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Sarajevo
is the capital and the largest city of Bosnia and Herzegovina with a
total population of approximately 600 000 people. Sarajevo is
situated in the area called the Sarajevo Field and the whole area is
surrounded by the Olympic mountains.
The average altitude of the urban center of Srajevo is 500 m (1640
feet). The mountains surrounding Sarajevo are called the Olympic
mountains as Sarajevo hosted the Winter Olympic games in 1984, thus
even today some refer to Sarajevo as the Olympic City. Snow sports
and winter recreation is a must of Sarajevo. Its Bjelesnica and
Jahorina mountains are one of the best European winter leisure spots.
Sarajevo is located in the Central European Time zone (GMT +1) which
basically means that it is already 1 pm in Sarajevo when it is noon
in London.
Sarajevo has a mild continental climate with average summer
temperature of 19,1°C (66 °F) and avarage winter temperature being
-1,3 °C (30 °F).
The ones travelling from the US should better prepare with jacks and
converters as Sarajevo has a 220 V - 50 Hz frequency electric supply.
The tap water in Sarajevo is safe to drink as it pours down as cool
as the source and tastes really great so don't get surprised when
you see people drinking the water from Sebilj (the old traditional
fountain on Baščaršija). You should follow the example.
Public transport is the important backbone of the whole Sarajevo as
complex network of trams, trolley buses, buses, and mini buses
interconnects all parts of the city. Alternative to the public
transport is the Sarajevo taxi service as the service provided is
one of the cheapest in all of Europe. For an example if you would to
take a taxi from Sarajevo airport to the very center of the city it
would cost you between 10 and 15 KM (BAM). |
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History
Three historic events that put
Sarajevo in the history books are: The assasination of Ferdinand and
the start of World War I, the winter Olympic games of 1984, and the
shelling of the city in the ethnic conflict of the Yugoslav war.
Earliest history of the Sarajevo valley dates back to the neolithic
when it was the craddle of the so called Butmir culture, a neolithic
society named after the finds in Butmir nearby Sarajevo. It is also
known that the Illyrians had several settlements in the valley.
Illyrians were the indiginous tribes that lived on the western part
of the Balkan peninsula. During Roman times, after the conquest of
the Illyrians, a town named Aquae Sulphurae ("sulfuric thermal
spring") was known to exist in the place of Ilidža, one of todays
suburbs of Sarajevo. After the Romans, the Goths settled the area
and after them in the 7th century came the Slavs. The settlement
Vrh-Bosna existed in the Sarajevo valley as a Slavic citadel from
1263 until it was conquered by the Ottoman empire in 1429. However
it was not before the 1461 that the settlement was established as a
city, named Bosna-Saraj, around the citadel. The city was founded by
Isa-Beg Isaković, the first governor of Bosnia.
The name Sarajevo is derived from Turkish saray ovası, meaning "the
field around saray" (Saray is a Turkic word of Persian origin which
means 'palace').
The Ottomans ruled Bosnia for five centuries and Sarajevo grew to
develop as an important cultural and trade centre of the region.
Although Isa-Beg Isaković was the one who founded Sarajevo, his
succedor as the governor of Bosnia, Gazi Husrev-beg was the one who
made it what it is today. He was responsible for the construction of
the famous Gazi Husrev-beg's Mosque, the Tsar's Mosque, and numerous
other mosques throughout the city. He also constructed the first
Sarajevo library, madrassa, school of Sufi philosophy, and clock
tower (Sahat Kula), along with numerous other important cultural
structures. The body of Gazi Husrev-beg remains to this day in a
tomb in the courtyard of his mosque. The tomb bears an inscription:
"May the mercy and generosity of god fall upon him every day". Many
even today visit the tomb to give prayer each day.
After
the long period of Ottoman rule, Austro-Hungarian empire acquired
Bosnia (1878-1918) and it was during this rule that many buildings
In Sarajevo were built in a recognisable "Austrian manner". This is
what gave Sarajevo its specific European flavour. Moreover Sarajevo
was industrialized by Austria-Hungary, who used the city as a
testing area for new inventions, such as electric tramways (1885),
before installing them in Vienna.
When the First World War ended Austrian crown province Bosnia and
Herzegovina, found itself in the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and
Slovenes later renamed in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. In 1941 the
Nazi Germany invaded Yugoslavia and Sarajevo was bombarded. Yugoslav
Partisan resistance fighters, led by Josip Broz Tito, liberated
Sarajevo on 6 April 1945 and Sarajevo has become an important
regional center of a newly formed Yugoslavia.
In 1992 as as the former communist state of Yugoslavia was
disintegrating, Sarajevo was surrounded by the "Jugoslovenska
Narodna Armija" (Yugoslav National Army) and a number of
paramilitary (Bosnian Serb Army) formations. The siege of Sarajevo
and the war in Bosnia and Herzegovina resulted in many deaths, large
scale destruction, and dramatic population shifts. As soon as the
war ended with the Dayton Agreement of November 1995 the slow
healling process started.
Today, once again, Sarajevo is able to welcome you and present you
with its wonderful attractions and beauty uncompared. |