Split, Hvar, & Dubrovnik: Three Pearls of Croatia

A panoramic view of the walled city Dubrovnik Croatia. Hvar or Split are equally beautiful.
A panoramic view of the walled city Dubrovnik Croatia. Hvar or Split are equally beautiful.

Hvar or Split, You Can’t Go Wrong in Coastal Croatia

By Terje Raa

My favorite part of Croatia forms a triangle, blue as the Adriatic and with corners made up of three pearls: Split, Hvar and Dubrovnik. Whether you choose Split or Dubrovnik, you can’t go wrong in this part of the world!

It’s an oddly shaped triangle, in which Split marks the upper corner and Hvar Town lies vertically below, quite nearby. The long sides point southeastwards, along the Dalmatian coast, all the way to Dubrovnik. My triangle is simply a sea-locked copy of this wedge-shaped part of the country.

Hvar Town - photos by Terje Raa
Hvar Town -Terje Raa photos.

Whether arriving by air or sea, Split is a popular gateway. Its splendors must wait, though, for I’m already approaching the island of Hvar in a catamaran due to drop me after one hour at the hippest holiday resort of Croatia, Hvar Town. There is a ferry from Split to Hvar.

This paradise comes in two versions; low season offering quiet medieval charms, for example in September, and a high season party zone abounding with yacht-borne celebrities.

Famous Cocktail Bar

Carpe Diem, a famous cocktail bar close to the catamaran’s docking place, has become a trademark of Hvar Town. Around here, I might run into some celebrities at night, when they appear in the bar, on the quarterdeck of their luxurious yachts or under the palms of the Riva promenade.

Hotel Slavija, Carpe Diem’s neighbor, and contrast attracts a different crowd; mainly middle-aged couples taking an after-dinner dance to retro pop tunes by Legino Band.

Strains of opera pour out of the Venetian Loggia one morning, part of Hotel Palace. Opera has certainly sounded on many occasions from the stage opposite, Hvar Theater, established in 1612 on the first floor of the Arsenal.

Climbing in Dubrovnik

Loggia and the Arsenal mark the lower end of the spectacular St. Stephen Square, whose upper end is adorned with the Cathedral’s trefoil facade. Promenades on either side of the bay lead to small pebble beaches, whereas the most frequented beaches, some of them for naturists only, are found on the Pakleni Islets in front of the town.

The Southern Pearl

Ferry from Split to Hvar, the Jadrolinija.
Ferry from Split to Hvar, the Jadrolinija.

The old ship Liburnija is going to do the lower side of my triangle, a line so long that she needs eight hours and allows herself a short stop on the island of Korcula.

At the end of the line, the walled-in city of Dubrovnik is nowhere to be seen, until a local bus lets me off at Pile Gate where St. Blaise, the city’s patron saint, welcomes me from his niche above the entrance.

We already met; before the war in the early 1990s, the effects of which are depicted in great detail on a white poster next to Pile.

Climbing in Dubrovnik
Climbing in Dubrovnik

Circling the defensive walls – 1.2 miles (2 km) long, up to 82 feet (25 m) high and 20 feet(6 m) thick – is a challenge, both physically and mentally. Thousands of new red tiles tell their own story, really striking if you see them from the highest section, the northern land side.

With the Adriatic shining on two sides, it’s like having history served on a silver platter, a history including 450 years of independence as a city republic, beginning in 1358.
Southern Palace Wall, Split

Ragusa, as Dubrovnik was named until 1918, was an aristocratic republic headed by a Rector, who was replaced every month, while the noblemen of the Grand Council and the Senate held the real power. The Republic based its wealth on trade and a dominant merchant fleet.

As to safety, the defensive walls had, of course, a deterrent effect, but more crucial were perhaps all the skillful diplomats promoting the republic’s interests through a network of consulates.

A devastating earthquake in 1667 left only the city walls intact. The majority of the Renaissance and Gothic buildings were in ruins and most were rebuilt in the more modest Baroque style. In 1808, Napoleon disbanded the Republic.

Placa, the merely 1,000-foot-long main street (300m), traverses the entire city from Pile in the west to Luza Square in the east, the latter surrounded by the Sponza Palace, St. Blaise Church and the Rector’s Palace.

Southern Palace Wall, Split
Southern Palace Wall, Split

Countless cultural events take place in Luza Square, especially during the Dubrovnik Festival in July and August, but even September is lively.

Last night, a midnight concert of classical music attracted a large crowd, and this morning, the square was invaded by folk dancers from Korcula, giving everybody a fright when pretending to attack each other with their swords.

A Roman Emperor

An intercity bus does its best to draw the last line of my triangle, the upper long side, although the coastal road to Split is anything but a straight line.

The views, however, compensate for that. During four and a half hours, the scenery keeps me awake by alternating between uphill and downhill, sharp bends, peaceful bays with islands opposite, and verdant greenery, particularly in the Neretva Delta.

The bus drops me near Diocletian’s Palace, like Dubrovnik a World Heritage site. Diocletian, Roman Emperor, built the vast palace for his own retirement 1700 years ago, a structure measuring 700 feet. by 600 feet (215 by 180 m), centuries later developing into a medieval town and today the busy core of Split, even containing a hotel, the old Hotel Slavija.

Along the southern palace wall, a magnificent palm-clad promenade, Riva, stretches away westwards.

Should Diocletian reappear, and the idea is not far-fetched, for the man considered himself an almighty half-god, then he would probably start his tour on the Riva, enter the palace through Bronze Gate and take a close look in his cellars, in which he used to lock up Christians who refused to worship him as their deity.

He could continue to the central square, the colonnaded Peristyle, where his seldom appearances took place.

Lazy Split

Lazy Split
Lazy Split, a great beach destination

In his own mausoleum at Peristyle, today the Cathedral of Split, the Emperor might reveal what happened to his deceased body. It actually disappeared at some point in history.

A careful ascent to the bell tower’s top could show him what became of Split: a modern city of 200,000 inhabitants, thus confirming that he chose the perfect location; on a lovely bay backed by bluish mountains.

In case he leaves through the western gate, Iron Gate, Diocletian would certainly be tempted to a coffee break on the most beloved square in Split, Narodni Trg.

To see my triangle, at least part of it, in a perspective, I proceed to the far end of the harbor, out where the ACI Marina lies at the foot of a little park, Sustipan, from a distance looking like a green plateau. This abandoned cemetery, the epitome of peace and beauty, apparently sharpens my senses. While admiring

Split through a forest of masts, I sense the nearness of Hvar, and images of faraway Dubrovnik seem to emerge from the gentle waves of the Adriatic.

Terje Raa is a Norwegian freelance writer based in Copenhagen, Denmark.

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One thought on “Split, Hvar, & Dubrovnik: Three Pearls of Croatia

  1. Great article, thanks for the tips!

    Indeed, Croatia is indeed home to many amazing sights and sounds, but in this beautiful land also lie some tourist-targeting scammers. Do be wary of the hostess bar scam, beach thieves, overcharging restaurants, pickpocketing, flat tire scam, overcharging taxi drivers, holiday apartment scam, car rental scam, border scam and many more!

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