.

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Istrian-Dalmatian exodus

The term Istrian-Dalmatian exodus refers to the post-World War II expulsion and departure of ethnic Italians from the Yugoslav territory of Istria, as well as the cities of Zadar and Rijeka.

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Italian Empire

The Italian Empire (Impero Italiano) comprised the colonies, protectorates, concessions, dependencies and trust territories of the Kingdom of Italy and, after 1946, the Italian Republic.

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Italian exonyms

Below is list of Italian language exonyms for places in non-Italian-speaking areas of Europe: In recent years, the use of Italian exonyms for lesser known places has significantly decreased, in favour of the foreign toponym.

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Italian folk dance

Italian Folk Dance has been an integral part of Italian culture for centuries.

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Italian Front (World War I)

The Italian Front (Fronte italiano; in Gebirgskrieg, "Mountain war") was a series of battles at the border between Austria-Hungary and Italy, fought between 1915 and 1918 in World War I. Following the secret promises made by the Allies in the Treaty of London, Italy entered the war in order to annex the Austrian Littoral and northern Dalmatia, and the territories of present-day Trentino and South Tyrol.

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Italian general election, 1921

General elections were held in Italy on 15 May 1921.

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Italian irredentism

Italian irredentism (irredentismo italiano) was a nationalist movement during the late 19th and early 20th centuries in Italy with irredentist goals which promoted the unification of geographic areas in which indigenous ethnic Italians and Italian-speaking persons formed a majority, or substantial minority, of the population.

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Italian irredentism in Dalmatia

Italian irredentism in Dalmatia was the political movement supporting the unification to Italy, during the 19th and 20th centuries, of adriatic Dalmatia.

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Italian wall lizard

The Italian wall lizard, ruin lizard, or İstanbul lizard (Podarcis sicula from the Greek meaning 'agile' and 'feet') is a species of lizard in the family Lacertidae.

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Jakubinskij's law

Jakubinskij's law, or Meyer–Jakubinskij's law, is a sound law that operated in the Serbo-Croatian Chakavian dialect in the 12th–13th century, named after Lav Jakubinski who discovered it in 1925, and sometimes also after K.H. Meyer who expanded and refined the rule in 1926.

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Johnny Mercer

John Herndon Mercer (November 18, 1909 – June 25, 1976) was an American lyricist, songwriter and singer.

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Julian Venice and Dalmatia

Julian Venice and Dalmatia (Venezia Giulia e Dalmazia) refers to the province in the Kingdom of Italy during the interwar period that was composed of the Julian March, Zadar, and Lastovo as well as territorial claims on the remainder of Dalmatia held by Yugoslavia.

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Kingdom of Croatia (925–1102)

The Kingdom of Croatia (Regnum Croatiae; Kraljevina Hrvatska, Hrvatsko Kraljevstvo) was a medieval kingdom in Central Europe comprising most of what is today Croatia (without western Istria and some Dalmatian coastal cities), as well as most of the modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina.

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Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia

The Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia (Kraljevina Hrvatska i Slavonija; Horvát-Szlavón Királyság; Königreich Kroatien und Slawonien) was a nominally autonomous kingdom within the Austro-Hungarian Empire, created in 1868 by merging the kingdoms of Croatia and Slavonia following the Croatian–Hungarian Settlement.

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Kingdom of Dalmatia

The Kingdom of Dalmatia (Kraljevina Dalmacija; Königreich Dalmatien; Regno di Dalmazia) was a crown land of the Austrian Empire (1815–1867) and the Cisleithanian half of Austria-Hungary (1867–1918).

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Korčula

Korčula (is a Croatian island in the Adriatic Sea. It has an area of; long and on average wide — and lies just off the Dalmatian coast. Its 15,522 inhabitants (2011) make it the second most populous Adriatic island after Krk and the most populous Croatian island not connected to the mainland by a bridge. The population are almost entirely ethnic Croats (95.74%). The island is twinned with Rothesay in Scotland.

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Lagosta

Lagosta may refer to.

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Lastovo (disambiguation)

Lastovo is an island in Croatia, but may also refer to.

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Lastovo (town)

Lastovo is a small town in southern Croatia.

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Lastovo Poklad

The Poklad (Carnival) event held yearly on the remote Adriatic Island of Lastovo is one of the more distinctive and authentic carnival traditions celebrated in all of Croatia today.

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Liburnia

Liburnia in ancient geography was the land of the Liburnians, a region along the northeastern Adriatic coast in Europe, in modern Croatia, whose borders shifted according to the extent of the Liburnian dominance at a given time between 11th and 1st century BC.

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Linđo

Linđo is a popular dance of Dubrovnik and the Dubrovnik region of Croatia.

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List of ancient geographic names in Croatia

This is a list of geographic names from ancient times in the current Republic of Croatia with modern names.

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List of European islands by area

This is a list of islands in Europe ordered by area.

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List of German exonyms for places in Croatia

This is a list of German exonyms for toponyms in Croatia.

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List of inhabited islands of Croatia

In the Croatian part of the Adriatic Sea, there are 718 islands, 389 islets and 78 reefs, making the Croatian archipelago the largest in the Adriatic Sea and the second largest in the Mediterranean Sea, the Greek archipelago being the largest.

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List of islands by name (L)

This article features a list of islands sorted by their name beginning with the letter L.

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List of islands in the Adriatic

There are more than 1200 islands in the Adriatic Sea, 69 of which are inhabited.

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List of islands in the Mediterranean

The following is a list describing the islands located in the Mediterranean Sea.

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List of islands of Croatia

This is a list of islands of Croatia.

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List of islands of Europe

This is a list of the larger offshore islands of Europe.

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List of Italian exonyms in Dalmatia

This is a list of Italian exonyms for places in the Croatian region of Dalmatia and the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea (including the shores of Montenegro), up to the city of Rijeka.

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List of lighthouses in Croatia

This is a list of lighthouses in Croatia.

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List of national border changes since World War I

List of national border changes since World War I refers to changes in borders between nations during or since 1914.

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List of shipwrecks in 1820

The list of shipwrecks in 1820 includes some ships sunk, wrecked or otherwise lost during 1820.

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List of shipwrecks in February 1941

The list of shipwrecks in February 1941 includes all ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during February 1941.

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Louis Vico Žabkar

Louis Vico Žabkar (7 December 1914 – 15 September 1994)Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014.

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Lumbarda

Lumbarda (it: Lombarda) is a small village and a municipality located on the Eastern tip of the Island of Korčula in Croatia, 7 kilometers away from the town of Korčula.

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Mrčara

Mrčara is a small uninhabited island in the Croatian part of the Adriatic Sea, located west of the islands of Prežba and Lastovo in southern Dalmatia.

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Municipalities of Croatia

Municipalities in Croatia (općina; plural: općine) are the second lowest administrative unit of government in the country, and along with cities and towns (grad, plural: gradovi) they form the second level of administrative subdisivion, after counties.

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Narentines

The Narentines were a South Slavic tribe that occupied an area of southern Dalmatia centered at the river Neretva (Narenta), active in the 9th and 10th centuries, noted as pirates on the Adriatic.

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Pasadur

Pasadur is a small coastal village in southern Croatia.

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Pietro II Orseolo

Pietro II Orseolo (961 − 1009) was the Doge of Venice from 991 to 1009.

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Population transfer

Population transfer or resettlement is the movement of a large group of people from one region to another, often a form of forced migration imposed by state policy or international authority and most frequently on the basis of ethnicity or religion but also due to economic development.

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Port of Split

The Port of Split (Luka Split) is a port in the central Dalmatian city of Split, Croatia.

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Postup

Postup is wine growing region on Croatia's Pelješac peninsula just to the east of Orebić.

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Prežba

Prežba is a small uninhabited island in the Croatian part of the Adriatic Sea, located northwest of the island of Lastovo in southern Dalmatia.

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Protected areas of Croatia

The main protected areas of Croatia are national parks, nature parks and strict reserves.

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Province of Zara

The Province of Zara (Provincia di Zara) was a province of the Kingdom of Italy, officially from 1918 to 1947.

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Republic of Ragusa

The Republic of Ragusa was a maritime republic centered on the city of Dubrovnik (Ragusa in Italian, German and Latin; Raguse in French) in Dalmatia (today in southernmost Croatia) that carried that name from 1358 until 1808.

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Saint Roch

Saint Roch or Rocco (lived c. 1348 – 15/16 August 1376/79 (traditionally c. 1295 – 16 August 1327)) was a Catholic saint, a confessor whose death is commemorated on 16 August and 9 September in Italy; he is specially invoked against the plague.

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Sazan Island

Sazan (Sazani; Saseno; Saso; Σάσων) is an island inside the Mediterranean Sea in southern Albania.

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Skrivena Luka

Skrivena Luka (literally "Hidden Harbor" in Croatian), known by locals as Portorus, is a small village in Croatia.

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Southeastern Chakavian

Southerneastern Chakavian (južnoistočni čakavski dijalekt) or Ijekavian accent is a subdialect of the Chakavian dialect of Serbo-Croatian.

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Spalato (Italian province)

Spalato (Italian province) (or "Spalato province") was a province of the Italian Governorate of Dalmatia, during World War II.

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Split, Croatia

Split (see other names) is the second-largest city of Croatia and the largest city of the region of Dalmatia. It lies on the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea and is spread over a central peninsula and its surroundings. An intraregional transport hub and popular tourist destination, the city is linked to the Adriatic islands and the Apennine peninsula. Home to Diocletian's Palace, built for the Roman emperor in 305 CE, the city was founded as the Greek colony of Aspálathos (Aσπάλαθος) in the 3rd or 2nd century BC. It became a prominent settlement around 650 CE when it succeeded the ancient capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia, Salona. After the Sack of Salona by the Avars and Slavs, the fortified Palace of Diocletian was settled by the Roman refugees. Split became a Byzantine city, to later gradually drift into the sphere of the Republic of Venice and the Kingdom of Croatia, with the Byzantines retaining nominal suzerainty. For much of the High and Late Middle Ages, Split enjoyed autonomy as a free city, caught in the middle of a struggle between Venice and the King of Hungary for control over the Dalmatian cities. Venice eventually prevailed and during the early modern period Split remained a Venetian city, a heavily fortified outpost surrounded by Ottoman territory. Its hinterland was won from the Ottomans in the Morean War of 1699, and in 1797, as Venice fell to Napoleon, the Treaty of Campo Formio rendered the city to the Habsburg Monarchy. In 1805, the Peace of Pressburg added it to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy and in 1806 it was included in the French Empire, becoming part of the Illyrian Provinces in 1809. After being occupied in 1813, it was eventually granted to the Austrian Empire following the Congress of Vienna, where the city remained a part of the Austrian Kingdom of Dalmatia until the fall of Austria-Hungary in 1918 and the formation of Yugoslavia. In World War II, the city was annexed by Italy, then liberated by the Partisans after the Italian capitulation in 1943. It was then re-occupied by Germany, which granted it to its puppet Independent State of Croatia. The city was liberated again by the Partisans in 1944, and was included in the post-war Socialist Yugoslavia, as part of its republic of Croatia. In 1991, Croatia seceded from Yugoslavia amid the Croatian War of Independence.

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State Anti-fascist Council for the National Liberation of Croatia

The State Anti-fascist Council for the National Liberation of Croatia (Zemaljsko antifašističko vijeće narodnog oslobođenja Hrvatske), often referred to by the acronym ZAVNOH, was the highest governing organ of the anti-fascist movement in Croatia during World War II.

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Statute of Lastovo

The Codex Lagostinum or Statute of Lastovo (Statuto di Lagosta, Lastovski statut), was a legislation of common law written in 1310 by the population of the island of Lagosta (now called Lastovo, in Croatia), which had autonomy under the Republic of Ragusa.

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Sušac

Sušac (meaning dry island, Cazza, Choasa) is a small rocky island in the Adriatic Sea with an area of 4.03 km2, and 16.4 km of coastline southwest of Korčula and Lastovo, on the halfway to the island of Vis, in Croatia.

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Suzana Stamenković

Suzana Stamenković (Сузана Стаменковић) is a Serbian singer of Pop and Folk music.

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Tandonia lagostana

Tandonia lagostana is a species of air-breathing, keeled, land slug, a shell-less terrestrial gastropod mollusks in the family Milacidae.

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Television in Croatia

Television in Croatia was first introduced in 1956.

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Timeline of Croatian history

This is a timeline of Croatian history, comprising important legal and territorial changes and political events in Croatia and its predecessor states.

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Timeline of the Adriatic campaign of 1807–14

The Adriatic campaign of 1807–1814 was a struggle for supremacy in the Adriatic Sea between the French Navy and the British Royal Navy during the Napoleonic Wars.

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Tony Šantić

Tony Šantić (born 17 October 1952 in Lastovo, Croatia) is a noted Australian thoroughbred owner and Southern bluefin tuna farmer.

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Treaty of Peace with Italy, 1947

The Treaty of Peace with Italy (one of the Paris Peace Treaties) was signed on 10 February 1947 between Italy and the victorious powers of World War II, formally ending hostilities.

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Treaty of Rapallo (1920)

The Treaty of Rapallo was a treaty between the Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (renamed Yugoslavia in 1929), signed to solve the dispute over some territories in the former Austrian Littoral in the upper Adriatic, and in Dalmatia.

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Trpanj

Trpanj (Trappano), is a town and municipality of Dubrovnik-Neretva County in south-eastern Croatia.

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Uble

Uble, also referred to as Ubli, is a small coastal village in southern Croatia.

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Ubli

Ubli may refer to several places: In Croatia.

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Visovac Monastery

The Visovac Monastery (Samostan Visovac), part of the Franciscan Province of the Most Holy Redeemer based in Split, is a Catholic (Roman Rite) monastery on the island of Visovac in the Krka National Park, Croatia.

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Yat

Yat or jat (Ѣ ѣ; italics: Ѣ ѣ) is the thirty-second letter of the old Cyrillic alphabet, as well as the name of the sound it represented.

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Yugoslav People's Army

The Yugoslav People's Army (Jugoslovenska narodna armija / Југословенска народна армија / Jugoslavenska narodna armija; also Yugoslav National Army), often referred-to simply by the initialism JNA, was the military of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

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Zadar

Zadar (see other names) is the oldest continuously inhabited Croatian city.

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Zaklopatica

Zaklopatica is a small village in southern Croatia.

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1009

Year in topic Year 1009 (MIX) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

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17th meridian east

The meridian 17° east of Greenwich is a line of longitude that extends from the North Pole across the Arctic Ocean, Europe, Africa, the Atlantic Ocean, the Southern Ocean, and Antarctica to the South Pole.

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Redirects here:

Lastovo (island).

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lastovo

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