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The pearls of the Adriatic

The pearls of the Adriatic

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M/S ANDI STAR

M/S ANDI STAR

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Dalmatian royal cruise...

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LQC Sunny route

 

Mediterranean are people, sea, coasts...but the Sun too, the Sun that gives life and for what we live...the Sun that gives all the beauty to our islands, the sunniest in the whole Mediterranean...

...let's follow the Sun, let's feel its power...

 

SHORT ITINERARY:
Saturday: Sumpetar/boarding – Nečujam (island Šolta)/overnight
Sunday: Nečujam – Pučišća (island Brač)/overnight
Monday: Pučišća – Jelsa (island Hvar)/overnight
Tuesday: Jelsa – Korčula/overnight
Wednesday: Korčula – Hvar/overnight
Thursday: Hvar – Vis/overnight
Friday: Vis – Sumpetar/overnight
Saturday: Sumpetar/boarding

 

The moment when you board on one of our ships, relax and take a welcome drink, your cruise starts towards the island Šolta...

 

Nečujam: the youngest village of the island, founded by building summer houses but also by planned hotel building, Nečujam is the largest and according to some the most beautiful cove of the island.
It is the center of the island’s tourism and with its apartment village it offers a pleasant holiday to different types of tourists and a lot of them are traditional visitors for decades.
The coves of Nečujam (Piškera, Maslinica, Podkamenica, Šumpljivina and Tiha) are a great potential for development of nautical and day-trip tourism. It is known that the first visitors who felt the beauty of Nečujam were Marko Marulić, the father of Croatian literature, and Petar Hektorović, a poet and a writer. Even the emperor Diocletian knew about the quality of the local seas of Šolta and he had his fishery in Nečujam. The Latin name of this place is Vallis Surda – deaf cove, because of its size. Namely, the cove of Nečujam is one of the larger on Šolta so most of the sounds get lost in it. The best example for that is the fact that when you come by boat to Nečujam at night hours, you can hear the sound from the disco-club only when you reach the shore.
This kind of natural characteristic was obviously appreciated by great artists as Marulić and Hektorović who right here found inspiration for their works of art. In today’s archeological localities can be found the traces of ancient life. In the cove of Piskera the remains of Roman farm building were found, while in the surroundings were found graves, some pottery and money. Under the sea we can see the remains of the walls by which the cove was enclosed and turned into a fishery. The remains of Roman necropolis were found in the vicinity and also near the cove of Supetar.
Today Nečujam is a modern tourist village. It is connected to other parts of the island by bus and taxi lines. Nečujam is the center of Šolta’s tourism for the very reason of the apartment village that is a part of it.

Spending the night in the biggest Brač's town, Pučišća, will allow us at least to peek in the world of stone: there is love and fight between man and stone in this town since olden times

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They would say: "it's hard with and without you", because the people of Pučišća live on stone, for stone and of stone. (more on www.pucisca.hr)

Island Hvar has a lot to show – from beautiful bays to old dalmatian towns full of heritage and secrets hidden in stone walls. We shall spend evening in such of those towns:

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Jelsa is a small town situated in a bay on the northern coast of the central part of the island of Hvar. It borders with the two highest peaks on the island: St. Nicolas on the west and Hum on the east. Jelsa consists of two main parts: Vela Banda on the southern coast and Mala Banda on the northern. Jelsa is an important tourist centre which has a rich tradition in tourism (the oldest hotel Jadran was built in 1911). The town is also well-known for its quality red wine for a long time ago.
On the hill above Jelsa there is Tor, a massive fortification built of huge regular shaped blocks of stone joined without mortar. It was a Greek observation point, which stands on an older Illyrian fort. This fort is from the ancient period and it was of great importance in the Middle Ages. Jelsa was being developed since the 14th century as the port of Pitve, the village 3 km far away from the sea. Jelsa developed especially in the 19th century, due to shipbuilding and navigation. This conditioned its urban expansion and its acquisition of the main role on the central part of the island.
Jelsa has numerous cultural and historical monuments. The most famous are:
Church of St. Mary's Assumption (from 1331), today the parish church, Our Lady of Health Church built in 1535 at the top of Racic hill (the hill itself offers a beautiful view of valley and the port), The Church of St. Rock built in the second part of the 16th century, The Church of St. Michael built in 1463, Lapidary (a collection of stone monuments) contains about twenty stone monuments dating back from ancient and mediaeval times, Perivoj (public garden) - one of the largest and most beautiful parks in Dalmatia, created in 1870 on alluvial terrain (the large poplars, pine and palm trees, acacias and oleanders, bay laurel and other Mediterranean plants add to the beauty of the park), Pjaca (main square) situated in the centre of Jelsa (on the west side of the square there is a natural water spring, also known as the small river Slatina, which has been used by the local inhabitants since the ancient times), Square of St. John which is one of the most beautiful squares from the Renaissance-Baroque era, with a small octagonal St. John church from the end of the 15th century and small church of St. Luke which is in the cove 4 km from Jelsa. In this area there are remains from the Roman period.

We are going further, towards Korčula, the hometown of Marco Polo...

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Korčula: a historic fortified town on the protected east coast of the island of Korčula in the Adriatic.The old city is surrounded by walls, and the streets are arranged in a herringbone pattern allowing free circulation of air but protecting against strong winds. Korcula is tightly built on a promontory that guards the narrow sound between the island and the mainland. Building outside the walls was forbidden until the 18th century, and the wooden drawbridge was only replaced in 1863. All of Korčula's narrow streets are stepped with the notable exception of the street running alongside the southeastern wall. The street is called the Street of Thoughts as one did not have to worry about the steps.The town's historic sites include the central Romanesque-Gothic Cathedral of St Mark (built from 1301 to 1806), the 15th-century Franciscan monastery with a beautiful Venetian Gothic cloister, the civic council chambers, the palace of the former Venetian governors, grand 15th and 16th century palaces of the local merchant nobles, and the massive city fortifications.

 

Hvar: the king of the island-towns, according to many the most beautiful posh place for a night out, nevertheless it's a town full of historical heritage. The town with the oldest theater in Europe. It is situated on the south-west coast of the island in a beautiful bay protected by the Pakleni islands. Once town of stormy history today Hvar is one of the most visited and most important tourist centers of the Adriatic.

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The oldest European theater, the Fortress, the Arsenal, the Town lodge, the cathedral, the Franciscan monastery, are some of the sights that will dazzle you with their beauty and take you back in time when Venetia, Austria or Napoleon were governing Hvar. But Hvar is not only about sights. It is also a port open to the sea and the Pakleni islands, it is a unique climate suitable for healing, it is its beaches and restaurants, clubs,. that have been a glowing tourist center for almost a century and a half!

Let's go to Vis, our most distant island...

Vis
(Greek: Issa) is the most outerly lying larger croatian island in the Adriatic Sea, and is part of the Central Dalmatian group of islands, with an area of 90.26 km² and a population of 3,617 (as of 2001). Of all the inhabited Croatian islands, it is the farthest from the coast. The highest peak of Vis is called Hum, 587 m high.
There are two towns on the island, Vis and Komiža, both located on the sea coast.
Vis was inhabited by the time of the neolithic period. In the 4th century B.C., the tyrant of Siracuse, Dionysius the Elder, founded the colony Issa on the island. Later, it became an independent city-state, and even minted its own money and founded its own colonies elsewhere. In the first century B.C., the island was held by the Liburnians. In the 4th century BC Syracusan Greeks colonised the Island. Its importance in the region ended with the first Illyro-Roman war.
The island then passed, for several centuries, under the rule of the Republic of Venice, until 1797.
After the short-lived Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy, with Italian as the official language, it passed under the rule of Austrian Empire.At the end of World War I, it passed under Italian rule in the period 1918 and 1921, and then was ceded to Yugoslavia. Shortly after that it was assigned to Italy. During the World War II, it was occupied by Yugoslavian partisans under the command of Tito and by a British flotilla in 1941 and 1943. At the end of the war the island returned to Yugoslavia. In 1991 it became part of independent Croatia.

Muster_u_Komizi Na_vinogradu Amfore_Lamboglia_2_u_viskoj_arheoloskoj_zbirci_kraj._2._poc


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