Il campanile della Cattedrale di San Marco sorge sopra i tetti rossi nella città di Korčula nella contea di Dubrovnik-Neretva, Croazia. La cattedrale fu iniziata all'inizio degli anni '1400 Nel 1426, gran parte della chiesa e i primi due piani del campanile erano stati completati. Nel 1440, il terzo piano del campanile era stato costruito. Più tardi negli anni '1400 una doppia lanterna fu aggiunta alla sommità della torre.
2832 x 4256 px | 24 x 36 cm | 9,4 x 14,2 inches | 300dpi
Data acquisizione:
7 settembre 2007
Ubicazione:
Korčula, Dubrovnik-Neretva county, Croatia
Altre informazioni:
Questa immagine potrebbe avere delle imperfezioni perché è storica o di reportage.
Korčula, Dubrovnik-Neretva county, Croatia: the campanile of the Cathedral of St Mark (Sv Marko) rises above the old town. The cathedral was begun early in the 1400s on the site of an earlier Romanesque building, of which only the three apses have remained. By 1426, much of the church and the first two stories of the bell tower had been completed. By 1440, the third storey of the bell tower had been constructed. Later in the 1400s, sumptuous Gothic decoration was added to the western gable end and the double lantern on top of the bell tower. Korčula is an island and town in the Adriatic, in the Southern Dalmatian archipelago, reached by ferry from the mainland. Korčula town was the birthplace of Marco Polo (1254 - 1324), Venetian merchant and explorer, and is today known as ‘Little Dubrovnik’. A Greek colony was founded on Korčula island in the 4th century BCE. In about the 6th century CE, the island became subject to the Byzantine Empire and in the 9th century was colonised by the Slavonic Neretvans. In 1000 AD, it submitted to the Doge of Venice. Shortly afterwards, it acceded to Croatia and after 1102 to Hungary-Croatia. In 1214, the island established its own independent statute, said to be the oldest in Dalmatia. There was a period of Venetian rule in the 1200s and 1300s, but the Venetians departed in 1358 and Korčula was ceded to Hungary. Then, in 1420, in common with Dalmatia, she returned to Venice. After the fall of Venice in 1797, the island was occupied successively by Austria, France, Russia and Great Britain before reverting to Austria from 1815 - 1918. Italy occupied the island during the First World War and until 1921, when Korčula was joined to Yugoslavia. D1129.B3472