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Coordinates: 46°03′20″N 14°30′30″E / 46.05556°N 14.50833°E / 46.05556; 14.50833
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{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2019}}
{{About|the Croatian capital city}}
{{short description|Capital of Croatia}}
{{short description|Capital of Slovenia}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2020}}
{{EngvarB|date=December 2016}}
{{Infobox settlement
{{Infobox settlement
| name = Zagreb
|name = Ljubljana
| official_name = ''Grad Zagreb''<br /> City of Zagreb
|official_name =
| settlement_type = [[Capital city]]
|settlement_type = [[Capital city]]
| image_flag = Flag of Zagreb.svg
|image_skyline = Ljubljana Montage 2.png
| flag_size = 130px
|imagesize =
|image_caption = <small>Clockwise from top: [[Ljubljana Castle]] in the background and [[Franciscan Church of the Annunciation]] in the foreground; [[Visitation of Mary Church (Ljubljana)|Visitation of Mary Church]] on [[Rožnik Hill]]; [[Kazina Palace]] at [[Congress Square]]; one of the Dragons on the [[Dragon Bridge (Ljubljana)|Dragon Bridge]]; [[Ljubljana City Hall]]; [[Ljubljanica]] with the [[Triple Bridge]] in distance</small>
| image_seal =
| seal_size =
|image_flag = Flag of Ljubljana.svg
| image_shield = Coat of arms of Zagreb.svg
|image_shield = Blason ville si Ljubljana (Slovénie).svg|
| shield_size = 90px
mapsize = 230px
| image_skyline = {{Photomontage
| map_caption = Location of Ljubljana in Slovenia
| pushpin_map = Slovenia#Europe
| photo1a = Patriotic Church (232085035).jpeg{{!}}St. Mark's Square
| photo2a = Teatro Nacional, Zagreb, Croacia, 2014-04-13, DD 02.JPG{{!}}Croatian National Theater in Zagreb
| photo2b = Archivo Nacional, Zagreb, Croacia, 2014-04-20, DD 01.JPG{{!}}[[Croatian State Archives]]
| photo3a = Business Centre T-Com Zagreb 2 - Architect Marijan Turkulin.jpg{{!}}Highrise buildings
| photo3b = Zagreb Tram Dubrava.JPG{{!}}Zagreb Tram
| photo4a = Pabellón del Arte, Zagreb, Croacia, 2014-04-20, DD 05.JPG{{!}}Art Pavilion
| spacing = 1
| position = center
| color_border = white
| color = grey
| border = grey
| size = 260
| foot_montage = Clockwise, from top: [[St. Mark's Square, Zagreb|St. Mark's Square]], [[Croatian State Archives]], [[Trams in Zagreb|Zagreb Tram]], [[Art Pavilion, Zagreb|Art Pavilion]], [[Cibona Tower|Cibona]] & [[HOTO Tower|HOTO towers]] and [[Croatian National Theatre in Zagreb|Croatian National Theatre]].}}
| mapsize = 230px
| map_caption = Location of Zagreb in Croatia
| pushpin_map = Croatia#Europe
| pushpin_relief = 1
| pushpin_relief = 1
| coordinates = {{coord|46|03|20|N|14|30|30|E|region:SI_type:city(200000)|display=inline,title}}
| pushpin_label_position =
|subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]]
| pushpin_mapsize =
|subdivision_name = {{flag|Slovenia}}
| pushpin_map_caption =
|subdivision_type1 = Municipality
| coordinates = {{coord|45|49|N|15|59|E|region:HR|display=inline,title}}
|subdivision_name1 = [[City Municipality of Ljubljana]]
| subdivision_type = [[List of sovereign states|Country]]
|established_title = First mention
| subdivision_name = {{flag|Croatia}}
|established_date = 1112–1125
| subdivision_type1 = [[Counties of Croatia|County]]
|established_title1 = Town privileges
| subdivision_type2 =
|established_date1 = 1220–1243
| subdivision_name1 = [[File:Flag of Zagreb.svg|border|23px]] [[City of Zagreb]]
| subdivision_name2 =
|parts_type = Subdivisions
| established_title2 = [[Roman Catholic Diocese of Zagreb|RC diocese]]
|leader_party = {{nowrap|[[Positive Slovenia|PS]]}}
| established_date2 = 1094
|leader_title = Mayor
| established_title3 = [[Golden Bull of 1242|Free royal city]]
|leader_name = [[Zoran Janković (politician)|Zoran Janković]]
| established_date3 = 1242
|area_total_km2 = 163.8
|elevation_footnotes = <ref name="YB2002"/>
| parts_type = Subdivisions
|elevation_m = 295
| parts = 17 [[Districts of Zagreb|city districts]]<br/>218 local committees<br/> (70 [[Settlement (Croatia)|settlements]])
| government_footnotes =
|elevation_ft = 968
|population_total = {{rise}} 292,988
| government_type = [[Mayor–council government|Mayor-Council]]
|population_as_of = 2019
| leader_party = [[Milan Bandić 365 - The Party of Labour and Solidarity|BM 365]]
|population_footnotes = <ref name="SURS-LJ-LJ">{{cite web |url=https://www.stat.si/KrajevnaImena/en/Settlements/Details/2370 |title=Ljubljana, Ljubljana |publisher=Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia |accessdate=28 September 2016 |work=Place Names}}</ref>
| leader_title = [[List of mayors of Zagreb|Mayor]]
|population_density_km2 = 1712
| leader_name = [[Milan Bandić]]
| population_metro = 537,712<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rralur.si/sl/regija/osebna-izkaznica|title=Osebna izkaznica – RRA LUR|work=rralur.si}}</ref>
| leader_title1 = [[Zagreb Assembly|City Assembly]]
|population_demonym =
| leader_name1 = {{Collapsible list
|postal_code_type = Postal codes
|title = 51 members
|postal_code = 1000–1211, 1231, 1260, 1261<ref>[http://www.postnestevilke.com/postne-stevilke-1000-1434.php Zip Codes in Slovenia from 1000 to 1434 (in Slovene)] Acquired on 28 April 2015.</ref>
|frame_style= border: none; padding: 0;
|area_code = 01 (+386 1 if calling from abroad)
|list_style=text-align:left;display:none;
|website = [http://www.ljubljana.si/ www.ljubljana.si]
|
|footnotes =
*[[Bandić Milan 365 - Labour and Solidarity Party|BM 365]], [[Green List (Croatia)|ZL]], [[People's Party - Reformists|NS-R]] (14)
|timezone = [[Central European Time|CET]]
*[[Social Democratic Party of Croatia|SDP]], [[Civic-Liberal Alliance|GLAS]], [[Croatian People's Party-Liberal Democrats|HNS]], [[Croatian Peasants Party|HSS]], [[Forward Croatia-Progressive Alliance|NH-PS]] (13)
|utc_offset = +1
*[[Croatian Social Liberal Party|HSLS]], [[Sandra Švaljek|NL SŠ]] (8)
|timezone_DST = [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]]
*[[Croatian Democratic Union|HDZ]] (7)
|utc_offset_DST = +2
*[[Independents for Croatia|EH-NHR]] (5)
|blank_name = [[Vehicle registration plates of Slovenia|Vehicle Registration]]
*[[Zagreb is Ours|ZN]], [[New Left (Croatia)|NL]], [[Workers' Front (Croatia)|RF]], [[For the City|ZG]] (4)
|blank_info = LJ
}}
}}
{{Quote box
| unit_pref = Metric
| width = 24em
| area_footnotes = <ref name=census>{{cite web|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/zgstat/o_zagrebu_stat.html |title=City of zagreb 2006 |publisher=City of Zagreb, Statistics Department |accessdate=25 January 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071011040234/http://www.zagreb.hr/zgstat/o_zagrebu_stat.html |archivedate=11 October 2007}}</ref>
| align = right
| area_magnitude =
| bgcolor = #B0C4DE
| area_total_km2 = 641
| title = Historical affiliations
| area_land_km2 =
| fontsize = 86%
| area_water_km2 =
| quote =
| area_water_percent =
{{flagicon image|Wappen Erzbistum Salzburg.png}} [[Prince-Archbishopric of Salzburg|Archbishop of Salzburg]] (1112–1555)<br />
| area_urban_km2 = 202.4
{{Flag|Habsburg Monarchy|[[Duchy of Styria]]}} (1555–1804)<br />
| area_metro_km2 = 3719
{{Flag|Austrian Empire}} (1804–1809, 1814–1867)<br />
| elevation_footnotes = <ref name=ljetopis>{{cite journal
{{flagicon image|Flag of France (1794–1815, 1830–1958).svg}} [[Illyrian Provinces]] (1809–1814; <small>capital</small>)<br />
|url =http://www1.zagreb.hr/zgstat/documents/Ljetopis%202007/STATISTICKI%20LJETOPIS%202007.pdf
{{Flag|Austria-Hungary}} (1867–1918)<br />
|title =Statistički ljetopis Grada Zagreba 2007
{{flag|State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs}} (1918)<br />
|journal =Statistički Ljetopis Zagreba
{{flag|Kingdom of Yugoslavia}}{{refn|Known as: Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (1918–1929)}} (1918–1941)<br />
|year =2013
{{flag|Kingdom of Italy}} (1941–1945; <small>occupied</small>)<br />
|accessdate =12 November 2008
{{flagicon image|Flag of Germany (1935–1945).svg}} [[Nazi Germany]] (1943–1945; <small>de facto</small>)<br />
|issn =1330-3678
{{flag|SFR Yugoslavia}}{{refn|Known as: Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia (1945–1963); Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (1963–1992)}} (1945–1991)<br />
|language =Croatian, English}}</ref>
{{flag|Slovenia}} (1991–present)
| elevation_m = 158
| elevation_ft = 518
| elevation_min_m = 122
| population_total = 790,017
| population_as_of = 2011 census
| population_footnotes = <ref name="census-2011-settlements"/><ref name="census-2011-districts"/><!--<ref name="CityMayors"/> This reference for this statistic: http://www.citymayors.com/statistics/largest-cities-mayors-ad2.html -->
| population_est = 812,635
| pop_est_as_of = 2019
| pop_est_footnotes = <ref name="2017 pop est">{{cite web|title=Grad Zagreb Population|url=http://population.city/croatia/adm/grad-zagreb/|website=Population.City|accessdate=10 June 2017|language=en|date=14 September 2016}}</ref>
| population_density_km2 =
4,055
| population_metro = 1,228,941
| population_note =
| population_demonym = Zagrepčanin ([[Croatian language|hr]])<br />Zagreber ([[English language|en]])
| blank_name = GDP ([[Purchasing Power Parity|PPP]])
| blank_info = 2017
| blank1_name = &nbsp;- Total
| blank1_info = $25 billion / €22.7 billion
| blank2_name = &nbsp;- Per capita
| blank2_info = $32,404 / €28,237
|blank3_name = [[Human Development Index|HDI]] (2017)
|blank3_info = 0.890<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://globaldatalab.org/shdi/shdi/|title=Sub-national HDI - Subnational HDI - Global Data Lab|website=globaldatalab.org}}</ref> – <span style="color:#090;">very high</span>
| postal_code_type = Postal code
| postal_code = HR-10 000, HR-10 010, HR-10 020, HR-10 040, HR-10 090
| area_code = +385 1
| area_code_type = [[Telephone numbers in Croatia|Area code]]
| registration_plate = [[Vehicle registration plates of Croatia|ZG]]
| website = {{URL|http://zagreb.hr}}
| footnotes =
| city_logo =
| citylogo_size =
| image_dot_map =
| dot_mapsize =
| dot_map_caption =
| dot_x =
| dot_y =
| established_title4 = Unified
| established_date4 = 1850
| population_density_metro_km2 = auto
| timezone = [[Central European Time|CET]]
| utc_offset = +1
| timezone_DST = [[Central European Summer Time|CEST]]
| utc_offset_DST = +2
| elevation_max_m = 1035
}}
}}
'''Ljubljana''' ({{IPAc-en|UK|ˌ|lj|uː|b|ˈ|l|j|ɑː|n|ə|,_|ˌ|l|ʊ|b|l|i|ˈ|ɑː|n|ə}},<ref>{{Cite Oxford Dictionaries|Ljubljana|accessdate=21 July 2019}}</ref><ref name="Collins">{{cite web|url=https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/ljubljana|title=Ljubljana|work=[[Collins English Dictionary]]|publisher=[[HarperCollins]]|accessdate=21 July 2019}}</ref><ref name="Longman">{{cite web|url=https://www.ldoceonline.com/dictionary/ljubljana|title=Ljubljana|work=[[Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English]]|publisher=[[Longman]]|accessdate=4 September 2019}}</ref> {{IPAc-en|US|ˌ|lj|uː|b|l|i|ˈ|ɑː|n|ə|,_|l|i|ˌ|uː|-}},<ref name="Collins"/><ref name="Longman"/><ref>{{cite American Heritage Dictionary|Ljubljana|accessdate=21 July 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite LPD|3}}</ref><ref>{{cite EPD|18}}</ref> {{IPA-sl|ljuˈbljàːna|lang|Ljubljana.ogg}},<ref>{{cite web|title=Slovenski pravopis 2001: Ljubljana|url=http://bos.zrc-sazu.si/c/SP/neva.exe?name=sp&expression=Ljubljana&hs=1}}</ref> <small>locally also</small> {{IPA-sl|luˈblàːna|}}; also known by other [[#Name and symbol|historical names]]<!-- Please maintain the naming conventions [[WP:PLACE#General_guidelines]]#2.The lead and [[WP:ALTNAME#Separate_section_usage]] and don't add alternative English or unofficial foreign names here-->) is the [[capital (political)|capital]] and largest city of [[Slovenia]].<ref name="Portrait2010">{{cite book |url=http://www.stat.si/doc/pub/PortretSlovenijaEU2010.pdf |title=Statistični portret Slovenije v EU 2010 |language=Slovenian, English|trans-title=Statistical Portrait of Slovenia in the EU 2010 |publisher=Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia |first=Vojka |last=Vuk Dirnberk |author2=Tomaž Valantič |issn=1854-5734 |accessdate=2 February 2011}}</ref><ref name="GV52-2">{{Cite news|url=http://www.geodetski-vestnik.com/52/2/gv52-2_290-312.pdf |title=Small and Medium-Size Towns as the Basis of Polycentric Urban Development |authors=Zavodnik Lamovšek, Alma. Drobne, Samo. Žaucer, Tadej |journal=Geodetski Vestnik |publisher=Association of Surveyors of Slovenia |ISSN=0351-0271 |year=2008 |volume=52 |issue=2 |page=303}}</ref> It has been the cultural, educational, economic, political, and administrative centre of independent Slovenia since 1991.


During antiquity, a Roman city called [[Emona]] stood in the area.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.culture.si/en/Emona,_Legacy_of_a_Roman_City|title=Emona, Legacy of a Roman City – Culture of Slovenia|website=www.culture.si|access-date=2016-04-13}}</ref> Ljubljana itself was first mentioned in the first half of the 12th century. Situated at the middle of a trade route between the northern [[Adriatic Sea]] and the [[Danube]] region, it was the historical capital of [[Carniola]],<ref>{{cite web|last=Mehle Mihovec |first=Barbka |title=Kje so naše meje? |url=http://www.gorenjskiglas.si/novice/priloga_moja_gorenjska/index.php?action=clanek&id=18737 |date=19 March 2008 |work=Gorenjski glas |publisher=Gorenjski glas |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Where are our borders? |accessdate=7 August 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080531165835/http://www.gorenjskiglas.si/novice/priloga_moja_gorenjska/index.php?action=clanek&id=18737 |archivedate=31 May 2008 }}</ref> one of the [[Slovenes|Slovene]]-inhabited parts of the [[Habsburg Monarchy]].<ref name="Portrait2010"/> It was under [[House of Habsburg|Habsburg]] rule from the Middle Ages until the dissolution of the [[Austria-Hungary|Austro-Hungarian]] Empire in 1918. After [[World War II]], Ljubljana became the capital of the [[Socialist Republic of Slovenia]], part of the [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia]]. It retained this status until Slovenia became independent in 1991 and Ljubljana became the capital of the newly formed state.<ref name="STAT11">{{cite book | chapterurl=http://www.stat.si/letopis/2011/05_11/05-11-11.htm |title=Statistični letopis 2011 |trans-title=Statistical Yearbook 2011 |chapter=Volitve |trans-chapter=Elections |page=108 |publisher=Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia |work=Statistical Yearbook 2011 |year=2011 |volume=15 |issn=1318-5403}}</ref>
'''Zagreb''' ({{IPAc-en|ˈ|z|ɑː|ɡ|r|ɛ|b|,_|ˈ|z|æ|ɡ|r|ɛ|b|,_|z|ɑː|ˈ|ɡ|r|ɛ|b}};<ref>
{{cite book|last=Wells|first=John C.|year=2008|title=Longman Pronunciation Dictionary|edition=3rd|publisher=Longman|isbn=978-1-4058-8118-0}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Roach|first=Peter|year=2011|title=Cambridge English Pronouncing Dictionary|edition=18th|place=Cambridge|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-15253-2}}</ref> {{IPA-sh|zǎːɡreb|hr|hr-Zagreb.ogg}})<ref>{{cite web|title=Hrvatski jezični portal|url=http://hjp.novi-liber.hr/index.php?show=search_by_id&id=f15nWxR%2B&keyword=Zagreb|accessdate=23 March 2015}}</ref> is the [[capital (political)|capital]] and the largest city of [[Croatia]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Grad Zagreb službene stranice|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> It is located in the northwest of the country, along the [[Sava]] river, at the southern slopes of the [[Medvednica]] mountain. Zagreb lies at an elevation of approximately {{convert|122|m|ft|abbr=on}} [[above mean sea level|above sea level]].<ref>{{cite web|title=OSNOVNI PODACI O GRADU ZAGREBU|url=http://www1.zagreb.hr/zgstat/osnovni_stat_podaci.html|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Zagreb, Zagreb... – ZPR – FER|url=http://web.zpr.fer.hr/ergonomija/2004/hendija/geografski.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070730134020/http://web.zpr.fer.hr/ergonomija/2004/hendija/geografski.htm|url-status=dead|archive-date=30 July 2007|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref>
The estimated population of the city in 2018 was 820,678.<ref>https://www.zagreb.hr/UserDocsImages/arhiva/statistika/ZGubrojkama.pdf</ref> The population of the Zagreb urban agglomeration is 1,086,528,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.zagreb.hr/UserDocsImages/gu%20za%20strategijsko%20planiranje/SRUAZ%202020%20_layout_ENG_digital.pdf |title=Zagreb Urban Agglomeration Development Strategy for the period up to 2020 |date= April 2018 |website= www.zagreb.hr |access-date=28 December 2019}}</ref> approximately a quarter of the total population of Croatia.


==Name and symbol==
Zagreb is a city with a rich history dating from the [[Roman Empire|Roman]] times to the present day. The oldest settlement located in the vicinity of the city was the Roman [[Andautonia]], in today's [[Ščitarjevo]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Arheološki park ANDAUTONIJA|url=http://www.andautonia.com/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Arheološki park ANDAUTONIJA u Ščitarjevu – Arheološki muzej u Zagrebu|url=http://www.amz.hr/naslovnica/virtualna-setnja/arheoloski-park/arheoloski-park-andautonija-u-scitarjevu.aspx|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Povijest – Andautonija|url=http://andautonija.hr/povijest/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120726004638/http://andautonija.hr/povijest/|url-status=dead|archive-date=26 July 2012|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Andautonija – Turistička zajednica Zagrebačke županije|url=http://www.tzzz.hr/mjesta/velika-gorica/andautonija/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> The name "Zagreb" is recorded in 1134, in reference to the foundation of the settlement at [[Kaptol, Zagreb|Kaptol]] in 1094. Zagreb became a [[free royal town]] in 1242.<ref>{{cite web|title=Muzej grada Zagreba – 5. Slobodni kraljevski grad na Gradecu|url=http://www.mgz.hr/hr/postav/kraljevski_grad/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Kralj Bela IV Gradecu izdao Zlatnu bulu kojom je postao slobodni kraljevski grad|url=https://narod.hr/kultura/kralj-bela-iv-gradecu-izdao-zlatnu-bulu-kojom-je-postao-slobodni-kraljevski-grad|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=slobodni kraljevski gradovi i trgovišta &#124; Hrvatska enciklopedija|url=http://www.enciklopedija.hr/natuknica.aspx?id=56666|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=slobodni kraljevski gradec – Grad Zagreb službene stranice|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/slobodni-kraljevski-gradec/39013|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Zlatna bula Bele IV. – Hrvatska enciklopedija|url=http://www.enciklopedija.hr/natuknica.aspx?ID=67295|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> In 1851 Zagreb had its [[List of mayors of Zagreb|first mayor]],<ref>{{cite web|title=Zagrebački gradonačelnici – Grad Zagreb službene stranice|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/zagrebacki-gradonacelnici/15573|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Popis gradonačelnika grada Zagreba / ZGportal Zagreb|url=http://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/zagrebacki-gradonacelnici/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Izabran prvi zagrebački gradonačelnik u povijesti – 1851.|url=http://www.dnevno.hr/ekalendar/na-danasnji-dan/izabran-prvi-zagrebacki-gradonacelnik-u-povijesti-1851-57298/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=15. svibnja 1851. – tko je bio prvi gradonačelnik Zagreba? – narod.hr|url=https://narod.hr/kultura/15-svibnja-1851-tko-prvi-gradonacelnik-zagreba|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> [[Janko Kamauf]].
[[File:Valvasor 1689 Ljubljana lintvern.jpg|thumb|Depiction of the city's coat of arms featuring the [[Saint George and the Dragon|dragon]] on top of the [[Ljubljana Castle|castle]], from [[Valvasor]]'s ''[[The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola]]'', 1689]]
The origin of the name of the city, '''Ljubljana''', is unclear. In the Middle Ages, both the river and the town were also known by the German name '''Laibach'''. This name was in official use as an [[Exonym and endonym|endonym]] until 1918, and it remains frequent as a German exonym, both in common speech and official use. <!-- Please maintain the naming conventions [[Wikipedia:Naming_conventions_(geographic_names)#Alternative_names]] by adding alternative English or unofficial foreign names here--> The city is alternatively named '''Lublana''' in many English language documents.<ref>[https://www.ancestry.com/interactive/1002/44474_08_00011-00575?pid=17781166 U.S., World War II Draft Registration Cards, 1942 for Frank Hren], ancestry.com paid subscription site; accessed December 2017.</ref> The city is called ''[[:szl:Lublana|Lublana]]'' in Silesian, ''[[:it:Lubiana|Lubiana]]'' in Italian, in {{lang-la|Labacum}} and anciently ''Aemona''.<ref>{{cite web|author=Libri Antichi Libri Rari |url=http://www.osservatoriolibri.com/luoghi.html |title=Città di stampa dei LIBRI ANTICHI dei LIBRI VECCHI dei LIBRI RARI |publisher=Osservatoriolibri.com |accessdate=10 December 2011}}</ref>


For most scholars, the problem has been in how to connect the Slovene and the German names. The origin from the [[Slavic languages|Slavic]] ''ljub''- "to love, like" was in 2007 supported as the most probable by the linguist [[Tijmen Pronk]], a specialist in comparative [[Indo-European languages|Indo-European linguistics]] and [[Slovene dialects|Slovene dialectology]], from the [[University of Leiden]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hum.leiden.edu/lucl/organisation/members/pronktc2.html#contact |title=Dr T.C. (Tijmen) Pronk |publisher=Leiden University Centre for Linguistics, University of Leiden |accessdate=24 April 2012 |year=2009}}</ref> He supported the thesis that the name of the river derived from the name of the settlement.<ref>{{cite journal |journal=Folia Onomastica Croatica |volume=16 |year=2007 |pages=185–191 |issn=1330-0695 |title=The Etymology of Ljubljana – Laibach |first=Tijmen |last=Pronk}}</ref> The linguist [[Silvo Torkar]], who specialises in Slovene personal and place names,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://isjfr.zrc-sazu.si/sl/sodelavci/silvo-torkar-sl#page-title |title=Dr. Silvo Torkar |language=Slovenian |publisher=Fran Ramovš Institute of the Slovenian Language |accessdate=24 April 2012|date=6 May 2011 }}</ref> argued at the same place for the thesis that the name ''Ljubljana'' derives from ''Ljubija'', the original name of the [[Ljubljanica|Ljubljanica River]] flowing through it, itself derived from the Old Slavic male name ''Ljubovid'', "the one of a lovely appearance". The name ''Laibach'', he claimed, was actually a hybrid of German and Slovene and derived from the same personal name.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/file/32485/ljubljana_l13_st_08-09_2008.pdf |title=O neprepoznanih ali napačno prepoznanih slovanskih antroponimih v slovenskih zemljepisnih imenih: Čadrg, Litija, Trebija, Ljubija, Ljubljana, Biljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=On the unrecognized or incorrectly recognized Slavic anthroponyms in Slovenian toponyms: Čadrg, Litija, Trebija, Ljubija, Ljubljana, Biljana |pages=257–273 |issn=1330-0695 |journal=The Etymology of Ljubljana – Laibach |first=Tijmen |last=Pronk |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110823142818/http://www.ljubljana.si/file/32485/ljubljana_l13_st_08-09_2008.pdf |archivedate=23 August 2011 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
Zagreb has special status as a Croatian administrative division and is a consolidated city-county (but separated from [[Zagreb County]]),<ref>{{cite web|title=Kakav je status Grada Zagreba? – Ministarstvo uprave|url=https://uprava.gov.hr/print.aspx?id=12937&url=print|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Popis županija, gradova i općina|url=https://uprava.gov.hr/o-ministarstvu/ustrojstvo/uprava-za-politicki-sustav-i-organizaciju-uprave/lokalna-i-podrucna-regionalna-samouprava/popis-zupanija-gradova-i-opcina/846|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Sustav lokalne i područne (regionalne) samouprave|url=https://uprava.gov.hr/print.aspx?id=12643&url=print|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Zakon o Gradu Zagrebu – Zakon.hr|url=https://www.zakon.hr/z/363/Zakon-o-Gradu-Zagrebu|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> and is administratively subdivided into [[Zagreb#City districts|17 city districts]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Gradske četvrti – Grad Zagreb službene stranice|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/gradske-cetvrti/12913|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Gradske četvrti grada Zagreba / ZGportal Zagreb|url=http://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/grad-zagreb-cetvrti/ |accessdate=21 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Doznajte kako su glasale pojedine gradske četvrti Zagreba – Dnevnik.hr|url=http://dnevnik.hr/vijesti/hrvatska/lokalni-izbori-2017-evo-kako-su-glasale-pojedine-gradske-cetvrti-zagreba---477393.html|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> Most of them are at a low elevation along the river [[Posavina|Sava valley]], whereas northern and northeastern city districts, such as [[Podsljeme]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Gradska četvrt Podsljeme – Grad Zagreb službene stranice|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/gradska-cetvrt-podsljeme/162|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Karta Podsljeme – Zagreb – Karta Zagreba|url=http://www.kartazagreba.info/karta-podsljeme.php|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Gradska četvrt Podsljeme / ZGportal Zagreb|url=http://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/grad-zagreb-cetvrti/podsljeme/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> and [[Sesvete]]<ref>{{cite web|title=Udaljenost Sesvete - Zagreb - Udaljenosti.com|url=http://www.udaljenosti.com/udaljenost_sesvete_zagreb/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Karta Sesvete – Zagreb – Karta Zagreba|url=http://www.kartazagreba.info/karta-sesvete.php|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Sesvete – Karta Zagreba|url=http://kartazagreba.net/sesvete|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> districts are situated in the foothills of the [[Medvednica]] mountain,<ref>{{cite web|title=Medvednica / Simboli grada Zagreba / ZGportal Zagreb|url=http://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/simboli-grada-zagreba/medvednica-zagrebacka-gora/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> making the city's geographical image rather diverse. The city extends over {{convert|30|km|0|abbr=off}} east-west and around {{convert|20|km|0|abbr=off}} north-south.<ref>{{cite web|title=Zagreb – Google Karte|url=https://www.google.hr/maps/place/Zagreb/@45.8401104,15.824247,11z/data=!3m1!4b1!4m5!3m4!1s0x4765d692c902cc39:0x3a45249628fbc28a!8m2!3d45.8150108!4d15.981919|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Karta Zagreba|url=http://kartazagreba.net/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref>


The symbol of the city is the [[Ljubljana Dragon]]. It is depicted on the top of the tower of [[Ljubljana Castle]] in the Ljubljana coat of arms and on the Ljubljanica-crossing [[Dragon Bridge (Ljubljana)|Dragon Bridge]] ({{lang|sl|Zmajski most}}).<ref name="ARCH124">{{cite book|author=C Abdunur |title=ARCH'01: Troisième conferénce internationale sur les ponts en arc |publisher=Presses des Ponts |year=2001 |page=124 |isbn=978-2-85978-347-1 }}</ref> It symbolises power, courage, and greatness.
The transport connections, concentration of industry, scientific, and research institutions and industrial tradition underlie its leading economic position in Croatia.<ref>{{cite web|title=Zagreb – naša metropola|url=http://povijest.net/zagreb/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Zagreb – moderna metropola bogate povijesti – HUP Zagreb|url=http://www.hupzagreb.com/destinacije/destinacija-198|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Grad Zagreb – Velegrad zelenog srca – Jutarnji List |url=http://www.jutarnji.hr/arhiva/grad-zagreb-velegrad-zelenog-srca/2123625/ |accessdate=21 June 2017}}</ref> Zagreb is the seat of the [[central government]], [[public administration|administrative bodies]], and almost all [[Government of Croatia|government ministries]].<ref>{{cite web|title=Republika Grad Zagreb – STav|url=http://stav.cenzura.hr/republika-grad-zagreb/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Unitarna i centralizirana Hrvatska zrela za redizajn – Glas Slavonije|url=http://www.glas-slavonije.hr/176472/11/Unitarna-i-centralizirana-Hrvatska-zrela-za-redizajn|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Sindikati traže izdvajanje Grada Zagreba iz statističke podjele RH|url=http://dnevnik.hr/vijesti/hrvatska/sindikati-traze-izdvajanje-grada-zagreba-iz-statisticke-podjele-rh.html|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> Almost all of the [[List of Croatian companies|largest Croatian companies]], [[Mass media|media]], and scientific institutions have their headquarters in the city. Zagreb is the most important transport hub in Croatia where [[Central Europe]], the [[Mediterranean]] and [[Southeast Europe]] meet, making the Zagreb area the centre of the road, rail and air networks of Croatia. It is a city known for its diverse [[economy]], high quality of living, [[Zagreb#Museums|museums]], sporting, and entertainment events. Its main branches of economy are [[high-tech]] industries and the [[service sector]].


There are several explanations on the origin of the Ljubljana Dragon. According to a [[Slavic mythology|Slavic]] myth, the slaying of a dragon releases the waters and ensures the fertility of the earth, and it is thought that the myth is tied to the [[Ljubljana Marshes]], the expansive marshy area that periodically threatens Ljubljana with flooding.<ref name="Exhib_2010">[http://www.mgml.si/media/katalog_9_5.pdf Exhibition catalogue Emona: myth and reality] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131105154411/http://www.mgml.si/media/katalog_9_5.pdf |date=5 November 2013 }}; Museum and Galleries of Ljubljana 2010</ref> According to the celebrated [[Greek mythology|Greek legend]], the [[Argonauts]] on their return home after having taken the [[Golden Fleece]] found a large lake surrounded by a marsh between the present-day towns of [[Vrhnika]] and Ljubljana. It was there that [[Jason]] struck down a monster. This monster has evolved into the [[dragon]] that today is present in the city coat of arms and flag.<ref name="InfoDragon">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/images-of-ljubljana/ |title=The dragon – city emblem |accessdate=2 August 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150907174416/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/images-of-ljubljana/ |archive-date=7 September 2015 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
==Name==
[[File:BASA-142K-1-488-1-Zagreb.jpeg|thumb|Ante Starčević Square]]
[[File:staritrgburze.jpg|thumb|right|[[Croatian Nobles Square (Zagreb)|Croatian Nobles Square]] in 1930s.]]
The etymology of the name ''Zagreb'' is unclear. It was used for the united city only from 1852, but it had been in use as the name of the [[Zagreb bishopric|Zagreb Diocese]] since the 12th century, and was increasingly used for the city in the 17th century.<ref>''Zagrabia'' in [[Giovanni Giacomo de Rossi]]'s ''Mercurio Geografico'' (''Dalmatia Istria Bosnia Servia Croatia parte di Schiavonia [...]'', Rome, c. 1692; [http://www.swaen.com/item.php?id=13422 swaen.com]).</ref>
The name is first recorded in a charter by [[Archdiocese of Esztergom|Ostrogon archbishop]] [[Felician, Archbishop of Esztergom|Felician]], dated 1134, mentioned as ''Zagrabiensem episcopatum''.<ref>Cod. Dipl. II 42: ''rex diuina gratia inspirante ... Zagrabiensem constituit episcopatum videlicet ut quos error idolatrie a dei cultura extraneos fecerat, episcopalis cuira ad viam veritatis reduceret.''
Mladen ANČIĆ, [http://hrcak.srce.hr/164151 "Dva teksta iz sredine 14. stoljeća. Prilog poznavanju „društvenog znanja“ u Hrvatskom Kraljevstvu] ("Two works from the middle of the 14th century: Contribution to the understanding of "social knowledge" in the Croatian Kingdom") ''Starohrvatska prosvjeta'' III.40 (2013).</ref>
The older form of the name is ''Zagrab''. The modern Croatian form ''Zagreb'' is first recorded in a 1689 map by [[Nicolas Sanson]].
An even older form is reflected in Hungarian ''Zabrag'' (recorded from c. 1200 and in use until the 18th century).
For this, Hungarian linguist Gyula Décsy proposes the etymology of ''Chabrag'', a well-attested [[hypocorism]] of the name ''[[Cyprian]]''. The same form is reflected in a number of Hungarian toponyms, such as [[Csepreg]].<ref name="Desy1990">Décsy, Gyula in: Jean-Claude Boulanger (ed.) ''Actes du XVIe Congrès international des sciences onomastiques: Québec, Université Laval, 16–22 août 1987 : le nom propre au carrefour des études humaines et des sciences sociales'', Presses Université Laval (1990), {{ISBN|978-2-7637-7213-4}}. [https://books.google.com/books?id=MLChUpf_66EC&pg=PA202 p. 202].</ref>


It is historically more believable that the dragon was adopted from [[Saint George]], the patron of the Ljubljana Castle chapel built in the 15th century. In the legend of Saint George, the dragon represents the old ancestral [[paganism]] overcome by [[Christianity]]. According to another explanation, related to the second, the dragon was at first only a decoration above the city coat of arms. In the [[Baroque]], it became part of the coat of arms, and in the 19th and especially the 20th century, it outstripped the tower and other elements in importance.
The name might be derived from Proto-Slavic word [[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/grębъ|*''grębъ'']] which means hill, uplift. (However, note Serbo-Croatian ''brȇg'' < Proto-Slavic [[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/bergъ|*''bergъ'']], which ''also'' means '(smaller) hill', and ''za brȇg'' 'to ''or'' toward the hill' for the seemingly [[Metathesis (linguistics)|metathesized]] variant in Hungarian, ''Zabrag'' – modified from assumed *''Zabreg'' because of Hungarian vowel harmony? –, mentioned above.) An Old Croatian reconstructed name [[wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/Zagrębъ|*''Zagrębъ'']] is manifested through the German name of the city Agram.<ref>{{cite web|title=Neke praslavenske riječi u hrvatskome – Hrčak – Srce|url=http://hrcak.srce.hr/168641|accessdate=10 July 2017}}</ref>


==History==
The name ''Agram'' was used in German in the [[Kingdom of Croatia (Habsburg)|Habsburg period]]; this name has been classified as "probably of Roman origin"<ref>Frank Moore Colby, Talcott Williams Dodd, ''The New International Encyclopaedia'', Volume 1, 1918, p. 239.</ref>
{{see also|Timeline of Ljubljana}}
but according to Décsy (1990) it could be an [[Austrian German]] reanalysis of ''*Zugram''.
<ref name="Desy1990"/>
In [[Middle Latin]] and [[New Latin|Modern Latin]], Zagreb is known as ''Agranum'' (the name of an unrelated Arabian city in [[Strabo]]), ''Zagrabia'' or ''Mons Graecensis'' (also ''Mons Crecensis'', in reference to [[Gradec, Zagreb|''Grič'' (Gradec)]]).


===Prehistory===
In Croatian [[folk etymology]], the name of the city has been derived from either the verb ''[[:wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/za|za]]-[[:wikt:Reconstruction:Proto-Slavic/grobъ|grab-]]'', meaning "to scoop" or "to dig". One folk legend illustrating this derivation
Around 2000 BC, the [[Ljubljana Marshes]] in the immediate vicinity of Ljubljana were settled by people living in [[stilt house|pile dwellings]]. [[Prehistoric pile dwellings around the Alps|Prehistoric pile dwellings]] and [[Ljubljana Marshes Wooden Wheel|the oldest wooden wheel in the world]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljanskobarje.si/unesco-na-ljubljanskem-barju/najstarejse-kolo-z-osjo-na-svetu|title=Najstarejše kolo z osjo na svetu – 5150 let|last=novisplet.com|work=ljubljanskobarje.si}}</ref> are among the most notable archeological findings from the marshland. These [[Pile-dwelling culture of the Ljubljana Marshes|lake-dwelling people]] lived through hunting, fishing and primitive agriculture. To get around the marshes, they used [[dugout canoe]]s made by cutting out the inside of tree trunks. Their archaeological remains, nowadays in the [[Municipality of Ig]], have been designated a [[UNESCO World Heritage Site]] since June 2011, in the [[Prehistoric pile dwellings around the Alps|common nomination of six Alpine states]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.ukom.gov.si/en/media_room/newsletter_slovenia_news/news/article/391/2809/1e33cc2ffd/?tx_ttnews&#91;newsletter&#93;=114 |title=Prehistoric Pile Dwellings Listed as UNESCO World Heritage |publisher=Government Communication Office |work=Slovenia News |date=28 June 2011 |access-date=28 June 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140427203207/http://www.ukom.gov.si/en/media_room/newsletter_slovenia_news/news/article/391/2809/1e33cc2ffd/?tx_ttnews&#91;newsletter& |archive-date=27 April 2014 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.washington.embassy.si/fileadmin/user_upload/dkp_51_vwa/newsletter/october_2011/Embassy_s_Newsletter__2011_-_14_-_10_finale.pdf |title=Pile-dwellings in the Ljubljansko Barje on UNESCO List |journal=Embassy Newsletter |publisher=Embassy of Slovenia in Washington |date=14 October 2011 |editor=Maša Štiftar de Arzu}}</ref>
ties the name to a drought of the early 14th century, during which [[Augustin Kažotić]] (c. 1260–1323) is said to have dug a well which miraculously produced water.<ref>Nikola Štambak, ''Zagreb'' (2004), [https://books.google.ch/books?id=QM-ldXH50iAC&pg=PA77 p. 77].</ref>
In another legend,<ref>{{cite web|title='BILA JEDNOM MANDA BAJNA, GRABILA JE IZ BUNARA' Legenda o Manduševcu i nastanku imena Zagreb|url=http://www.zagreb.info/ritam-grada/zagrebacki-misteriji/bila-jednom-manda-bajna-grabila-je-iz-bunara-legenda-o-mandusevcu-i-nastanku-imena-zagreb/10008|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=LEGENDA O ZELENOM KURCU: Što se krije iza priče o Mandi i žednom junaku?|url=http://www.zagreb.info/ritam-grada/zagrebacki-misteriji/legenda-o-imenu-zagreba-sto-se-krije-iza-price-o-mandi-i-zednom-junaku/102904|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Poznate i nepoznate legende o Zagrebu i okolici! - Narodni.NET|url=http://narodni.net/poznate-nepoznate-legende-zagrebu-okolici/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Manduševac, fontana po kojoj je Zagreb dobio ime|url=http://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/simboli-grada-zagreba/mandusevac-fontana-po-kojoj-je-zagreb-dobio-ime/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Zagreb nije oduvijek bio Zagreb. Znate li kako se zvao? – Večernji.hr|url=https://www.vecernji.hr/zagreb/zagreb-nije-oduvijek-bio-zagreb-znate-li-kako-se-zvao-601895|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> a city governor is thirsty and orders a girl named Manda to "scoop" water from [[Ban Jelačić Square#History|Manduševac]] well (nowadays a fountain in Ban Jelačić Square), using the imperative: ''zagrabi, Mando!'' ("Scoop, Manda!").<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20071224154308/http://kulturniturizam.croatia.hr/Home/Legende.aspx?idLanguage=2&idDocument=2547 "Legend about Zagreb".] Croatian National Tourist Board. Retrieved on 12 November 2008.</ref>


Later, the area remained a transit point for numerous tribes and peoples, among them the [[Illyrians]], followed by a mixed nation of the [[Celts]] and the Illyrians called the [[Iapydes]], and then in the 3rd century BC a Celtic tribe, the [[Taurisci]].<ref name="Histo1">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/first-settlers/ |title=First settlers |accessdate=31 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100318073218/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/first-settlers/ |archivedate=18 March 2010 }}</ref>
==History==
{{main|History of Zagreb|Timeline of Zagreb}}
[[File:Kaptol s katedralom 1686.jpg|thumb|left|Kaptol 1686.]]
[[File:The_Zagreb_Cathedral_renovated_according_to_designs_of_Hermann_Bolle_(end_of_19_century).jpg|thumb|left|[[Zagreb Cathedral]] end of 19th century]]
[[File:Jelacicev_trg_1933.jpg|thumb|left|[[Ban Jelačić Square]] 1933.]]
The oldest settlement located near today's Zagreb was a [[Roman Empire|Roman]] town of [[Andautonia]], now [[Šćitarjevo]], which existed between the 1st and the 5th century AD.<ref name=andautonia>{{cite web
|url= http://www.andautonia.com/eng/english.html
|title= The Roman town of Andautonia
|accessdate= 8 November 2008
|work= Andautonia Archaeological Park
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081207040340/http://www.andautonia.com/eng/english.html |archive-date=7 December 2008}}</ref> The first recorded appearance of the name Zagreb is dated to 1094, at which time the city existed as two different city centres: the smaller, eastern [[Kaptol, Zagreb|Kaptol]], inhabited mainly by [[clergy]] and housing [[Zagreb Cathedral]], and the larger, western [[Gradec, Zagreb|Gradec]], inhabited mainly by craftsmen and merchants. Gradec and Kaptol were united in 1851 by [[Josip Jelačić|ban Josip Jelačić]], who was credited for this, with the naming the main city square, [[Ban Jelačić Square]] in his honour.<ref name="Ban Josip Jelačić">{{cite web|url=http://www.hrt.hr/arhiv/ndd/10listopad/1016%20Jelacic.html |title=Ban Josip Jelačić |publisher=[[Croatian Radiotelevision]] |work=hrt.hr |language=hr |accessdate=30 October 2016 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305010027/http://www.hrt.hr/arhiv/ndd/10listopad/1016%20Jelacic.html |archivedate=5 March 2016 }}</ref> During the period of [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|former Yugoslavia]], Zagreb remained an important economic centre of the country, and was the second largest city. After [[Croatian independence referendum, 1991|Croatia declared independence]] from Yugoslavia, Zagreb was proclaimed its capital.<ref name="Sluzbeni List">{{cite web |url=http://narodne-novine.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeni/1991_06_31_875.html |title=Deklaraciju o proglašenju suverene i samostalne Republike Hrvatske (Declaration on the Sovereignty and Independence of the Croatian Republic) |last=Sluzbeni List|work=narodne-novine.nn.hr|accessdate=27 May 2013}}</ref>


===Early Zagreb===
===Antiquity===
{{Main|Emona}}
[[File:Emona3.JPG|thumb|Excavations at the building site of the planned new [[National and University Library of Slovenia]]. One of the discoveries was an ancient Roman public bath house.<ref name="Zupanek_2010">Bernarda Županek (2010) [http://www.culture.si/en/Emona,_Legacy_of_a_Roman_City "Emona, Legacy of a Roman City"], [[Museum and Galleries of Ljubljana]], Ljubljana.</ref>]]
Around 50 BC, the [[Ancient Rome|Romans]] built a military encampment that later became a permanent settlement called [[Emona|Iulia Aemona]].<ref name="Histo2">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/times-of-roman-emona/ |title=The Times of Roman Emona |accessdate=31 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100315124047/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/times-of-roman-emona/ |archivedate=15 March 2010 }}</ref><ref name="roman emona">{{cite web|title=Roman Emona|url=http://www.culture.si/en/Roman_Emona|work=Culture.si|publisher=Ministry of culture of the republic of Slovenia|accessdate=15 October 2012}}</ref><ref name="legacy">{{cite web|title=Emona, Legacy of a Roman City|url=http://www.culture.si/en/Emona,_Legacy_of_a_Roman_City|work=Culture.si|publisher=Ministry of culture of the republic of Slovenia|accessdate=15 October 2012}}</ref> This entrenched fort was occupied by the ''[[Legio XV Apollinaris]]''.<ref name="Apollinaris">{{in lang|fr}} Hildegard Temporini and Wolfgang Haase, ''Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt''. de Gruyter, 1988. {{ISBN|3-11-011893-9}}. [https://books.google.com/books?id=74vdDevajNoC&pg=PA343&lpg=PA343&dq=Emona+legion+XV&source=web&ots=Oz_GEBKbi_&sig=jODLhDZxfNwHfBW48cBMhE2GCs0&hl=fr&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=8&ct=result Google Books, p.343]</ref> In 452, it was destroyed by the [[Huns]] under [[Attila the Hun|Attila]]'s orders,<ref name="Histo2"/> and later by the [[Ostrogoths]] and the [[Lombards]].<ref name="Artis">Daniel Mallinus, ''La Yougoslavie'', Éd. Artis-Historia, Brussels, 1988, D/1988/0832/27, p. 37-39.</ref> Emona housed 5,000–6,000 inhabitants and played an important role during numerous battles. Its plastered brick houses, painted in different colours, were already connected to a [[Sewage|drainage system]].<ref name="Histo2"/>


In the 6th century, the ancestors of the [[Slovenes]] moved in. In the 9th century, they fell under [[Franks|Frankish]] domination, while experiencing frequent [[Hungarian people|Magyar]] raids.<ref name="Histo6">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/ljubljana-in-middle-ages/ |title=Ljubljana in the Middle Ages |accessdate=31 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100318072655/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/ljubljana-in-middle-ages/ |archivedate=18 March 2010 }}</ref> Not much is known about the area during the settlement of [[Slavs]] in the period between the downfall of Emona and the Early Middle Ages.
The history of Zagreb dates as far back as 1094 A.D. when the [[Kingdom of Hungary|Hungarian]] [[Ladislaus I of Hungary|King Ladislaus]], returning from his campaign against [[Kingdom of Croatia (medieval)|Croatia]], founded a diocese. Alongside the bishop's [[Episcopal see|see]], the canonical settlement [[Kaptol, Zagreb|Kaptol]] developed north of [[Zagreb Cathedral]], as did the fortified settlement [[Gradec, Zagreb|Gradec]] on the neighbouring hill; the border between the two being the Medveščak stream. Today the latter is Zagreb's Upper Town ([[Gornji Grad – Medveščak|Gornji Grad]]) and is one of the best preserved urban nuclei in [[Croatia]]. Both settlements came under [[Tatars|Tatar]] attack in 1242. As a sign of gratitude for offering him a safe haven from the [[Tatars]] the Croatian and Hungarian [[Béla IV of Hungary|King Bela IV]] bestowed Gradec with a [[Golden Bull of 1242|Golden Bull]], which offered its citizens exemption from county rule and autonomy, as well as its own [[judiciary|judicial system]].


===16th to 18th centuries===
===Middle Ages===
The parchment sheet ''Nomina defunctorum'' ("Names of the Dead"), most probably written in the second half of 1161, mentions the nobleman Rudolf of Tarcento, a lawyer of the [[Patriarchate of Aquileia (Episcopal)|Patriarchate of Aquileia]], who had bestowed a canon with 20 farmsteads beside the [[Ljubljana Castle|castle of Ljubljana]] (''castrum Leibach'') to the Patriarchate. According to the historian [[Peter Štih]]'s deduction, this happened between 1112 and 1125, thus representing the earliest mention of Ljubljana.<ref name=CL>{{cite book |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/file/863357/castrumleibach-e.pdf |title=Castrum Leibach: the first recorded mention of Ljubljana and the city's early history: facsimile with commentary and a history introduction |author=Peter Štih |year=2010 |isbn=978-961-6449-36-6 |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |access-date=12 May 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303230058/http://www.ljubljana.si/file/863357/castrumleibach-e.pdf |archive-date=3 March 2016 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }} {{COBISS|ID=252833024}}</ref>
There were numerous connections between the Kaptol diocese and the free sovereign town of Gradec for both economic and political reasons, but they weren't known as an integrated city, even as Zagreb became the political centre and, representing both Croatia, [[Slavonia]] and [[Dalmatia]], first convened at Gradec. Zagreb was chosen as the seat of the [[Ban of Croatia]] in 1621 under ban [[Nikola Frankopan]].


Originally owned by a number of possessors, until the first half of the 12th century, the territory south of the [[Sava]] where the town of Ljubljana developed gradually became property of the Carinthian family of the [[House of Sponheim|Dukes of Sponheim]].<ref name=CL /> Urban settlement in Ljubljana started in the second half of the 12th century.<ref name=CL /> At around 1200, [[market town|market rights]] were granted to [[Old Square (Ljubljana)|Old Square]] ({{lang|sl|Stari trg}}),<ref name="Ljubljana Town Hall"/> which at the time was one of the three districts that Ljubljana originated from. The other two districts were an area called "Town" ({{lang|sl|Mesto}}), built around the predecessor of the present-day [[Ljubljana Cathedral]] at one side of the [[Ljubljanica]] River, and [[New Square (Ljubljana)|New Square]] ({{lang|sl|Novi trg}}) at the other side.<ref name="AVLuwigana">{{cite web |url=http://arhitekturni-vodnik.org/?object=151&mode=4 |title=Srednjeveška Ljubljana – Luwigana |trans-title=Ljubljana of the Middle Ages – Luwigana |work=Arhitekturni vodnik [Architectural Guide] |accessdate=15 May 2012}}</ref> The [[Franciscan Bridge]], a predecessor of the present-day [[Triple Bridge]], and the [[Cobblers' Bridge#History|Butchers' Bridge]] connected the walled areas with wood-made buildings.<ref name="AVLuwigana"/> Ljubljana acquired the [[town privileges]] at some time between 1220 and 1243.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.si/books?id=USAqAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA170 |chapter=Kranjski deželni stanovi do leta 1518: Mesta |language=Slovenian |trans-chapter=Carniolan Provincial Estates Until 1518: Towns |page=170 |first=Andrej |last=Nered |title=Dežela – knez – stanovi: oblikovanje kranjskih deželnih stanov in zborov do leta 1518 |trans-title=The Land – the Prince – the Estates: the Formation of Carniolan Provincial Estates and Assemblies Until 1518 |year=2009 |publisher=Založba ZRC}}</ref> Seven fires erupted in the town during the Middle Ages.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://www.dlib.si/preview/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-D3OCD795/0fb96310-3693-4eae-bac0-ed1fb2225482 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180921191232/http://www.dlib.si/preview/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-D3OCD795/0fb96310-3693-4eae-bac0-ed1fb2225482 |url-status=dead |archive-date=2018-09-21 |title=Vpliv požarov na razvoj in podobo srednjeveških mest |language=Slovenian |first=Domen |last=Kušar |trans-title=The Influence of Fires on the Development and Image of Towns in the Middle Ages |year=2003 |volume=14 |issue=2 |journal=Urbani izziv [Urban Challenge] }}</ref> Artisans organised themselves into [[guild]]s. The [[Teutonic Knights]], the [[Conventual Franciscans]], and the [[Franciscans]] settled in the town.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.marijino-oznanjenje.si/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=68&Itemid=67&showall=1 |work=Župnija Marijino oznanenje: Ljubljana – Frančiškani [The Parish of the Annunciation – Franciscans] |accessdate=15 May 2012 |first=Jože |last=Mlinarič |title=Frančiškanski samostan od ustanovitve okoli leta 1240 do preselitve 1784 |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Franciscan Monastery from Its Establishment around 1240 until Its Relocation in 1784}}</ref> In 1256, when the Carinthian duke [[Ulrich III, Duke of Carinthia|Ulrich III of Spanheim]] became lord of Carniola, the provincial capital was moved from [[Kamnik]] to Ljubljana.
At the invitation of the [[Croatian Parliament]], the [[Society of Jesus|Jesuits]] came to Zagreb and built the first [[grammar school]], the [[Catherine of Alexandria|St. Catherine's]] Church and monastery. In 1669, they founded an academy where philosophy, theology and law were taught, the forerunner of today's [[University of Zagreb]].


In the late 1270s, Ljubljana was conquered by King [[Ottokar II of Bohemia]].<ref name=MunicipalityHistory>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/ |title=History of Ljubljana |publisher=Municipality of Ljubljana |accessdate=November 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150908133217/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/ |archive-date=8 September 2015 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }} (includes timeline)</ref> In 1278, after Ottokar's defeat, it became—together with the rest of [[Carniola]]—property of [[Rudolph I of Germany|Rudolph of Habsburg]].<ref name="Artis"/><ref name="Histo6"/> It was administered by the [[Counts of Gorizia]] from 1279 until 1335,<ref name="Ljubljana Town Hall">{{Cite news|url=http://www.visitljubljana.si/file/141388/mestna-hisa-slo-ang-3.pdf |title=Ljubljana Town Hall |author=Darinka Kladnik |date=October 2006 |publisher=Ljubljana Tourist Board |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110915023251/https://www.visitljubljana.si/file/141388/mestna-hisa-slo-ang-3.pdf |archivedate=15 September 2011 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.dlib.si/v2/StreamFile.aspx%3FURN%3DURN:NBN:SI:doc |title=700 let Novega trga v mestu Ljunbljani |author=Marija Verbič |year=1967 |volume=15 |number=2 |journal=Kronika: časopis Za Slovensko Krajevno Zgodovino |access-date=29 November 2010 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/6HdR8qdom?url=http://www.dlib.si/v2/StreamFile.aspx?URN=URN:NBN:SI:doc |archive-date=25 June 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref>{{sfn|Britannica|1910}} when it became the capital town of Carniola.<ref name="Histo6"/> Renamed ''Laibach'', it would be owned by the [[House of Habsburg]] until 1797.<ref name="Artis"/> In 1327, the Ljubljana's "Jewish Quarter"—now only "Jewish Street" ({{lang|sl|Židovska ulica}}) remains—was established with a synagogue, and lasted until Emperor [[Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor|Maximilian I]] in 1515 succumbed to [[medieval antisemitism]] and expelled Jews from Ljubljana, for which he demanded a certain payment from the town.<ref name="Ljubljana Town Hall"/> In 1382, in front of [[St. Bartholomew's Church (Ljubljana)|St. Bartholomew's Church]] in [[Spodnja Šiška|Šiška]], at the time a nearby village, now part of Ljubljana, a peace treaty was signed between the [[Republic of Venice]] and [[Leopold III of Austria (Habsburg)|Leopold III]] of [[Habsburg]].<ref name="Ljubljana Town Hall"/>
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Zagreb was badly devastated by fire and [[Bubonic plague|the plague]]. In 1776, the royal council (government) moved from [[Varaždin]] to Zagreb and during the reign of [[Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor|Joseph II]] Zagreb became the headquarters of the [[Varaždin]] and [[Karlovac]] general command.<ref name="HRT">{{cite web
|url=http://www.hrt.hr/arhiv/hrvati_u_svijetu/upoznajte_hrvatsku/03_glavni_grad_hrvatske/zagreb_eng.html
|title=The city of Zagreb
|work=hrt.hr
|publisher=[[Croatian Radiotelevision]]
|accessdate=2 July 2006
|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20070117124718/http://www.hrt.hr/arhiv/hrvati_u_svijetu/upoznajte_hrvatsku/03_glavni_grad_hrvatske/zagreb_eng.html <!-- Bot retrieved archive --> |archivedate= 17 January 2007}}</ref>


===19th to mid-20th century===
===Early modern===
[[File:Ljubljana-Valvasor.jpg|thumb|center|upright=3.2|"Laybach" (Ljubljana) in [[Johann Weikhard von Valvasor|Johann Weikhard von Valvasor's]] work ''[[The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola]]'' of 1689]]
In the 15th century, Ljubljana became recognised for its art, particularly painting and sculpture. The [[Roman Rite|Roman Rite Catholic]] [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Ljubljana|Diocese of Ljubljana]] was established in 1461 and the [[Ljubljana Cathedral|Church of St. Nicholas]] became the diocesan cathedral.<ref name="Histo6"/> After the [[1511 Idrija earthquake]],<ref name=bavec>{{cite journal|last1=Bavec|first1=Milos|last2=Car|first2=Marjeta|last3=Stopar|first3=Robert|last4=Jamsek|first4=Petra|last5=Gosar|first5=Andrej|title=Geophysical evidence of recent activity of the Idrija fault, Kanomlja, NW Slovenia|journal=Materials and Geoenvironment|date=2012|volume=59}}</ref><ref name=Lipold>{{cite journal|last1=Lipold|first1=Marc Vincenc|title=Bericht über die geologischen Aufnamen in Ober-Krein im Jahre 1856|journal=Jahrbuch der K. K. Geol. Reichsanstalt|date=1857}}</ref><ref name=Fitzko>{{cite journal|last1=Fitzko|first1=F.|last2=Suhadolc|first2=P.|last3=Aoudia|first3=A.|last4=Panza|first4=G.F.|title=Constraints on the location and mechanism of the 1511 Western-Slovenia earthquake from active tectonics and modeling of macroseismic data|journal=Tectonophysics|volume=404|issue=1–2|pages=77–90|doi=10.1016/j.tecto.2005.05.003|year=2005|bibcode=2005Tectp.404...77F}}</ref><ref name=Cunningham>{{cite journal|last1=Cunningham|first1=Dickson|last2=Gosar|first2=Andrej|last3=Kastelic|first3=Vanja|last4=Grebby|first4=Stephen|last5=Tansey|first5=Kevin|title=Multi-disciplinary investigations of active faults in the Julian Alps, Slovenia|journal=Acta Geodyn. Geomater.|date=2007|volume=4|url=http://www.irsm.cas.cz/materialy/acta_content/2007_01/7_Cunningham.pdf|accessdate=10 August 2014}}</ref> the city was rebuilt in the [[Renaissance architecture|Renaissance]] style and a new wall was built around it.<ref name="Histo3">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/renaissance-and-baroque/ |title=Renaissance and Baroque |accessdate=31 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100318072700/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/renaissance-and-baroque/ |archivedate=18 March 2010 }}</ref> Wooden buildings were forbidden after a large fire at New Square in 1524.


In the 16th century, the population of Ljubljana numbered 5,000, 70% of whom spoke [[Slovene language|Slovene]] as their [[first language]], with most of the rest using German.<ref name="Histo3"/> The first [[High school (upper secondary)|secondary school]], public library and printing house opened in Ljubljana. Ljubljana became an important educational centre.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.si/books?id=VJAXAQAAMAAJ |title=Ljubljana City Guide |first=Breda |last=Mihelič |year=1990 |publisher=State Publishing House of Slovenia |page=30 |id={{COBISS|ID=18846464}}}}</ref>
<!--''Political history is missing'' (March 2013)-->
In the 19th century, Zagreb was the centre of the [[Illyrian movement|Croatian National Revival]] and saw the erection of important cultural and historic institutions.
In 1850, the town was united under its first [[List of mayors of Zagreb|mayor]] – [[Janko Kamauf]].<ref name="HRT"/>


From 1529, Ljubljana had an active [[Protestant Reformation#Slovene Lands|Slovene Protestant community]]. After they were expelled in 1598, marking the beginning of the [[Counter-Reformation]], Catholic Bishop [[Thomas Chrön]] ordered the public burning of eight cartloads of Protestant books.<ref name="ES">Rajhman, Jože, & Emilijan Cevc. 1990. Tomaž Hren. ''Enciklopedija Slovenije'', vol. 4, pp. 50–51. Ljubljana: Mladinska knjiga.</ref><ref>Lutar Ivanc, Aleksandra. 2006. ''Album slovenskih književnikov''. Ljubljana: Mladinska knjiga, p 14.</ref>
The first [[rail transport|railway]] line to connect Zagreb with [[Zidani Most]] and [[Sisak]] was opened in 1862 and in 1863 Zagreb received a [[gasworks]]. The Zagreb [[water supply|waterworks]] was opened in 1878.


In 1597, [[Society of Jesus|Jesuits]] arrived in the city, followed in 1606 by the [[Order of Friars Minor Capuchin|Capuchins]], to [[Counter-Reformation|eradicate Protestantism]]. Only 5% of all the residents of Ljubljana at the time were of Catholic confession, so it took quite a while to make it Catholic again. Jesuits organised the first theatrical productions in the town, fostered the development of [[Baroque music]] and established Catholic schools. In the middle and the second half of the 17th century, foreign architects built and renovated numerous monasteries, churches, and palaces in Ljubljana and introduced [[Baroque architecture]]. In 1702, the [[Ursulines]] settled in the town, where, the following year, they opened the first public school for girls in the [[Slovene Lands]]. Some years later, the construction of [[Ursuline Church of the Holy Trinity]] started.<ref name="RKD1980">{{cite web |url=http://giskd2s.situla.org/rkd/Opis.asp?Esd=1980 |title=1980: Ljubljana – Cerkev sv. Trojice |trans-title=1980: Ljubljan – Holy Trinity Church |work=Register nepremične kulturne dediščine [Registry of Immovable Cultural Heritage] |language=Slovenian |publisher=Ministry of Culture, Republic of Slovenia |accessdate=29 October 2012}}</ref><ref name="LJinfo">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.info/sights/ursuline-church/|title=Ljubljana.info – Ursuline Church Ljubljana|work=ljubljana.info}}</ref> In 1779, [[St. Christopher's Cemetery]] replaced the cemetery at [[St. Peter's Parish Church (Ljubljana)|St. Peter's Church]] as the main Ljubljana cemetery.<ref>{{cite book |title=Mestna hiša v Ljubljani: pomembni dogodki v zgodovini mesta |first=Darinka |last=Kladnik |page=58 |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Ljubljana Town Hall: Significant Events in the Town History |year=1996 |publisher=Viharnik |isbn=9789616057059}}</ref>
After the [[1880 Zagreb earthquake]], up to the 1914 outbreak of [[World War I]], development flourished and the town received the characteristic layout which it has today.
The first horse-drawn [[tram]] was used in 1891. The construction of the [[rail transport|railway]] lines enabled the old suburbs to merge gradually into [[Donji grad (Zagreb)|Donji Grad]], characterised by a regular block pattern that prevails in [[Central Europe]]an cities. This bustling core hosts many imposing buildings, monuments, and parks as well as a multitude of museums, theatres and cinemas. An [[power station|electric power plant]] was built in 1907.
{{multiple image
|align=center
|image2=Zagreb (29255640143).jpg
|width2=365
|caption2=Panoramic view of Zagreb
|image1= Zagreb_(29588612210).jpg
|width1=430
|caption1= Panoramic view of [[Gradec, Zagreb|Upper Town – Gradec]]}}
Since 1 January 1877, the [[Grič cannon]] is fired daily from the [[Lotrščak Tower]] on [[Grič, Zagreb|Grič]] to mark midday.


===Late modern===
The first half of the 20th century saw a considerable expansion of Zagreb. Before World War I, the city expanded and neighbourhoods like [[Stara Peščenica]] in the east and [[Črnomerec]] in the west were created. After the war, [[working class|working-class]] districts such as [[Trnje, Zagreb|Trnje]] emerged between the railway and the [[Sava]], whereas the construction of residential districts on the hills of the southern slopes of [[Medvednica]] was completed [[Interwar period|between the two World Wars]].
[[File:Pristanišče na Bregu 1765.jpg|thumb|right|Ljubljana in the 18th century]]
[[File:Leander Russ - Parade zur Begrüßung des Kaisers in Laibach - 1845.jpeg|thumb|right|Celebration during the [[Congress of Laibach]], 1821]]
[[File:Špitalski most, Marijin trg in pogled proti Šmarni gori z gradu 1900.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Ljubljana, c. 1900]]
[[File:Ljubljana in 1895 (3).jpg|thumb|right|The 1895 earthquake destroyed much of the city centre, enabling an extensive renovation program]]
[[File:Ljubljana 1909 (Salvatore Spina) removed watermark.ogg|thumb|The oldest preserved film recordings of Ljubljana (1909), with a depiction of streets, the [[Ljubljana tram system|Ljubljana tram]], and a celebration. Salvatore Spina Company, Trieste.<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://books.google.si/books?id=w1IqAQAAIAAJ |language=Slovenian |title=Dokumenti Slovenskega gledališkega in filmskega muzeja |trans-title=The Documents of the Slovenian Theatre and Film Museum |volume=16–19 |publisher=Slovenski gledališki in filmski muzej [Slovenian Theatre and Film Museum] |year=1980 |page=128}}</ref>]]
From 1809 to 1813, during the [[Napoleon I of France|Napoleonic]] interlude, Ljubljana (under the name ''Laybach'') was the capital of the [[Illyrian Provinces]].<ref name="Artis" /><ref name="Histo4">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/ljubljana-18th-19th-centuries/ |title=Ljubljana in the 18th and 19th Centuries |accessdate=31 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100318073535/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/ljubljana-18th-19th-centuries/ |archivedate=18 March 2010 }}</ref> In 1813, the city became Austrian again and from 1815 to 1849 was the administrative centre of the [[Kingdom of Illyria (1816–1849)|Kingdom of Illyria]] in the [[Austrian Empire]].<ref name="Cvirn2000">{{cite book |title=Ilustrirana zgodovina Slovencev |trans-title=The Illustrated History of the Slovenes |chapter=Ilirsko kraljestvo |trans-chapter=Kingdom of Illyria |year=2000 |editor-first=Marko |editor-last=Vidic |publisher=Mladinska knjiga |isbn=978-86-11-15664-4 |page=213}}</ref> In 1821, it hosted the [[Congress of Laibach]], which fixed European political borders for years to come.<ref name="InfoIntro">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/ |title=Introducing Ljubljana |accessdate=31 October 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Jarrett|first=Mark|title=The Congress of Vienna and its Legacy: War and Great Power Diplomacy after Napoleon|publisher=I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited|year=2013|location=London|isbn=978-1-78076-116-9}}</ref> The first train arrived in 1849 from Vienna and in 1857 the line was extended to [[Trieste]].<ref name="Histo4" />


In 1895, Ljubljana, then a city of 31,000, suffered [[1895 Ljubljana earthquake|a serious earthquake]] measuring 6.1&nbsp;degrees [[Richter magnitude scale|Richter]] and 8–9&nbsp;degrees&nbsp;[[Mercalli intensity scale|MCS]].<ref name="ARSO1">{{cite web |url=http://www.arso.gov.si/potresi/potresna%20aktivnost/Mo%c4%8dni_potresi_v_preteklosti.pdf |title=Potresna aktivnost v Sloveniji: Močni potresi v preteklosti |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Seismic Activity in Slovenia: Strong Earthquakes in the Past |work=Potresna aktivnost v Sloveniji [Seismic Activity in Slovenia] |publisher=Environmental Agency of the Republic of Slovenia |accessdate=15 May 2012}}</ref><ref name="Verdinek2005">{{cite journal |url=http://www.srl.si/arhiv/2005-04/pdf/verdinek.pdf |title=Ljubljanski potres v slovenskih literarnih delih |language=Slovenian|trans-title=Ljubjana Earthquake in Slovene Literary Works |journal=Slavistična revija [Journal of Slavic Linguistics] |volume=53 |issue=4 |issn=0350-6894 |first=Alenka |last=Verdinek |year=2005}}</ref><ref name="Geopedia">{{cite book |url=http://www.pespoti.si/pkv-tocka.php?id=145 |title=Planinski dom 2. grupe odredov na Jančah |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Mountain Hut of the 2nd Group of Detachments at Janče |work=Pot kurirjev in vezistov NOV Slovenije [Path of Couriers and Operators of the National Liberation War of Slovenia] |author=Dobnik, Jože |publisher=Društvo Domicilnega odbora kurirjev in vezistov NOV Slovenije. |year=2006 |accessdate=15 May 2012 |isbn=978-961-238-581-1}}</ref><ref name="Adamič1995">{{cite journal |url=http://www.dlib.si/details/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-IG209UX5/?&language=eng |title=Earthquake Threat in Ljubljana |first=Milan |last=Orožen Adamič |year=1995 |journal=Geografski zbornik [Acta geographica] |issn=0373-4498 |volume=35 |pages=45–112}}</ref> Some 10% of its 1,400 buildings were destroyed, although casualties were light.<ref name="ARSO1" /> During the reconstruction that followed, a number of districts were rebuilt in the [[Vienna Secession]] style.<ref name="Histo4" /> Public [[Incandescent light bulb|electric lighting]] appeared in the city in 1898. The rebuilding period between 1896 and 1910 is referred to as the "revival of Ljubljana" because of architectural changes from which a great deal of the city dates back to today and for reform of urban administration, health, education and tourism that followed. The rebuilding and quick modernisation of the city were led by the mayor [[Ivan Hribar]].<ref name="Histo4" />
In the 1920s, the population of Zagreb increased by 70 percent – the largest demographic boom in the history of the town. In 1926, the first [[radio broadcasting|radio station]] in the region began broadcasting from Zagreb, and in 1947 the [[Zagreb Fair]] was opened.<ref name="HRT"/>


In 1918, following the end of [[World War I]] and the dissolution of [[Austria–Hungary|Austria-Hungary]], the region joined the [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia|Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes]].<ref name="Artis" /><ref name="Histo5">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/restless-20th-century/ |title=The Turbulent 20th Century |accessdate=31 October 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100315121957/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/history/restless-20th-century/ |archivedate=15 March 2010 }}</ref><ref>{{cite EB1922 |wstitle=Yugoslavia |volume=32 |page=1116}}</ref> In 1929, Ljubljana became the capital of the [[Drava Banovina]], a [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia|Yugoslav]] province.<ref name="banovina">{{cite web |url=http://www.clio.fr/CHRONOLOGIE/chronologie_slovenie_dans_la_yougoslavie_des_karageorgevitch.asp |title=Dans la Yougoslavie des Karageorgévitch |accessdate=30 July 2008 |language=French}}</ref>
During [[World War II]], Zagreb became the capital of the [[Independent State of Croatia]], which was backed by [[Nazi Germany]] and the [[Fascism in Italy|Italians]]. The history of [[Zagreb in World War II]] became rife with incidents of regime terror and resistance sabotage, and the [[Ustaša]] regime had thousands of people executed during the war in and near the city. The city was taken by the [[Partisans (Yugoslavia)|Partisans]] at the end of the war. From 1945 until 1990, Zagreb was the capital of the [[Socialist Republic of Croatia]], one of the six constituent socialist republics of the [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia]].


In 1941, during [[World War II]], [[Kingdom of Italy#Fascist regime (1922–1943)|Fascist Italy]] occupied the city, and on 3 May 1941 made ''Lubiana'' the capital of Italy's [[Province of Ljubljana]]<ref name="rodogno">{{cite book|title=Fascism's European empire: Italian occupation during the Second World War|author=Davide Rodogno|publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|isbn=978-0-521-84515-1|year=2006|page=82}}</ref> with the former Yugoslav general [[Leon Rupnik]] as mayor. After the Italian capitulation, [[Nazi Germany]] with SS-general [[Erwin Rösener]] and [[Friedrich Rainer]] took control in 1943,<ref name="Histo5" /> but formally the city remained the capital of an Italian province until 9 May 1945. In Ljubljana, the occupying forces established strongholds and command centres of [[Quisling]] organisations, the [[Anti-Communist Volunteer Militia]] under Italy and the [[Slovene Home Guard|Home Guard]] under German occupation. Since February 1942, the city was surrounded by [[barbed wire]], later fortified by [[bunker]]s, to prevent co-operation between the [[Liberation Front of the Slovene Nation|resistance movement]] that operated within and outside the fence.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.delo.si/znanje/izobrazevanje/kabinet-cudes-ljubljana-v-zicnem-obrocu.html |language=Slovenian|newspaper=Delo.si |first=Blaž |last=Vurnik |date=22 April 2016 |title=Kabinet čudes: Ljubljana v žičnem obroču |trans-title=Cabinet of Curiosities: Ljubljana in the Barbed Wire Ring}}</ref><ref name="60 let">{{cite web |url=http://www.mklj.si/ljubljanske-zgodbe/item/download/734_f72c43e3efd7223e45a53e9a72ae0597 |title=Ljubljanske zgodbe: 60. obletnica Pohodov ob žici |language=Slovenian|trans-title=Ljubljana Stories: The 60th Anniversary of the Marches Along the Wire |publisher=Ljubljana Municipal Library |year=2016 |first=Gašper |last=Hudolin |first2=Ana Nuša |last2=Kerševan}}</ref> Since 1985, the [[Trail of Remembrance and Comradeship| commemorative trail]] has ringed the city where this iron fence once stood.<ref name="rideau fer">{{in lang|sl|en}} {{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana-tourism.si/file/559602/2006-april-POT-SPOMINOV-IN-TOVARITVA-_2.pdf |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070926230004/http://www.ljubljana-tourism.si/file/559602/2006-april-POT-SPOMINOV-IN-TOVARITVA-_2.pdf |archivedate=26 September 2007 |title=The Trail of Remembrance and Comradeship |accessdate=30 July 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Postwar reprisals resulted in a number of [[mass graves in Ljubljana]].<ref name="Booker">Booker, Christopher. 1997. ''A Looking-Glass Tragedy. The Controversy over the Repatriations From Austria In 1945.'' London: Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd., p. 214.</ref><ref>Vuletić, Dominik. 2007. "Kaznenopravni i povijesni aspekti bleiburškog zločina." ''Pravnik'' 41(85): 125–150.</ref><ref name="Grahek">[http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/74034 Grahek Ravančić, Martina. 2009. "Izručenja i sudbine zarobljenika smještenih u savezničkim logorima u svibnju 1945. Journal of Contemporary History 41(2): 391–416.]</ref><ref name="Ferenc">Ferenc, Tone. 1999. "Šentvid." ''Enciklopedija Slovenije'', vol. 13 (Š–T). Ljubljana: Mladinska knjiga, p. 28.</ref>
===Modern Zagreb===
[[File:Zagreb - 2015 - panoramio (5).jpg|thumb|right|upright=0.9|[[Ban Jelačić Square]]]]
[[File:19-06-16-Zagreb-DJI_0181.jpg|thumb|right|upright=0.9|King Tomislav Square]]
The area between the railway and the [[Sava]] river witnessed a new construction boom after [[World War II]]. After the mid-1950s, construction of new residential areas south of the [[Sava]] river began, resulting in [[Novi Zagreb]] (Croatian for ''New Zagreb''), originally called "Južni Zagreb" (Southern Zagreb).<ref name=juzni_zagreb>{{cite journal |url=http://www.zarez.hr/222/z_socijalna.html |title=O imaginarnim kartama Južnog= Novog Zagreba |journal=Zarez |last=Maretić |first=Mirko |issue=№ 222 |date=10 January 2008 |accessdate=25 February 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090515163924/http://www.zarez.hr/222/z_socijalna.html |archive-date=15 May 2009 |language=Croatian}}</ref>
Today Novi Zagreb is divided in two [[city districts]]: [[Novi Zagreb-zapad]] ([[Novi Zagreb-zapad|West
Novi Zagreb]]) and [[Novi Zagreb-istok]] ([[Novi Zagreb-istok|East Novi Zagreb]])


After World War II, Ljubljana became the capital of the [[Socialist Republic of Slovenia]], part of the [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia]]. It retained this status until Slovenia became independent in 1991.<ref name="STAT11"/>
The city also expanded westward and eastward, incorporating [[Dubrava, Zagreb|Dubrava]], Podsused, [[Jarun]], [[Blato, Zagreb|Blato]] and other settlements.
The cargo railway hub and the [[international airport]] [[Zagreb Airport|Pleso]] were built south of the [[Sava]] river. The largest [[industrial district|industrial zone]] (Žitnjak) in the south-eastern part of the city represents an extension of the industrial zones on the eastern outskirts of the city, between the [[Sava]] and the Prigorje region. Zagreb also hosted the [[1987 Summer Universiade|Summer Universiade]] in 1987.<ref name="HRT"/>


===Contemporary===
During the 1991–1995 [[Croatian War of Independence]], it was a scene of some [[Battle of the Barracks|sporadic fighting]] surrounding its [[Yugoslav People's Army|JNA]] [[barracks|army barracks]], but escaped major damage. In May 1995, it was targeted by Serb [[rocket artillery]] in two [[Zagreb rocket attacks|rocket attacks]] which killed seven civilians.
Ljubljana remains the capital of independent [[Slovenia]], which joined the [[European Union]] in 2004.<ref name="Histo5"/>


==Geography==
An urbanised area connects Zagreb with the surrounding towns of [[Zaprešić]], [[Samobor]], [[Dugo Selo]] and [[Velika Gorica]]. Sesvete was the first and the closest area to become a part of the [[urban agglomeration|agglomeration]] and is already included in the City of Zagreb for administrative purposes and now forms the easternmost city district.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dzs.hr/Eng/censuses/Census2001/Popis/E01_01_03/e01_01_03_zup22.html |title=SAS Output |publisher=Dzs.hr |accessdate=15 September 2011}}</ref>
[[File:Image Ljubljana-OpenStreetMap-MapBox.png|thumb|right|Map with the city's [[Ljubljana Ring Road|motorway ring]] from OpenStreetMap [[MapBox]] map]]
[[File:SmarnaGora.jpg|thumb|right|[[Mount Saint Mary]], the highest hill in Ljubljana, with the peak Grmada reaching {{convert|676|m|abbr=on|sp=us}}]]
The city, with an area of {{convert|163.8|km2|sqmi|sp=us}}, is situated in the [[Ljubljana Basin]] in [[Central Slovenia Statistical Region|Central Slovenia]], between the [[Southern Limestone Alps|Alps]] and the [[Karst#Slovenia|Karst]]. Ljubljana is located some {{convert|320|km|mi|sp=us}} south of [[Munich]], {{convert|477|km|mi|sp=us}} east of [[Zürich]], {{convert|250|km|mi|sp=us}} east of Venice, {{convert|350|km|mi|sp=us}} southwest of [[Vienna]], {{convert|224|km|mi|sp=us}} south of [[Salzburg]] and {{convert|400|km|mi|sp=us}} southwest of [[Budapest]].<ref>Approximate road distances calculated through [[Google Earth]].</ref> The extent of Ljubljana has changed considerably in the past 40 years, mainly because some of the nearby settlements have merged with Ljubljana.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stat.si/KrajevnaImena/pregledi_naselja_najvecja_prebivalci.asp?tlist=off&txtIme=LJUBLJANA&selNacin=celo&selTip=naselja&ID=2370 |title=Največja naselja po številu prebivalcev: Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Largest settlements by the number of residents: Ljubljana |publisher=Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia |date=1 January 2010 |accessdate=5 February 2011}}</ref>


===Geology===
===Area and population development===
The city stretches out on an [[alluvium|alluvial]] plain dating to the [[Quaternary]] [[Geologic time scale|era]]. The mountainous regions nearby are older, dating from the [[Mesozoic]] ([[Triassic]]) or [[Paleozoic]].<ref name="Geologymap">{{cite web|url=http://english.fossiel.net/system/geolkaart/slovenie.jpg |title=Geological Map of Slovenia |accessdate=30 July 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080811180940/http://english.fossiel.net/system/geolkaart/slovenie.jpg |archivedate=11 August 2008 }}</ref> A number of earthquakes have devastated Ljubljana, including in [[1511 Idrija earthquake|1511]] and [[1895 Ljubljana earthquake|1895]].<ref name="Adamič1995"/>
{|class="wikitable" style="margin: 1em auto 1em auto;" |+ '''Cells left-aligned, table centred'''
|-
! style="width:50px;"|Year
! style="width:80px;"|Area <br/>(km<sup>2</sup>)
! style="width:80px;"|Population <br/>(within city limits at that time)
! style="width:80px;"|Population <br/>(within today's city limits)
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1368
|style="text-align:left;"|
|style="text-align:left;"|2,810<ref group="nb" name="ex02">from the household census</ref>
|style="text-align:left;"|
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1742
|style="text-align:left;"|3.33
|style="text-align:left;"|5,600<ref group="nb" name="ex02"/>
|style="text-align:left;"|
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1805
|style="text-align:left;"|3.33
|style="text-align:left;"|7,706<ref group="nb">population census without clergy and nobility</ref>(~11 000 in total)
|style="text-align:left;"|
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1850
|style="text-align:left;"|25.4
|style="text-align:left;"|16,036
|style="text-align:left;"|
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1857
|style="text-align:left;"|25.4
|style="text-align:left;"|16,657
|style="text-align:left;"|48,266
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1869
|style="text-align:left;"|25.4
|style="text-align:left;"|19,857
|style="text-align:left;"|54,761
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1880
|style="text-align:left;"|25.4
|style="text-align:left;"|30,830
|style="text-align:left;"|67,188
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1890
|style="text-align:left;"|25.4
|style="text-align:left;"|40,268
|style="text-align:left;"|82,848
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1900
|style="text-align:left;"|64.37
|style="text-align:left;"|61,002
|style="text-align:left;"|111,565
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1910
|style="text-align:left;"|64.37
|style="text-align:left;"|79,038
|style="text-align:left;"|136,351
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1921
|style="text-align:left;"|64.37
|style="text-align:left;"|108,674
|style="text-align:left;"|167,765
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1931
|style="text-align:left;"|64.37
|style="text-align:left;"|185,581
|style="text-align:left;"|258,024
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1948
|style="text-align:left;"|74.99
|style="text-align:left;"|279,623
|style="text-align:left;"|356,529
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1953
|style="text-align:left;"|235.74
|style="text-align:left;"|350,829
|style="text-align:left;"|393,919
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1961
|style="text-align:left;"|495.60
|style="text-align:left;"|430,802
|style="text-align:left;"|478,076
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1971
|style="text-align:left;"|497.95
|style="text-align:left;"|602,205
|style="text-align:left;"|629,896
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1981
|style="text-align:left;"|1,261.54
|style="text-align:left;"|768,700
|style="text-align:left;"|723,065
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|1991
|style="text-align:left;"|1,715.55
|style="text-align:left;"|933,914
|style="text-align:left;"|777,826
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|2001
|style="text-align:left;"|641.36
|style="text-align:left;"|779,145
|style="text-align:left;"|779,145
|-
|style="text-align:center;"|2011
|style="text-align:left;"|641.36
|style="text-align:left;"|792,875
|style="text-align:left;"|792,875
|-
|colspan=5 |<small>The data in column 3 refers to the population in the city borders as of the census in question. Column 4 is calculated for the territory now defined as the City of Zagreb ([[Narodne novine|Narodne Novine]] 97/10).</small><ref name=ljetopis2>{{cite journal|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/zgstat/documents/Ljetopis%202007/058-080.pdf |title=Statistički ljetopis Grada Zagreba 2007. – 2. Stanovništvo |journal=Statistički Ljetopis Zagreba |year=2007 |accessdate=12 November 2008 |issn=1330-3678 |language=Croatian, English |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081028232442/http://www1.zagreb.hr/zgstat/documents/Ljetopis%202007/058-080.pdf |archivedate=28 October 2008}}</ref>
|}


== Geography ==
===Topography===
Ljubljana has an elevation of {{convert|295|m|sp=us}}<ref name="YB2002">{{cite web |url=http://www.stat.si/letopis/2002/01_02/01-06-02.asp?jezik=en |title=Nadmorska višina naselij, kjer so sedeži občin |language=Slovenian, English |trans-title=Height above sea level of seats of municipalities |year=2002 |publisher=Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130524220943/http://www.stat.si/letopis/2002/01_02/01-06-02.asp?jezik=en |archivedate=24 May 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> The [[city centre]], located along the Ljubljanica River, has an elevation of {{convert|298|m|sp=us}}.<ref name="Mesto2006">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/file/32397/ljubljana-2006.pdf |title=Ljubljana, glavno mesto |trans-title=Ljubljana, the Capital |date=June 2006 |publisher=Statistics and Analysis Service, Information Center, City Administration, City Municipality of Ljubljana |accessdate=7 February 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130319063707/http://www.ljubljana.si/file/32397/ljubljana-2006.pdf |archivedate=19 March 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> [[Ljubljana Castle]], which sits atop [[Castle Hill (Ljubljana)|Castle Hill]] ({{lang|sl|Grajski grič}}) south of the city centre, has an elevation of {{convert|366|m|ft|sp=us}}. The highest point of the city, called [[Grmada (Ljubljana)|Grmada]], reaches {{convert|676|m|ft|sp=us}}, {{convert|3|m|ft|sp=us}} more than the nearby [[Mount Saint Mary]] ({{lang|sl|Šmarna gora}}) peak, a popular hiking destination.<ref name="Geopedia2012-01-30">{{cite web |url=http://geopedia.si/#T105_L410_F10110084_x459056_y109604_s15_b4 |title=Settlements: Ljubljana |publisher=Geopedia.si |accessdate=30 January 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.burger.si/SmarnaGora/uvod_ENG.html |title=Šmarna gora |work=Slovenia-Landmarks |first=Boštjan |last=Burger |accessdate=30 January 2012}}</ref> These are located in the northern part of the city.<ref name="Geopedia2012-01-30" />
=== Climate ===
{{wide image|Ljubljana Ljubljanski Grad-Ljubljana Castle - jug south.jpg|900px|View to the south from [[Ljubljana Castle]] with the [[Ljubljana Marshes]] in the back. The building density there is substantially lower due to unsuitable ground for construction.}}
[[File:Zelena_potkova_istok.jpg|thumb|left|King Tomislav Square]]
{{wide image|Ljubljana Ljubljanski Grad-Ljubljana Castle -Sever North.jpg|900px|View to the north from [[Ljubljana Castle]] with the [[Karawanks]] (left), Mount Saint Mary (center), and [[Kamnik–Savinja Alps]] (right) in the background}}
[[File:Zagreb_2_(4685302916).jpg|thumb|right|Zagreb downtown]]


===Waters===
<!-- add when there is enough surrounding text
[[File:Ljubljana old town with excursion boat.JPG|thumb|260px|right|River in the centre of Ljubljana.]]
{{climate chart
[[File:Ljubljanica banks night.jpg|thumb|240px|left|Many bridges across the Ljubljanica River are popular tourist attractions.]]
|Zagreb
[[File:Koseški bajer.jpg|thumb|Koseze Pond is used for rowing, fishing, and ice skating in winter.]]
|-3.0 |3.7 |43.2
The main watercourses in Ljubljana are the [[Ljubljanica]], the [[Sava]], the [[Gradaščica]], the [[Mali Graben]], the [[Iška]] and the [[Iščica]] Rivers. From the [[Trnovo District]] to the [[Moste District]], around Castle Hill, the Ljubljanica partly flows through the [[Gruber Canal]], built according to plans by [[Gabriel Gruber]] from 1772 until 1780. Next to the eastern border of the city, the Ljubljanica, the Sava, and the [[Kamnik Bistrica]] Rivers flow together.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://geopedia.si/lite.jsp?locale=en&params=T105_L410_F10110084_x468931.15599999996_y105141_s11#T105_L410_F10110084_x468931.15599999996_y105141_s11 |title=Settlements: Ljubljana |publisher=Geopedia.si |accessdate=5 February 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/si/zivljenje-v-ljubljani/okolje-prostor-bivanje/povrsinske-vode/ |title=Površinske vode |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Surface Waters |accessdate=5 February 2011 |publisher=Municipality of Ljubljana}}</ref> The lowest point of Ljubljana, with an elevation of {{convert|261|m|sp=us}}, is located at the confluence.<ref name="Mesto2006"/>
|-1.8 |6.8 |38.9
|1.6 |11.9 |52.6
|5.2 |16.3 |59.3
|9.8 |21.5 |72.6
|13.0 |24.5 |95.3
|14.7 |26.7 |77.4
|14.4 |26.3 |92.3
|10.8 |22.1 |85.8
|6.2 |15.8 |82.9
|1.4 |8.9 |80.1
|−1.7 |4.6 |59.6
|float= right
|clear= none
|source= DHMZ<ref name= normals >{{cite web
|url = http://klima.hr/k1/k1_2/zagreb_maksimir.pdf
|title = Zagreb Climate Normals
|accessdate = 2 December 2015
|publisher = Croatian Meteorological and Hydrological Service}}</ref>}} -->


Through its history, Ljubljana has also been struck by floods. [[2010 Slovenia floods|The latest floods]] took place in 2010.<ref name="LjNovice Poplave">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljnovice.com/default.asp?podrocje=2&menu=2&novica=125560 |title=Vodna ujma minuli konec tedna ohromila dobršen del Slovenije |language=Slovenian |publisher=[[Ljubljanske novice]] |trans-title=Large part of Slovenia brought to a halt by a flash flood |accessdate=20 September 2010 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111003090429/http://www.ljnovice.com/default.asp?podrocje=2&menu=2&novica=125560 |archivedate=3 October 2011 }}</ref> Southern and western parts of the city are more flood-endangered than northern parts.<ref name="Ocena poplave">{{Cite news|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/file/405358/ogrozenost_mol_poplave_dobravc_2007.pdf |title=Ocena ogroženosti mestne občine Ljubljana zaradi poplav |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Flood hazard assessment of the City Municipality of Ljubljana |year=2007 |author=Dobravc, Mina |page=7 |accessdate=20 September 2010 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110823135534/http://www.ljubljana.si/file/405358/ogrozenost_mol_poplave_dobravc_2007.pdf |archivedate=23 August 2011 }}</ref> The Gruber Canal has partly diminished the danger of floods in the [[Ljubljana Marshes]], the largest marshes in Slovenia, south of Ljubljana.
The climate of Zagreb is classified as an [[oceanic climate]] ([[Humid temperate climate|Köppen climate classification]] ''Cfb''), but with significant continental influences and very closely bordering on a [[humid continental climate]] (''Dfb'') as well as a [[humid subtropical climate]] (Cfa). Zagreb has four separate [[season]]s. Summers are generally warm, sometimes hot. In late May it gets significantly warmer, temperatures start rising and it is often pleasant with frequent afternoon and evening thunderstorms. Heatwaves can occur but are short-lived. Temperatures rise above {{convert|30|C}} on an average 14.6 days each summer. Rainfall is abundant in the summertime and it continues to be in autumn as well. With 840&nbsp;mm of precipitation per year, Zagreb is Europe's 9th wettest capital, receiving less precipitation than Luxembourg but more than [[Brussels]], [[Paris]] and [[London]]. [[Autumn]] in its early stages is often mild and sunny with occasional episodes of rain. Autumn is characterised by an increase in rainy days as well as by temperature averages that steadily fall towards the end of the season. Morning [[fog]] is common from mid-October to January, with northern city districts at the foothills of the [[Medvednica]] mountain as well as those districts along the [[Sava]] river being more prone to all-day fog accumulation. Winters are relatively cold with a precipitation decrease pattern. February is the driest month, averaging 39&nbsp;mm of precipitation. On average there are 29 days with snowfall, with first snow usually falling in early December. However, in recent years, the number of snowy days has decreased sharply. Springs are generally mild and pleasant with frequent weather changes and are windier than other seasons. Sometimes cold spells can occur, mostly in its early stages. The average daily mean temperature in the winter is around {{convert|1|°C}} (from December to February) and the average temperature in the summer is {{convert|22.0|C|1}}.<ref name= normals >{{cite web
|url = http://klima.hr/k1/k1_2/zagreb_maksimir.pdf
|title = Zagreb Climate Normals
|accessdate = 2 December 2015
|publisher = Croatian Meteorological and Hydrological Service}}</ref>


There are two major ponds in Ljubljana. [[Koseze Pond]] is located in the Šiška District and [[Tivoli Pond]] is located in the southern part of [[Tivoli City Park]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.kamnaizlet.si/destinacije/tivolski-ribnik |title=Tivolski ribnik |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Tivoli Pond |work=Kamnaizlet.si |publisher=PVA, d. o. o. |accessdate=8 February 2012}}</ref> Koseze Pond is home to a number of rare plant and animal species and is a popular place of meeting and recreation.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.delo.si/clanek/151456 |first=Alenka |last=Zgonik |title=Dobimo se na Koseškem bajerju |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Let's Meet at Koseze Pond |date=5 May 2011 |issn=1854-6544}}</ref> Tivoli Pond is a shallow pond with a small volume that was originally used for boating and ice skating, but has been abandoned over the years and is now only used for fishing.<ref name="Krelj2012">{{cite book |url=http://www.digitalna-knjiznica.bf.uni-lj.si/dn_krelj_ziva.pdf |language=Slovenian, English|title=Ekološki status ribnika Tivoli |trans-title=The Ecological Status of Tivoli Pond |first=Živa |last=Krelj |publisher=Department of Biology, Faculty of Natural Sciences and Engineering, University of Ljubljana |year=2007}}</ref>
The highest recorded temperature at the Maksimir weather station was {{convert|40.4|°C|°F|abbr=on}} in July 1950, and lowest was {{convert|-27.3|°C|°F|abbr=on}} in February 1956.<ref name=HRMETEO>{{cite web |url= http://klima.hr/klima.php?id=k1&param=srednjak&Grad=zagreb_maksimir |title= Mjesečne vrijednosti za Zagreb Maksimir u razdoblju1949−2014 |publisher= [[Croatian Meteorological and Hydrological Service]] |language= Croatian |accessdate=3 December 2015}}</ref> A temperature of {{convert|-30.5|C}} was recorded on the since defunct Borongaj Airfield in February 1940.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Marković |first1=Đurđica |title=Najledeniji dani u našoj zemlji |url=http://blog.meteo-info.hr/meteorologija/najledeniji-dani-u-nasoj-zemlji/ |website=Meteo-info.hr |accessdate=22 August 2018 |language=hr |date=21 December 2011}}</ref>


===Climate===
{{Weather box
Ljubljana's climate is an [[oceanic climate]] ([[Köppen climate classification]]: '''Cfb'''), bordering on a [[humid subtropical climate]] zone ([[Köppen climate classification]]: '''Cfa'''), with [[continental climate|continental]] characteristics such as warm summers and moderately cold winters.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.weatherbase.com/weather/weather-summary.php3?s=41031&cityname=Ljubljana,+Slovenia|title=Ljubljana, Slovenia Köppen Climate Classification (Weatherbase)|website=Weatherbase|access-date=2019-02-23}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.researchgate.net/publication/265221427|title=MODERN CLIMATE CHANGE IN SLOVENIA|website=ResearchGate|language=en|access-date=2019-02-23}}</ref> July and August are the warmest months with daily highs generally between {{convert|25|and|30|C|F}}, and January is the coldest month with temperatures mostly oscillating around {{convert|0|°C|°F|abbr=on}}. The city experiences 90 days of frost per year, and 11 days with temperatures above {{convert|30|°C|°F|abbr=on}}. The precipitation is relatively evenly distributed throughout the seasons, although winter and spring tend to be somewhat drier than summer and autumn. Yearly precipitation is about {{convert|1400|mm|in|abbr=on|sp=us}}, making Ljubljana one of the wettest European capitals. Thunderstorms are very common from May to September and can occasionally be quite heavy. Snow is common from December to February; on average, there are 48 days with snow cover recorded each winter season. The city is known for its fog, which is recorded on average on 64 days per year, mostly in autumn and winter, and can be particularly persistent in conditions of [[inversion (meteorology)|temperature inversion]].<ref name="ARSO">{{cite web|url=http://www.arso.gov.si/vreme/napovedi%20in%20podatki/ljubljana.html|title=ARSO|accessdate=10 September 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130722165257/http://www.arso.gov.si/vreme/napovedi%20in%20podatki/ljubljana.html|archive-date=22 July 2013|url-status=dead|df=dmy-all}}</ref>
|location= Zagreb (1971–2000, extremes 1949–2014)
{{Weather box|location=Ljubljana
|metric first= Y
|metric first=Yes
|single line= Y
|single line=Yes
|Jan record high C = 19.4
|Feb record high C = 22.2
|Jan record high C=15.8
|Mar record high C = 26.0
|Feb record high C=19.7
|Apr record high C = 30.5
|Mar record high C=24.3
|May record high C = 33.7
|Apr record high C=27.8
|Jun record high C = 37.6
|May record high C=32.4
|Jul record high C = 40.4
|Jun record high C=35.6
|Aug record high C = 39.8
|Jul record high C=37.1
|Sep record high C = 34.0
|Aug record high C=40.2
|Oct record high C = 28.3
|Sep record high C=30.3
|Nov record high C = 25.4
|Oct record high C=25.8
|Dec record high C = 22.5
|Nov record high C=20.9
|year record high C = 40.4
|Dec record high C=16.7
|Jan high C = 3.7
|year record high C=40.2
|Feb high C = 6.8
|Jan high C=3.4
|Mar high C = 11.9
|Feb high C=6.4
|Apr high C = 16.3
|Mar high C=11.4
|May high C = 21.5
|Apr high C=16.1
|Jun high C = 24.5
|May high C=21.4
|Jul high C = 26.7
|Jun high C=24.6
|Aug high C = 26.3
|Jul high C=27.3
|Sep high C = 22.1
|Aug high C=26.7
|Oct high C = 15.8
|Sep high C=21.6
|Nov high C = 8.9
|Oct high C=15.9
|Dec high C = 4.6
|Nov high C=8.8
|year high C = 15.8
|Dec high C=3.8
|Jan mean C = 0.3
|year high C=15.6
|Feb mean C = 2.3
|Jan mean C=0.3
|Mar mean C = 6.4
|Feb mean C=1.9
|Apr mean C = 10.7
|Mar mean C=6.5
|May mean C = 15.8
|Apr mean C=10.8
|Jun mean C = 18.8
|May mean C=15.8
|Jul mean C = 20.6
|Jun mean C=19.1
|Aug mean C = 20.1
|Jul mean C=21.3
|Sep mean C = 15.9
|Aug mean C=20.6
|Oct mean C = 10.5
|Sep mean C=16.0
|Nov mean C = 5.0
|Oct mean C=11.2
|Dec mean C = 1.4
|Nov mean C=5.6
|year mean C = 10.7
|Dec mean C=1.2
|Jan low C = -3.0
|year mean C=10.9
|Feb low C = -1.8
|Jan low C=-2.5
|Mar low C = 1.6
|Feb low C=-2.0
|Apr low C = 5.2
|Mar low C=1.7
|May low C = 9.8
|Apr low C=5.8
|Jun low C = 13.0
|May low C=10.3
|Jul low C = 14.7
|Jun low C=13.7
|Aug low C = 14.4
|Jul low C=15.5
|Sep low C = 10.8
|Aug low C=15.2
|Oct low C = 6.2
|Sep low C=11.5
|Nov low C = 1.4
|Oct low C=7.7
|Dec low C = -1.7
|Nov low C=2.8
|year low C = 5.9
|Dec low C=-1.1
|Jan record low C = -24.3
|year low C=6.6
|Feb record low C = -27.3
|Jan record low C=-20.3
|Mar record low C = -18.3
|Feb record low C=-23.3
|Apr record low C = -4.4
|Mar record low C=-14.1
|May record low C = -1.8
|Apr record low C=-3.2
|Jun record low C = 2.5
|May record low C=0.2
|Jul record low C = 5.4
|Jun record low C=3.8
|Aug record low C = 3.7
|Jul record low C=7.4
|Sep record low C = -0.6
|Aug record low C=5.8
|Oct record low C = -5.6
|Sep record low C=3.1
|Nov record low C = -13.5
|Oct record low C=-5.2
|Dec record low C = -19.8
|Nov record low C=-14.5
|year record low C = -27.5
|Dec record low C=-14.5
|year record low C=-23.3
|precipitation colour = green
|precipitation colour = green
|Jan precipitation mm = 43.2
|Jan precipitation mm=69
|Feb precipitation mm = 38.9
|Feb precipitation mm=70
|Mar precipitation mm = 52.6
|Mar precipitation mm=88
|Apr precipitation mm = 59.3
|Apr precipitation mm=99
|May precipitation mm = 72.6
|May precipitation mm=109
|Jun precipitation mm = 95.3
|Jun precipitation mm=144
|Jul precipitation mm = 77.4
|Jul precipitation mm=115
|Aug precipitation mm = 92.3
|Aug precipitation mm=137
|Sep precipitation mm = 85.8
|Sep precipitation mm=147
|Oct precipitation mm = 82.9
|Oct precipitation mm=147
|Nov precipitation mm = 80.1
|Nov precipitation mm=129
|Dec precipitation mm = 59.6
|Dec precipitation mm=107
|year precipitation mm = 840.1
|year precipitation mm=1362
|unit precipitation days = 0.1 mm
|unit precipitation days=0.1 mm
|Jan precipitation days = 9.8
|Jan precipitation days=11
|Feb precipitation days = 9.4
|Feb precipitation days=9
|Mar precipitation days = 11.0
|Mar precipitation days=11
|Apr precipitation days = 13.0
|Apr precipitation days=14
|May precipitation days = 13.5
|May precipitation days=14
|Jun precipitation days = 13.7
|Jun precipitation days=15
|Jul precipitation days = 11.2
|Jul precipitation days=12
|Aug precipitation days = 10.4
|Aug precipitation days=12
|Sep precipitation days = 10.4
|Sep precipitation days=12
|Oct precipitation days = 10.9
|Oct precipitation days=13
|Nov precipitation days = 11.3
|Nov precipitation days=14
|Dec precipitation days = 11.0
|Dec precipitation days=14
|year precipitation days = 135.6
|year precipitation days=153
|Jan sun=71
|unit snow days = 1.0&nbsp;cm
|Feb sun=114
|Jan snow days = 10.3
|Mar sun=149
|Feb snow days = 7.1
|Apr sun=178
|Mar snow days = 1.8
|May sun=235
|Apr snow days = 0.2
|Jun sun=246
|May snow days = 0.0
|Jul sun=293
|Jun snow days = 0.0
|Aug sun=264
|Jul snow days = 0.0
|Sep sun=183
|Aug snow days = 0.0
|Oct sun=120
|Sep snow days = 0.0
|Nov sun=66
|Oct snow days = 0.0
|Dec sun=56
|Nov snow days = 2.9
|year sun=1974
|Dec snow days = 6.7
|source 1=Slovenian Environment Agency (ARSO)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.meteo.si/uploads/probase/www/climate/table/en/by_location/ljubljana/climate-normals_81-10_Ljubljana_eng.pdf |title=Climate normals 1981–2010 |publisher=ARSO |accessdate=2 December 2014 }}</ref> (data for 1981–2010)
|year snow days = 29.0
|source 2=Slovenian Environment Agency (ARSO)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.meteo.si/met/en/climate/diagrams/ljubljana/ |title=Extreme values of measured yearly, monthly and daily values of chosen meteorological parameters in 1948–2011 |publisher=ARSO |accessdate=2 December 2014 }}</ref> (some extreme values for 1948–2013)
|Jan humidity = 82.5
|Feb humidity = 76.4
|Mar humidity = 70.3
|Apr humidity = 67.5
|May humidity = 68.3
|Jun humidity = 69.7
|Jul humidity = 69.1
|Aug humidity = 72.1
|Sep humidity = 77.7
|Oct humidity = 81.3
|Nov humidity = 83.6
|Dec humidity = 84.8
|year humidity = 75.3
|Jan sun = 55.8
|Feb sun = 98.9
|Mar sun = 142.6
|Apr sun = 168.0
|May sun = 229.4
|Jun sun = 234.0
|Jul sun = 275.9
|Aug sun = 257.3
|Sep sun = 189.0
|Oct sun = 124.0
|Nov sun = 63.0
|Dec sun = 49.6
|year sun =
|Jan percentsun = 23
|Feb percentsun = 39
|Mar percentsun = 43
|Apr percentsun = 45
|May percentsun = 54
|Jun percentsun = 55
|Jul percentsun = 63
|Aug percentsun = 63
|Sep percentsun = 54
|Oct percentsun = 41
|Nov percentsun = 26
|Dec percentsun = 23
|year percentsun = 47
| Jan uv =1
| Feb uv =2
| Mar uv =3
| Apr uv =5
| May uv =7
| Jun uv =8
| Jul uv =8
| Aug uv =7
| Sep uv =5
| Oct uv =3
| Nov uv =1
| Dec uv =1
|source = [[Croatian Meteorological and Hydrological Service]]<ref name= normals/><ref name=HRMETEO/> and Weather Atlas<ref name=WeatherAtlas/>
|date=August 2010
}}
}}


==Cityscape==
{|style="width:100%;text-align:center;line-height:1.2em;margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto" class="wikitable mw-collapsible"
{{wide image|View on Ljubljana from Nebotičnik Tower (38458386985).jpg|900px|View of Ljubljana from Nebotičnik; Ljubljana Castle is on the left.}}
|-
The city's architecture is a mix of styles. Despite the appearance of large buildings, especially at the city's edge, Ljubljana's historic centre remains intact. Although the oldest architecture has been preserved from the Roman period, Ljubljana's downtown got its outline in the Middle Ages.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.dlib.si/details/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-5GMVBYIJ/ |title=Stavbni razvoj v Ljubljani (1144–1895) in arhivsko gradivo Zgodovinskega arhiva Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Architectural Development of Ljubljana (1144–1895) and the Archives of the Historical Archives of Ljubljana |first=Jože |last=Suhadolnik |year=1994 |volume=42 |issn=0023-4923 |journal=Kronika: časopis za slovensko krajevno zgodovino [The Chronicle: the Newspaper for the Slovenian History of Places] }}</ref> After the [[1511 Western Slovenia earthquake|1511 earthquake]], it was rebuilt in the [[Baroque|Baroque style]] following Italian, particularly Venetian, models.
!Colspan=14|Climate data for Zagreb


After the quake in 1895, it was once again rebuilt, this time in the [[Vienna Secession]] style, which today is juxtaposed against the earlier Baroque style buildings that remain. Large sectors built in the inter-war period often include a personal touch by the architects [[Jože Plečnik]]<ref name="RTV2006-05-31">{{cite web |url=http://www.rtvslo.si/tureavanture/podobe-slovenije/kamniti-dokumenti-ljubljanske-zgodovine/199703 |title=Kamniti dokumenti ljubljanske zgodovine |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Stone Documents of the History of Ljubljana |date=31 May 2006 |work=MMC RTV Slovenija |publisher=RTV Slovenija}}</ref> and [[Ivan Vurnik]].<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.si/books?id=57sRAQAAMAAJ |title=Walks in old Ljubljana: a guide to its culture and history |year=1992 |first=Ivan |last=Stopar |first2=Damjan |last2=Prelovšek |publisher=Marketing 013 ZTP |id={{COBISS|ID=31777280}}}}</ref> In the second half of the 20th century, parts of Ljubljana were redesigned by [[Edvard Ravnikar]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rtvslo.si/kultura/razglednice-preteklosti/eden-zadnjih-univerzalnih-arhitektov-pri-nas/155638 |title=Eden zadnjih univerzalnih arhitektov pri nas |language=Slovenian |trans-title=One of the Last Universal Architects at Our Place |first=Polona |last=Balantič |date=23 June 2008 |work=MMC RTV Slovenija |publisher=RTV Slovenija}}</ref>
|-
!Month
!Jan
!Feb
!Mar
!Apr
!May
!Jun
!Jul
!Aug
!Sep
!Oct
!Nov
!Dec
!style="border-left-width:medium"|Year
|-
!Mean daily daylight hours
|style="background:#E9E900;color:#000000;"|9.0
|style="background:#F0F011;color:#000000;"|10.0
|style="background:#FFFF33;color:#000000;"|12.0
|style="background:#FFFF55;color:#000000;"|14.0
|style="background:#FFFF66;color:#000000;"|15.0
|style="background:#FFFF77;color:#000000;"|16.0
|style="background:#FFFF66;color:#000000;"|15.0
|style="background:#FFFF55;color:#000000;"|14.0
|style="background:#FFFF44;color:#000000;"|13.0
|style="background:#F7F722;color:#000000;"|11.0
|style="background:#E9E900;color:#000000;"|9.0
|style="background:#E9E900;color:#000000;"|9.0
|style="background:#FFFF37;color:#000000;"|12.3
|-
!Colspan=14 style="background:#f8f9fa;font-weight:normal;font-size:95%;"|Source: Weather Atlas<ref name="WeatherAtlas">{{cite web |url=https://www.weather-atlas.com/en/croatia/zagreb-climate |title=Zagreb, Croatia – Climate data |publisher=Weather Atlas |accessdate=9 March 2017}}</ref>
|}


===Cityscape===
===Main sights===
The central square in Ljubljana is [[Prešeren Square]] ({{lang|sl|Prešernov trg}}) where the [[Franciscan Church of the Annunciation]] ({{lang|sl|Frančiškanska cerkev}}) is located. Built between 1646 and 1660 (the belltowers following later), it replaced an older Gothic church on the same site. The layout takes the form of an early-Baroque basilica with one nave and two rows of lateral chapels. The Baroque main altar was executed by the sculptor Francesco Robba. Much of the original frescos were ruined by the cracks in the ceiling caused by the [[1895 Ljubljana earthquake|Ljubljana earthquake in 1895]]. The new frescos were painted by the Slovene [[impressionist]] painter [[Matej Sternen]].
<gallery mode="packed-hover" heights="180px">
File:St. Marks Sq Zagreb pano.jpg|[[St. Mark's Square, Zagreb|St. Mark's Square]]: [[Banski dvori]] ([[Croatian Government]] residence), [[St. Mark's Church, Zagreb|St. Mark's Church]], [[Croatian Parliament]]
File:Panorama Save.JPG|[[Sava]] flowing through Zagreb.
</gallery>
The most important historical [[high-rise]] constructions are [[Neboder]] on [[Ban Jelačić Square]], [[Cibona Tower]] (1987) and [[Zagrepčanka]] (1976) on Savska Street, [[Mamutica]] in Travno ([[Novi Zagreb – istok]] district, built in 1974) and [[Zagreb TV Tower]] on [[Medvednica|Sljeme]] (built in 1973).<ref>{{cite web
|url= http://putujte.blogspot.com/2014/12/gdje-se-nalazi-najvazniji-neboder-u.html
|title= Zagreb hoteli – putovanje u Zagreb
|accessdate= 27 August 2015
|date= 19 December 2014
|work= Blogger
|language= Croatian
}}</ref>


[[Ljubljana Castle]] (''Ljubljanski grad'') is a medieval castle with [[Romanesque architecture|Romanesque]], [[Gothic architecture|Gothic]], and [[Renaissance architecture|Renaissance]] architectural elements, located on the summit of [[Castle Hill (Ljubljana)|Castle Hill]], which dominates the city centre.<ref>{{cite book |url=https://books.google.si/books?id=Q-tXAAAAMAAJ |title=Vsi slovenski gradovi: leksikon slovenske grajske zapuščine |language=Slovenian |trans-title=All Slovenian Castles: The Lexicon of the Slovenian Castle Heritage |first=Ivan |last=Jakič |year=1997 |isbn=9788634117714 |publisher=Državna založba Slovenije [National Publishing House] |page=192}}</ref> The area surrounding today's castle has been continuously inhabited since 1200 BC.<ref name="LubljanaCastle">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/castle/default.html |title=Ljubljanski grad / Ljubljana Castle |accessdate=30 July 2008 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080502132830/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/castle/default.html |archivedate=2 May 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The castle was built in the 12th century and was a residence of the [[Margrave]]s, later the [[Duchy of Carniola|Dukes of Carniola]].<ref>[http://www.ljubljana-calling.com/ENG/inCallingZnGrad.php Ljubljana Calling/Sightseeing/Ljubljana Castle] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140202145822/http://www.ljubljana-calling.com/ENG/inCallingZnGrad.php |date=2 February 2014 }}</ref> The castle's Viewing Tower dates to 1848; this was inhabited by a guard whose duty it was to fire cannons warning the city in case of fire or announcing important visitors or events, a function the castle still holds today.<ref name="LubljanaCastle"/> Cultural events and weddings also take place there.<ref name="LubljanaFestival">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljanafestival.si/en/ljubljana_castle/history/|title=Festival Ljubljana |accessdate=30 July 2008}}</ref> Since 2006, a [[Ljubljana Castle funicular|funicular]] has linked the city centre to the castle atop the hill.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/news/75611/detail.html |title=5 Years of the Funicular Railway to the Castle |date=28 December 2011 |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120313112641/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/news/75611/detail.html |archivedate=13 March 2012 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
In the 2000s, the City Assembly approved a new plan that allowed for the many recent high-rise buildings in Zagreb, such as the Almeria Tower, [[Eurotower (Zagreb)|Eurotower]], [[HOTO Tower]], [[Zagrebtower]] and one of the tallest skyscrapers [[Sky Office Tower]].<ref name=skyoffice>{{cite web
|url=http://www.skyoffice.hr/hrv/
|title=Sky Office – Zagreb
|accessdate=27 August 2015
|work=Sky Office
|language=Croatian
|url-status=dead
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150817011757/https://www.skyoffice.hr/hrv/
|archivedate=17 August 2015
}}</ref><ref name=empoirs>{{cite web
|url= http://www.emporis.com/buildings/1199128/sky-office-tower-zagreb-croatia
|title= Sky Office Tower, Zagreb
|accessdate= 27 August 2015
|date=
|work= Empoirs
}}</ref>


[[File:StNicholas-Ljubljana.JPG|thumb|Ljubljana Cathedral.]]
In [[Novi Zagreb]], the neighbourhoods of [[Blato, Zagreb|Blato]] and [[Lanište, Croatia|Lanište]] expanded significantly, including the [[Arena Zagreb|Zagreb Arena]] and the adjoining business centre.<ref name="blato_lanište">{{cite web|url=http://www.novi-zagreb.hr/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1174 |title=Blato i Lanište postaju najsuvremeniji dio Zagreba? |work=novi-zagreb.hr |date=28 March 2008 |accessdate=27 July 2008 |language=Croatian |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721101337/http://www.novi-zagreb.hr/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1174 |archivedate=21 July 2011}}</ref>
[[Ljubljana Town Hall|Town Hall]] ({{lang|sl|Mestna hiša}}, {{lang|sl|Magistrat}}), located at [[Town Square (Ljubljana)|Town Square]], is the seat of the [[City Municipality of Ljubljana]]. The original building was built in a Gothic style in 1484.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.dlib.si/details/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-5GMVBYIJ/ |title=Stavbni razvoj v Ljubljani (1144–1895) in arhivsko gradivo Zgodovinskega arhiva Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Architectural Development of Ljubljana (1144–1895) and the Archives of the Historical Archives of Ljubljana |first=Jože |last=Suhadolnik |year=1994 |volume=42 |issue=2 |journal=Kronika: časopis za slovensko krajevno zgodovino [The Chronicle: The Newspaper for the Slovenian History of Places] |issn=0023-4923 }}</ref> Between 1717 and 1719,<ref name="RTV2006-05-31"/> the building underwent a Baroque renovation with a Venetian inspiration by the architect [[Gregor Maček, Sr.]].<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.dlib.si/details/URN:NBN:SI:doc-YK8W9WXI |title=Meščani Ljubljane in njihova mestna hiša |language=Slovenian, English, German|first=Katja |last=Žvanut |journal=Kronika: časopis za slovensko krajevno zgodovino [The Chronicle: The Newspaper for the Slovenian History of Places] |issn=0023-4923 |volume=47 |issue=1/2 |year=1999 }}</ref> Near Town Hall, at [[Town Square (Ljubljana)|Town Square]], stands a replica of the Baroque [[Robba Fountain]]. The original has been moved into the [[National Gallery of Slovenia|National Gallery]] in 2006. The Robba Fountain is decorated with an obelisk at the foot of which there are three figures in white marble symbolising the three chief rivers of Carniola. It is work of [[Francesco Robba]], who designed numerous other Baroque statues in the city.<ref name="Baroque">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/baroque_ljubljana/default.html |title=Baroque Ljubljana |accessdate=30 July 2008 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080627191346/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/baroque_ljubljana/default.html |archivedate=27 June 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref>


[[Ljubljana Cathedral]] ({{lang|sl|ljubljanska stolnica}}), or St. Nicholas's Cathedral ({{lang|sl|stolnica sv. Nikolaja}}), serves the [[Archdiocese of Ljubljana]]. Easily identifiable due to its green dome and twin towers, it is located at [[Cyril and Methodius Square]] ({{lang|sl|Ciril-Metodov trg}}, named for [[Saints Cyril and Methodius]]) by the nearby [[Ljubljana Central Market]] and Town Hall.<ref name="LubljanaCathedrale">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/baroque_ljubljana/cathedral/default.html |title=Stolnica (Cerkev sv. Nikolaja) / The Cathedral (Church of St. Nicholas) |accessdate=30 July 2008 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080412030506/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/baroque_ljubljana/cathedral/default.html |archivedate=12 April 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Diocese of Ljubljana was set up in 1461.<ref name="LubljanaCathedrale"/> Between 1701 and 1706, the Jesuit architect [[Andrea Pozzo]] designed the Baroque church with two side chapels shaped in the form of a [[Christian cross|Latin cross]].<ref name="LubljanaCathedrale"/> The dome was built in the centre in 1841.<ref name="LubljanaCathedrale"/> The interior is decorated with Baroque frescos painted by [[Giulio Quaglio the Younger|Giulio Quaglio]] between 1703–1706 and 1721–1723.<ref name="LubljanaCathedrale"/>
Due to a long-standing restriction that forbade the construction of 10-story or higher buildings, most of Zagreb's high-rise buildings date from the 1970s and 1980s and new [[apartment|apartment building]]s on the outskirts of the city are usually 4–8 floors tall. Exceptions to the restriction have been made in recent years, such as permitting the construction of high-rise buildings in Lanište or Kajzerica.<ref name=javno>{{cite web
|url=http://www.javno.com/hr/zagreb/clanak.php?id=55540
|title=Na Laništu gradnja iznad 9 katova
|accessdate=21 September 2009
|date=21 June 2007
|work=Javno.hr
|language=Croatian
|url-status=dead
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090115193913/http://www.javno.com/hr/zagreb/clanak.php?id=55540
|archivedate=15 January 2009
}}</ref>


[[Nebotičnik]] (pronounced {{IPA-sl|nɛbɔtiːtʃniːk|}}, "Skyscraper") is a thirteen-story building that rises to a height of {{convert|70.35|m|ft|0|abbr=on|sp=us}}. It combines elements of the [[Neoclassical architecture|Neoclassical]] and the [[Art-Deco]] architecture. Predominantly a place of business, Nebotičnik is home to a variety of shops on the ground floor and first story, and various offices are located on floors two to five. The sixth to ninth floors are private residences. Located on the top three floors are a café, bar and observation deck.<ref name="Ljubljana.si">''[http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/20th_century_ljubljana/skyscraper/ Ljubljana.si – Skyscraper]''. Retrieved 3 December 2007. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080606070329/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/20th_century_ljubljana/skyscraper/ |date=6 June 2008 }}</ref> It was designed by the Slovenian architect [[Vladimir Šubic]]. Construction began in July 1930 and the building opened on 21 February 1933.<ref name="govcomm"/> It was for some time the tallest residential building in Europe.<ref name="govcomm">''[http://www.ukom.gov.si/eng/slovenia/background-information/neboticnik/ Government Communication Office – Ljubljana's Neboticnik Is 70 Years Old]''. Retrieved 3 December 2007. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080305171128/http://www.ukom.gov.si/eng/slovenia/background-information/neboticnik/ |date=5 March 2008 }}</ref>
===Surroundings===
{{further|Zagreb County|Prigorje|Hrvatsko Zagorje|Turopolje}}
[[File:Oltar domovine Medvedgrad 2009.jpg|upright=0.9|thumb|right|Altar of the Homeland]]
[[File:Stari grad Medvedgrad - Zagreb 02.jpg|thumb|right|upright=0.9|[[Medvedgrad]] fortress]]
The wider Zagreb area has been continuously inhabited since the prehistoric period, as witnessed by archaeological findings in the Veternica cave from the [[Paleolithic]] and excavation of the remains of the Roman Andautonia near the present village of Šćitarjevo.


<gallery>
Picturesque former villages on the slopes of Medvednica, Šestine, Gračani and Remete, maintain their rich [[tradition]]s, including folk costumes, Šestine umbrellas, and [[gingerbread]] products.
File:Ljubljana Prešeren Square.jpg|Prešeren Square in downtown Ljubljana
File:Río Ljubljanica, Liubliana, Eslovenia, 2017-04-14, DD 06.jpg|Ljubljanica River, downtown Ljubljana
File:Ljubljana BW 2014-10-09 11-34-41.jpg|[[Ljubljana Town Hall|Town Hall]]
File:Robbafountain.jpg|{{nowrap|[[Robba Fountain]] at}}<br />[[Town Square (Ljubljana)|Town Square]]
File:Fuente de la Plaza Nueva, Liubliana, Eslovenia, 2017-04-14, DD 44-46 HDR.jpg|Fountain in New Square
File:Ljubljana BW 2014-10-09 12-19-48.jpg|{{nowrap|[[Urbanc House]] at}}<br />[[Prešeren Square]]
File:Ljubljana BW 2014-10-09 13-57-30.jpg|[[Slovenian Philharmonic|Slovenian Philharmonic Building]]
File:Neboticnik Tower 1.jpg|[[Nebotičnik]]
File:Ljubljana building of former Cooperative Bank.jpg|Former Cooperative Bank
</gallery>


===Parks and other green spaces===
To the north is the [[Medvednica]] Mountain ({{lang-hr|Zagrebačka gora}}), with its highest peak [[Medvednica|Sljeme]] (1,035 m), where one of the tallest structures in Croatia, [[Zagreb TV Tower]] is located. The Sava and the [[Kupa (river)|Kupa]] valleys are to the south of Zagreb, and the region of [[Hrvatsko Zagorje]] is located on the other (northern) side of the Medvednica hill. In mid-January 2005, Sljeme held its first [[FIS Alpine World Ski Championships|World Ski Championship tournament]].
[[Tivoli City Park]] ({{lang|sl|Mestni park Tivoli}}) is the largest park in Ljubljana.<ref name="CulturalHeritage">{{cite web |url=http://www.slovenia.info/?kul_zgod_znamenitosti=6296&lng=2 |title=Ljubljana, Park Tivoli, Rožnik and Šišenski hill – Cultural and Historical Heritage – Slovenia – Official Travel Guide – |last=Slovenia.Info |work=slovenia.info |year=2011 |accessdate=5 July 2011}}</ref><ref name="LjubljanaLife">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana-life.com/culture/culture_details/49-Tivoli_Park |title=Tivoli Park Ljubljana &#124; Slovenia – Ljubljana Life |last=LjubljanaLife.com |work=ljubljana-life.com |year=2011 |accessdate=5 July 2011}}</ref> It was designed in 1813 by the French engineer [[Jean Blanchard]] and now covers approximately {{convert|5|km2|abbr=on|sp=us}}.<ref name="CulturalHeritage"/> The park was laid out during the [[French First Empire|French imperial]] administration of Ljubljana in 1813 and named after the [[Paris]]ian [[Jardin de Tivoli, Paris|Jardins de Tivoli]].<ref name="CulturalHeritage"/> Between 1921 and 1939, it was renovated by the [[Slovenes|Slovene]] architect [[Jože Plečnik]], who unveiled his statue of Napoleon in 1929 in Republic Square and designed a broad central promenade, called the [[Jakopič Promenade]] ({{lang|sl|Jakopičevo sprehajališče}}) after the leading Slovene [[impressionism|impressionist]] painter [[Rihard Jakopič]].<ref name="CulturalHeritage"/><ref name="LjubljanaLife"/> Within the park, there are different types of trees, flower gardens, several statues, and fountains.<ref name="CulturalHeritage"/><ref name="LjubljanaLife"/> Several notable buildings stand in the park, among them [[Tivoli Castle]], the [[National Museum of Contemporary History]] and the [[Tivoli Hall|Tivoli Sports Hall]].<ref name="CulturalHeritage"/>


[[Tivoli–Rožnik Hill–Šiška Hill Landscape Park]] is located in the western part of the city.<ref name="Lešnik2003">{{cite book |url=http://www.ckff.si/dokumenti/inventarizacija_dvozivk_tivoli.pdf |title=Poročilo: Inventarizacija dvoživk (Amphibia) v Krajinskem parku Tivoli, Rožnik in Šišenski hrib |trans-title=A Report: The Inventarisation of Amphibians (Amphibia) in Tivoli–Rožnik–Šiška Hill Landscape Park |pages=8–9 |language=Slovenian |publisher=Center for Cartography of Fauna and Flora |date=23 September 2003 |first=Aleksandra |last=Lešnik}}</ref>
From the summit, weather permitting, the vista reaches as far as [[Velebit]] Range along Croatia's rocky northern coast, as well as the snow-capped peaks of the towering [[Julian Alps]] in neighbouring [[Slovenia]]. There are several lodging villages, offering accommodation and restaurants for hikers. Skiers visit Sljeme, which has four ski-runs, three ski-lifts and a chairlift.


The [[Ljubljana Botanical Garden]] ({{lang|sl|Ljubljanski botanični vrt}}) covers {{convert|2.40|ha}} next to the junction of the [[Gruber Canal]] and the Ljubljanica, south of the Old Town. It is the central Slovenian [[botanical garden]] and the oldest cultural, scientific, and educational organisation in the country. It started operating under the leadership of [[Franc Hladnik]] in 1810. Of over 4,500 plant [[species]] and [[subspecies]], roughly a third is [[endemism|endemic]] to Slovenia, whereas the rest originate from other European places and other continents. The institution is a member of the international network [[Botanic Gardens Conservation International]] and cooperates with more than 270 botanical gardens all across the world.<ref>{{cite journal|url=http://bijh-s.zrc-sazu.si/ABS/SI/ABS/Cont/53_1/ABS%2053_1-2010_Bavcon.pdf |title=Botanični vrt Univerze v Ljubljani – 200 let |language=Slovenian, English |trans-title=University Botanic Gardens Ljubljana – 200 Years |first=Jože |last=Bavcon |journal=Acta Biologica Slovenica |volume=53 |issue=1 |pages=3–33 |year=2010 |issn=1408-3671 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131019135443/http://bijh-s.zrc-sazu.si/ABS/SI/ABS/Cont/53_1/ABS%2053_1-2010_Bavcon.pdf |archivedate=19 October 2013 }}</ref>
The old [[Medvedgrad]], a recently restored medieval [[wikt:Special:Search/burg|burg]] was built in the 13th century on Medvednica hill. It overlooks the western part of the city and also hosts the ''Shrine of the Homeland'', a memorial with an [[eternal flame]], where Croatia pays reverence to all its heroes fallen for [[homeland]] in its history, customarily on [[Public holiday|national holiday]]s. The ruined medieval fortress [[Susedgrad]] is located on far-western side of Medvednica hill. It has been abandoned since the early 17th century, but it is visited during the year.


In 2014, Ljubljana won the [[European Green Capital Award]] for 2016 for its environmental achievements.<ref>{{cite web|url = http://ec.europa.eu/environment/europeangreencapital/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/EGCA-winning-city-2016-Ljubljana-F01.pdf|title = Environment: Ljubljana European Green Capital 2016|date = 24 June 2014|accessdate = 24 June 2014|website = |publisher = European Commission}}</ref>
Zagreb occasionally experiences earthquakes, due to the proximity of [[Žumberak]]-[[Medvednica]] fault zone.<ref>[http://www2.ogs.trieste.it/gngts/gngts/convegniprecedenti/2008/riassunti/1.1/11-toml.pdf SEISMOGENIC ZONES OF NORTHWESTERN CROATIA] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160206110700/http://www2.ogs.trieste.it/gngts/gngts/convegniprecedenti/2008/riassunti/1.1/11-toml.pdf |date=6 February 2016 }} GNGTS 2008</ref> It's classified as an area of high seismic activity.<ref name="embassy earthquake">{{cite web|url=http://zagreb.usembassy.gov/service/special-consular-services/emergency-and-medical-issues/earthquake.html|title=Earthquake – Zagreb, Croatia – Embassy of the United States|work=usembassy.gov|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160206090402/http://zagreb.usembassy.gov/service/special-consular-services/emergency-and-medical-issues/earthquake.html|archivedate=6 February 2016}}</ref> The area around Medvednica was the epicentre of the [[1880 Zagreb earthquake]] (magnitude 6.3), and the area is known for occasional landslide threatening houses in the area.<ref name="landslide survey croatian">{{cite web|url=http://www.hgi-cgs.hr/zagreb_potresi.html|title=Potresi na zagrebačkom području|last=dpuljic|work=hgi-cgs.hr}}</ref> The proximity of strong seismic sources presents a real danger of strong earthquakes.<ref name="landslide survey croatian"/> Croatian Chief of [[Office of Emergency Management]] Pavle Kalinić stated Zagreb experiences around 400 earthquakes a year, most of them being imperceptible. However, in case of a strong earthquake, it's expected that 3,000 people would die and up to 15,000 would be wounded.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://net.hr/danas/hrvatska/stizu-upute-kako-se-ponasati-potresi-se-stalno-dogadaju-zagreb-ih-ima-400-godisnje/|title=STIŽU UPUTE KAKO SE PONAŠATI: "Potresi se stalno događaju. Zagreb ih ima 400 godišnje"|date=14 January 2016|work=net.hr}}</ref>


===Streets and squares===
==Demographics==
[[File:Ljubljana streets (11330213013).jpg|alt=|thumb|Čop Street.]]
{{main|Demographics of Zagreb}}
[[File:Ljubljana stritarjeva ulica.jpg|thumb|Stritar Street with Robba fountain.]]
[[File:Oktogon palaca Prve hrvatske stedionice s 01052012 roberta f.jpg|thumb|right|[[Oktogon (Zagreb)|Oktogon, urban passageway in city center]]]]
Existing already in the 18th century, the Ljubljana central square, the [[Prešeren Square (Ljubljana)|Prešeren Square]]'s modern appearance has developed since the end of the 19th century. After the 1895 earthquake, [[Max Fabiani]] designed the square as the hub of four streets and four banks, and in the 1980s, [[Edvard Ravnikar]] proposed the circular design and the granite block pavement.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.slovenia.info/?arhitekturne_znamenitosti=765&lng=1 |title=Ljubljana, Tromostovje |work=slovenia.info |publisher=Slovenian Tourist Board |accessdate=15 May 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.dlib.si/details/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-YLJCEM5D/ |title=Prešernov trg v Ljubljani |first=Breda |last=Mihelič |language=Slovenian, English|trans-title=Prešeren Square in Ljubljana |journal=Zbornik za umetnostno zgodovino [Collection of Art History Papers] |year=1999 |volume=35 |pages=94–131}}</ref> A statue of the Slovene [[List of national poets|national poet]] [[France Prešeren]] with a [[muse]] stands in the middle of the square. The [[Prešeren Monument (Ljubljana)|Prešeren Monument]] was created by [[Ivan Zajec]] in 1905, whereas the pedestal was designed by Max Fabiani. The square and surroundings have been closed to traffic since 1 September 2007.<ref name="caf">{{cite book |url=http://geo2.ff.uni-lj.si/pisnadela/pdfs/dipl_200801_nina_caf.pdf |title=Turizem kot del revitalizacije mestnega jedra Ljubljana |author=Nina Caf |year=2008 |accessdate=12 December 2011 }}{{dead link|date=January 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> Only a tourist train leaves Prešeren Square every day, transporting tourists to [[Ljubljana Castle]].<ref name="caf"/>
[[File:Street - panoramio (15).jpg|thumb|[[Tkalčićeva Street]]]]
[[File:Mamutica Zagreb 20110620 2877.jpg|right|thumb|[[Mamutica]] in [[Novi Zagreb-istok|East Novi Zagreb]] [[city district]] ([[Travno]] local committee area), an apartment complex built in 1974 as the Croatian version of the ''[[plattenbau]]'', largest building (by volume) in Zagreb and in [[Croatia]]]]


[[Republic Square (Ljubljana)|Republic Square]], at first named Revolution Square, is the largest square in Ljubljana.<ref name="DEDITR">{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.dedi.si/dediscina/210-trg-republike |title=Trg republike |trans-title=Republic Square |encyclopedia=Enciklopedija naravne in kulturne dediščine na Slovenskem – DEDI [Encyclopedia of Natural and Cultural Heritage in Slovenia] |first1=Alenka |last1=Bartulovič |editor1-first=Mateja |editor1-last=Šmid Hribar |editor2-first=Gregor |editor2-last=Golež |editor3-first=Dan |editor3-last=Podjed |editor4-first=Drago |editor4-last=Kladnik |editor5-first=Bojan |editor5-last=Erhartič |editor6-first=Primož |editor6-last=Pavlin |editor7-first=Jerele |editor7-last=Ines |accessdate=23 May 2012 |language=Slovenian}}</ref> It was designed in the second half of the 20th century by Edvard Ravnikar.<ref name="DEDITR"/> On 26 June 1991, the independence of Slovenia was declared here.<ref name="DEDITR"/> The [[National Assembly Building of Slovenia|National Assembly Building]] stands at its northern side, and [[Cankar Hall]], the largest Slovenian cultural and congress centre, at the southern side.<ref name="DEDITR"/> At its eastern side stands the two-storey building of [[Maximarket]], also work of Ravnikar. It houses one of the oldest department stores in Ljubljana and a cafe, which is a popular meeting place and a place of political talks and negotiations.<ref name="DEDITR2">{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://www.dedi.si/dediscina/211-veleblagovnica-maximarket |title=Veleblagovnica Maximarket |trans-title=Maximarket Department Store |encyclopedia=Enciklopedija naravne in kulturne dediščine na Slovenskem – DEDI [Encyclopedia of Natural and Cultural Heritage in Slovenia] |first1=Alenka |last1=Bartulovič |editor1-first=Mateja |editor1-last=Šmid Hribar |editor2-first=Gregor |editor2-last=Golež |editor3-first=Dan |editor3-last=Podjed |editor4-first=Drago |editor4-last=Kladnik |editor5-first=Bojan |editor5-last=Erhartič |editor6-first=Primož |editor6-last=Pavlin |editor7-first=Jerele |editor7-last=Ines |accessdate=23 May 2012 |language=Slovenian}}</ref>
Zagreb is by far the largest city in [[Croatia]] in terms of area and population. The official [[2011 Croatian census|2011 census]] counted 792,325 residents,<ref name="city-strategy-stats">{{cite web |url=http://www1.zagreb.hr/zgstat/o_zagrebu_stat.html |title=GRADSKI URED ZA STRATEGIJSKO PLANIRANJE I RAZVOJ GRADA – Odjel za statistiku |last=Zagreb city council|work=www1.zagreb.hr |year=2011 |accessdate=16 June 2011}}</ref><ref name="AboutCroatia">{{cite web |url=http://www.about-croatia.com/croatia-population.php |title=About Croatia – Population of Croatia |last=About Croatia |work=Information provided by the Croatian Central Bureau of Statistics |year=2011 |accessdate=16 June 2011}}</ref> although due to a [[Immigration|substantial immigrant]] influx the number of people residing in the city is much higher.


[[Congress Square]] ({{lang|sl|Kongresni trg}}) is one of the most important centres of the city. It was built in 1821 for ceremonial purposes such as [[Congress of Laibach|Congress of Ljubljana]] after which it was named. Since then it became an important centre for political ceremonies, demonstrations and protests, such as the ceremony at creation of [[Kingdom of Yugoslavia]], ceremony of liberation of [[Belgrade]], protests against [[JBTZ trial|Yugoslav authority]] in 1988 etc. The square also houses several important buildings, such as the [[University of Ljubljana|University of Ljubljana Palace]], [[Slovenian Philharmonic|Philharmonic Hall]], [[Ursuline Church of the Holy Trinity]], and the [[Slovene Society|Slovene Society Building]]. Star Park ({{lang|sl|Park Zvezda}}) is located in the centre of the square. In 2010 and 2011, the square was heavily renovated and is now mostly closed to road traffic on ground area, however there are five floors for commercial purposes and a parking lot located underground.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rtvslo.si/kultura/drugo/foto-zgodbe-ki-so-se-dogajale-na-kongresnem-trgu/260463 |title=Zgodbe, ki so se dogajale na Kongresnem trgu |language=Slovenian |trans-title=News from Congress Square |accessdate=9 October 2011 |publisher=Radiotelevizija Slovenija}}</ref>
Zagreb [[metropolitan area]] population is slightly above 1.1 million inhabitants,<ref name="CityMayors">{{cite web |url=http://www.citymayors.com/statistics/largest-cities-mayors-ad2.html |title=City Mayors: Largest cities and their mayors in 2011 (Countries A-D) |last=City Mayors & Tann vom Hove |work=citymayors.com |year=2010 |quote=City Mayors & Tann vom Hove|accessdate=29 June 2011}}</ref> as it includes the [[Zagreb County]].<ref name=zg_cc>{{cite web|url=http://www.ff.uni-lj.si/oddelki/geo/publikacije/dela/files/Dela_27/01_Sic.pdf |title=Spatial and functional changes in recent urban development of Zagreb |year=2007 |accessdate=6 November 2008 |publisher=[[Delo (newspaper)|Delo]] |last=Sić |first=Miroslav |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081217230924/http://www.ff.uni-lj.si/oddelki/geo/publikacije/dela/files/Dela_27/01_Sic.pdf |archivedate=17 December 2008}}</ref> Zagreb metropolitan area makes approximately a quarter of a total [[Demographics of Croatia|population of Croatia]].
In 1997, the City of Zagreb itself was given special County status, separating it from Zagreb County,<ref>[[Narodne novine]] 62/01, 125/08</ref> although it remains the [[administrative centre]] of both.


[[Čop Street]] ({{lang|sl|Čopova ulica}}) is a major thoroughfare in the centre of Ljubljana. The street is named after [[Matija Čop]], an early 19th-century literary figure and close friend of the Slovene [[Romantic poetry|Romantic poet]] [[France Prešeren]]. It leads from the [[Main Post Office Palace (Ljubljana)|Main Post Office]] ({{lang|sl|Glavna pošta}}) at [[Slovene Street (Ljubljana)|Slovene Street]] ({{lang|sl|Slovenska cesta}}) downward to Prešeren Square and is lined with bars and stores, including the oldest [[McDonald's|McDonald's restaurant]] in Slovenia. It is a pedestrian zone and regarded as the capital's central [[promenade]].
The majority of its citizens are [[Croats]] making up 93% of the city's population (2011 census). The same census records around 55,000 residents belonging to [[Ethnic minorities in Croatia|ethnic minorities]]: 17,526 [[Serbs]] (2.22%), 8,119 [[Bosniaks]] (1.03%), 4,292 [[Albanians]] (0.54%), 2,755 [[Romani people|Romani]] (0.35%), 2,132 [[Slovenes]] (0.27%), 1,194 [[Macedonians (ethnic group)|Macedonians]] (0.15%), 1,191 [[Montenegrins (ethnic group)|Montenegrins]] (0.15%), and a number of other smaller communities.<ref name=zageb_ethnic>
{{cite web
|url=http://www.dzs.hr/Eng/censuses/census2011/results/htm/e01_01_04/e01_01_04_RH.html
|title=Population by Ethnicity, By Towns/Municipalities, 2011 Census
|work= Census 2011
|publisher= [[Croatian Bureau of Statistics]]
|accessdate= 16 April 2015
}}</ref>


===Bridges===
{|class="infobox" style="float:right; font-size:85%;"
Ljubljana's most known bridges, listed from northern to southern ones, include the [[Dragon Bridge (Ljubljana)|Dragon Bridge]] ({{lang|sl|Zmajski most}}), the [[Butchers' Bridge]] ({{lang|sl|Mesarski most}}), the [[Triple Bridge]] ({{lang|sl|Tromostovje}}), the [[Fish Footbridge]] ({{lang-sl|Ribja brv}}), the [[Cobblers' Bridge]] ({{lang-sl|Šuštarski most}}), the [[Hradecky Bridge]] ({{lang-sl|Hradeckega most}}), and the [[Trnovo Bridge]] ({{lang|sl|Trnovski most}}). The last mentioned crosses the [[Gradaščica]], whereas all other bridges cross the [[Ljubljanica River]].
|colspan="2"|'''Largest groups of foreign residents'''<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.dzs.hr/Hrv/censuses/census2011/results/htm/H01_01_04/h01_01_04_RH.html|title=Population by nationality, 2011|publisher=Croatia|accessdate=22 August 2011}}</ref>
|-\
!Nationality ||Population (2011)
|-
|{{flagcountry|Serbia}}||17.526
|-
|{{flagcountry|Bosnia and Herzegovina}}||8.119
|-
|{{flagcountry|Albania}}||4.292
|-
|{{flagcountry|Slovenia}}||2.132
|-
|{{flagcountry|Macedonia}}||1.194
|-
|{{flagcountry|Montenegro}}||1.191
|-
|{{flagcountry|Czech Republic}}||835
|-
|{{flagcountry|Hungary}}||825
|-
|{{flagcountry|Italy}}||399
|-
|{{Flagcountry|Germany}}
|364
|-
|{{Flagcountry|Ukraine}}
|332
|-
|{{Flagcountry|Russia}}
|331
|}


====City districts====
====The Dragon Bridge====
[[File:Dragon Bridge 1 (5756113569).jpg|thumb|Dragon statue on the [[Dragon Bridge (Ljubljana)|Dragon Bridge]]]]
{{main|Districts of Zagreb}}
The 1901 [[Dragon Bridge (Ljubljana)|Dragon Bridge]], decorated with the Dragon statues<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.rtvslovenija.si/tureavanture/podobe-slovenije/med-mostovi-slovenske-prestolnice/200845 |title=Med mostovi slovenske prestolnice |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Among the Bridges of the Slovenian Capital |work=MMC RTV Slovenia |publisher=RTV Slovenia |date=28 March 2008}}</ref> on pedestals at four corners of the bridge<ref name=ECCENET>[http://www.eccenet.org/News/2001/2001Supp2.htm Dragon Bridge] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111003134331/https://www.eccenet.org/News/2001/2001Supp2.htm |date=3 October 2011 }} ''Eccenet.org''</ref><ref name="SBTG84">{{cite book |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=h_d3xtr7rDEC&pg=PA75 |authors=McKelvie, Robin. McKelvie, Jenny |chapter=What To See |title=Slovenia: The Bradt Travel Guide |publisher=Bradt Travel Guides |year=2008 |page=[https://archive.org/details/sloveniabradttra0000mcke/page/75 75] |isbn=978-1-84162-119-7 |url=https://archive.org/details/sloveniabradttra0000mcke/page/75 }}</ref> has become a symbol of the city<ref name="LJUBLJANA"/> and is regarded as one of the most beautiful examples of a bridge made in [[Vienna Secession]] style.<ref name="ARCH124"/><ref name="S65">{{cite book |first=Steve |last=Fallon |title=Slovenia |publisher=Lonely Planet |year=2004 |page=65 |isbn=978-1-74104-161-3}}</ref><ref name=LJUBLJANA>[http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/ljubljanica_bridges/dragon_bridge/default.html The Dragon Bridge] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081211082312/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/sights/ljubljanica_bridges/dragon_bridge/default.html |date=11 December 2008 }}</ref><ref name=IABC>[http://europe.iabc.com/eli2007/eli2007_welcome.pdf Ljubljana – A lively city, safe under the wings of a dragon] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080410061126/http://europe.iabc.com/eli2007/eli2007_welcome.pdf |date=10 April 2008 }} ''International Associations of Business Communicators (IABC)''</ref> It has a span of {{convert|33.34|m|ftin|sp=us}}<ref name="ARCH124"/> and its arch was at the time the third largest in Europe.<ref name=ECCENET/> It is protected as a technical monument.<ref name="ARCH124b">{{cite conference |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E7ywmb24EQMC&pg=PA124 |title=World Famous Arch Bridges in Slovenia: The Dragon Bridge in Ljubljana (1901) |first=Gorazd |last=Humar |date=September 2001 |publisher=Presses des Ponts |booktitle=Arch'01: troisième Conférence internationale sur les ponts en arc Paris |editor=Charles Abdunur |pages=124–125 |location=Paris |isbn=2-85978-347-4}}</ref>
Since 14 December 1999 City of Zagreb is divided into 17 [[city districts]] (''gradska četvrt'', pl. ''gradske četvrti''):<ref name="census-2011-districts">{{Croatian Census 2011
|format= HTML
|url= http://www.dzs.hr/Eng/censuses/census2011/results/htm/e01_01_01_cet/E01_01_01_zup21_cet.html
|title= Population by age and sex, by districts of City of Zagreb
|accessdate= 31 August 2014
}}</ref><ref name="districts-2001">{{cite web
|url= http://www.dzs.hr/Eng/censuses/Census2001/Popis/E01_01_03/e01_01_03_zup22.html
|title= City of Zagreb – Population by districts
|work= Census 2001
|publisher= [[Croatian Bureau of Statistics]]
|accessdate= 20 January 2011
}}</ref>


====The Butchers' Bridge====
{|class="sortable wikitable" style="text-align:right"
[[File:Love padlocks at Butchers' Bridge (Ljubljana).JPG|thumb|Butchers' Bridge [[love lock]]s.]]
|-
Decorated with mythological bronze sculptures, created by [[Jakov Brdar]], from Ancient Greek mythology and Biblical stories,<ref>{{cite web|author=Tekst: Irena Brejc |url=http://www.dnevnik.si/tiskane_izdaje/objektiv/1042372767 |title=Iz gline naredi dober kruh in ga razdeli med ljudi &#124; Dnevnik |publisher=Dnevnik.si |date=15 September 2012 |accessdate=19 September 2012}}</ref> the Butchers' Bridge connects the [[Ljubljana Central Market|Ljubljana Open Market]] area and the restaurants-filled [[Petkovšek Embankment]] ({{lang|sl|Petkovškovo nabrežje}}). It is also known as the [[love padlocks]]-decorated bridge in Ljubljana.
! #
! District
! Area (km²)
! Population<br/>(2011)
! Population<br/>(2001)
! Population<br/>density (2001)
|-
|1. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Donji grad (Zagreb)|Donji Grad]] ||3.01 ||37,123 ||45,108 ||14,956.2
|-
|2. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Gornji Grad – Medveščak]] ||10.12 ||31,279 ||36,384 ||3,593.5
|-
|3. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Trnje, Zagreb|Trnje]] ||7.37 ||42,126 ||45,267 ||6,146.2
|-
|4. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Maksimir]] ||14.35 ||49,448 ||49,750 ||3,467.1
|-
|5. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Peščenica – Žitnjak]] ||35.30 ||56,446 ||58,283 ||1,651.3
|-
|6. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Novi Zagreb – istok]] ||16.54 ||59,227 ||65,301 ||3,947.1
|-
|7. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Novi Zagreb – zapad]] ||62.59 ||58,025 ||48,981 ||782.5
|-
|8. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Trešnjevka – sjever]] ||5.83 ||55,342 ||55,358 ||9,498.6
|-
|9. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Trešnjevka – jug]] ||9.84 ||66,595 ||67,162 ||6,828.1
|-
|10. ||style="text-align:left"|<span style="display:none">C</span>[[Črnomerec]] ||24.33 ||39,040 ||38,762 ||1,593.4
|-
|11. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Gornja Dubrava]] ||40.28 ||62,221 ||61,388 ||1,524.1
|-
|12. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Donja Dubrava, Zagreb|Donja Dubrava]] ||10.82 ||36,461 ||35,944 ||3,321.1
|-
|13. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Stenjevec]] ||12.18 ||51,849 ||41,257 ||3,387.3
|-
|14. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Podsused – Vrapče]] ||36.05 ||45,771 ||42,360 ||1,175.1
|-
|15. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Podsljeme]] ||60.11 ||19,249 ||17,744 ||295.2
|-
|16. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Sesvete]] ||165.26 ||70,633 ||59,212 ||358.3
|-
|17. ||style="text-align:left"|[[Brezovica, Zagreb|Brezovica]] ||127.45 ||12,040 ||10,884 ||85.4
|- class="sortbottom"
|style="background: #efefef; border-top: 2px solid gray;" |
|style="text-align:left; background: #efefef; border-top: 2px solid gray;" |'''TOTAL'''
|style="background:#efefef; border-top:2px solid gray;"|641.43
|style="background:#efefef; border-top:2px solid gray;"|792,875
|style="background:#efefef; border-top:2px solid gray;"|779,145
|style="background:#efefef; border-top:2px solid gray;"|1,214.9
|}


====The Triple Bridge====
{{Clear}}
[[File:Ljubljana in Ljubljanica.jpg|thumb|The scenic Triple Bridge, decorated with stone balusters and stone lamps on all of the three bridges.]]
The [[Triple Bridge]] is decorated with stone [[baluster]]s and stone lamps on all of the three bridges and leads to the terraces looking on the river and poplar trees. It occupies a central point on the east-west axis, connecting the [[Tivoli City Park]] with [[Rožnik Hill]], on one side, and the [[Ljubljana Castle]] on the other,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.visitljubljana.com/en/directory/sights-attractions/1821/detail.html |title=Triple Bridge |work=visitljubljana.com |accessdate=15 May 2012 |publisher=Ljubljana Tourism}}</ref> and the north-south axis through the city, represented by the river. It was enlarged in order to prevent the historically single bridge from being a [[Bottleneck (traffic)|bottleneck]] by adding two side [[pedestrian]] bridges to the middle one.


====The Fish Footbridge====
City districts are subdivided in 218 local committees as primary units of local self-government.<ref>[http://www.zagreb.hr/default.aspx?id=1991 "zagreb.hr – Local self-government"]. Retrieved 28 September 2016.</ref>
The Fish Footbridge offers a good view of the neighbouring Triple Bridge to the north and the Cobbler's Bridge to the south of it. It is a transparent glass-made bridge, which is illuminated at night by in-built LEDs.<ref>[http://www.fleetwoodurban.com.au/inspiration/global/ribja-brv-girder Ribja brv Girder Bridge] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180327094423/http://www.fleetwoodurban.com.au/inspiration/global/ribja-brv-girder |date=27 March 2018 }}, www.fleetwoodurban.com.au,</ref> From 1991 to 2014 the bridge was a wooden one and decorated with flowers, while since its reconstruction in 2014, it is made of glass. It was planned already in 1895 by [[Max Fabiani]] to build a bridge on the location, in 1913 [[Alfred Keller]] planned a staircase, later [[Jože Plečnik]] incorporated both into his own plans which, however, were not realised.<ref>[https://www.rtvslo.si/kultura/drugo/ribja-brv-v-novi-preobleki/347367 Ribja brv v novi 'preobleki'], MMC RTV Slovenia, 27 September 2014</ref>
[[File:2007-08-20 - panoramio.jpg|thumb|[[Ilica (street)|Ilica, the main shopping street in Zagreb]]]]
[[File:Zagreb_welcomes_you.jpg|thumb|Model of the city by Damir Mataušić]]


====Settlements====
====The Cobbler's Bridge====
[[File:Palaca Farkas Cvjetni trg Zagreb 01052012 roberta f.jpg|thumb|Petar Preradović Square]]


The 1930 'Cobblers' Bridge' ({{lang|sl|Šuštarski}}, from German {{lang|de|Schuster}} – Shoemaker) is another [[Plečnik]]'s creation, connecting two major areas of medieval Ljubljana. It is decorated by two kinds of pillars, the [[Corinthian pillar]]s which delineate the shape of the bridge itself and the [[Ionic order|Ionic pillars]] as lamp-bearers.<ref>{{Cite web | url=http://kongres-magazine.eu/2017/05/cobblers-bridge-cevljarski-most/ | title=Cobblers' Bridge (Čevljarski most)| date=30 May 2017}}</ref>
The city itself is not the only [[naselje|standalone settlement]] in the City of Zagreb administrative area – there are a number of larger urban settlements like Sesvete and Lučko and a number of smaller [[villages]] attached to it whose population is tracked separately.<ref name="census-2011-settlements">{{Croatian Census 2011|accessdate= 31 August 2014|S|21}}</ref> There are 70 settlements in the City of Zagreb administrative area:
{{Div col|colwidth=30em}}
* [[Adamovec]], population 975
* [[Belovar]], population 378
* [[Blaguša]], population 594
* [[Botinec]], population 9
* [[Brebernica]], population 49
* [[Brezovica, Zagreb|Brezovica]], population 594
* [[Budenec]], population 323
* [[Buzin]], population 1,055
* [[Cerje, Zagreb|Cerje]], population 398
* [[Demerje]], population 721
* [[Desprim]], population 377
* [[Dobrodol, Croatia|Dobrodol]], population 1,203
* [[Donji Čehi]], population 232
* [[Donji Dragonožec]], population 577
* [[Donji Trpuci]], population 428
* [[Drenčec]], population 131
* [[Drežnik Brezovički]], population 656
* [[Dumovec]], population 903
* [[Đurđekovec]], population 778
* [[Gajec, Croatia|Gajec]], population 311
* [[Glavnica Donja]], population 544
* [[Glavnica Gornja]], population 226
* [[Glavničica]], population 229
* [[Goli Breg]], population 406
* [[Goranec]], population 449
* [[Gornji Čehi]], population 363
* [[Gornji Dragonožec]], population 295
* [[Gornji Trpuci]], population 87
* [[Grančari]], population 221
* [[Havidić Selo]], population 53
* [[Horvati]], population 1,490
* [[Hrašće Turopoljsko]], population 1,202
* [[Hrvatski Leskovac]], population 2,687
* [[Hudi Bitek]], population 441
* [[Ivanja Reka]], population 1,800
* [[Jesenovec]], population 460
* [[Ježdovec]], population 1,728
* [[Kašina]], population 1,548
* [[Kašinska Sopnica]], population 245
* [[Kučilovina]], population 219
* [[Kućanec]], population 228
* [[Kupinečki Kraljevec]], population 1,957
* [[Lipnica, Croatia|Lipnica]], population 207
* [[Lučko]], population 3,010
* [[Lužan]], population 719
* [[Mala Mlaka]], population 636
* [[Markovo Polje]], population 425
* [[Moravče, Croatia|Moravče]], population 663
* [[Odra, Zagreb|Odra]], population 1,866
* [[Odranski Obrež]], population 1,578
* [[Paruževina]], population 632
* [[Planina Donja]], population 554
* [[Planina Gornja]], population 247
* [[Popovec]], population 937
* [[Prekvršje]], population 809
* [[Prepuštovec]], population 332
* [[Sesvete]], population 54,085
* [[Soblinec]], population 978
* [[Starjak]], population 227
* [[Strmec, Zagreb|Strmec]], population 645
* [[Šašinovec]], population 678
* [[Šimunčevec]], population 271
* [[Veliko Polje, Zagreb|Veliko Polje]], population 1,668
* [[Vuger Selo]], population 273
* [[Vugrovec Donji]], population 442
* [[Vugrovec Gornji]], population 357
* [[Vurnovec]], population 201
* [[Zadvorsko]], population 1,288
* '''Zagreb''', population 688,163
* [[Žerjavinec]], population 556
{{div col end}}


====The Trnovo Bridge====
{{Clear}}
[[File:Trnovo_Bridge.jpg|thumb|Trnovo Bridge]]
The Trnovo Bridge is the most prominent object of Plečnik's renovation of the banks of the Gradaščica. It is located in the front of the [[Trnovo Church]] to the south of the city centre. It connects the neighbourhoods of [[Krakovo]] and [[Trnovo, Ljubljana|Trnovo]], the oldest Ljubljana suburbs, known for their market gardens and cultural events.<ref>{{cite book |title=Chapter: The Suburbs of Krakovo and Trnovo |page=30 |work=Ljubljana Tourist Guide |publisher=Ljubljana Tourism |url=http://issuu.com/visitljubljana/docs/ljubljana-tourist-guide?mode=window&pageNumber=30 |date=February 2012}}</ref> It was built between 1929 and 1932. It is distinguished by its width and two rows of [[birch]]es that it bears, because it was meant to serve as a public space in front of the church. Each corner of the bridge is capped with a small pyramid, a signature motif of Plečnik's, whereas the mid-span features a pair of [[Art-Deco]] male sculptures. There is also a statue of [[John the Baptist|Saint John the Baptist]] on the bridge, the patron of the Trnovo Church. It was designed by {{nowrap|[[Nikolaj Pirnat]]}}.


====The Hradecky Bridge====
== Government and politics ==
[[File:Hradeckega most Ljubljana (1).JPG|thumb|Hradecky Bridge [hinged bridge]]]
{{See also|List of mayors of Zagreb|Zagreb Assembly}}
The [[Hradecky Bridge]] is one of the first [[hinged bridge]]s in the world,<ref name="ARCH126">{{cite conference |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E7ywmb24EQMC&pg=PA126 |title=World Famous Arch Bridges in Slovenia: 6. Cast Iron Single-Hinged Arch Bridge in Ljubljana (1867) |first=Gorazd |last=Humar |date=September 2001 |publisher=Presses des Ponts |booktitle=Arch'01: troisième Conférence internationale sur les ponts en arc Paris |editor=Charles Abdunur |pages=126 |location=Paris |isbn=2859783474}}</ref> the first<ref name="Slivnik2010">{{cite journal|url=http://www.fa.uni-lj.si/filelib/9_ar/2010/ar_2010_1_clanki_lara_slivnik.pdf |title=Zgradbe z železno oziroma jekleno konstrukcijo v Sloveniji |language=Slovenian, English |trans-title=Buildings with iron and steel structures in Slovenia |first=Lara |last=Slivnik |year=2010 |issue=1 |journal=AR: Arhitektura, raziskave [Architecture, Research] |issn=1581-6974 |editor=Juvanec, Borut |pages=38–39 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130730145753/https://www.fa.uni-lj.si/filelib/9_ar/2010/ar_2010_1_clanki_lara_slivnik.pdf |archivedate=30 July 2013 }}</ref> the only preserved [[cast iron]] bridge in Slovenia,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.geopedia.si/?params=T105_L7644_F293#T105_L7644_F293_x463610_y101049_s17_b4 |title=Točke Poljanskega predmestja |at=Hradeckega most [Hradecky Bridge] |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Points of the Poljane Suburb |work=Geopedia.si |publisher=Synergise, d. o. o.}}</ref> and one of its most highly valued technical achievements.<ref name="LJ2011-05-12">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/news/72280/detail.html |title=Hradecki Bridge |date=12 May 2011 |work=Ljubljana.si |publisher=Municipality of Ljubljana |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130319065715/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/news/72280/detail.html |archivedate=19 March 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref name="Trbižan2011">{{cite news |url=http://www.delo.si/druzba/znanost/tretje-zivljenje-mostu-hradeckega-cez-ljubljanico.html |title=Tretje življenje mostu Hradeckega čez Ljubljanico |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Third Life of the Hradecky Bridge over the Ljubljanica |date=12 May 2011 |first=Milan |last=Trbižan |newspaper=Delo.si |issn=1854-6544 |id={{COBISS|ID=256579584}}}}</ref> It has been situated on an extension of [[Hren Street (Ljubljana)|Hren Street]] ({{lang|sl|Hrenova ulica}}), between the [[Krakovo Embankment]] ({{lang|sl|Krakovski nasip}}) and the [[Gruden Embankment]] ({{lang|sl|Grudnovo nabrežje}}), connecting the [[Trnovo District]] and the [[Prule]] neighbourhood in the [[Center District, Ljubljana|Center District]].<ref name="RKD365">{{cite web|url=http://giskd2s.situla.org/rkd/Opis.asp?Esd=365 |title=365: Ljubljana – Hradeckega most |language=Slovenian |trans-title=365: Ljubljana – The Hradecky Bridge |work=Registry of the Immovable Cultural Heritage |publisher=Ministry of Culture, Slovenia |accessdate=13 March 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130319064442/https://giskd2s.situla.org/rkd/Opis.asp?Esd=365 |archivedate=19 March 2013 }}</ref> The Hradecky Bridge was manufactured according to the plans of the senior engineer [[Johann Hermann (engineer)|Johann Hermann]] from Vienna in the [[Auersperg iron foundry, Dvor|Auersperg iron foundry]] in [[Dvor, Žužemberk|Dvor near Žužemberk]],<ref name="Trbižan2011"/> and installed in Ljubljana in 1867, at the location of today's [[Cobblers' Bridge]].<ref name="Geopedia.si">{{cite book |url=http://www.geopedia.si/?params=T105_L7452_F1330#T105_L7452_F1330_x462113_y100591_s17_b4 |title=Prestolnica Ljubljana nekoč in danes: Čevljarski most |trans-title=A pictorial chronicle of a capital city: Shoemaker's Bridge |work=Geopedia.si |first=Marko |last=Habič |publisher=National Publishing House of Slovenia. Sinergise, d. o. o. |year=1997 |isbn=978-8634120073}}</ref>


==Culture==
The current [[mayor]] of Zagreb is [[Milan Bandić]] ([[Bandić Milan 365 - Labour and Solidarity Party|BM 365 –Labour and Solidarity Party]]). He was confirmed as mayor on 4 June 2017 ([[Zagreb local elections, 2017|Zagreb local elections 2017]], second round). Two deputy mayors (vice mayoresses) are Jelena Pavičić-Vukičević and Olivera Jurković-Majić.
===Accent===


Ljubljana accent and/or dialect ({{lang-sl|ljubljanščina}} {{IPA-sl|luːblɑːŋʃnɑː||lublansna.ogg}}) is considered border dialect, since Ljubljana is situated where [[Upper Carniolan dialect group|Upper]] dialect and [[Lower Carniolan dialect group]] meet. Historically<ref name="Osnove Trubarjevega jezika">{{cite journal |last1=Rigler |first1=Jakob |title=Osnove Trubarjevega jezika |journal=Jezik in Slovstvo |date=1965 |volume=10 |issue=6–7}}</ref> Ljubljana dialect in the past displayed features more similar with the Lower Carniolan dialect group, but it gradually grew closer to the Upper dialect group, as a direct consequence of mass migration from Gorenjska region into Ljubljana in the 19th and 20th century. Ljubljana as a city grew mostly to the north, and gradually incorporated many villages that were historically part of [[Upper Carniola]] and so its dialect shifted away and closer to [[Upper Carniolan dialect group|Upper]] dialects. The Ljubljana dialect has also been used as literary means in novels, such as in the novel ''Nekdo drug'' by [[Branko Gradišnik]],<ref name="Gjurin_Gradisnik">{{cite web|url=http://www.cobiss.si/scripts/cobiss?command=DISPLAY&base=cobib&lani=en&rid=16904448|title=Velemir Gjurin: Beseda avtorju. In: Nekdo drug|accessdate=25 July 2012}}</ref> or in poems, such as ''Pika Nogavička'' (Slovene for [[Pippi Longstocking]]) by [[Andrej Rozman - Roza]].<ref name="Blažič_Rozman">{{cite web|url=http://www.cobiss.si/scripts/cobiss?command=DISPLAY&base=cobib&lani=en&rid=37473378 |title=Ljubljanščina in druga stilna sredstva v besedilih Andreja Rozmana Roze na primeru Pike Nogavičke. In: Slovenska narečja med sistemom in rabo|publisher=Znanstvena založba Filozofske fakultete|accessdate=25 July 2012}}</ref>
The [[Zagreb Assembly]] is composed of 51 representatives. Last elections were held on 21 May 2017 ([[Zagreb local elections, 2017|Zagreb local elections]]). The current structure of the city assembly by party lines is as follows (2 December 2017):<ref>{{cite web|title=zagreb.hr – Političke stranke u Gradskoj skupštini (The Political parties structure)|url=http://www.skupstina.zagreb.hr/default.aspx?id=605|accessdate=2 March 2017}}</ref>


The central position of Ljubljana and its dialect had crucial impact<ref name="Osnove Trubarjevega jezika"/> on the development of Slovenian language. It was the speech of 16th century Ljubljana that [[Primož Trubar]] a Slovenian [[Protestant Reformers|Protestant Reformer]] took as a foundation of what later became standard [[Slovenian language]], with small addition of his native speech, that is [[Lower Carniolan dialect]].<ref name="Osnove Trubarjevega jezika"/><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rigler |first1=Jakob |title=Nekdanja ljubljanščina kot osnova Trubarjevega jezika |journal=Začetki Slovenskega Knjižnega Jezika |date=1965 |pages=100–110}}</ref> While in Ljubljana, he lived in a house, on today's Ribji trg, in the oldest part of the city. Living in Ljubljana had profound impact on his work, he considered Ljubljana the capital of all [[Slovenes]], not only because of its central position in the heart of the [[Slovene lands]], but also because it always had an essentially Slovene character. Most of its inhabitants spoke Slovene as their mother tongue, unlike other cites in today's [[Slovenia]]. It is estimated that in Trubar's period around 70% of Ljubljana's 4000 inhabitants attended mass in Slovene language.<ref name="Osnove Trubarjevega jezika"/> Trubar considered Ljubljana's speech most suitable, since it sounded much more noble, than his own, simple dialect of his hometown [[Rašica, Velike Lašče|Rašica]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rigler |first1=Jakob |title=Začetki slovenskega knjižnega jezika. The Origins of the Slovene Literary Language, Ljubljana: Slovenska akademija znanosti in umetnosti |journal=Razred Za Filoloske in Literarne Vede |date=1968 |volume=22}}</ref> Trubar's choice was later adopted also by other Protestant writers in the 16th century, and ultimately led to a formation of more standard language.
{{Zagreb Assembly (structure)}}


=== Administration ===
===In literary fiction===
Ljubljana appears in the 2005 ''[[The Historian]]'', written by [[Elisabeth Kostova]], and is called by its Roman name (Emona).<ref>''[[The Historian]]'', [http://www.bookbrowse.com/excerpts/index.cfm/book_number/1589/page_number/3/the-historian excerpt] from the novel, p.3-4</ref>
[[File:Gradsko poglavarstvo-Zagreb.JPG|Zagreb City Administration|thumb]]


Ljubljana is also the setting of [[Paulo Coelho]]'s 1998 novel ''[[Veronika Decides to Die]]''.
According to the [[Constitution of Croatia|Constitution]], the city of Zagreb, as the capital of [[Croatia]], has a special status. As such, Zagreb performs [[Self-governance|self-governing]] public affairs of both [[List of cities and towns in Croatia|city]] and [[Counties of Croatia|county]]. It is also the seat of the [[Zagreb County]] which encircles Zagreb.


===Festivals===
The city administration bodies are the '''[[Zagreb Assembly|Zagreb City Assembly]]''' (''Gradska skupština Grada Zagreba'') as the representative body and the '''[[list of mayors of Zagreb|mayor of Zagreb]]''' (''Gradonačelnik Grada Zagreba'') who is the executive head of the city.
Each year, over 10,000 cultural events take place in the city, including ten international theatre, music, and art festivals.<ref name="InfoIntro"/> The [[Ljubljana Festival]] is one of the two oldest festivals in former Yugoslavia (the [[Dubrovnik Summer Festival]] was established in 1950, and the Ljubljana Festival one in 1953). Guests have included [[Dubravka Tomšič]], [[Marjana Lipovšek]], [[Tomaž Pandur]], [[Katia Ricciarelli]], [[Grace Bumbry]], [[Yehudi Menuhin]], [[Mstislav Rostropovich]], [[José Carreras]], Slid Hampton, [[Zubin Mehta]], [[Vadim Repin]], Valerij Gergijev, [[Andrew Davis (conductor)|Sir Andrew Davis]], Danjulo Išizaka, Midori, Jurij Bašmet, [[Ennio Morricone]], and [[The Manhattan Transfer|Manhattan Transfer]]. Orchestras have included the [[New York Philharmonic]], [[Israel Philharmonic]], [[Royal Philharmonic Orchestra]], Orchestras of the [[Bolshoi Theatre]] from [[Moscow]], [[La Scala]] from [[Milan]], and [[Mariinsky Theatre]] from [[Saint Petersburg]]. In recent years there have been 80 different kinds of events and some 80,000 visitors from Slovenia and abroad.{{citation needed|date=May 2013}} Other cultural venues include [[Križanke]], [[Cankar Hall]] and the [[Exhibition and Convention Centre (Ljubljana)|Exhibition and Convention Centre]]. During Book Week, starting each year on [[World Book Day]], events and book sales take place at [[Congress Square]]. A [[flea market]] is held every Sunday in the old city.<ref name="Pointinteret">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/tourism/ljubljana/points_of_interest/museums/default.html |title=Museums |accessdate=31 July 2008 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071231040254/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/tourism/ljubljana/points_of_interest/museums/default.html |archivedate=31 December 2007 |url-status=dead }}</ref> On the evening of [[International Workers' Day]], a celebration with a [[bonfire]] takes place on [[Rožnik Hill]].


===Museums and art galleries===
The City Assembly is the representative body of the citizens of the City of Zagreb elected for a four-year term on the basis of [[universal suffrage]] in [[direct elections]] by [[secret ballot]] using [[proportional representation|proportional system]] with [[d'Hondt method]] in a manner specified by law. There are 51 representatives in the City Assembly, among them president and vice-presidents of the assembly are elected by the representatives.
[[File:Slovenian Railway Museum 2010.JPG|thumb|upright=0.9|right|Interior of the Slovenian Railway Museum]]
[[File:NationalGallery-Ljubljana.JPG|thumb|left|Main building of the Slovenian National Gallery]]
Ljubljana has numerous [[art museum|art galleries]] and museums. The first purpose-built art gallery in Ljubljana was the [[Jakopič Pavilion]], which was in the first half of the 20th century the central exhibition venue of Slovene artists. In the early 1960s, it was succeeded by the [[Ljubljana City Art Gallery]], which has presented a number of modern Slovene and foreign artists. In 2010, there were 14 museums and 56 art galleries in Ljubljana.<ref name="InNumbers">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/ljubljana-in-numbers/ |title=Ljubljana in Figures |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |accessdate=23 April 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120419120715/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/ljubljana-in-numbers |archivedate=19 April 2012 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> There is for example an architecture museum, [[Slovenian Railway Museum|a railway museum]], a school museum, a sports museum, a museum of modern art, a museum of contemporary art, a [[Pivovarna Union|brewery museum]], the [[Slovenian Museum of Natural History]] and the Slovene Ethnographic Museum.<ref name="Pointinteret"/> The [[National Gallery of Slovenia|National Gallery]] ({{lang|sl|Narodna galerija}}), founded in 1918,<ref name="Histo5"/> and the [[Museum of Modern Art (Ljubljana)|Museum of Modern Art]] ({{lang|sl|Moderna galerija}}) exhibit the [[List of Slovenian artists|most influential Slovenian artists]]. In 2006, the museums received 264,470 visitors, the galleries 403,890 and the theatres 396,440.<ref name="InNumbers"/> The [[Metelkova Museum of Contemporary Art]] ({{lang|sl|Muzej sodobne umetnosti Metelkova}}), opened in 2011,<ref>Ginanne Brownell (2 December 2011), [http://travel.nytimes.com/2011/12/03/arts/03iht-rartljub03.html New Museum Opens for the Avant-Garde], ''[[New York Times]]''</ref> hosts various simultaneous exhibitions, a research library, archives, and a bookshop.


===Entertainment and performing arts===
Prior to 2009, the mayor was elected by the City Assembly. It was changed to direct elections by [[Majority vote|majoritarian vote]] ([[two-round system]]) in 2009. The mayor is the head of the city administration and has two deputies (directly elected together with him/her). The term of office of the mayor (and his/her deputies) is four years. The mayor (with the deputies) may be recalled by a referendum according to law (not less than 20% of all electors in the City of Zagreb or not less than two-thirds of the [[Zagreb Assembly]] city deputies have the right to initiate a [[recall referendum|city referendum]] regarding recalling of the mayor; when a majority of voters taking part in the referendum vote in favour of the recall, provided that majority includes not less than one third of all persons entitled to vote in the City of Zagreb, i.e. ⅓ of persons in the City of Zagreb [[electoral register]], the mayor's mandate shall be deemed revoked and [[special elections|special mayoral by-elections]] shall be held).
[[File:Ljubljanska Opera 2.jpg|thumb|The front of the [[Slovene National Opera and Ballet Theatre|Opera and Ballet Theatre]]]]
[[File:SNG-Drama-Ljubljana.JPG|thumb|The Slovenian National Theatre]]
[[Cankar Hall]] is the largest Slovenian cultural and congress center with multiple halls and a large foyer in which art film festivals, artistic performances, book fairs, and other cultural events are held.


====Cinema====
In the City of Zagreb the [[mayors of Zagreb|mayor]] is also responsible for the state administration (due to the special status of Zagreb as a "city with county rights", there isn't State Administration Office which in all counties performs tasks of the central government).
The cinema in Ljubljana appeared for the first time at the turn of the 20th century, and quickly gained popularity among the residents. After World War II, the [[Cinema Company Ljubljana]], later named ''Ljubljana Cinematographers'', was established and managed a number of already functioning movie theatres in Ljubljana, including the only Yugoslav children's theatre. A number of cinema festivals took place in the 1960s, and a [[cinematheque]] opened its doors in 1963. With the advent of television, video, and recently the Internet, most cinema theatres in Ljubljana closed, and the cinema mainly moved to [[Kolosej]], a [[multiplex (movie theater)|multiplex]] in the [[BTC City]]. It features twelve screens, including an [[IMAX 3D]] screen. The remaining theatres are [[Kino Komuna]], [[Kinodvor]], where art movies are accompanied by events, and the [[Slovenian Cinematheque]].


====Classical music, opera and ballet====
City administration offices, institutions and services (18 [[Municipal service|city offices]], 1 [[Municipal service|public institute]] or [[Municipal service|bureau]] and 2 [[Municipal services|city services]]) have been founded for performing activities within the self-administrative sphere and activities entrusted by the state administration.
The [[Slovenian Philharmonics]] is the central music institution in Ljubljana and Slovenia. It holds [[classical music]] concerts of domestic and foreign performers as well as educates youth. It was established in 1701 as part of [[Academia operosorum Labacensis]] and is among the oldest such institutions in Europe. The [[Slovene National Opera and Ballet Theatre]] also resides in Ljubljana, presenting a wide variety of domestic and foreign, modern and classic, opera, ballet and concert works. It serves as the national opera and ballet house. Numerous music festivals are held in Ljubljana, chiefly in [[Classical music|European classical music]] and jazz, for instance the [[Ljubljana Summer Festival]] ({{lang|sl|Ljubljanski poletni festival}}), and [[Trnfest]].
The city administrative bodies are managed by the principals (appointed by the mayor for a four-year term of office, may be appointed again to the same duty). The City Assembly Professional Service is managed by the secretary of the City Assembly (appointed by the Assembly).


====Theatre====
Local government is organised in 17 [[city district]]s (or [[borough|city borroughs]]) represented by City District Councils. Residents of districts elect members of councils.<ref>[http://www.zagreb.hr/default.aspx?id=1125 "zagreb.hr – Zagreb in brief (City administration)"]. Retrieved 29 September 2016.</ref>
In addition to the main houses, with the [[Slovene National Theatre, Ljubljana|SNT Drama Ljubljana]] as the most important among them, a number of small producers are active in Ljubljana, involved primarily in [[physical theatre]] (e.g. [[Betontanc]]), [[street theatre]] (e.g. [[Ana Monró Theatre]]), [[theatresports]] championship [[Impro League]], and [[improvisational theatre]] (e.g. [[IGLU Theatre]]). A popular form is [[puppetry]], mainly performed in the [[Ljubljana Puppet Theatre]]. Theatre has a rich tradition in Ljubljana, starting with the 1867 first ever Slovene-language drama performance.


===International relations===
====Modern dance====
The [[modern dance]] was presented in Ljubljana for the first time at the end of the 19th century and developed rapidly since the end of the 1920s. Since the 1930s when in Ljubljana was founded a [[Mary Wigman]] dance school, the first one for modern dance in Slovenia, the field has been intimately linked to the development in Europe and the United States. [[Ljubljana Dance Theatre]] is today the only venue in Ljubljana dedicated to [[contemporary dance]]. Despite this, there's a vivid happening in the field.
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Croatia}}


====Twin towns – sister cities====
====Folk dance====
Several [[folk dance]] groups are active in Ljubljana.
Zagreb is [[twin towns and sister cities|twinned]] with the following towns and cities:<ref name="Zagreb Twinning">{{cite web|url=http://www1.zagreb.hr/mms/en/index.html|title=Intercity and International Cooperation of the City of Zagreb|publisher= 2006–2009 City of Zagreb|accessdate=23 June 2009}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Gradovi prijatelji grada Zagreba|url=http://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/gradovi-prijatelji/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref name="narod.hr">{{cite web|title=Na Bundekfestu prvi put i gradovi prijatelji-Rim, Beč, Budimpešta i Ljubljana|url=https://narod.hr/zagreb-2/na-bundekfestu-prvi-put-gradovi-prijatelji-rim-bec-budimpesta-ljubljana|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref>
{{colbegin}}
* {{flagicon|ITA}} [[Bologna]], [[Italy]] <small>''(since 1963)''</small>
* {{flagicon|GER}} [[Mainz]], [[Germany]] <small>''(since 1967)''</small>
* {{flagicon|RUS}} [[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]] <small>''(since 1968)''</small><ref name="saint_petersburg">{{cite web|url=http://eng.gov.spb.ru/figures/ities |title=Saint Petersburg in figures – International and Interregional Ties |publisher=Saint Petersburg City Government |accessdate=23 March 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://archive.is/20090224073839/http://eng.gov.spb.ru/figures/ities |archivedate=24 February 2009 }}</ref>
* {{flagicon|NOR}} [[Tromsø]], [[Norway]] <small>''(since 1971)''</small>
* {{flagicon|ARG}} [[Buenos Aires]], [[Argentina]] <small>''(since 1972)''</small>
* {{flagicon|JPN}} [[Kyoto]], [[Japan]] <small>''(since 1972)''</small><ref name="Kyoto twinnings">{{cite web|url=http://www.city.kyoto.lg.jp/sogo/page/0000083407.html |title=Sister Cities of Kyoto City |accessdate=21 January 2014 |publisher=City of Kyoto |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140121151906/http://www.city.kyoto.lg.jp/sogo/page/0000083407.html |archivedate=21 January 2014 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
* {{flagicon|POR}} [[Lisbon]], [[Portugal]] <small>''(since 1977)''</small><ref name="Lisbon twinnings">{{cite web|url=http://www.anmp.pt/anmp/pro/mun1/gem101l0.php?cod_ent=M1100|title=Lisboa – Geminações de Cidades e Vilas|accessdate=23 August 2013|work=Associação Nacional de Municípios Portugueses [National Association of Portuguese Municipalities]|language=Portuguese|trans-title=Lisbon – Twinning of Cities and Towns}}</ref><ref name="Lisbon twinnings 2">{{cite web|url=http://www.cm-lisboa.pt/municipio/relacoes-internacionais |title=Acordos de Geminação, de Cooperação e/ou Amizade da Cidade de Lisboa |accessdate=23 August 2013 |work=Camara Municipal de Lisboa |language=Portuguese |trans-title=Lisbon – Twinning Agreements, Cooperation and Friendship |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20131031202617/http://www.cm-lisboa.pt/municipio/relacoes-internacionais |archivedate=31 October 2013 }}</ref>
* {{flagicon|USA}} [[Pittsburgh]], [[United States|USA]] <small>''(since 1980)''</small>
* {{flagicon|PRC}} [[Shanghai]], [[China]] <small>''(since 1980)''</small>
* {{flagicon|HUN}} [[Budapest]], [[Hungary]] <small>''(since 1994)''<ref name="Budapest twinnings">{{cite web|url=http://budapest.hu/Lapok/Fovaros/Testvervarosok.aspx |title=Budapest – Testvérvárosok |accessdate=14 August 2013 |work=Budapest Főváros Önkormányzatának hivatalos oldala [Official site of the Municipality of Budapest] |language=Hungarian |trans-title=Budapest – Twin Cities |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130809185135/http://budapest.hu/Lapok/Fovaros/Testvervarosok.aspx |archivedate=9 August 2013 |url-status=dead }}</ref></small>
* {{flagicon|BOL}} [[La Paz]], [[Bolivia]] <small>''(since 2000)''</small>
* {{flagicon|BIH}} [[Sarajevo]], [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]] <small>''(since 2001)''</small><ref name="Twin 1">{{cite web|url=http://www.sarajevo.ba/en/stream.php?kat=147 |title=Fraternity cities on Sarajevo Official Web Site |publisher=City of Sarajevo 2001–2008 |accessdate=9 November 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081201150030/http://www.sarajevo.ba/en/stream.php?kat=147 |archivedate=1 December 2008 }}</ref>
* {{flagicon|SVN}} [[Ljubljana]], [[Slovenia]] <small>''(since 2001)''</small><ref name="Ljubljana twinnings">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/si/ljubljana/pobratena-mesta-zdruzenja/ |title=Medmestno in mednarodno sodelovanje |accessdate=27 July 2013 |work=Mestna občina Ljubljana (Ljubljana City) |language=Slovenian |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130626075304/http://www.ljubljana.si/si/ljubljana/pobratena-mesta-zdruzenja/ |archivedate=26 June 2013 }}</ref>
* {{flagicon|MNE}} [[Podgorica]], [[Montenegro]] <small>''(since 2006)''</small>
* {{flagicon|IRN}} [[Tabriz]], [[Iran]] <small>'' (since 2006)''</small><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8507180542 |title=سفير كرواسي در تهران: "زاگرب" با تبريز خواهر خوانده مي‌شود |publisher=Farsnews.com |accessdate=23 December 2015}}</ref>
* {{flagicon|TUR}} [[Ankara]], [[Turkey]] <small>''(since 2008)''</small><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ankara.bel.tr/en/foreign-relations-department/sister-cities-of-ankara#.V6zuCGVvfxs|title=Sister Cities of Ankara|work=ankara.bel.tr}}</ref>
* {{flagicon|UK}} [[London]], [[United Kingdom]] <small>''(since 2009)''</small>
* {{flagicon|Kosovo}} [[Prizren]], [[Kosovo]]{{efn|name=kosovo-status}} <small>''(since 2010)''</small>
* {{flagicon|NMK}} [[Skopje]], [[North Macedonia]] <small>''(since 2011)''</small>
* {{flagicon|POL}} [[Warsaw]], [[Poland]] <small>''(since 2011)''</small><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/gradovi-prijatelji/|title=Gradovi prijatelji grada Zagreba|accessdate=25 August 2015|publisher=ZGportal Zagreb}}</ref>
* {{flagicon|KAZ}} [[Nur-Sultan]], [[Kazakhstan]] <small>''(since 2014)''</small><ref>{{cite web|url=http://astana.gov.kz/en/modules/material/5428|title=Declaration of intent signed by Akim of Astana and Mayor of Croatias capital|date=4 July 2014|accessdate=9 October 2014|publisher=Akimat of Astana|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141015024125/http://astana.gov.kz/en/modules/material/5428|archive-date=15 October 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref>
* {{flagicon|ITA}} [[Rome]], [[Italy]] <small>''(since 2014)''</small><ref name="narod.hr"/>
* {{flagicon|Austria}} [[Vienna]], [[Austria]] <small>''(since 2014)''</small><ref name="narod.hr"/>
* {{flagicon|CRO}} [[Petrinja]], [[Croatia]] <small>''(since 2015)''</small><ref>{{cite web|title=Zagreb i Petrinja postaju gradovi prijatelji|url=http://www.zagrebancija.com/zagreb-i-petrinja-postaju-gradovi-prijatelji/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref>
* {{flagicon|CRO}} [[Vukovar]], [[Croatia]] <small>''(since 2016)''</small><ref>{{cite web|title=Vukovar i Zagreb gradovi prijatelji: Povelju o prijateljstvu potpisali Bandić i Penava|url=https://www.vecernji.hr/vijesti/vukovar-i-zagreb-gradovi-prijatelji-povelju-o-prijateljstvu-potpisali-milan-bandic-i-ivan-penava-1074743|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref>
{{colend}}


====Partner cities====
====Jazz====
In July 2015, over four days, the 56th Ljubljana Jazz Festival took place. A member of the European Jazz Network, the festival presented 19 concerts featuring artists from 19 countries, including a celebration of the 75th anniversary of [[James Blood Ulmer]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.europejazz.net/articles/ljubljana-jazz-festival-july-2015|title=Ljubljana Jazz Festival – July 2015 – Europe Jazz Network|work=europejazz.net}}</ref>


===Popular urban culture and alternative scene===
The city has partnership arrangements with:
[[File:20190510 KinoSiska 01 PhotoNejcKetis.jpg|thumb|[[Kino Šiška Centre for Urban Culture]] in Ljubljana]]
{|class="wikitable"'
[[File:Metelkova mesto6.jpg|thumb|''The Barn'' building located in [[Metelkova]], the Ljubljana equivalent of the Copenhagen's [[Freetown Christiania]].]]
|- valign="top"
In the 1980s with the emergence of [[subculture]]s in Ljubljana, an alternative culture begun to develop in Ljubljana organised around two student organisations.<ref>{{cite book |chapter-url=https://books.google.si/books?id=jsEpW9kbyosC&pg=PA198 |title=Culture and Technology in the New Europe: Civic Discourse in Transformation |chapter=Video as Civic Discourse in Slovenia and the Former Yugoslavia: Strategies of Visualization and the Aesthetics of Video in the New Europe: Ljubljana's Alternative or Subculture(e/al) Movement |pages=198–202 |first=Marina |last=Gržinić |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2000 |first2=Laura |last2=B. Lengel |isbn=978-1-56750-466-8}}</ref> This caused an influx of young people to the city centre, caused political and social changes, and led to the establishment of alternative art centres.<ref>{{cite book |chapter-url=https://books.google.si/books?id=hE3oIMB6aj8C&pg=PA227 |title=Serbia, Croatia and Slovenia at Peace and at War: Selected Writings, 1983–2007 |chapter=Democratization in Slovenia–The Second Stage |page=227 |publisher=LIT Verlag Münster |year=2008 |editor-first=Sabrina |editor-last=P. Ramet |first1=Karen |last1=Dawisha |first2=Bruce |last2=Parrot |isbn=978-3-03735-912-9}}</ref>
|
* {{flagicon|POL}} [[Kraków]] in [[Poland]] <small>''(since 1975)''<ref name="Kraków">{{cite web|url=http://www.krakow.pl/otwarty_na_swiat/?LANG=UK&MENU=l&TYPE=ART&ART_ID=16|title=Kraków otwarty na świat|publisher=krakow.pl|accessdate=19 July 2009}}</ref></small>
* {{flagicon|ALB}} [[Tirana]], [[Albania]].<ref name="International relations ">{{cite web|url=http://www.tirana.gov.al/common/images/International%20Relations.pdf |title=Twinning Cities: International Relations |accessdate=23 June 2009 |work=Municipality of Tirana |publisher=tirana.gov.al |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111010042121/http://www.tirana.gov.al/common/images/International%20Relations.pdf |archivedate=10 October 2011}}</ref><ref>Twinning Cities: International Relations. Municipality of Tirana. www.tirana.gov.al. Retrieved on 25 January 2008.</ref>
|}


;Metelkova and Rog
== Culture ==
A Ljubljana equivalent of the Copenhagen's [[Freetown Christiania]], a self-proclaimed autonomous [[Metelkova]] neighbourhood, was set up in a former Austro-Hungarian barracks that were built in 1882 (completed in 1911).<ref name="Metelkova">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana-life.com/ljubljana/metelkova | title=Metelkova |publisher=ljubljana-life.com |accessdate=7 August 2012}}</ref><ref name="Metelkova mesto">{{cite web | title=Metelkova mesto |publisher=culture.si |accessdate=23 September 2018| url=https://www.culture.si/en/Metelkova_mesto_Autonomous_Cultural_Zone }}</ref>


In 1993, the seven buildings and 12,500 m2 of space were turned into art galleries, artist studios, and seven nightclubs, including two LGBTQ+ venues, playing host to all range of music from hardcore to jazz to dub to techno. Adjacent to the Metelkova are located the [[Celica Hostel]]<ref name="CelicaHostel">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana-life.com/sleep/hotels_details/9-Celica_Hostel |title=Celica Hostel |accessdate=7 August 2012}}</ref> with rooms all artistically decorated by the Metelkova artists, and a new part of the Museum of Modern Art, [[Museum of Contemporary Art, Ljubljana|Museum of Contemporary Art]].<ref name="CalgaryHerald">{{cite news|url=https://theprovince.com/travel/Ljubljana+easy+love+explore/6912326/story.html |title=Lovely Ljubljana; Its name is hard to pronounce, but the city's easy to love and explore |newspaper=[[The Calgary Herald]] |date=21 July 2012 |accessdate=7 August 2012 }}{{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> Another alternative culture centre is located in the former [[Rog (factory)|Rog factory]]. Both [[Metelkova]] and [[Rog (factory)|Rog factory]] factory located in [[Tabor, Ljubljana|Tabor]] neighbourhood are walking distance from the city centre and visited by various tours.
===Tourism===
[[File:Zagrebacka Uspinjaca i Lotrscak 01052012 roberta f.jpg|[[Zagreb Funicular]]|thumb]]
Zagreb is an important tourist center, not only in terms of passengers traveling from the rest of Europe to the Adriatic Sea, but also as a travel destination itself. Since the end of the [[History of Croatia|war]], it has attracted close to a million visitors annually, mainly from [[Austria]], [[Germany]] and [[Italy]], and in recent years many tourists from far east (South Korea, Japan, China, and last two years, from India). It has become an important tourist destination, not only in Croatia, but considering the whole region of southeastern Europe. There are many interesting sights and happenings for tourists to attend in Zagreb, for example, the two statues of Saint George, one at the [[Republic of Croatia Square]], the other at [[Stone Gate|Kamenita vrata]], where the image of Virgin Mary is said to be only thing that hasn't burned in the 17th-century fire. Also, there is an art installation starting in Bogovićeva street, called [[Nine Views]]. Most people don't know what the statue "Prizemljeno Sunce" (The Grounded Sun) is for, and just scrawl graffiti or signatures on it, but it's actually the Sun scaled down, with many planets situated all over Zagreb in scale with the Sun. There are also many festivals and events throughout the year, which made Zagreb a year-round tourist destination for many years already.


;Šiška Cultural Quarter
The historical part of the city to the north of [[Ban Jelačić Square]] is composed of the [[Gradec, Zagreb|Gornji Grad]] and [[Kaptol, Zagreb|Kaptol]], a medieval urban complex of churches, palaces, museums, galleries and government buildings that are popular with tourists on sightseeing tours. The historic district can be reached on foot, starting from [[Jelačić Square]], the centre of Zagreb, or by a [[funicular]] on nearby Tomićeva Street. Each Saturday, (from April till the end of September), on [[St. Mark's Square, Zagreb|St. Mark's Square]] in the [[Gradec, Zagreb|Upper town]], tourists can meet members of the Order of The Silver Dragon (Red Srebrnog Zmaja), who reenact famous historical conflicts between [[Gradec, Zagreb County|Gradec]] and [[Kaptol, Zagreb|Kaptol]]. It's a great opportunity for all visitors to take photographs of authentic and fully functional historical replicas of medieval armour.
The [[Šiška Cultural Quarter]] hosts a number of art groups and cultural organisations dedicated to contemporary and avant-garde arts. Part of it is also [[Kino Šiška Centre for Urban Culture]], a venue where music concerts of indie, punk, and rock bands as well as exhibitions take place. [[Museum of Transitory Art]] (MoTA) is a museum without a permanent collection or a fixed space. Instead, its programs are realised in different locations and contexts in temporary physical and virtual spaces dedicated to advancing the research, production and presentation of transitory, experimental, and live art forms. Yearly MoTA organises Sonica Festival. [[Ljudmila (hackerspace)|Ljudmila]] (since 1994) strives to connect research practices, technologies, science, and art.


==Sports==
In 2010 more than 600,000<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.poslovni.hr/vijesti/grad-zagreb-u-2010-broj-turistickih-dolazaka-veci-za-4-posto-168991.aspx |title=Broj turistickih dolazaka|publisher=poslovni.hr|accessdate=12 January 2012}}</ref> tourists visited the city, with a 10%<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.kigo.hr/tekst/11098.html |title=Broj turista najvise porastao u Zagrebu |publisher=kigo.hr |accessdate=12 January 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130301124403/http://www.kigo.hr/tekst/11098.html |archivedate=1 March 2013}}</ref> increase seen in 2011. In 2012 a total of 675 707 tourists<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mint.hr/default.aspx?id=9244.html|title=U Zagrebu više turista i noćenja|publisher=Ministry of Tourism|accessdate=27 September 2013}}</ref> visited the city.
===Clubs===
The record number of tourists visited Zagreb in 2017. – 1.286.087, up 16% compared to the year before, which generated 2.263.758 overnight stays, up 14,8%.
A tension between German and Slovene residents dominated the development of sport of Ljubljana in the 19th century. The first sport club in Ljubljana was the [[South Sokol Gymnastic Club]] ({{lang|sl|Gimnastično društvo Južni Sokol}}), established in 1863 and succeeded in 1868 by the [[Ljubljana Sokol]] ({{lang|sl|Ljubljanski Sokol}}). It was the parent club of all Slovene [[Sokol]] clubs as well as an encouragement for the establishment of the [[Croatian Sokol]] club in Zagreb. Members were also active in culture and politics, striving for greater integration of the Slovenes from different Crown lands of [[Austria–Hungary]] and for their cultural, political, and economic independence.


In 1885, German residents established the first sports club in the territory of nowadays Slovenia, {{lang|de|[[Der Laibacher Byciklistischer Club]]}} (''Ljubljana Cycling Club''). In 1887, Slovene cyclists established the [[Slovene Cyclists Club]] ({{lang|sl|Slovenski biciklistični klub}}). In 1893 followed the first Slovene [[Alpine club]], named [[Slovene Alpine Club]] ({{lang|sl|Slovensko planinsko društvo}}), later succeeded by the [[Alpine Association of Slovenia]] ({{lang|sl|Planinska zveza Slovenije}}). Several of its branches operate in Ljubljana, the largest of them being the [[Ljubljana Matica Alpine Club]] ({{lang|sl|Planinsko društvo Ljubljana-Matica}}). In 1900, the sports club {{lang|de|Laibacher Sportverein}} (English: ''Ljubljana Sports Club'') was established by the city's German residents and functioned until 1909. In 1906, Slovenes organised themselves in its Slovene counterpart, the Ljubljana Sports Club ({{lang|sl|Ljubljanski športni klub}}). Its members were primarily interested in [[rowing (sport)|rowing]], but also swimming and football. In 1911, the first Slovene football club, ''[[ND Ilirija|Ilirija]]'', started operating in the city. Winter sports started to develop in the area of the nowadays Ljubljana already before World War II.<ref name="SDDolomiti2012-01-05">{{cite web |url=http://www.sddolomiti.si/?page_id=172 |title=Zgodovina |trans-title=History |publisher=Sports Club Dolomiti |accessdate=5 January 2012}}</ref> In 1929, the first [[ice hockey]] club in Slovenia (then Yugoslavia) [[HDD Olimpija Ljubljana|SK Ilirija]] was established.
====Souvenirs and gastronomy====
[[File:Licitars2.jpg|thumb|right|[[Licitar|Licitar hearts]], a popular souvenir]]
Numerous shops, boutiques, store houses and [[shopping mall|shopping centers]] offer a variety of quality clothing. There are about fourteen big shopping centers in Zagreb. Zagreb's offerings include [[crystal]], [[Chinese ceramics|china]] and [[Pottery|ceramics]], [[wicker]] or [[straw]] baskets, and top-quality Croatian [[wine]]s and [[gastronomy|gastronomic]] products.


Nowadays, the city's [[Association football|football]] team which plays in the [[Slovenian PrvaLiga]] is [[NK Olimpija Ljubljana (2005)|NK Olimpija Ljubljana]]. Ljubljana's [[ice hockey]] clubs are [[HK Slavija Ljubljana|HK Slavija]] and [[HK Olimpija]]. They both compete in the [[Slovenian Ice Hockey League|Slovenian Hockey League]]. The basketball teams are [[KD Slovan]] and [[KK Cedevita Olimpija]]. The latter, which has a green dragon as its mascot, hosts its matches at the 12,480-seat [[Arena Stožice]]. Handball is more or less popular in female section. [[RK Krim]] is one of the best women handball team in Europe. They won [[EHF Champions League]] twice, also 2nd and 3rd places are not a rare thing. [[AMTK Ljubljana]] is the most successful [[motorcycle speedway|speedway]] club in Slovenia. The Ljubljana Sports Club has been succeeded by the [[Livada Canoe and Kayak Club]].<ref name="Habič1997SPM">{{cite book |chapter-url=http://www.geopedia.si/?params=T105_L7452_F1327#T105_L7452_F1327_x462354_y99219_s17_b4 |chapter=Ljubljanica se leno vije proti mestu |trans-chapter=The Ljubljanica River, as It Winds Lazily Towards the Town |title=Prestolnica Ljubljana nekoč in danes |trans-title=A Pictorial Chronicle of a Capital City |work=Geopedia.si |first=Marko |last=Habič |publisher=National Publishing House of Slovenia |year=1997 |isbn=978-86-341-2007-3}}</ref>
Notable Zagreb souvenirs are the [[necktie|tie]] or ''cravat'', an accessory named after Croats who wore characteristic scarves around their necks in the [[Thirty Years' War]] in the 17th century and the [[Ballpoint pen|ball-point pen]], a tool developed from the inventions by [[Slavoljub Eduard Penkala]], an inventor and a citizen of Zagreb.


===Mass sport activities===
Many Zagreb restaurants offer various specialties of [[Croatian cuisine|national]] and [[Fusion cuisine|international cuisine]]. Domestic products which deserve to be tasted include [[Turkey as food|turkey]], [[duck]] or [[goose]] with ''[[mlinci]]'' (a kind of [[pasta]]), ''štrukli'' (cottage cheese [[strudel]]), ''sir i vrhnje'' ([[cottage cheese]] with cream), ''kremšnite'' ([[custard]] slices in flaky pastry), and ''orehnjača'' (traditional [[walnut#Nuts|walnut]] roll).
[[File:VW20LM 25.10.2015 FOTO DAMJAN KONČAR -1.jpg|thumb|The [[Ljubljana Marathon]], 2015]]
Each year since 1957, on 8–10 May, the traditional recreational ''[[Trail of Remembrance and Comradeship|Walk Along the Wire]]'' has taken place to mark the liberation of Ljubljana on 9 May 1945.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://english.sta.si/1283111/thousands-join-ljubljana-hike |title=Thousands Join Ljubljana Hike |date=10 May 2008 |publisher=Slovenian Press Agency [STA]}}</ref> At the same occasion, a triples competition is run on the trail, and a few days later, a student run from Prešeren Square to Ljubljana Castle is held. The last Sunday in October, the [[Ljubljana Marathon]] and a few minor competition runs take place on the city streets. The event attracts several thousand runners each year.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/highlights/current_topics/marathon/default.html |title=13th Ljubljana marathon – record participation! |accessdate=1 November 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081026192404/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/highlights/current_topics/marathon/default.html |archivedate=26 October 2008 }}</ref>


===Museums===
===Sport venues===
[[File:Archivo Nacional, Zagreb, Croacia, 2014-04-13, DD 01.JPG|thumb|left|[[Croatian State Archives]]]]
[[File:Tacen Whitewater Course 2.jpg|thumb|The [[Tacen Whitewater Course]] on the Sava]]
The [[Stožice Stadium]], opened since August 2010 and located in [[Stožice Sports Park]] in the [[Bežigrad District]], is the biggest football stadium in the country and the home of the NK Olimpija Ljubljana. It is one of the two main venues of [[Slovenia national football team]]. The park also has an indoor arena, used for indoor sports such as basketball, [[team handball|handball]] and [[volleyball]] and is the home venue of [[KK Olimpija]], [[RK Krim]] and [[ACH Volley Bled]] among others. Beside football, the stadium is designed to host cultural events as well. Another stadium in the Bežigrad district, [[Bežigrad Stadium]], is closed since 2008 and is deteriorating. It was built according to the plans of [[Jože Plečnik]] and was the home of the [[NK Olimpija Ljubljana (1911–2004)|NK Olimpija Ljubljana]], dissolved in 2004. [[Joc Pečečnik]], a Slovenian multimillionaire, plans to renovate it.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.slovenskenovice.si/novice/slovenija/plecnika-prerasca-plevel-z-velodromom-se-grejejo-romi |title=Plečnika prerašča plevel, z velodromom se grejejo Romi |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Plečnik Overgrown by Weed, Velodrome Used by Romas to Warm Themselves |newspaper=Slovenske novice |date=6 May 2012}}</ref>
[[File:Museo Mimara, Zagreb, Croacia, 2014-04-20, DD 01.JPG|thumb|left|[[Mimara Museum]]]]
[[File:Záhřeb, muzeum umění a řemesel.jpg|thumb|left|[[Museum of Arts and Crafts, Zagreb|Museum of Arts and Crafts]]]]
[[File:Hrvatsko društvo likovnih umjetnika.jpg|thumb|left|[[Meštrović Pavilion]]]]
[[File:Muzej suvremene umjetnosti Zg 111209 1.jpg|thumb|left|[[Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb|Museum of Contemporary Art]]]]
Zagreb's numerous [[museum]]s reflect the history, art and culture not only of Zagreb and Croatia, but also of Europe and the world. Around thirty collections in museums and galleries comprise more than 3.6 million various exhibits, excluding church and private collections.


[[Ljubljana Sports Park]] is located in [[Spodnja Šiška]], part of the [[Šiška District]]. It has a football stadium with five courts, an athletic hall, outdoor athletic areas, tennis courts, a [[Boules]] court, and a [[sand volleyball]] court. The majority of competitions are in [[athletics (sport)|athletics]]. Another sports park in Spodnja Šiška is [[Ilirija Sports Park]], known primarily for its stadium with a speedway track. At the northern end of Tivoli Park stands the [[Ilirija Swimming Pool Complex]], which was built as part of a swimming and athletics venue following plans by Bloudek in the 1930s and has been nearly abandoned since then, but there are plans to renovate it.
The '''[[Archaeological Museum, Zagreb|Archaeological Museum]]''' (19 [[Nikola Šubić Zrinski]] Square) collections, today consisting of nearly 450,000 varied [[archaeology|archaeological]] artefacts and monuments, have been gathered over the years from many different sources. These holdings include evidence of Croatian presence in the area.<ref name=zageb_archeo>{{cite web
|url=http://www.amz.hr/eng/page.asp?id=muzej&sub=2&url=povijest
|title=The History and Activities of the Archeological Museum
|accessdate=2 July 2006
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060518052905/http://www.amz.hr/eng/page.asp?id=muzej&sub=2&url=povijest
|archivedate=18 May 2006
|url-status=dead
}}</ref> The most famous are the Egyptian collection, the [[Liber Linteus|Zagreb mummy]] and bandages with the oldest [[Old Italic alphabet|Etruscan]] inscription in the world (''[[Liber Linteus]] Zagrabiensis''), as well as the [[coin collecting|numismatic]] collection.


A number of sport venues are located in Tivoli Park. An outdoor swimming pool in Tivoli, constructed by Bloudek in 1929, was the first [[Olympic-size swimming pool]] in Yugoslavia. Currently, the [[Tivoli Recreational Centre]] in Tivoli is Ljubljana's largest recreational centre and has three swimming pools, saunas, a Boules court, a health club, and other facilities.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.visitljubljana.com/en/directory/sports-recreation-wellness/1662/detail.html |title=Tivoli Sports Park |work=visitljubljana.com |publisher=Ljubljana Tourism |accessdate=14 May 2012}}</ref> There are two skating rinks, a basketball court, a winter ice rink, and ten tennis courts in its outdoor area.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sport-ljubljana.si/park-tivoli/o-parku-tivoli/ |title=Park Tivoli: O Parku Tivoli |trans-title=Tivoli Park: About Tivoli Park |work=sport-ljubljana.si |year=2011 |accessdate=14 May 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120422143619/http://www.sport-ljubljana.si/park-tivoli/o-parku-tivoli/ |archivedate=22 April 2012 }}</ref> The [[Tivoli Hall]] consists of two halls. The smaller one accepts 4,050 spectators and is used for basketball matches. The larger one can accommodate 6,000 spectators and is primarily used for hockey, but also for basketball matches. The halls are also used for concerts and other cultural events. The [[Slovenian Olympic Committee]] has its office in the building.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.dogaja.se/druzabni-kraji/6696/hala_tivoli/ |title=Hala Tivoli – športna dvorana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Tivoli Hall – Sports Hall |accessdate=14 May 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100128053617/http://www.dogaja.se/druzabni-kraji/6696/hala_tivoli/ |archivedate=28 January 2010 }}</ref>
'''[[Modern Gallery, Zagreb|Modern Gallery]]''' ({{lang-hr|Moderna galerija}}) holds the most important and comprehensive collection of [[painting]]s, [[sculpture]]s and [[drawing]]s by 19th- and 20th-century Croatian artists. The collection numbers more than 10,000 works of art, housed since 1934 in the historic Vranyczany Palace in the centre of Zageb, overlooking the Zrinjevac Park. A secondary gallery is the Josip Račić Studio at Margaretska 3.<ref name="moderngallery">{{cite web|title=Modern Gallery |publisher=Moderna Galerija |url=http://www.moderna-galerija.hr|accessdate=8 October 2010}}</ref>


The [[Tacen Whitewater Course]], located on a course on the Sava, {{convert|8|km|0|abbr=off|sp=us}} northwest of the city centre, hosts a major international canoe/kayak slalom competition almost every year, examples being the [[ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships]] in [[1955 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships|1955]], [[1991 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships|1991]], and [[2010 ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships|2010]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.wc-tacen.si/3/?pID=55 |title=Tacen White Water Slalom Course |accessdate=21 February 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111006090536/http://www.wc-tacen.si/3/?pID=55 |archivedate=6 October 2011 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
'''[[Croatian Natural History Museum]]''' (1 Demetrova Street) holds one of the world's most important collection of [[Neanderthal]] remains found at one site.<ref name=zageb_nat>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=94&l=e&nav=nav5&solo=270
|title=Croatian Natural History Museum
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref> These are the remains, stone weapons and tools of prehistoric ''[[Krapina]] man''. The holdings of the Croatian Natural History Museum comprise more than 250,000 specimens distributed among various collections.


Since the 1940s,<ref name="SDDolomiti2012-01-05"/> a [[ski slope]] has been in use in [[Gunclje]],<ref name="APG2012-05-02OP">{{cite web |url=http://ski.element.si/default.asp?mID=menu_smucisce&pID={f14f886f-6700-451c-998f-9a599266a7a3} |title=Osnovni podatki smučišča |language=sl |trans-title=Basic Data About the Ski Slope |work=Alpski poligon Gunclje |accessdate=5 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130510092317/http://ski.element.si/default.asp?mID=menu_smucisce&pID=%7Bf14f886f-6700-451c-998f-9a599266a7a3%7D |archive-date=10 May 2013 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> in the northwestern part of the city.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://ski.element.si/default.asp?pid=smucisce |title=Smučišče |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Ski Slope |work=Alpski poligon Gunclje |accessdate=5 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130126082123/http://ski.element.si/default.asp?pid=smucisce |archive-date=26 January 2013 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> It is {{convert|600|m|sp=us}} long and has two ski lifts, its maximum incline is 60° and the difference in height from the top to the bottom is {{convert|155|m|sp=us}}.<ref name="APG2012-05-02OP"/> Five [[ski jumping hill]]s stand near the ski slope.<ref name="SDDolomiti2012-01-05"/> Several Slovenian Olympic and World Cup medalists trained and competed there.<ref name="SDDolomiti2012-01-05"/><ref>{{Cite news|url=http://www.ventilatorbesed.com/?opcija=kom_clanki&oce=47&id=3014 |title=Primož Peterka – prvi Slovenec, ki je preskočil magično mejo |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Primož Peterka – the First Slovene Who Jumper Over the Magic Limit |date=14 October 2011 |journal=Ventilator besed – revija za kulturo in izobraževanje}}</ref> In addition, the Arena Triglav complex of six jumping hills is located in the [[Šiška District]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.szlj.si/novice/1212 |title=Revija smučarskih skokov v Mostecu |language=Slovenian |trans-title=A Ski Jumping Show in Mostec |publisher=Sports Society of Ljubljana |date=9 June 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cssiska.si/pdf/dan_css.pdf |title=Vabilo na prireditve ob dnevu Četrtne skupnosti Šiška in evropske dnevu sosedov |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Invitation to the Events on the Day of the District Community of Šiška and the European Day of Neighbours |publisher=District Community of Šiška |year=2011 |accessdate=6 February 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://www.webcitation.org/69Rmcf5bK |archivedate= 26 July 2012 }}</ref> A ski jumping hill, build in 1954 upon the plans by [[Stanko Bloudek]], was located in Šiška near [[Vodnik Street]] ({{lang|sl|Vodnikova cesta}}) until 1976. International competitions for the [[Kongsberg Cup]] were held there, attended by thousands of spectators.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.dnevnik.si/novice/neverjetno/1042512406 |title=Neverjetno: Orli nad Šiško |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Incredible: Eagles Above Šiška |date=25 February 2012 |publisher=Dnevnik.si}}</ref> The ice rinks in Ljubljana include [[Koseze Pond]] and Tivoli Hall. In addition, in the 19th century and the early 20th century, [[Tivoli Pond]] and a marshy meadow in [[Trnovo, Ljubljana|Trnovo]], named Kern, were used for ice skating.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.dlib.si/details/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-AO1BR6T0 |title=Kern – Trnovsko drsališče |first=Albert |last=Sič |year=1939 |journal=Kronika Slovenskih Mest |volume=6 |issue=4 |oclc=300063354}}</ref>
'''[[Technical Museum, Zagreb|Technical Museum]]''' (18 Savska Street) was founded in 1954 and it maintains the oldest preserved machine in the area, dating from 1830, which is still operational. The museum exhibits numerous historic aircraft, cars, machinery and equipment. There are some distinct sections in the museum: the Planetarium, the Apisarium, the Mine (model of mines for coal, iron and [[ferrous|non-ferrous metals]], about {{convert|300|m|ft|abbr=on}} long), and the [[Nikola Tesla]] study.<ref name=zageb_tech>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=94&l=e&nav=nav5&solo=291
|title=Technical Museum
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.tehnicki-muzej.hr/ |title= Tehnički muzej |language= Croatian |publisher= Technical Museum |location= Zagreb, Croatia |work= Official web site |accessdate= 27 December 2010}}</ref>


==Economy==
'''[[Zagreb City Museum|Museum of the City of Zagreb]]''' (20 Opatička Street) was established in 1907 by the Association of the Braća Hrvatskog Zmaja. It is located in a restored monumental complex (Popov toranj, the Observatory, Zakmardi Granary) of the former Convent of the [[Poor Clares]], of 1650.<ref name=zageb_citymus>{{cite web
[[File:BTC City panorama.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|[[BTC City]] is the largest shopping mall, sports, entertainment and business area in Ljubljana.]]
|url=http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=94&l=e&nav=nav5&solo=272
|title=Museum of the City of Zagreb
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref> The Museum deals with topics from the cultural, artistic, economic and [[political history]] of the city spanning from Roman finds to the [[modern history|modern period]]. The holdings comprise over 80,000 items arranged systematically into collections of artistic and mundane objects characteristic of the city and its history.


Industry remains the most important employer, notably in the [[pharmaceutical industry|pharmaceuticals]], [[petrochemical]]s and [[food industry|food processing]].<ref name="InfoIntro"/> Other fields include banking, finance, transport, construction, skilled trades and services and tourism. The public sector provides jobs in education, culture, [[health care]] and local administration.<ref name="InfoIntro"/>
'''[[Museum of Arts and Crafts, Zagreb|Arts and Crafts Museum]]''' (10 [[Republic of Croatia Square]]) was founded in 1880 with the intention of preserving the works of art and craft against the new predominance of industrial products. With its 160,000 exhibits, the Arts and Crafts Museum is a national-level museum for artistic production and the history of [[Archaeological culture|material culture]] in Croatia.<ref name=zageb_artsandcrafts>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=94&l=e&nav=nav5&solo=278
|title=Arts and Crafts Museum
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref>


The [[Ljubljana Stock Exchange]] ({{lang|sl|Ljubljanska borza}}), purchased in 2008 by the [[Wiener Börse|Vienna Stock Exchange]],<ref name="Bourse Vienne">{{cite web|url= http://www.sloveniatimes.com/en/inside.cp2?uid=DCC97754-19B6-64BF-BC26-9760B7F88908&linkid=news&cid=ED4C6575-3589-840B-A072-1B6760015E2E |title=Austrians Buy Ljubljana Stock Exchange |accessdate=31 July 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20090111114616/http://www.sloveniatimes.com/en/inside.cp2?uid=DCC97754-19B6-64BF-BC26-9760B7F88908&linkid=news&cid=ED4C6575-3589-840B-A072-1B6760015E2E |archivedate=11 January 2009 }}</ref> deals with large Slovenian companies. Some of these have their headquarters in the capital: for example, the [[chain store|retail chain]] [[Mercator (retail)|Mercator]], the [[Petroleum industry|oil company]] [[Petrol d.d.]] and the telecommunications concern [[Telekom Slovenije]].<ref name="Bourse Ljubljana">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljse.si/cgi-bin/jve.cgi?doc=%208373&sid=qaKUUjazRohwRuAP |title=Ljubljanska borza d.d. |accessdate=31 July 2008}}</ref> Over 15,000 enterprises operate in the city, most of them in the [[tertiary sector of the economy|tertiary sector]].<ref name="Tertiaire Ljubljana">{{cite web |url=http://www.wieninternational.at/en/node/4997 |title=Ljubljana: economic center of Slovenia |accessdate=31 July 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080608140330/http://www.wieninternational.at/en/node/4997 |archivedate=8 June 2008 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
'''[[Ethnographic Museum, Zagreb|Ethnographic Museum]]''' (14 [[Ivan Mažuranić]] Square) was founded in 1919. It lies in the fine Secession building of the one-time Trades Hall of 1903. The ample holdings of about 80,000 items cover the ethnographic heritage of Croatia, classified in the three cultural zones: the Pannonian, Dinaric and Adriatic.<ref name=zageb_ethnographic>{{cite web |url = http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=94&l=e&nav=nav5&solo=263 |title = Ethnographic Museum |publisher = The Zagreb Tourist Board |accessdate=6 December 2012}}</ref>


Numerous companies and over 450 shops are located in the [[BTC City]], the largest business, shopping, recreational, entertainment and cultural centre in Slovenia. It is visited each year by 21 million people.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.info/shopping/btc/ |title=BTC City, Ljubljana |publisher=Ljubljana.info |accessdate=22 December 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana-life.com/shop/shops_details/60-BTC_City |title=Ljubljana Life: BTC City |publisher=Lifeboat Limited |accessdate=22 December 2010}}</ref> It occupies an area of {{convert|475000|m2|sp=us}} in the [[Moste, Ljubljana|Moste District]] in the eastern part of Ljubljana.<ref>{{Cite news|url= http://www.revijakapital.com/kapital/novice.php?rubrika_id=1&novica=13106 |title=20 let od otvoritve prve trgovine na območju BTC CITY Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=20 Years Since the Opening of the First Shop in the BTC CITY Ljubljana Area |journal=[[Kapital (magazine)|Kapital]] |publisher=Kapital Publishing Company |date=4 October 2010 |accessdate=22 December 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Zgodovina nakupovalnih centrov |trans-title=A History of Shopping Centers |first=Tomaž |last=Martinek |year=2007 |publisher=Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana |language=Slovenian}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=http://geo.ff.uni-lj.si/pisnadela/pdfs/dipl_200705_anja_sulin.pdf |title=Preobrazba industrijskih območij v Mestni občini Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Transformation of Industrial Areas in the City Municipality of Ljubljana |year=2007 |first=Anja |last=Šulin |publisher=Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana |accessdate=22 December 2010 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140328012020/http://geo.ff.uni-lj.si/pisnadela/pdfs/dipl_200705_anja_sulin.pdf |archivedate=28 March 2014 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
'''[[Mimara Museum]]''' (5 Roosevelt Square) was founded with a donation from Ante "Mimara" Topić and opened to the public in 1987. It is located in a late 19th-century [[Renaissance Revival architecture|neo-Renaissance]] palace.<ref name=zageb_mim>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=94&l=e&nav=nav5&solo=275
|title=Mimara Museum
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref>
The holdings comprise 3,750 works of art of various techniques and materials, and different cultures and civilisations.


About 74% of Ljubljana households use [[district heating]] from the [[Ljubljana Power Station]].<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.greenljubljana.com/funfacts/district-heating-systems |title=District heating systems|date=19 June 2015|accessdate=30 September 2017}}</ref>
'''[[Croatian Museum of Naïve Art]]''' (works by Croatian primitivists at 3 Ćirilometodska Street) is one of the first museums of [[naïve art]] in the world. The museum holds works of Croatian naïve expression of the 20th century. It is located in the 18th-century Raffay Palace in the [[Gornji Grad – Medveščak|Gornji Grad]].
The museum holdings consist of almost 2000 works of art – paintings, sculptures, drawings and prints, mainly by Croatians but also by other well-known world artists.<ref name="zagreb_naïve">{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-touristinfo.hr/?id=94&l=e&nav=nav5&solo=267
|title=Croatian Naïve Art Museum
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref> From time to time, the museum organises topics and retrospective exhibitions by naïve artists, expert meetings and educational workshops and playrooms.


==Government==
The '''[[Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb|Museum of Contemporary Art]]''' was founded in 1954. Its new building hosts a rich collection of Croatian and international contemporary visual art which has been collected throughout the decades from the nineteen-fifties till today. The museum is located in the centre of [[Novi Zagreb]], opened in 2009. The old location, 2 St. Catherine's Square, is part of the Kulmer Palace in the [[Gornji Grad – Medveščak|Gornji Grad]].<ref name=zagreb_contemporary>{{cite web
The city of Ljubljana is governed by the [[City Municipality of Ljubljana]] ({{lang-sl|Mestna občina Ljubljana}}; MOL), which is led by the city council. The president of the city council is called the mayor. Members of the city council and the mayor are elected in the local election, held every four years. Among other roles, the city council drafts the municipal budget, and is assisted by various boards active in the fields of health, sports, finances, education, [[environmental movement|environmental protection]] and tourism.<ref name="Commissions">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/council/boards/default.html |title=Boards of the City Council |accessdate=31 July 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080110131314/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/council/boards/default.html |archivedate=10 January 2008 }}</ref> The municipality is subdivided into 17 districts represented by district councils. They work with the municipality council to make known residents' suggestions and prepare activities in their territories.<ref name="Districts">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/districts/default.html |title=District authorities |accessdate=31 July 2008 |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080412032307/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/districts/default.html |archivedate=12 April 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.uradni-list.si/1/objava.jsp?urlurid=2001381 |title=Spremembe in dopolnitve statuta Mestne občine Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Amendments and Completions of the Statute of the City Municipality of Ljubljana |newspaper=Official Gazette}}</ref>
|url=http://www.msu.hr/#/en/
|title=The Museum of Contemporary Art Zagreb
|accessdate=20 January 2010
}}</ref>


Between 2002 and 2006, [[Danica Simšič]] was mayor of the municipality.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/si/ljubljana/zupani/1911/danica-simsic/ |title=Danica Simšič 2002 |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |accessdate=30 January 2012}}</ref> Since the municipal elections of 22 October 2006 until his confirmation as a deputy in the [[National Assembly (Slovenia)|National Assembly of Slovenian]] in December 2011, [[Zoran Janković (politician)|Zoran Janković]], previously the managing director of the [[Mercator (retail)|Mercator retail chain]], was the mayor of Ljubljana. In 2006, he won 62.99% of the popular vote.<ref name="Maire">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/mayor/default.html |title=The Mayor of the City of Ljubljana |accessdate=31 July 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080918215935/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/mayor/default.html |archivedate=18 September 2008 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> On 10 October 2010, Janković was re-elected for another four-year term with 64.79% of the vote. From 2006 until October 2010, the majority on the city council (the [[Zoran Janković List]]) held 23 of 45 seats.<ref name="Maire"/> On 10 October 2010, Janković's list won 25 out of 45 seats in the city council. From December 2011 onwards, when Janković's list won the [[Slovenian parliamentary election, 2011|early parliamentary election]], the deputy mayor [[Aleš Čerin]] was decided by him to lead the municipality. Čerin did not hold the post of mayor.<ref name="Dnevnik2012-02-01">{{cite news |url=http://www.dnevnik.si/novice/slovenija/1042506738 |title=Čerin ljubljansko občino trenutno vodi v neskladju s statutom |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Čerin is Currently Leading the Ljubljana Municipality in Discrepancy with its Statute |newspaper=Dnevnik.si |date=1 February 2012}}</ref> After Janković had failed to be elected as the Prime Minister in the [[National Assembly (Slovenia)|National Assembly]], he participated at the mayoral by-election on 25 March 2012 and was elected for the third time with 61% of the vote. He retook the leadership of the city council on 11 April 2012.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.sta.si/en/vest.php?s=a&id=1746295 |title=Janković Sworn in as Ljubljana Mayor Again |date=11 April 2012 |publisher=Slovenian Press Agency |work=English Service: News}}</ref>
'''[[List of museums in Croatia|Other museums and galleries]]'''
Valuable historical collections are also found in the Croatian [[School]] Museum, the Croatian [[Hunting]] Museum, the Croatian [[Sport]]s Museum, the Croatian Post and [[Telecommunication]]s Museum, the HAZU ([[Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts]]) Glyptotheque (collection of monuments), and the HAZU Graphics Cabinet.


Public order in Ljubljana is enforced by the [[Ljubljana Police Directorate]] ({{lang|sl|Policijska uprava Ljubljana}}).<ref name="Police">{{cite web|url=http://www.policija.si/portal_en/organiziranost/pu/lj/index.php |archive-url=https://archive.today/20080620143121/http://www.policija.si/portal_en/organiziranost/pu/lj/index.php |url-status=dead |archive-date=20 June 2008 |title=Police directorate Ljubljana |accessdate=1 February 2012 }}</ref> There are five areal police stations and four sectoral police stations in Ljubljana.<ref name="PDL">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/file/954611/9.-toka---predstavitev-varnostnih-razmer.pdf |title=Varnostne razmere na območju Mestne občine Ljubljana v obdobju 2005 – 2010 |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Safety Situation in the Area of the City Municipality of Ljubljana in the 2005–2010 Period |publisher=Police Directorate of Ljubljana, Ministry of the Interior, Republic of Slovenia |date=March 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130319065629/http://www.ljubljana.si/file/954611/9.-toka---predstavitev-varnostnih-razmer.pdf |archivedate=19 March 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> Public order and municipal traffic regulations are also supervised by the [[Traffic wardens (Ljubljana)|city traffic wardens]] ({{lang|sl|Mestno redarstvo}}).<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/administration/offences-departments/wardens/ |title=City traffic wardens |accessdate=14 September 2010 |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100318073834/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/administration/offences-departments/wardens/ |archivedate=18 March 2010 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> Ljubljana has a quiet and secure reputation.<ref name="PDL"/><ref name="securite">{{cite web|url=http://www.var.fr/dispatch.do?sectionId=site/page_d_accueil_10772717277503/le_var_10772717703904/les_varois_dans_le_monde_1191224486801284/conseils___bons_plans_1191224797342285/slov_nie_1191225455611299&showSection=site/page_d_accueil_10772717277503/le_var_10772717703904/les_varois_dans_le_monde_1191224486801284/conseils___bons_plans_1191224797342285/slov_nie_1191225455611299 |title=Precautions to take |accessdate=31 July 2008 |language=French |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081118052528/http://www.var.fr/dispatch.do?sectionId=site%2Fpage_d_accueil_10772717277503%2Fle_var_10772717703904%2Fles_varois_dans_le_monde_1191224486801284%2Fconseils___bons_plans_1191224797342285%2Fslov_nie_1191225455611299&showSection=site%2Fpage_d_accueil_10772717277503%2Fle_var_10772717703904%2Fles_varois_dans_le_monde_1191224486801284%2Fconseils___bons_plans_1191224797342285%2Fslov_nie_1191225455611299 |archivedate=18 November 2008 }}</ref>
[[The Strossmayer Gallery of Old Masters]] (11 Zrinski Square) offers permanent holdings presenting European paintings from the 14th to 19th centuries,<ref name=zageb_stross>{{cite web|url=http://www.mdc.hr/strossmayer/eng/povijest.html |title=About Strossmayer's Old Masters Gallery |accessdate=2 July 2006 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927234334/http://www.mdc.hr/strossmayer/eng/povijest.html |archivedate=27 September 2007}}</ref> and the [[Ivan Meštrović]] Studio, (8 Mletačka Street) with sculptures, drawings, lithography portfolios and other items, was a donation of this great artist to his homeland The Museum and Gallery Center (4 Jesuit Square) introduces on various occasions the Croatian and foreign cultural and artistic heritage. The [[Art Pavilion]] (22 King Tomislav Square) by Viennese architects Hellmer and Fellmer who were the most famous designers of theatres in Central Europe is a [[Neoclassicism|neo-classical]] exhibition complex and one of the landmarks of the downtown. The exhibitions are also held in the impressive [[Ivan Meštrović|Meštrović]] building on Žrtava Fašizma Square – the Home of Croatian [[Fine art|Fine Art]]ists. The World Center "Wonder of Croatian Naïve Art" (12 [[Ban Jelačić Square]]) exhibits masterpieces of Croatian naïve art as well as the works of a new generation of artists. The Modern Gallery (1 Hebrangova Street) comprises all relevant fine artists of the 19th and 20th centuries. The [[Museum of Broken Relationships]] at 2 Ćirilometodska holds people's mementos of past relationships.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://new.brokenships.com/en |title=Museum of Broken Relationships |publisher=New.brokenships.com |accessdate=5 May 2014 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20111120183225/http://new.brokenships.com/en |archivedate=20 November 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-11971134 |title=Museum of Broken Relationships: BBC video |publisher=Bbc.co.uk |date=13 December 2010 |accessdate=5 May 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/15/arts/design/15broken.html|title=A Poignant Trail of Broken Hearts, All on Display|date=15 February 2010|work=The New York Times}}</ref> It is the first private museum in the country.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://en.wikinoticia.com/culture-science/strange-inventions/67179-the-museum-of-broken-relationships |title=The Museum of Broken Relationships |publisher=En.wikinoticia.com |date=25 November 2010 |accessdate=3 June 2011}}</ref> [[Lauba House]] (23a Baruna Filipovića) presents works from [[Filip Trade Collection]], a large private collection of modern and contemporary Croatian art and current artistic production.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.lauba.hr/en/homepage-2/ |title=People and Art House Lauba |publisher=Lauba.hr |accessdate=5 May 2014 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140508124605/http://www.lauba.hr/en/homepage-2/ |archivedate=8 May 2014 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://pogledaj.to/en/architecture/lauba-%E2%80%93-the-youngest-centenarian-in-town/ |title=Lauba-The Youngest Centenarian in Town |publisher=pogledaj.to |date=25 April 2011 |accessdate=18 July 2011}}</ref>


===Events===
==Demographics==
In 1869, Ljubljana had about 22,600 inhabitants,<ref name="Pipp">{{Cite journal|url=http://www.dlib.si/stream/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-0GBMI71V/7473cdee-a0c0-405b-aed2-39786b347805/PDF |title=Razvoj števila prebivalstva Ljubljane in bivše vojvodine Kranjske |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Development of the Number of Population of Ljubljana and the Former Duchy of Carniola |first=Lojze |last=Pipp |year=1935 |journal=Kronika Slovenskih Mest |volume=2 |number=1}}</ref> a figure that grew to almost 60,000 by 1931.<ref name="Histo5"/>
[[File:Croatian_National_Theatre_in_Zagreb_in_2018.jpg|right|thumb|Croatian National Theatre]]
[[File:Kinosc.jpg|right|thumb|Golden Pram award of the [[Zagreb Film Festival]]]]
Zagreb developed its Advent several years, and it has been awarded Best Christmas Market 3 years in a row.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.europeanbestdestinations.com/christmas-markets/|title=Best Christmas Markets in Europe|website=Europe's Best Destinations}}</ref> Hosting numerous events for 6 weeks, from 1 December till 6 January.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.adventzagreb.hr/|title=Advent Zagreb|website=www.adventzagreb.hr}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.visitzagreb.hr/topic/advent-zagreb/|title=Zagreb Advent & Christmas Market » Visit and Experience Zagreb}}</ref>


At the 2002 census, 39% of Ljubljana inhabitants were [[Catholic]]; 30% had no religion, an unknown religion or did not reply; 19% atheist; 6% [[Eastern Orthodox]]; 5% [[Islam|Muslim]]; and the remaining 0.7% Protestant or another religion.<ref name="Religion">{{cite web |url=http://www.stat.si/popis2002/en/rezultati/rezultati_red.asp?ter=OBC&st=6 |title=Population by religion, municipalities, Slovenia, Census 2002 |accessdate=5 August 2008}}</ref>
Zagreb has been, and is, hosting some of the most popular mainstream artists, in the past few years their concerts held the [[Rolling Stones]], [[U2]], [[Eric Clapton]], [[Deep Purple]], [[Bob Dylan]], [[David Bowie]], [[Roger Waters]], [[Depeche Mode]], [[The Prodigy|Prodigy]], [[Beyoncé Knowles|Beyoncé]], [[Nick Cave]], [[Jamiroquai]], [[Manu Chao]], [[Massive Attack]], [[Metallica]], [[Snoop Dogg]], [[Lady Gaga]], [[Duran Duran]] as well as some of world most recognised underground artists such as [[Dimmu Borgir]], [[Sepultura]], [[Melvins]], [[Mastodon (band)|Mastodon]] and many more. Zagreb is also a home of the [[INmusic festival]], one of the biggest open air festivals in Croatia which is being held every year, usually at the end of June. There are also many jazz festivals like Zagreb Jazz Festival which was the host for some of the most popular artists from world jazz scene like [[Pat Metheny]] or [[Sonny Rollins]] just to name a few. Zagreb is also home of many others club festivals like Žedno uho where many of indie, rock, metal and electronica artists like [[Animal Collective]], [[Melvins]], [[Butthole Surfers]], [[Crippled Black Phoenix]], [[NoMeansNo]], [[The National (band)|The National]], [[Mark Lanegan]], [[Swans (band)|Swans]], [[Mudhoney]] etc. made there performances around the clubs and concert halls of Zagreb. This is mostly recognised because of the city's location, and its good traffic relations with other neighbouring European capital cities such as Vienna and Budapest. This is the effort of Zagreb community to increase the percentage of tourist visits during the summer time, as Croatia, in general, is a popular destination for many people around the globe during the vacation period.


Approximately 91% of the population speaks Slovene as their primary native language. The second most-spoken language is [[Bosnian language|Bosnian]], with [[Serbo-Croatian]] being the third most-spoken language.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stat.si/popis2002/en/rezultati/rezultati_red.asp?ter=OBC&st=92 Statistični urad RS |title=Population by language usually spoken in the household (family), municipalities, Slovenia, 2002 Census |accessdate=4 September 2011}}</ref>
===Performing arts===
[[File:Festival_of_Lights_20190321_DSC_9204.jpg|right|thumb|Festival of Lights]]
There are about 20 permanent or seasonal theatres and stages. The [[Croatian National Theatre in Zagreb|Croatian National Theater in Zagreb]] was built in 1895 and opened by emperor [[Franz Joseph I of Austria]]. The most renowned [[List of concert halls|concert hall]] named "[[Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall|Vatroslav Lisinski]]", after the composer of the first Croatian opera, was built in 1973.


<div class="center">
''Animafest'', the World Festival of [[Animation|Animated Film]]s, takes place every even-numbered year, and the ''Music Biennale'', the international festival of [[avant-garde music]], every odd-numbered year. It also hosts the annual ''[[ZagrebDox]]'' [[documentary film]] festival. The ''Festival of the Zagreb [[orchestra|Philharmonic]]'' and the flowers exhibition ''Floraart'' (end of May or beginning of June), the ''Old-timer Rally'' annual events. In the summer, theatre performances and concerts, mostly in the Upper Town, are organised either indoors or outdoors. The stage on Opatovina hosts the ''Zagreb Histrionic Summer'' theatre events.
'''Demographic evolution<ref name="Pipp"/><ref>{{cite book |url=http://geo2.ff.uni-lj.si/pisnadela/pdfs/dipl_201111_maja_bohnec_kogoj.pdf |title=Raba tal in spreminjanje meje Mestne občine Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Use of Soil and Changes of the Borders of the City Municipality of Ljubljana |first=Maja |last=Bohnec Kogoj |year=2011 |publisher=Department of Geography, Faculty of Arts, University of Ljubljana |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130730124917/http://geo2.ff.uni-lj.si/pisnadela/pdfs/dipl_201111_maja_bohnec_kogoj.pdf |archivedate=30 July 2013 |df=dmy-all }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|url=http://193.2.17.2/publikacije/prenos/?urn=SISTORY:ID:1555 |title=Življenje Ljubljančanov med drugo svetovno vojno |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The life of the Ljubljana Inhabitants During World War II |first=Mojca |last=Šorn |publisher=Institute of Modern History |year=2007 |isbn=978-961-6386-12-8 }}{{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |url=http://www.stat.si/doc/pub/mestna_naselja_slo_03.pdf |title=Mestna naselja v Republiki Sloveniji |language=Slovenian, English|trans-title=Urban Settlement in the Republic of Slovenia, 2003 |publisher=Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia |year=2004 |page=53}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stat.si/krajevnaimena/pregledi_naselja_najvecja_prebivalci.asp?tlist=off&txtIme=LJUBLJANA&selNacin=celo&selTip=naselja&ID=2370 |title=Največja naselja po številu prebivalcev |language=Slovenian, English|trans-title=Largest settlements by number of residents |publisher=stat.si |accessdate=1 January 2014}}</ref>'''
{|class="wikitable" style="font-size:90%; width:80%; border:0; text-align:center; line-height:120%;"
|-
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1600
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1700
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1754
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1800
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1846
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1869
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1880
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1890
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1900
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1910
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1921
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1931
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1948
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1953
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1961
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1971
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1981
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:11%; color:black;" |1991
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:12%; color:black;" |2002
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:12%; color:black;" |2010
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:12%; color:black;" |2013
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:12%; color:black;" |2014
! style="background:#f5f5f5; width:12%; color:black;" |2015
|- style="color:black; background:#d1e8ff; background:#d1e8ff;"
||6,000
||7,500
||9,400
||10,000
||18,000
||22,593
||26,284
||30,505
||36,547
||41,727
||53,294
||59,768
||98,599
||113,340
||135,366
||173,853
||224,817
||258,873
||267,008
||271,885
||282,994
||277,554
||278,789
|}
</div>


==Education==
Zagreb is also the host of ''Zagrebfest'', the oldest Croatian [[pop music|pop-music]] [[music festival|festival]], as well as of several traditional international sports events and tournaments. The ''Day of the City of Zagreb'' on 16 November is celebrated every year with special festivities, especially on the [[Jarun]] lake in the southwestern part of the city.
===Primary education===
In Ljubljana today there are over 50 public elementary schools with over 20,000 pupils.<ref name="InNumbers"/><ref name="University of Ljubljana"/> This also includes an [[international school|international]] elementary school for foreign pupils. There are two private elementary schools: a [[Waldorf education|Waldorf]] elementary school and a [[Catholic school|Catholic]] elementary school. In addition, there are several elementary music schools.


Historically the first school in Ljubljana belonged to [[Teutonic Knights]] and was established in the 13th century. It originally accepted only boys; girls were accepted from the beginning of the 16th century. [[Parochial school]]s are attested in the 13th century, at [[St. Peter's Parish Church (Ljubljana)|St. Peter's Church]] and at Saint Nicholas's Church, the later Ljubljana Cathedral. Since 1291, there were also trade-oriented private schools in Ljubljana. In the beginning of the 17th century, there were six schools in Ljubljana and later three. A girls' school was established by [[Poor Clares]], followed in 1703 by the [[Ursulines]]. Their school was for about 170 years the only public girls' school in [[Carniola]]. These schools were mainly private or established by the city.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.dlib.si/details/URN:NBN:SI:DOC-5MPOYPTA/ |title=Ljubljansko ljudsko šolstvo v terezijanski in jožefinski dobi |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Ljubljana People's Schools in the Era of Theresian and Josef's Era |journal=Kronika slovenskih mest [The Chronicle of Slovenian Cities] |first=Dostal |last=Rudolf |year=1939 |volume=6 |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |pages=21–28; 33–41}}</ref>
===Recreation and sports===


In 1775, the Austrian Empress [[Maria Theresa]] proclaimed [[elementary education]] obligatory and Ljubljana got its [[normal school#Europe|normal school]], intended as a learning place for teachers. In 1805, the first state [[music school]] was established in Ljubljana. In the time of [[Illyrian Provinces]], "''école primaire''", a unified four-year elementary school program with a greater emphasis on Slovene, was introduced. The first public schools, unrelated to religious education, appeared in 1868.
[[File:Prva vožnja SQT2019 žene.png|thumb|right|[[Snow Queen Trophy]] is a [[FIS Alpine Ski World Cup|World Cup]] [[Alpine skiing|alpine ski]] [[Racing|race]] in Zagreb.]]
[[File:Jarun Lake aerial view.jpg|thumb|right|[[Jarun Lake]]]]
Zagreb is home to numerous sports and recreational centres. Recreational [[SportsCenter|Sports Center]] Jarun, situated on [[Jarun|Jarun Lake]] in the southwest of the city, has fine shingle beaches, a world-class [[regatta]] course, a [[jogging]] lane around the lake, several restaurants, many [[Nightclub|night clubs]] and a [[discothèque]]. Its sports and recreation opportunities include swimming, sunbathing, waterskiing, angling and other [[List of water sports|water sports]], but also [[beach volleyball]], football, basketball, handball, table tennis, and [[Miniature golf|mini-golf]].


===Secondary education===
[[Dom Sportova]], a sport centre in northern [[Trešnjevka]] features six halls. The largest two have seating capacity of 5,000 and 3,100 people, respectively.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sportskiobjekti.hr/default.aspx?id=105|title=Ustanova Upravljanje sportskim objektima – Dvorane Doma sportova|first=Globaldizajn|last=www.globaldizajn.hr|work=sportskiobjekti.hr}}</ref> This centre is used for basketball, handball, volleyball, hockey, gymnastics, tennis, etc. It also hosts music events.
[[File:Realka-Ljubljana.JPG|thumb|left|The first complete Realschule (technical grammar school) was established in Ljubljana in 1871.]]
Currently in Ljubljana there are ten public and three private [[grammar school]]s. The public schools divide into general [[gymnasium (school)|gymnasiums]] and [[Classical gymnasium|classical]] gymnasiums, the latter offering Latin and Greek as foreign languages. Some general schools offer internationally oriented European departments, and some offer sport departments, allowing students to more easily adjust their sport and school obligations. All state schools are free, but the number of students they can accept is limited. The private secondary schools include a Catholic grammar school and a Waldorf grammar school. There are also professional grammar schools in Ljubljana, offering economical, technical, or artistic subjects (visual arts, music). All grammar schools last four years and conclude with the [[matura]] exam.


Historically, upon a proposal by [[Primož Trubar]], the [[Carniolan Estates' School]] (1563–1598) was established in 1563 in the period of [[Slovene Reformation]]. Its teaching languages were mainly [[Latin]] and [[Greek language|Greek]], but also [[German language|German]] and [[Slovene language|Slovene]], and it was open for both sexes and all social strata. In 1597, [[Jesuit]]s established the [[Laibach Jesuit College|Jesuit College]] (1597–1773), intended to transmit general education. In 1773, secondary education came under the control of the state. A number of reforms were implemented in the 19th century; there was more emphasis on general knowledge and religious education was removed from state secondary schools. In 1910, there were 29 secondary schools in Ljubljana, among them classical and real gymnasiums and [[Realschule]]s (technical secondary schools).
[[Arena Zagreb]] was finished in 2008. The 16,500-seat arena<ref>[[Arena Zagreb]]{{circular reference|date=October 2015}}</ref> hosted the [[2009 World Men's Handball Championship]].
The [[Dražen Petrović Basketball Hall]] seats 5,400 people. Alongside the hall is the {{convert|94|m|ft|adj=on}} high glass [[Cibona Tower]].
[[Mladost (sports society)|Sports Park Mladost]], situated on the embankment of the Sava river, has an [[Olympic-size swimming pool]], smaller indoor and outdoor [[swimming pool]]s, a sunbathing terrace, 16 [[tennis]] courts as well as [[basketball]], [[volleyball]], [[team handball|handball]], [[Association football|football]] and [[field hockey]] courts.
A volleyball sports hall is within the park.
Sports and Recreational Center Šalata, located in [[Šalata]], only a couple hundred meters from the [[Ban Jelačić Square|Jelačić Square]], is most attractive for tennis players. It comprises a big [[tennis court]] and eight smaller ones, two of which are covered by the so-called "balloon", and another two equipped with lights. The centre also has swimming pools, basketball courts, football fields, a gym and fitness centre, and a four-lane [[bowling]] alley. Outdoor [[ice skating]] is a popular winter recreation. There are also several fine restaurants within and near the centre.


===Tertiary education===
Maksimir Tennis Center, located in Ravnice east of [[Donji grad (Zagreb)|downtown]], consists of two sports blocks. The first comprises a tennis centre situated in a large tennis hall with four courts. There are 22 outdoor tennis courts with lights. The other block offers multipurpose sports facilities: apart from tennis courts, there are handball, basketball and [[indoor soccer|indoor football]] grounds, as well as [[track and field]] facilities, a [[bocce|bocci ball]] alley and [[table tennis]] opportunities.
[[File:University of Ljubljana Palace.jpg|thumb|left|The main building of the [[University of Ljubljana]], formerly the seat of the Carniolan Parliament]]
In 2011, the University had 23 faculties and three academies, located in different parts of Ljubljana. They offer Slovene-language courses in medicine, [[applied science]]s, arts, law, administration, natural sciences, and other subjects.<ref name="Université Ljubljana II">{{cite web |url=http://www.uni-lj.si/en/about_university_of_ljubljana/statues_of_ul.aspx |title=Statutes of UL |accessdate=31 July 2008}}</ref> The university has more than 63,000 students and some 4,000 teaching faculty.<ref name="University of Ljubljana"/> Students make up one-seventh of Ljubljana's population, giving the city a youthful character.<ref name="University of Ljubljana">{{cite web |url=http://www.uni-lj.si/en/about_university_of_ljubljana/university_of_ljubljana.aspx |title=University of Ljubljana |last=University of Ljubljana |work=uni-lj.si |year=2011 |accessdate=5 July 2011}}</ref><ref name="Université Ljubljana">{{cite web |url=http://www.uni-lj.si/en/about_university_of_ljubljana/ul_history.aspx |title=UL history |accessdate=31 July 2008}}</ref>


Historically, higher schools offering the study of general medicine, surgery, architecture, law and theology, started to operate in Ljubljana during the [[French occupation of the Slovene Lands]], in 1810–11. Austro-Hungarian Empire never allowed Slovenes to establish their own university in Ljubljana and the [[University of Ljubljana]], Slovenia's most important university, was founded in 1919 after Slovenes joined the first Yugoslavia.<ref name="Histo5"/><ref name="University of Ljubljana"/> When it was founded, the university comprised five faculties: law, philosophy, technology, theology and medicine. From the beginning, the seat of the university has been at [[Congress Square]] in a building that served as the State Mansion of Carniola from 1902 to 1918.
Recreational swimmers can enjoy a smaller-size indoor swimming pool in Daničićeva Street, and a newly opened indoor Olympic-size pool at [[Utrine, Zagreb|Utrine]] sports centre in Novi Zagreb. Skaters can skate in the [[Ice rink|skating rink]] on Trg Sportova (Sports Square) and on the lake Jarun Skaters' park. [[Hippodrome]] Zagreb offers recreational [[Equestrianism|horseback riding]] opportunities, while [[horse racing|horse races]] are held every weekend during the warmer part of the year.


===Libraries===
The 38,923<ref>[[Stadion Maksimir]]{{circular reference|date=October 2015}}</ref>-seat [[Stadion Maksimir|Maksimir Stadium]], last 10 years under renovation, is located in [[Maksimir]] in the northeastern part of the city. The stadium is part of the immense Svetice recreational and sports complex (ŠRC Svetice), south of the Maksimir Park. The complex covers an area of {{convert|276440|m2|acre|0|abbr=on}}. It is part of a significant [[Green Zone]], which passes from [[Medvednica Mountains]] in the north toward the south. ŠRC Svetice, together with Maksimir Park, creates an ideal connection of areas which are assigned to sport, recreation and leisure.
[[File:National Library Ljubljana 2010.jpg|thumb|left|The building of the [[National and University Library of Slovenia|National and University Library]], designed in the 1930s by [[Jože Plečnik]].]]
;National and University Library of Slovenia
The [[National and University Library of Slovenia]] is the Slovene [[national library|national]] and [[university library]]. In&nbsp;2011, it held about 1,307,000&nbsp;books, 8,700&nbsp;manuscripts, and numerous other textual, visual and multimedia resources, altogether 2,657,000&nbsp;volumes.<ref name="PP2011">{{cite book|url=http://www.nuk.uni-lj.si/nuk1.asp?id=181487672 |title=Poslovno poročilo 2011 |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Business Report 2011 |page=23 |date=28 February 2012 |publisher=National and University Library of Slovenia |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120524233120/http://www.nuk.uni-lj.si/nuk1.asp?id=181487672 |archivedate=24 May 2012 }}</ref>


;Central Technological Library
The latest larger recreational facility is [[Bundek]], a group of two small lakes near the Sava in [[Novi Zagreb]], surrounded by a partly forested park. The location had been used prior to the 1970s, but then went to neglect until 2006 when it was renovated.
The second largest university library in Ljubljana is the [[Central Technological Library]], the national library and information hub for natural sciences and technology.


;Municipal Library and other libraries
Some of the most notable sport clubs in Zagreb are: [[NK Dinamo Zagreb]], [[KHL Medveščak Zagreb]], [[RK Zagreb]], [[KK Cibona]], [[KK Zagreb]], [[KK Cedevita]], [[NK Zagreb]], [[HAVK Mladost]] and others.
The Municipal [[City Library of Ljubljana]], established in&nbsp;2008, is the central regional library and the largest Slovenian general public library. In&nbsp;2011, it held 1,657,000 volumes, among these 1,432,000 books and a multitude of other resources in 36 branches.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mklj.si/eng/index.php/about/statistics |title=Statistics |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |accessdate=14 May 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120430023409/http://www.mklj.si/eng/index.php/about/statistics |archivedate=30 April 2012 }}</ref> Altogether, there are 5&nbsp;general public libraries and over 140&nbsp;specialised libraries in Ljubljana.<ref name="InNumbers"/>
The city hosted the [[2016 Davis Cup World Group]] final between [[Croatia Davis Cup Team|Croatia]] and [[Argentina Davis Cup Team|Argentina]].


Besides the two largest university libraries there are a number of libraries at individual faculties, departments and institutes of the [[University of Ljubljana]]. The largest among them are the [[Central Humanist Library of the Faculty of Arts|Central Humanist Library]] in the field of [[humanities]], the [[Central Social Sciences Library of the Faculty of Social Sciences, Ljubljana|Central Social Sciences Library]], the [[Central Economic Library]] in the field of [[economics]], the [[Central Medical Library]] in the field of [[medical sciences]], and the [[Libraries of the Biotechnical Faculty]] in the field of [[biology]] and [[biotechnology]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.uni-lj.si/en/en/libraries/libraries_at_ul/the_organisation_and_activities_of_the_ul_libraries.aspx |title=The Organisation and Activities of the UL Libraries |accessdate=13 May 2012}}</ref>
=== Religion ===
[[File:Z-202 Kompleks Katedrale Uznesenja Marijina 4.jpg|[[Zagreb Cathedral]]|thumb]]
The [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Zagreb|Archdiocese of Zagreb]] is a [[metropolitan bishop|metropolitan see]] of the [[Roman Catholicism in Croatia|Catholic Church in Croatia]], serving as its religious centre. The current Archbishop is [[Josip Bozanić|Josip Cardinal Bozanić]]. The Catholic Church is the largest religious organisation in Zagreb, Catholicism being the predominant religion of Croatia, with over 1.1 million adherents.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/diocese/dzagr.html|title=Zagreb(Archdiocese)-Statistics|publisher=Zagreb(Archdiocese)|accessdate=3 May 2012}}</ref>
Zagreb is also the [[Episcopal see]] of the [[Metropolitanate of Zagreb and Ljubljana]] of the [[Serbian Orthodox Church]].
[[Islam in Croatia|Islamic religious organisation of Croatia]] has the see in Zagreb. Current president is Mufti Aziz Hasanović. There used to be a mosque in the Meštrović Pavilion during World War II<ref>[[Meštrović Pavilion]]</ref> at the Žrtava Fašizma Square, but it was relocated to the neighbourhood of Borovje in [[Peščenica – Žitnjak|Peščenica]]. Mainstream Protestant churches have also been present in Zagreb – Evangelical (Lutheran) Church and Reformed Christian (Calvinist) Church. [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] (LDS Church) is also present in the Zagreb neighbourhood of [[Jarun]] whereas Jehovah's Witnesses have their headquarters in Central Zagreb.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.crkvaisusakrista.hr/|title=Crkva Isusa Krista Svetaca Poslijednih Dana|publisher=crkvaisusakrista.hr|accessdate=2 September 2012}}</ref> In total there are around 40 non-Catholic religious organisations and denominations in Zagreb with their headquarters and places of worship across the city making it a large and diverse [[multicultural]] community.
There is also significant Jewish history through the Holocaust: [[History of the Jews in Croatia#World War I|History of the Jews in Croatia - Wikipedia]]


;History
== Economy and infrastructure ==
The first libraries in Ljubljana were located in [[monastery|monasteries]]. The first public library was the [[Carniolan Estates' Library]], established in&nbsp;1569 by Primož Trubar. In the 17th century, the [[Jesuit library, Ljubljana|Jesuit Library]] collected numerous works, particularly about mathematics. In&nbsp;1707, the [[Seminary Library, Ljubljana|Seminary Library]] was established; it is the first and oldest public scientific library in Slovenia. Around&nbsp;1774, after the dissolution of Jesuits, the [[Lyceum Library, Ljubljana|Lyceum Library]] was formed from the remains of the Jesuit Library as well as several monastery libraries.
[[File:Sky Office Tower 03.JPG|[[Sky Office Tower]]|thumb]]
Important branches of industry are: production of electrical machines and devices, [[chemical industry|chemical]], [[pharmaceutical drug|pharmaceutical]], [[textile industry|textile]], [[food industry|food and drink]] processing. Zagreb is an [[international trade]] and business centre, as well as an essential transport hub placed at the crossroads of [[Central Europe]], the [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] and the [[Southeast Europe]].<ref name=zageb_economy>{{cite web|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/Dokument.nsf/AboutZagreb?OpenPage |title=About Zagreb Economy |accessdate=2 July 2006 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20060614151640/http://www.zagreb.hr/Dokument.nsf/AboutZagreb?OpenPage |archivedate=14 June 2006 }}</ref> Almost all of the largest Croatian as well as Central European companies and conglomerates such as [[Agrokor]], [[INA (company)|INA]], [[Hrvatski Telekom]] have their headquarters in the city.


==Science==
The only Croatian stock exchange is the Zagreb Stock Exchange ({{lang-hr|Zagrebačka burza}}), which is located in [[Eurotower (Zagreb)|Eurotower]], one of the tallest [[List of tallest buildings in Croatia|Croatian skyscrapers]].
The first society of the leading scientists and public workers in Carniola was the [[Dismas Fraternity]] (Latin: {{lang|la|Societas Unitorum}}), formed in Ljubljana in 1688.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://umzg.zrc-sazu.si/?q=/node/264 |title=Lavric AHAS 6 &#124; Umetnostnozgodovinski inštitut Franceta Steleta |publisher=Umzg.zrc-sazu.si |accessdate=1 June 2011}}</ref> In 1693, the ''[[Academia Operosorum Labacensium]]'' was founded and lasted with an interruption until the end of the 18th century. The next academy in Ljubljana, the [[Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts]], was not established until 1938.


==Transport==
According to 2008 data, the city of Zagreb has the highest PPP and nominal [[gross domestic product]] per capita in Croatia at $32,185 and $27,271 respectively, compared to the Croatian averages of [[United States dollar|$]]18,686 and $15,758.<ref name=zagreb_stat>{{cite web
[[File:ZelezniskaPostaja-Ljubljana.JPG|thumb|[[Ljubljana Bus Station]] and the building of the [[Ljubljana Railway Station]] in the background]]
|url= http://www.zagreb.hr/UserDocsImages/prezentacija_11%2011-ENG.ppt
[[File:Trains pic by Praktica.JPG|thumb|Railway near the central workshop in [[Moste, Ljubljana|Moste]]]]
|title= Zagreb – City Office for Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship
|accessdate= 25 April 2012
|url-status= dead
|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20130720022211/http://www.zagreb.hr/UserDocsImages/prezentacija_11%2011-ENG.ppt
|archivedate= 20 July 2013
}}</ref>


===Air transport===
As of May 2015, the average monthly net salary in Zagreb was 6,669 [[Croatian kuna|kuna]], about [[Euro|€]]870 (Croatian average is 5,679 kuna, about €740).<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.index.hr/vijesti/clanak/prosjecna-placa-u-zagrebu-990-kuna-visa-od-hrvatskog-prosjeka/834757.aspx |title=Prosječna plaća u Zagrebu 990 kuna viša od hrvatskog prosjeka |publisher=[[Index.hr]] |accessdate=31 January 2016}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Foto: Marijan Sušenj/PIXSELL |url=http://www.vecernji.hr/vijesti/znate-li-koliko-iznosi-prosjecna-placa-hrvatskoj-clanak-536625 |title=Znate li koliko iznosi prosječna plaća u Hrvatskoj? – Vijesti – hrvatska – Večernji list |publisher=Vecernji.hr |accessdate=5 May 2014}}</ref> At the end of 2012, the average [[unemployment]] rate in Zagreb was around 9.5%.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.zagreb.hr/default.aspx?id=1037 |title=Službene stranice Grada Zagreba – Zaposlenost i nezaposlenost |publisher=Zagreb.hr |date=5 October 2013 |accessdate=5 May 2014}}</ref>
[[Ljubljana Jože Pučnik Airport]] ([[International Air Transport Association|IATA]] code LJU), located {{convert|26|km|mi|sp=us}} northwest of the city, has flights to numerous European destinations. Among the companies that fly from there are [[Air France]], [[Air Serbia]], [[Brussels Airlines]], [[easyJet]], [[Finnair]], [[Lufthansa]], [[Montenegro Airlines]], [[Swiss]], [[Wizz Air]], [[Transavia]] and [[Turkish Airlines]]. The destinations are mainly European.<ref name="Transavion">{{cite web|url=http://www.lju-airport.si/eng/airliner.asp?IDD=12&IDM=209 |title=Aerodrom Ljubljana, d.d. |accessdate=31 July 2008 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080916003831/http://www.lju-airport.si/eng/airliner.asp?IDM=209&IDD=12 |archivedate=16 September 2008 }}</ref> This airport has superseded the [[Polje Airport|original Ljubljana airport]], in operation from 1933 until 1963.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://giskd2s.situla.org/rkd/Opis.asp?Esd=7622 |title=7622: Ljubljana – Staro letališče |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Ljubljana: The Old Airport |work=Register of the Cultural Heritage of Slovenia |publisher=Ministry of Culture, Slovenia |accessdate=16 January 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120706190023/http://giskd2s.situla.org/rkd/Opis.asp?Esd=7622 |archivedate=6 July 2012 }}</ref><ref name="Matjaz">{{cite web |url=https://sites.google.com/site/staroljubljanskoletalisce/home |title=Staro Ljubljansko letališče: Zgodovina |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The Old Ljubljana Airport: History |accessdate=16 January 2012}}</ref> It was located in the Municipality of Polje (nowadays the [[Moste, Ljubljana|Moste District]]), on a plain between Ljubljanica and Sava next to the railroad in Moste.<ref name="Matjaz"/> There was a military airport in Šiška from 1918 until 1929.<ref name="ZajecABB">{{cite book |url=http://www.bb.si/doc/diplome/Zajec_Anja-Sprejem_in_odprava_potnikov_na_Letaliscu_Jozeta_Pucnika_Ljubljana.pdf |title=Sprejem in odprava potnikov na Letališču Jožeta Pučnika Ljubljana |first=Anja |last=Zajec |date=May 2010 |publisher=B&B education and training |pages=8–9}}</ref>
34% of companies in Croatia have headquarters in Zagreb, and 38.4% of the Croatian workforce works in Zagreb, including almost all banks, utility and public transport companies.<ref>{{cite web|title=CENTRALIZIRANA HRVATSKA Analiza Jutarnjeg – zaposleni Zagrepčani primaju 50 posto veće plaće od Varaždinaca!|url=http://www.jutarnji.hr/vijesti/hrvatska/centralizirana-hrvatska-analiza-jutarnjeg-zaposleni-zagrepcani-primaju-50-posto-vece-place-od-varazdinaca/286912/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Centralizacija: Zagreb troši triput više od Rijeke, Splita i Osijeka zajedno|url=http://www.glas-slavonije.hr/221198/1/Centralizacija-Zagreb-trosi-triput-vise-od-Rijeke-Splita-i-Osijeka-zajedno|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Grabar Kitarović: Demografska slika Hrvatske je ogroman problem|url=http://dnevnik.hr/vijesti/hrvatska/kolinda-grabar-kitarovic-hrvatska-je-previse-centralizirana---423225.html|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref>


===Rail transport===
Companies in Zagreb create 52% of total turnover and 60% of total profit of Croatia in 2006 as well as 35% of Croatian export and 57% of Croatian import.<ref name=hgk_ppp>{{cite web|url=http://www.zg.hgk.hr/prezentacija___read-only_.pdf |title=Gospodarstvo Grada Zagreba i Zagrebačke županije |date=11 December 2007 |accessdate=11 November 2008 |work=Croatian Chamber of Economy |language=Croatian |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20081217230926/http://www.zg.hgk.hr/prezentacija___read-only_.pdf |archivedate=17 December 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web
In the [[Ljubljana Rail Hub]], the [[Pan-European corridors|Pan-European railway corridors]] [[Pan-European Corridor V|V]] (the fastest link between the North Adriatic, and Central and Eastern Europe)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ukom.gov.si/en/media_relations/background_information/transport/slovenia_a_country_at_the_crossroads_of_transport_links/ |title=Slovenia, a Country at the Crossroads of Transport Links |publisher=Government Communication Office, Republic of Slovenia |date=November 2000 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120708045103/http://www.ukom.gov.si/en/media_relations/background_information/transport/slovenia_a_country_at_the_crossroads_of_transport_links/ |archivedate=8 July 2012 }}</ref> and [[Pan-European Corridor X|X]] (linking Central Europe with the Balkans)<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.iccr-international.org/code-ten/docs/codeten-corridor10.pdf |title=Corridor X – Case Study |volume=1 |author=Siarov, Veselin. Ahmed, Moustafa |date=February 1999 |journal=— |access-date=7 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130524182242/http://www.iccr-international.org/code-ten/docs/codeten-corridor10.pdf |archive-date=24 May 2013 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> and the [[main line (railway)|main]] European lines (E 65, E 69, E 70) intersect.<ref>{{cite book|chapter-url=http://www.slo-zeleznice.si/uploads/SZ/program_omrezja_2009_EN/Prva_verzija/Network_Statement_RS_2009.doc |chapter=Extent of PRI |page=25 |title=Network Statement of the Republic of Slovenia 2009 |date=December 2007 |authors=Pšenica, Peter. Pangerc, Jože |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120208102330/http://www.slo-zeleznice.si/en/passengers/slovenia/across-slovenia/city-pass |archivedate=8 February 2012 }}</ref> All international transit trains in Slovenia drive through the Ljubljana hub, and all international passenger trains stop there.<ref name="oDPN2010-03">{{cite book |url=http://arhiv.mm.gov.si/mop/javno/zeleznisko_vozlisce_ljubljana/1_tekstualni_del/12_uredba/oDPN_Zeleznica_100323.pdf |title=Državni prostorski načrt za Ljubljansko železniško vozlišče |language=Slovenian |trans-title=The National Space Plan for the Ljubljana Rail Hub: Draft |date=March 2010 |author=LUZ, d. d. |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120708094000/http://arhiv.mm.gov.si/mop/javno/zeleznisko_vozlisce_ljubljana/1_tekstualni_del/12_uredba/oDPN_Zeleznica_100323.pdf |archivedate=8 July 2012 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> The area of Ljubljana has six passenger [[railway station|stations]] and nine stops.<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.dnevnik.si/tiskane_izdaje/dnevnik/1042289357 |first=Tanja |last=Brkić |title=SŽ: Železniška postajališča niso zadovoljivo opremljena |language=Slovenian |trans-title=SŽ: The Railway Stops are Not Adequately Fitted |newspaper=Dnevnik.si |date=7 August 2008}}</ref> For passengers, the [[Slovenian Railways]] company offers the possibility to buy a daily or monthly city pass that can be used to travel between them.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.slo-zeleznice.si/en/passengers/slovenia/across-slovenia/city-pass |title=City pass |publisher=Slovenian Railways |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120208102330/http://www.slo-zeleznice.si/en/passengers/slovenia/across-slovenia/city-pass |archivedate=8 February 2012 }}</ref> The [[Ljubljana railway station]] is the central station of the hub. The [[Ljubljana Moste Railway Station]] is the largest Slovenian railway dispatch. The [[Ljubljana Zalog Railway Station]] is the central Slovenian [[rail yard]].<ref name="oDPN2010-03"/> There are a number of [[industrial railway|industrial rails]] in Ljubljana.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sindikat-szps.si/downloads/daljinar%208.pdf |title=0800.03: Imenik železniških postaj, daljinar in kažipot za prevoz blaga po progah SŽ |language=Slovenian |trans-title=0800.03: The Directory of Railway Stations, Fare Scales and a Signpost for the Transport of Goods on the Rails of the Slovenian Railways |publisher=Holding Slovenske železnice |date=16 April 2004 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120815045747/http://www.sindikat-szps.si/downloads/daljinar%208.pdf |archivedate=15 August 2012 }}</ref> At the end of 2006,<ref name="The Ljubljana Blog">{{cite web |url=http://ljubljana-slovenia.blogspot.com/2007/01/ljubljanas-funicular-tram.html |author=Urban Rail |title=Ljubljana's funicular tram |date=30 January 2007 |accessdate=13 September 2009}}</ref> the [[Ljubljana Castle funicular]] started to operate. The rail goes from [[Krek Square]] (''Krekov trg'') near the [[Ljubljana Central Market]] to [[Ljubljana Castle]]. It is especially popular among tourists. The full trip lasts 60&nbsp;s.
|url=http://www.zg.hgk.hr/pg006.html
|title=Economic Profile of Zagreb Chamber of Commerce
|publisher=Croatian Chamber of Commerce, Zagreb Chamber of Commerce
|accessdate=25 January 2008
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080115172243/http://www.zg.hgk.hr/pg006.html
|archivedate=15 January 2008
|language=hr
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>


===Transport===
===Roads===
Ljubljana is located where Slovenia's two main freeways intersect,<ref>{{cite journal|url= http://www.ff.uni-lj.si/oddelki/geo/publikacije/dela/files/dela_22/011_cerne.pdf |title=Pomen prometa za ljubljansko mestno aglomeracijo |language=Slovenian, English|trans-title=The Significance of Transport for the Ljubljana Urban Agglomeration |first=Černe |last=Andrej |journal=Dela |issue=22 |year=2004 |page=78 |issn=0354-0596 |url-status=dead |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20070325194934/http://www.ff.uni-lj.si/oddelki/geo/publikacije/dela/files/Dela_22/011_cerne.pdf |archivedate=25 March 2007 }}</ref> connecting the freeway route from east to west, in line with [[Pan-European Corridor V]], and the freeway in the north–south direction, in line with [[Pan-European Corridor X]].<ref name="Oplotnik2004">{{cite conference|url= http://dinamico2.unibg.it/highways/paper/oplotnik.pdf |title=National motorway construction program (NMCP) in Slovenia (financing, impact on national economy and realisation) |authors=Oplotnik, Žan. Križanič, France |booktitle=Highways: cost and regulation in Europe |date=November 2004 |url-status=dead |archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20121120161909/https://dinamico2.unibg.it/highways/paper/oplotnik.pdf |archivedate=20 November 2012 }}</ref> The city is linked to the southwest by [[European route E70|A1-E70]] to the Italian cities of [[Trieste]] and [[Venice]] and the Croatian port of [[Rijeka]].<ref name="Michelin">Michelin, ''Slovénie, Croatie, Bosnie-Herzégovine, Serbie, Monténégro, Macédoine'', Cartes et guides n°736, Michelin, Zellik, Belgium, 2007, {{ISBN|978-2-06-712627-5}}</ref> To the north, [[European route E57|A1-E57]] leads to [[Maribor]], [[Graz]] and [[Vienna]]. To the east, [[European route E70|A2-E70]] links it with the Croatian capital [[Zagreb]], from where one can go to [[Hungary]] or important cities of the former Yugoslavia, such as [[Belgrade]].<ref name="Michelin"/> To the northwest, [[European route E61|A2-E61]] goes to the Austrian towns of [[Klagenfurt]] and [[Salzburg]], making it an important entry point for [[northern Europe]]an tourists.<ref name="Michelin"/> A [[vignette (road tax)|toll sticker]] system has been in use on the [[Ljubljana Ring Road]] since 1 July 2008.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.voyage.gc.ca/countries_pays/report_rapport-eng.asp?id=267000 |title=Travel Report: Slovenia |publisher=Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada |date=17 January 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.portoroz.si/en/slovenian-vignettes |title=Slovenian Vignettes (Toll Stickers) |publisher=Tourist Association Portorož |accessdate=6 February 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120720162815/http://www.portoroz.si/en/slovenian-vignettes |archive-date=20 July 2012 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> The centre of the city is more difficult to access especially in the peak hours due to long arteries with traffic lights and a large number of daily commuters.<ref>{{cite book |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Transport Accessibility in Slovenia |title=Prometna dostopnost v Sloveniji |first=Jani |last=Kozina |year=2010 |publisher=ZRC Publishing House |isbn=978-961-254-235-1 |pages=69–71}}</ref> The core city centre has been closed for motor traffic since September 2007 (except for residents with permissions), creating a [[pedestrian zone]] around [[Prešeren Square]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://citiscope.org/story/2016/how-ljubljana-turned-itself-europes-green-capital |title=How Ljubljana turned itself into Europe's 'green capital' – Citiscope |work=citiscope.org |first=Simone |last=d'Antonio |date=29 January 2016 |accessdate=30 September 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171001031622/http://citiscope.org/story/2016/how-ljubljana-turned-itself-europes-green-capital |archive-date=1 October 2017 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
{{main|Transport in Zagreb}}


Historical [[Ljubljana tram system]] was completed in 1901 and was replaced by buses in 1928,<ref name="110CPT">{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/si/zivljenje-v-ljubljani/v-srediscu/73744/detail.html |title=110 let mestnega potniškega prometa |language=Slovenian |trans-title=110 Years of the City Passenger Traffic |publisher=Municipality of Ljubljana |date=6 September 2011}}</ref> which were in turn abolished and replaced by trams in 1931<ref name="110CPT"/> in its final length of {{convert|18.5|km|sp=us}} in 1940,<ref>{{cite news|url= https://books.google.si/books?id=-WhWAAAAMAAJ |year=1959 |language=Slovenian |title=Kronika: časopis za slovensko krajevno zgodovino |trans-title=The Chronicle: The Newspaper for the Slovene Place History |publisher=Zgodovinsko društvo za Slovenijo (Historical Association of Slovenia) |volume=8–9 |page=64}}</ref> In 1959, it was abolished in favor of automobiles;<ref name="Nebec"/> the tracks were dismantled and tram cars were transferred to [[Osijek#Transport|Osijek]] and [[Subotica]].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://www.business.hr/vijesti/potencijalni-gradonacelnici-obecali-tramvaj-stadion-i-dzamiju |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120803160957/http://www.business.hr/vijesti/potencijalni-gradonacelnici-obecali-tramvaj-stadion-i-dzamiju |url-status=dead |archive-date=2012-08-03 |title=Potencijalni gradonačelnici obećali tramvaj, stadion i džamiju |newspaper=Business.hr |author=Business.hr Editorial Office }}</ref> Reintroduction of an actual tram system to Ljubljana has been proposed repeatedly in the 2000s.<ref>{{cite web|title=Tramvaj ponovno v Ljubljani? Zares želi, da odločitev o tirnem prometu pade že zdaj|url= http://www.dnevnik.si/novice/slovenija/1042328241 |work=STA|publisher=dnevnik.si|accessdate=30 December 2011}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Vozilo, ki bi zanimanje vzbujalo še danes|url= http://www.rtvslo.si/slovenija/vozilo-ki-bi-zanimanje-vzbujalo-se-danes/211642 |work=MMC|publisher=rtvslo.si |accessdate=30 December 2011}}</ref>
====Highways====
{{further|Highways in Croatia}}
[[File:Petlja Držićeva Slavonska.jpg|thumb|left|[[Slavonska Avenue]]]]
[[File:ZET Zagreb.png|thumb|upright=1.6|The [[Zagrebački električni tramvaj|ZET]] network of daytime tram lines in 2009 ''(Line 5 has since been extended to Maksimir and Kapelska and Hanuševa stops were removed)'']]


There are numerous taxi companies in the city.
Zagreb is the hub of five major Croatian highways.


===City bus===
The highway [[A6 (Croatia)|A6]] was upgraded in October 2008 and leads [[w:A7 (Croatia)#Route description|from Zagreb to Rijeka]], and forming a part of the Pan-European Corridor Vb. The upgrade coincided with the opening of the [[Zrinski Bridge|bridge over the Mura river]] on the [[A4 (Croatia)|A4]] and the completion of the [[Hungary|Hungarian]] [[M7 motorway (Hungary)|M7]], which marked the opening of the first freeway corridor between [[Rijeka]] and [[Budapest]].<ref name=arz>{{cite web
[[File:Mercedes-Benz O405GN2 LPP 206.jpg|thumb|Older type of city bus on the streets of Ljubljana]]
|url = http://www.product-of-croatia.com/vijest.php?broj=1499
The [[Ljubljana Bus Station]], the Ljubljana central bus hub, is located next to the Ljubljana railway station. The city bus network, run by the [[Ljubljana Passenger Transport]] (''LPP'') company, is Ljubljana's most widely used means of [[public transport]]. The fleet is relatively modern. The number of dedicated bus lanes is limited, which can cause problems in peak hours when traffic becomes congested.<ref name="ECORYS2011">{{cite book |chapter-url=http://ec.europa.eu/regional_policy/sources/docgener/evaluation/pdf/evasltrat_tran/slovenia.pdf |chapter=Situation per mode of transport |title=Study on Strategic Evaluation on Transport Investment Priorities under Structural and Cohesion funds for the Programming Period 2007–2013 |date=August 2006 |publisher=ECORYS Nederland BV}}</ref> Bus rides may be paid with the [[Urbana (payment card)|Urbana payment card]] (also used for the funicular) or with a [[mobile payment|mobile phone]]. Sometimes the buses are called ''trole'' (referring to [[trolley pole]]s), harking back to the 1951–71 days when Ljubljana had [[trolleybus]] (''trolejbus'') service.<ref name="Izgubljena">{{cite news |url=http://www.dnevnik.si/tiskane_izdaje/dnevnik/1042403604 |title=Izgubljena Ljubljana |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Lost Ljubljana |first=Nenad |last=Pataky |newspaper=Dnevnik |date=17 November 2010}}</ref> There were five [[Ljubljana trolleybus system|trolleybus lines in Ljubljana]], until 1958 alongside the tram.<ref name="Nebec">{{cite book |url=http://www.bb-kranj.si/doc/diplome/Nebec_Damjan-Analiza_placilnega_sistema_v_LPP.pdf |title=Analiza plačilnega sistema v LPP |language=Slovenian, German |trans-title=An Analysis of the Payment System in the LPP |first=Damjan |last=Nebec |publisher=B&B education and training |date=March 2010 |pages=10–11 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120803073742/http://www.bb-kranj.si/doc/diplome/Nebec_Damjan-Analiza_placilnega_sistema_v_LPP.pdf |archivedate=3 August 2012 |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
|title = From Zagreb to Rijeka in an hour
|date = 22 October 2008
|accessdate = 11 November 2008
|work = Product of Croatia
|url-status = dead
|archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110715120400/http://www.product-of-croatia.com/vijest.php?broj=1499
|archivedate = 15 July 2011
}}</ref> The [[A1 (Croatia)|A1]] starts at the [[Lučko interchange]] and [[Concurrency (road)|concurs]] with the A6 up to the [[Bosiljevo 2 interchange]], connecting Zagreb and [[Split, Croatia|Split]] ({{As of|2008|10}} [[Vrgorac]]). A further extension of the A1 up to [[Dubrovnik]] is under construction. Both highways are tolled by the Croatian highway authorities [[Hrvatske autoceste]] and [[Autocesta Rijeka - Zagreb]].{{citation needed|date=October 2012}}


Another means of public road transport in the city centre is the Cavalier ({{lang|sl|Kavalir}}), an electric vehicle operated by LPP since May 2009. There are three such vehicles in Ljubljana. The ride is free and there are no stations because it can be stopped anywhere. It can carry up to five passengers; most of them are elderly people and tourists.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/news/71679/detail.html |title='The Cavalier' on the Streets of Ljubljana |date=30 March 2011 |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |work=Ljubljana.si |access-date=24 April 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110910000733/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/news/71679/detail.html |archive-date=10 September 2011 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> The Cavalier drives in the car-free zone in the Ljubljana downtown. The first line links [[Čop Street]], [[Wolf Street]] and the [[Hribar Embankment]], whereas the second links [[Town Square (Ljubljana)|Town Square]], [[Upper Square (Ljubljana)|Upper Square]], and [[Old Square (Ljubljana)|Old Square]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/si/mol/novice/2106/detail.html |title=Naj vas zapelje Kavalir |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Let the Cavalier Drive You |date=13 May 2009 |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |work=Ljubljana.si}}</ref> There is also a tractor with wagons decorated to look like a train for tourists in Ljubljana, linking [[Cyril and Methodius Square]] in the city centre with Ljubljana Castle.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.slovenia.info/?ogledi=466&lng=1 |title=Turistični vlakec na Ljubljanski grad |language=Slovenian |trans-title=A Tourist Train to Ljubljana Castle |work=Slovenia.info |accessdate=24 April 2012}}</ref>
Highway [[A3 (Croatia)|A3]] (formerly named [[Brotherhood and unity|Bratstvo i jedinstvo]]) was the showpiece of Croatia in the [[Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia|SFRY]]. It is the oldest Croatian highway.<ref name="bratstvo-enotnost">{{cite web|publisher=Zbirka.si |url=http://www.zbirka.si/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160311035630/http://www.zbirka.si/ |url-status=dead |archive-date=11 March 2016 |title=PRAZNOVANJE ROJSTNEGA DNE ZA OTROKE – NASVETI! |trans-title=Brotherhood and Unity Motorway |language=Slovenian |accessdate=27 August 2015}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref><ref name="RTS-vremeplov">{{cite web
|publisher= [[Radio Television of Serbia]]
|url= http://www.rts.rs/page/stories/sr/story/125/Društvo/602651/Vremeplov+(1.4.2010).html
|title= Vremeplov
|trans-title= Time machine
|language= Serbian
|date= 1 April 2010
|accessdate= 17 August 2015
}}</ref>
A3 forms a part of the [[Pan-European Corridor X]]. The highway starts at the [[Bregana]] [[border checkpoint|border crossing]], bypasses Zagreb forming the southern arch of the [[Zagreb bypass]] and ends at [[Lipovac, Vukovar-Srijem County|Lipovac]] near the Bajakovo border crossing. It continues in [[Southeast Europe]] in the direction of [[Near East]]. This highway is tolled except for the stretch between Bobovica and [[Ivanja Reka interchange|Ivanja Reka]] interchanges.<ref name="HAC-A3-prospekt">{{cite web |publisher=Hrvatske autoceste |url=http://www.hac.hr/files/file/brosure/A3_hr.pdf |title=Autocesta A3 – Bregana–Zagreb–Lipovac |trans-title=Motorway A3 – Bregana–Zagreb–Lipovac |date=3 July 2006 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110220231220/http://www.hac.hr/files/file/brosure/A3_hr.pdf |archivedate=20 February 2011 |accessdate=21 June 2017}}</ref>


===Bicycles===
Highway [[A2 (Croatia)|A2]] is a part of the [[Pan-European Corridor Xa|Corridor Xa]].<ref name=corridors>{{cite web
[[File:BicikeLJ Ljubljana-Prešernov trg.JPG|thumb|[[BicikeLJ]], a Ljubljana-based self-service bicycle network, is free of charge for the first hour.]]
|url= http://www.seetoint.org/index.php?option=com_rubberdoc&view=doc&id=6&format=raw
There is a considerable amount of [[bicycle]] traffic in Ljubljana, especially in the warmer months of the year. It is also possible to rent a bike. Since May 2011, the [[BicikeLJ]], a self-service [[Bicycle sharing system|bicycle rental]] system offers the residents and visitors of Ljubljana 600 bicycles and more than 600 parking spots at 60 stations in the wider city centre area. The daily number of rentals is around 2,500.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sta.si/vest.php?s=a&id=1659068 |title=Ljubljana Rent-a-Bike Network Gaining in Popularity |date=24 July 2011 |publisher=STA}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.sta.si/en/vest.php?id=1635721 |title=Ljubljana Launches Public Bike Project |date=14 May 2011 |publisher=STA}}</ref> There was a possibility to rent a bike even before the establishment of BicikeLJ.<ref name="Transvelo">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/tourist_services/lj-bike/default.html |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009205059/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/tourist_services/lj-bike/default.html |archivedate=9 October 2007 |title=Ljubljana Bike |accessdate=31 July 2008 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
|title= South East Europe Core Regional Transport Network Development Plan
|date=May 2006
|accessdate= 13 November 2008
|work= South-East Europe Transport Observatory
}}</ref> It connects Zagreb and the frequently congested [[Macelj]] border crossing, forming a near-continuous motorway-level link between Zagreb and [[Western Europe]].<ref name=2000loan>{{cite web
|url= http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTCUSTOMPOLICYANDADMIN/Resources/615371-1115072495642/P070088_PAD.pdf
|title= Project appraisal document on a proposed loan to the Republic of Croatia
|date= 27 September 2000
|accessdate= 13 November 2008
|work= [[World Bank Group|The World Bank]]
}}</ref> Forming a part of the Corridor Vb, highway [[A4 (Croatia)|A4]] starts in Zagreb forming the northeastern wing of the [[Zagreb bypass]] and leads to Hungary until the [[Goričan]] border crossing. It is often used highway around Zagreb.<ref>{{cite web|title=Autocesta koja koči Hrvatsku|url=http://www.ncs.hr/hr/autocesta_koja_koci_hrvatsku/11758/7_2|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref>


There are still some conditions for cyclists in Ljubljana that have been criticised as unfortunate to date. This refers to cycle lanes in poor condition and constructed in a way that motorised traffic is privileged. There are also many one-way streets which therefore cannot be used as alternate routes so it is difficult to legally travel by bicycle through the city centre.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.delo.si/novice/slovenija/razvajati-kolesarje-ne-avtomobiliste.html/ |author= Mateja Gruden |title=Delo (17. julij 2000): Razvajati kolesarje, ne avtomobiliste |publisher=delo.si |date=25 March 2012 |accessdate=24 August 2012}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://kolesarji.org/peticija-za-fabianijev-most/ |author=Ljubljanska kolesarska mreža |title=Peticija za Fabianijev most |publisher=kolesarji.org |date=12 June 2012 |accessdate=24 August 2012 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120824211642/https://kolesarji.org/peticija-za-fabianijev-most/ |archivedate=24 August 2012 }}</ref> Through years, some prohibitions have been partially abolished by marking [[cycle lane]]s on the pavement.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mladina.si/tednik/200029/clanek/i-kuscer/ |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20010504065527/http://www.mladina.si/tednik/200029/clanek/i-kuscer/ |archivedate=4 May 2001 |title=Mladina (17. julij 2000): Kolesarski zmaji |date=9 January 2008 |accessdate=10 December 2011 |url-status=dead }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://lkm.kolesarji.org/besedila/LKM%20pobude%20za%20prijazno%20kolesarsko%20infrastrukturo.pdf |title=Ljubljanska kolesarska mreža (okt. 2010): Pobude za izboljšave v Ljubljanski kolesarski infrastrukturi, str. 2 |accessdate=10 December 2011 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110820050256/http://lkm.kolesarji.org/besedila/LKM%20pobude%20za%20prijazno%20kolesarsko%20infrastrukturo.pdf |archivedate=20 August 2011 |df=dmy-all }}</ref> Nevertheless, the situation has been steadily improving; in 2015, Ljubljana placed 13th in a ranking of the world's most bicycle-friendly cities.<ref>{{cite web |url= http://www.sloveniatimes.com/survey-ranks-ljubljana-world-s-13th-most-bicycle-friendly-city|title= Survey Ranks Ljubljana World's 13th Most Bicycle-Friendly City|accessdate=30 June 2015 |date=30 June 2015 |work=Slovenia Times }}</ref> In 2016 Ljubljana was already 8th on the Copenhagenize list.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://copenhagenizeindex.eu/08_ljubljana.html |title=copenhagenizeindex |publisher=copenhagenizeindex.eu |date=21 June 2018 |accessdate=21 June 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180716072259/http://copenhagenizeindex.eu/08_ljubljana.html |archive-date=16 July 2018 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
<!-- Currently in dispute: A highway tunnel going through the [[Medvednica]] Mountains is in the planning stages and could become Zagreb's main northern transit connection. This project has generated controversy among locals who oppose it.


===Water transport===
A northern branch of the [[Zagreb bypass]] (''Sjeverna tangenta'') going through the Medvednica Mountains in the northern parts of Zagreb is in planning stages. Due to steep hills, if constructed, this route would make many overpasses and tunnels a necessity thus being very costly. Because of its high controversy and very strong local [[NIMBY]] opposition the success of the project is doubtful.
The river transport on the Ljubljanica and the Sava was the main means of cargo transport to and from the city until the mid-19th century, when railroads were built. Today, the Ljubljanica is used by a number of tourist ships, with wharves under the [[Butchers' Bridge]], at [[Fish Square, Ljubljana|Fish Square]], at [[Court Square, Ljubljana|Court Square]], at [[Breg, Ljubljana|Breg]], at the [[Poljane Embankment]], and elsewhere.
-->
The railway and the highway [[A3 (Croatia)|A3]] along the [[Sava]] river that extend to [[Slavonia]] (towards [[Slavonski Brod]], [[Vinkovci]], [[Osijek]] and [[Vukovar]]) are some of the busiest traffic corridors in the country.<ref name=zageb_tran>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-life.com/travel/travel.php
|title=Zagreb Transportation
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref> The railway running along the [[Sutla]] river and the [[A2 (Croatia)|A2]] highway (Zagreb-[[Macelj]]) running through [[Zagora (Croatia)|Zagorje]], as well as traffic connections with the Pannonian region and [[Hungary]] (the [[Hrvatsko Zagorje|Zagorje]] railroad, the roads and railway to [[Varaždin]] – [[Čakovec]] and [[Koprivnica]]) are linked with truck routes.<ref name="hž">{{cite web
|url= http://www.hznet.hr/iSite3/lgs.axd?t=16&id=1713
|title= Izvješće o mreži
|page= 67
|year= 2009
|accessdate= 13 November 2008
|work= [[Croatian Railways]]
|language= Croatian}}</ref> The southern railway connection to [[Split, Croatia|Split]] operates on a high-speed [[tilting train]]s line via the [[Lika]] region (renovated in 2004 to allow for a five-hour journey); a faster line along the [[Una (Sava)|Una]] river valley is currently in use only up to the border between [[Croatia]] and [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]].<ref name="hž"/><ref name=vjesnik_tilting_trains>{{cite web
|url= http://ns1.vjesnik.com/html/2004/09/20/Clanak.asp?r=unu&c=1
|title= Nagibni vlakovi više nisu nagibni
|date= 20 September 2004
|last= Pupačić
|first= Tomislav
|accessdate= 13 November 2008
|work= [[Vjesnik]]
|language= Croatian
|url-status= dead
|archiveurl= https://archive.is/20090108164504/http://ns1.vjesnik.com/html/2004/09/20/Clanak.asp?r=unu&c=1
|archivedate= 8 January 2009
}}</ref>


====Roads====
==Healthcare==
Ljubljana has a rich history of discoveries in medicine and innovations in medical technology. The majority of [[secondary care|secondary]] and [[tertiary care]] in Slovenia takes place in Ljubljana. The [[Ljubljana University Medical Centre]] is the largest hospital centre in Slovenia. The [[Faculty of Medicine, Ljubljana|Faculty of Medicine]] (University of Ljubljana) and the [[Ljubljana Institute of Oncology]] are other two central medical institutions in Slovenia. The [[Ljubljana Community Health Centre]] is the largest [[health centre]] in Slovenia. It has seven units at 11 locations. Since 1986, Ljubljana is part of the [[Healthy city|WHO European Healthy Cities Network]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ljubljana.si/si/mol/mestna-uprava/oddelki/zdravje-socialno-varstvo/organizacijske-enote-v-sestavi/ |title=Organizacijske enote v sestavi: Odsek za zdravje |language=Slovenian |trans-title=Organisational Units of the Department of Health and Social Protection |publisher=City Municipality of Ljubljana |year=2009 |access-date=8 December 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111206073938/http://www.ljubljana.si/si/mol/mestna-uprava/oddelki/zdravje-socialno-varstvo/organizacijske-enote-v-sestavi |archive-date=6 December 2011 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref>
[[File:Rotor Zagreb.jpg|thumb|right|Roundabout in [[Novi Zagreb – zapad|New Zagreb – west]]]]


==International relations==
The city has an extensive [[Avenue Road|avenue]] network with numerous main arteries up to ten lanes wide and [[Zagreb bypass]], a congested four-lane [[highway]] encircling most of the city. Finding a [[parking space]] is supposed to be made somewhat easier by the construction of new underground multi-story [[parking lot]]s (Importanne Center, Importanne Gallery, Lang Square, Tuškanac, Kvaternik Square, Klaić Street, etc.). The busiest roads are the main east–west arteries, former [[Brotherhood and Unity Highway|Highway "Brotherhood and Unity"]], consisting of [[Ljubljanska Avenue]], [[Zagrebačka Avenue]] and [[Slavonska Avenue]]; and the Vukovarska Avenue, the closest bypass of the city centre. The avenues were supposed to alleviate traffic problem, but most of them are today gridlocked at rush hour and others, like Branimirova Avenue and Dubrovnik Avenue which are gridlocked for the whole day.<ref>{{cite web|title=PROMETNI KOLAPS Gužve zbog asfaltiranja Avenije Dubrovnik trajat će do kraja kolovoza|url=http://www.jutarnji.hr/vijesti/zagreb/prometni-kolaps-guzve-zbog-asfaltiranja-avenije-dubrovnik-trajat-ce-do-kraja-kolovoza/4633754/|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Zbog radova velike gužve u Novom Zagrebu, Avenija Dubrovnik djelomično zatvorena do srijede|url=https://www.vecernji.hr/zagreb/zbog-radova-velike-guzve-u-novom-zagrebu-avenija-dubrovnik-djelomicno-zatvorena-do-srijede-1109543|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=10 projekata koji bi riješili gradske gužve u Zagrebu – na čekanju|url=https://www.vecernji.hr/zagreb/10-projekata-koji-bi-rijesili-gradske-guzve-na-cekanju-1078136|accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> [[International E-road network|European routes]] [[European route E59|E59]], [[European route E65|E65]] and [[E70 in Croatia|E70]] serve Zagreb.
{{See also|List of twin towns and sister cities in Slovenia}}


===Twin towns and sister cities===
=====Bridges=====
Ljubljana is [[twin towns and sister cities|twinned]] with:<ref name="Ljubljana twinnings">{{cite web|url=http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/twin_cities_association_-memberships/|title=Ljubljana's twin cities|accessdate=27 July 2013|work=Mestna občina Ljubljana (Ljubljana City)|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160611224540/http://www.ljubljana.si/en/about-ljubljana/twin_cities_association_-memberships/|archivedate=11 June 2016|df=dmy-all}}</ref>
Zagreb has seven road traffic bridges across the [[Sava|river Sava]], and they all span both the river and the [[levee]]s, making them all by and large longer than {{convert|200|m|ft|abbr=on}}. In downstream order, these are:
{|class="wikitable"
{|class="wikitable"
|- valign="top"
|-
|
! Name (English)
*{{flagicon|TUR}} [[Ankara]], Turkey <small>(since 2015)</small>
! Name (Croatian)
*{{flagicon|GRC}} [[Athens]], Greece <small>(since 2000)</small>
! Year Finished
*{{flagicon|AZE}} [[Baku]], Azerbaijan <small>(since 2013)</small>
! Type of bridge
*{{flagicon|SRB}} [[Belgrade]], Serbia <small>(since 2010)</small>
! Road that goes over
*{{flagicon|SVK}} [[Bratislava]], Slovakia <small>(since 1967)</small>
! Other Information
*{{flagicon|BEL}} [[Brussels]], Belgium <small>(since 2004)</small>
|-
*{{flagicon|GER}} [[Chemnitz]], Germany <small>(since 1966)</small>
|'''[[Zagreb#Bridges|Podsused Bridge]]'''
*{{flagicon|PRC}} [[Chengdu]], China <small>(since 1981)</small>
|''Podsusedski most''
||
|1982
*{{flagicon|USA}} [[Cleveland]], United States
|Two-lane road bridge with a commuter train line (not yet completed)
*{{flagicon|GER}} [[Leverkusen]], Germany <small>(since 1979)</small>
|[[Samobor|Samoborska Road]]
*{{flagicon|UAE}} [[Fujairah]], United Arab Emirates <small>(since 2014)</small>
|Connects Zagreb to its close [[suburb]]s by a road to [[Samobor]], the fastest route to Bestovje, Sveta Nedelja and Strmec.
*{{flagicon|AUT}} [[Graz]], Austria <small>(since 2001)</small>
|-
*{{flagicon|RUS}} [[Moscow]], Russia <small>(since 2000)</small>
|'''[[Zagreb#Bridges|Jankomir Bridge]]'''
*{{flagicon|RUS}} [[Moscow Oblast|Moscow Region]], Russia <small>(since 2001)</small>
|''Jankomirski most''
*{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Parma]], Italy <small>(since 1964)</small>
|1958, 2006 (upgrade)
*{{flagicon|ITA}} [[Pesaro]], Italy <small>(since 1964)</small>
|Four lane road bridge
||
|[[Ljubljanska Avenue]]
*{{flagicon|CRO}} [[Ploče]], Croatia <small>(since 1982)</small>
|Connects Ljubljanska Avenue to the [[Jankomir interchange]] and [[Zagreb bypass]].
*{{flagicon|CRO}} [[Rijeka]], Croatia <small>(since 1979)</small>
|-
*{{flagicon|BIH}} [[Sarajevo]], Bosnia and Herzegovina <small>(since 2002)</small>
|'''[[Adriatic Bridge]]'''
*{{flagicon|NMK}} [[Skopje]], North Macedonia <small>(since 2007)</small>
|''Jadranski most''
*{{flagicon|TUN}} [[Sousse]], Tunisia <small>(since 1969)</small>
|1981
*{{flagicon|GEO}} [[Tbilisi]], Georgia <small>(since 1977)</small>
|Six lane road bridge (also carries [[tram]] tracks)
*{{flagicon|GER}} [[Wiesbaden]], Germany <small>(since 1977)</small>
|[[Adriatic Sea|Adriatic Avenue]]
*{{flagicon|CRO}} [[Zagreb]], Croatia <small>(since 2001)</small>
|The most famous bridge in Zagreb. The bridge spans from Savska Street in the north to the [[Remetinec Roundabout]] in the south.
|-
|'''[[Zagreb#Bridges|Sava Bridge]]'''
|''Savski most''
|1938
|Pedestrian since the construction of the Adriatic Bridge
|[[Sava|Savska Road]]
|The official name at the time of building was ''New'' Sava bridge, but it is the oldest still standing bridge over [[Sava]]. The bridge is known among experts due to some construction details.<ref name=Crnobrnja>{{cite news
|url= http://hrcak.srce.hr/index.php?show=clanak&id_clanak_jezik=14235
|title= Bridges across the Sava River in Zagreb
|author= Neven Crnobrnja
|language= Croatian
|journal= Građevinar
|volume= 57
|number= 12
|year= 2006
|publisher= Hrvatski savez građevinskih inženjera
|location= Zagreb, Croatia
|accessdate= 20 January 2011
}}</ref>
|-
|'''[[Liberty Bridge, Zagreb|Liberty Bridge]]'''
|''Most slobode''
|1959
|Four lane road bridge
|[[Većeslav Holjevac|Većeslav Holjevac Avenue]]
|It used to hold a pair of [[bus lane]]s, but due to the increasing individual traffic and better tram connections across the river, those were converted to normal lanes.
|-
|'''[[Zagreb#Bridges|Youth Bridge]]'''
|''Most mladosti''
|1974
|Six lane road bridge (also carries tram tracks)
|[[Marin Držić Avenue]]
|Connects eastern [[Novi Zagreb]] to the districts of [[Trnje, Zagreb|Trnje]], [[Peščenica – Žitnjak|Peščenica]], [[Donja Dubrava, Zagreb|Donja Dubrava]] and [[Maksimir]].
|-
|'''[[Homeland Bridge]]'''
|''Domovinski most''
|2007
|Four-lane road bridge (also carries two bicycle and two pedestrian lanes; has space reserved for light railroad tracks)
|[[Workforce|Radnička (Workers') Road]]
|This bridge is the last bridge built on Sava to date; it links [[Peščenica – Žitnjak|Peščenica]] via Radnička street to the [[Zagreb bypass]] at Kosnica. It is planned to continue towards [[Zagreb Airport]] at [[Pleso]] and [[Velika Gorica]], and on to state road D31 going to the south.
|}
|}

There are also two rail traffic bridges across the Sava, one near the Sava bridge and one near [[Mičevec]], as well as two bridges that are part of the [[Zagreb bypass]], one near [[Zaprešić]] (west), and the other near [[Ivanja Reka]] (east).

Two additional bridges across the river [[Sava]] are proposed: Jarun Bridge and Bundek Bridge.
<!-- NEXT PARAGRAPH COMMENTED OUT BECAUSE THESE ARE NO REAL PROJECTS AT THIS MOMENT (reintroduced a sentence on new bridge proposals)
Two additional bridges across the river Sava are planned in 2008: Jarun Bridge and Bundek Bridge (which will most likely be named in honour of [[John Paul II]]).<ref name=zageb_most>{{cite web
|url=http://www.poslovni.hr/23823.aspx
|title=Two new bridges in Zagreb
|work=Poslovni dnevnik
|accessdate=6 October 2006
|language=hr}}</ref>
--><!-- NEXT PARAGRAPH COMMENTED OUT BECAUSE THESE ARE NO REAL PROJECTS AT THIS MOMENT

=====Tunnels=====
A recent traffic study of Zagreb's cit centre proposes building seven tunnels underneath the city centre. The number of cars in the city centre is rising by 4% every year and current traffic levels require a widening of the road infrastructure. A particular problem is [[Ilica (street)|Ilica]] Street, which has high amounts of both car, tram and pedestrian traffic. Any widening of this street would take some space from the pedestrians. The tunnels would triple the downtown road capacity and allow the cars to travel at {{convert|50|km/h|abbr=on}} at [[peak hour]]. The seven tunnels would also help solve the problem of the unfinished [[Sljeme tunnel]], which has been a citywide nuisance for a long time.

The proposed tunnels would have an underground interchange near Jabukovac street in the hills north of the city centre. Three tunnels (one of which would have two tubes) would connect the future Jabukovac interchange with the city centre. Another tunnel would connect Jabukovac to [[Gupčeva zvijezda]], one would go to Zelengaj north of Britanski square and the third one would go to Vončinina Street, about {{convert|1|km|mi|abbr=on}} east of Jabukovac. There would also be a tunnel connecting Draškovićeva Street to [[Ribnjak, Zagreb]], eliminating the current long and often congested bypass which uses smaller streets near [[Žrtava Fašizma Square]].

Should the proposal be accepted, it would take three years to build the tunnels.<ref name=tuneli>{{cite web
|url=http://www.sutra.hr/gradski-ritam/tunelima-kroz-centar-zagreba
|title=Tunelima kroz centar Zagreba
|accessdate=27 November 2007
|last=Šimunović
|first=Damjan
|date=24 November 2007
|work=Sutra.hr
|language=Croatian
}}</ref>
-->

====Public transportation====
[[File:19-06-16-Zagreb-DJI_0183.jpg|thumb|right|[[Zagreb Glavni kolodvor|Main Railway Station]]]]
[[File:ZET tram&bus.jpg|thumb|right|[[Zagrebački električni tramvaj|ZET]] tram and city bus]]
[[File:HŽ Class 6112 1.JPG|thumb|right|[[HŽ series 6112|Newest model]] of the Zagreb city trains system]]
[[Public transport]]ation in the city is organised in several layers: the inner parts of the city are mostly covered by [[tram]]s, the outer city areas and closer suburbs are linked with [[bus]]es and rapid transit [[Zagreb Commuter Rail|commuter rail]].

The public transportation company [[Zagrebački električni tramvaj|ZET]] (''Zagrebački električni tramvaj'', Zagreb Electric Tram) operates trams, all inner bus lines, and the most of the suburban bus lines, and it is subsidised by the city council.

The national rail operator [[Croatian Railways]] (''Hrvatske željeznice'', HŽ) runs a network of urban and suburban train lines in the metropolitan Zagreb area, and is a [[government-owned corporation]].

The [[funicular]] (''uspinjača'') in the historic part of the city is a [[tourist attraction]].

[[Taxicab|Taxi]] market has been liberalized in early 2018<ref>{{cite web|url=https://vlada.gov.hr/vijesti/ministar-butkovic-novim-zakonom-o-prijevozu-u-cestovnom-prometu-jeftiniji-i-dostupniji-taksi-za-sve-gradjane/23630 |title=Ministar Butković: Novim Zakonom o prijevozu u cestovnom prometu jeftiniji i dostupniji taksi za sve građane |publisher=Government of the Republic of Croatia }}</ref> and numerous transport companies have been allowed to enter the market; consequently, the prices significantly dropped whereas the service was immensely improved so the popularity of taxis in Zagreb has been increasing from then onwards.

=====Tram network=====
{{main|Trams in Zagreb}}
Zagreb has an extensive [[tram]] network with 15-day and 4 night lines covering much of the inner- and middle-suburbs of the city. The first tram line was opened on 5 September 1891 and trams have been serving as a vital component of Zagreb mass transit ever since. Trams usually travel at speeds of {{convert|30|-|50|km/h|0|abbr=off}}, but slow considerably during [[rush hour]]. The network operates at the [[curb (road)|curb]] whereas on larger avenues its tracks are situated inside the green belts.

<!-- NEXT PARAGRAPH COMMENTED OUT BECAUSE THESE ARE NO REAL PROJECTS AT THIS MOMENT
Trams connect almost all parts of the city, and a number of new lines have been recently proposed, including to "[[Arena Zagreb|Arena]]", handball stadium in construction, to Vrapce, and [[Zagreb Airport]], the main airport in Zagreb located in the suburb of [[Pleso]]. -->
An ambitious program, which entailed replacing old trams with the new and modern ones built mostly in Zagreb by companies [[KONČAR Group|Končar elektroindustrija]] and, to a lesser extent, by [[TŽV Gredelj]], has recently been finished. The new "[[CROTRAM|TMK 2200]]", trams by the end of 2012 made around 95% of the fleet.<ref name=new_series>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zet.hr/vijesti/novosti/predstavljen-71-niskopodni-tramvaj.aspx
|title=Predstavljen 71. niskopodni tramvaj
|accessdate=8 January 2008
|date=27 December 2007
|publisher=[[Zagrebački električni tramvaj]] (ZET)
|language=Croatian
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071231084927/http://www.zet.hr/vijesti/novosti/predstavljen-71-niskopodni-tramvaj.aspx
|archivedate=31 December 2007
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>
<!-- NEXT PARAGRAPH COMMENTED OUT BECAUSE THESE ARE NO REAL PROJECTS AT THIS MOMENT -->
<!--A second [[light-rail]] or [[metro]] system was proposed in January 2007. The system was envisioned with five lines; three running west-east, and two running north-south converging on the city centre. All lines were planned to go underground in the city centre. It is currently unknown whether it will be built or not.-->

=====Suburban rail network=====
{{main|Zagreb Commuter Rail}}
The commuter rail network in Zagreb has existed since 1992. In 2005, suburban rail services were increased to a 15-minute frequency serving the middle and outer suburbs of Zagreb, primarily in the east–west direction and to the southern districts. This has enhanced the commuting opportunities across the city.<ref name=suburban_rail>{{cite web|url=http://www.24sata.hr/index.php?cmd=show_clanak&tekst_id=73771 |title=Zagreb kupuje 18 vlakova za brži prigradski promet |date=1 August 2008 |last=Vojković |first=Ana Marija |accessdate=8 December 2008 |language=Croatian |work=[[24 sata (Croatia)|24 sata]] |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110928005631/http://www.24sata.hr/index.php?cmd=show_clanak&tekst_id=73771 |archivedate=28 September 2011}}</ref>

A new link to the nearby town of [[Samobor]] has been announced and is due to start construction in 2014. This link will be [[standard gauge|standard-gauge]] and tie in with normal [[Croatian Railways]] operations. The previous narrow-gauge line to Samobor called ''[[Samoborček]]'' was closed in the 1970s.<ref name="samoborček">{{cite journal
|url= http://193.198.60.202/komunalni/arhiva/362/str11.pdf
|title= Uskoro Samoborček i novi prigradski vlakovi
|language= Croatian
|date= 28 November 2007
|accessdate= 31 July 2008
|journal= Zagrebački Komunalni Vjesnik
|issue= № 362
|page= 11
|issn= 1845-4968
|url-status= dead
|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20080910055608/http://193.198.60.202/komunalni/arhiva/362/str11.pdf
|archivedate= 10 September 2008
}}</ref>

====Air traffic====
{{main|Zagreb International Airport}}
[[File:Zagreb_Airport_New_Terminal.jpg|thumb|right|New terminal of the [[Zagreb International Airport|Franjo Tudjman Airport]]]]
[[Zagreb International Airport|Zagreb Airport]] {{airport codes|ZAG|LDZA}} is the main Croatian international airport, a {{convert|17|km|mi|abbr=on}} drive southeast of Zagreb in the city of [[Velika Gorica]]. The airport is also the main Croatian airbase featuring a fighter squadron, helicopters, as well as military and freight [[Cargo aircraft|transport aircraft]].<ref name=zageb_pleso>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-life.com/travel/travel.php
|title=Franjo Tuđman Airport terminal
|accessdate=2 July 2006
}}</ref> The airport had 2,77 millions of passengers in 2016 with a new passenger terminal being opened in late March 2017 that can accommodate up to 5,5 million passengers.

Zagreb also has a second, smaller airport, [[Lučko]] {{airport codes|2=LDZL}}. It is home to sports aeroplanes and a Croatian special police unit, as well as being a military helicopter airbase. Lučko used to be the main airport of Zagreb from 1947 to 1959.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.zagreb-airport.hr/hr/poslovne_1_3/index.aspx
|title=Zagreb Airport – History
|accessdate=2 October 2008
|language=Croatian
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080801145700/http://www.zagreb-airport.hr/hr/poslovne_1_3/index.aspx
|archivedate=1 August 2008
|url-status=dead
}}</ref>

A third, small grass airfield, Buševec, is located just outside [[Velika Gorica]]. It is primarily used for sports purposes.<ref name="buševec">{{cite web|url=http://www.vjesnik.com/Html/1999/10/10/Clanak.asp?r=zag&c=2 |title=Usprkos teškoćama leti se dalje |date=10 October 1999 |accessdate=31 July 2008 |last=Kosović |first=Vedran |work=[[Vjesnik]] |language=Croatian |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090108075005/http://www.vjesnik.com/Html/1999/10/10/Clanak.asp?r=zag&c=2 |archivedate=8 January 2009 }}</ref>

==Education==
{{further|List of high schools in Zagreb}}
[[File:Great_Hall_of_the_Rectorate_of_the_University_of_Zagreb.jpg|thumb|right|Great Hall of the Rectorate, [[University of Zagreb]]]]
Zagreb has 136 [[primary education|primary]] schools and 100 [[secondary education|secondary]] schools including 30 [[gymnasium (school)|gymnasia]].<ref name=mzos_prim_ed>{{cite web
|url=http://public.mzos.hr/Default.aspx?sec=2236
|title=Primary schools
|publisher=Republic of Croatia, Ministry of science, education and sports
|accessdate=27 September 2007
|url-status=dead
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070711194353/http://public.mzos.hr/Default.aspx?sec=2236
|archivedate=11 July 2007

}}</ref><ref name=mzos_sec_ed>{{cite web
|url=http://public.mzos.hr/Default.aspx?sec=2252
|title=Secondary schools
|publisher=Republic of Croatia, Ministry of science, education and sports
|accessdate=27 September 2007
|url-status=dead
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071023023302/http://public.mzos.hr/Default.aspx?sec=2252
|archivedate=23 October 2007

}}</ref> There are 5 public [[higher education]] institution and 9 private professional higher education schools.<ref name=mzos_higher_ed>{{cite web
|url=http://public.mzos.hr/Default.aspx?sec=2511
|title=Higher education institutions
|publisher=Republic of Croatia, Ministry of science, education and sports
|accessdate=3 September 2007
|url-status=dead
|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20070609114433/http://public.mzos.hr/Default.aspx?sec=2511
|archivedate=9 June 2007

}}</ref>

===University===
{{main|University of Zagreb}}
{{further|List of universities in Croatia}}
Founded in 1669, the University of Zagreb is the oldest continuously operating university in Croatia and one of the largest<ref>{{cite web|title=About University|url=http://www.unizg.hr/homepage/about-university/|accessdate=23 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Croatia: University of Zagreb – KTH|url=https://www.kth.se/en/student/program/utlandsstudier/utbyte/kroatien-university-of-zagreb-1.633106|accessdate=23 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=University of Zagreb – CENTER FOR EUROPEAN EDUCATION|url=http://web.lecee.eu/~new_web/index.php?id=66&L=1|accessdate=23 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=University of Zagreb, Croatia – Europe Engage|url=https://europeengage.org/university-of-zagreb-croatia/|accessdate=23 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=University of Zagreb – Top Universities|url=https://www.topuniversities.com/universities/university-zagreb-2|accessdate=23 July 2017|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20170729104911/https://www.topuniversities.com/universities/university-zagreb-2|archivedate=29 July 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=4th Ensec Conference-Zagreb-Croatia|url=https://www.quovadis.hr/ensec2013/index.php?page=venue|accessdate=23 July 2017}}</ref> and oldest universities in the Southeastern Europe. Ever since its foundation, the university has been continually growing and developing and now consists of 29 faculties, three art academies and the Croatian Studies Centre. More than 200,000 students have attained the [[Bachelor's degree]] at the university, which has also assigned 18,000 [[Master's degree|Master's]] and 8,000 [[Doctorate|Doctor's degree]]s.<ref name=zg_brief>{{cite web
|url= http://www.zagreb.hr/default.aspx?id=1125
|title= Zagreb in brief
|accessdate= 11 November 2008
|work= City of Zagreb
}}</ref>
{{As of|2011}}, the University of Zagreb is ranked among 500 Best Universities of the world by the [https://web.archive.org/web/20110925025850/http://www.shanghairanking.com/ARWU-2011-Press-Release.html Shanghai Academic Ranking of World Universities].

Zagreb is also the seat of two private universities: the [[Catholic University of Croatia]] and the Libertas International University; as well as numerous public and private polytechnics, colleges and higher professional schools.{{which|date=July 2019}}


==See also==
==See also==


*[[List of people from Ljubljana]]
{{Portal bar|Geography|Europe|Croatia}}


==References==
==References==
===Bibliography===
{{See also|Timeline of Ljubljana#Bibliography|l1=Bibliography of the history of Ljubljana}}
*{{cite book|last=Jarrett|first=Mark|title=The Congress of Vienna and its Legacy: War and Great Power Diplomacy after Napoleon|publisher=I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited|year=2013|location=London|isbn=978-1780761169}}
* {{cite book
|editor1=Emily Gunzburger Makas |editor2=Tanja Damljanovic Conley |title=Capital Cities in the Aftermath of Empires: Planning in Central and Southeastern Europe
|year= 2009
|publisher=Routledge
|isbn=978-1-135-16725-7
|chapter= Ljubljana
|chapterurl= https://books.google.com/books?id=M_aMAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA223
|pages=223–240
|author= Jörg Stabenow
| ref = {{harvid|Stabenow|2009}}
}}
* Velušček, Anton (ed.) (2009). [https://books.google.com/books?id=KyG1YVVFDJIC ''Stare Gmajne Pile-Dwelling Settlement and its Era''] (bilingual English and Slovenian edition). Založba ZRC. {{ISBN|978-961-254-155-2}}.


===Footnotes===
===Notes===
{{Reflist|30em}}
<references group="nb"/>
{{notelist |refs =<ref name="kosovo-status">{{Kosovo-note}}</ref>|2}}

===Citations===
{{reflist|30em}}

===Bibliography===
{{Refbegin}}
* {{Cite book|last1=Cresswell|first1=Peterjon|last2=Atkins|first2=Ismay|last3=Dunn|first3=Lily|title=Time Out Croatia|url=https://books.google.com/?id=VZweAAAACAAJ|date=10 July 2006|publisher=Time Out Group Ltd & Ebury Publishing, [[Random House|Random House Ltd.]] 20 Vauxhall Bridge Road, London SV1V 2SA|edition=First|location=London, Berkeley & Toronto|isbn=978-1-904978-70-1}}
{{Refend}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Sister project links|Zagreb|voy=Zagreb}}
{{Sister project links|Ljubljana|voy=Ljubljana}}
* [http://www.zagreb.hr/default.aspx?id=1979 Zagreb Official website]
*[http://www.ljubljana.si/en/municipality/ City of Ljubljana official site]
* [http://www.infozagreb.hr/ Zagreb Tourist Board]
*[http://www.visitljubljana.com/ Official Ljubljana tourism site]
*[http://www.burger.si/Ljubljana/2007/seznam.html Ljubljana: locations with surround photography]. Retrieved 28 February 2011. Burger.si.
* [https://www.visitzagreb.hr/ Visit Zagreb - Travel Guide]
*[https://www.google.com/maps/place/Ljubljana/@46.0661174,14.5320991,11z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x476531f5969886d1:0x400f81c823fec20?hl=en Ljubljana on Google Maps]
* [https://www.zv.hr/en Zagreb Fair]
* [http://www.zagreb-airport.hr/home Zagreb International airport]


{{Ljubljana}}
{{Geographic location
{{Municipalities of Slovenia}}
|Centre = Zagreb
|North = [[Varaždin]]
|Northeast = [[Bjelovar]]
|East = [[Dugo Selo]]
|Southeast = [[Velika Gorica]]
|South = [[Odra, Zagreb|Odra]]
|Southwest = [[Karlovac]]
|West = [[Samobor]]
|Northwest = [[Zaprešić]]
}}

{{Zagreb}}
{{Zagreb history}}
{{County seats of Croatia}}
{{Counties of Croatia}}
{{Croatian cities}}
{{List of European capitals by region}}
{{List of European capitals by region}}
{{Hero Cities of SFRJ}}
{{Capital cities of the European Union}}
{{Capital cities of the European Union}}
{{Hero Cities of SFRJ}}
{{World Book Capital}}
{{Eurovision Song Contest}}

{{S-start}}
{{S-bef|before=[[Rotterdam]], [[Netherlands]] (1953)}}
{{S-ttl|title=[[World Gymnaestrada]] host city|years=1957}}
{{S-aft|after=[[Stuttgart]], [[West Germany]] (1961)}}
{{S-end}}

{{S-start}}
{{S-bef|before=[[Kobe]], [[Japan]] (1985)}}
{{S-ttl|title=[[Universiade]] host city|years=1987}}
{{S-aft|after=[[Duisburg]], [[West Germany]] (1989)}}
{{S-end}}

{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:Zagreb| ]]<!--please leave the empty space as standard-->
[[Category:Ljubljana| ]]<!--leave the empty space as standard-->
[[Category:Articles containing video clips]]
[[Category:Capitals in Europe]]
[[Category:Capitals in Europe]]
[[Category:Cities and towns in Croatia]]
[[Category:Cities and towns in Lower Carniola]]
[[Category:Counties of Croatia]]
[[Category:Populated places in the City Municipality of Ljubljana]]
[[Category:Former counties of Croatia]]
[[Category:Populated places in the City of Zagreb]]
[[Category:Populated places on the Sava]]
[[Category:Populated places on the Sava]]
[[Category:Populated places established in the 11th century]]
[[Category:11th-century establishments in Croatia]]
[[Category:1094 establishments in Europe]]
[[Category:Zagreb County (former)]]

Revision as of 00:45, 5 March 2020

Ljubljana
Clockwise from top: Ljubljana Castle in the background and Franciscan Church of the Annunciation in the foreground; Visitation of Mary Church on Rožnik Hill; Kazina Palace at Congress Square; one of the Dragons on the Dragon Bridge; Ljubljana City Hall; Ljubljanica with the Triple Bridge in distance
Clockwise from top: Ljubljana Castle in the background and Franciscan Church of the Annunciation in the foreground; Visitation of Mary Church on Rožnik Hill; Kazina Palace at Congress Square; one of the Dragons on the Dragon Bridge; Ljubljana City Hall; Ljubljanica with the Triple Bridge in distance
Ljubljana is located in Slovenia
Ljubljana
Ljubljana
Location of Ljubljana in Slovenia
Ljubljana is located in Europe
Ljubljana
Ljubljana
Ljubljana (Europe)
Coordinates: 46°03′20″N 14°30′30″E / 46.05556°N 14.50833°E / 46.05556; 14.50833
Country Slovenia
MunicipalityCity Municipality of Ljubljana
First mention1112–1125
Town privileges1220–1243
Government
 • MayorZoran Janković (PS)
Area
 • Capital city163.8 km2 (63.2 sq mi)
Elevation295 m (968 ft)
Population
 (2019)[3]
 • Capital cityRise 292,988
 • Density1,712/km2 (4,430/sq mi)
 • Metro
537,712[1]
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal codes
1000–1211, 1231, 1260, 1261[4]
Area code01 (+386 1 if calling from abroad)
Vehicle RegistrationLJ
Websitewww.ljubljana.si
Historical affiliations

Archbishop of Salzburg (1112–1555)
 Habsburg Monarchy (1555–1804)
 Austrian Empire (1804–1809, 1814–1867)
Illyrian Provinces (1809–1814; capital)
 Austria-Hungary (1867–1918)
 State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (1918)
 Kingdom of Yugoslavia[5] (1918–1941)
 Kingdom of Italy (1941–1945; occupied)
Nazi Germany (1943–1945; de facto)
 SFR Yugoslavia[6] (1945–1991)
 Slovenia (1991–present)

Ljubljana (UK: /ˌljbˈljɑːnə, ˌlʊbliˈɑːnə/,[7][8][9] US: /ˌljbliˈɑːnə, liˌ-/,[8][9][10][11][12] Slovene: [ljuˈbljàːna] ,[13] locally also [luˈblàːna]; also known by other historical names) is the capital and largest city of Slovenia.[14][15] It has been the cultural, educational, economic, political, and administrative centre of independent Slovenia since 1991.

During antiquity, a Roman city called Emona stood in the area.[16] Ljubljana itself was first mentioned in the first half of the 12th century. Situated at the middle of a trade route between the northern Adriatic Sea and the Danube region, it was the historical capital of Carniola,[17] one of the Slovene-inhabited parts of the Habsburg Monarchy.[14] It was under Habsburg rule from the Middle Ages until the dissolution of the Austro-Hungarian Empire in 1918. After World War II, Ljubljana became the capital of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia, part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. It retained this status until Slovenia became independent in 1991 and Ljubljana became the capital of the newly formed state.[18]

Name and symbol

Depiction of the city's coat of arms featuring the dragon on top of the castle, from Valvasor's The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola, 1689

The origin of the name of the city, Ljubljana, is unclear. In the Middle Ages, both the river and the town were also known by the German name Laibach. This name was in official use as an endonym until 1918, and it remains frequent as a German exonym, both in common speech and official use. The city is alternatively named Lublana in many English language documents.[19] The city is called Lublana in Silesian, Lubiana in Italian, in Latin: Labacum and anciently Aemona.[20]

For most scholars, the problem has been in how to connect the Slovene and the German names. The origin from the Slavic ljub- "to love, like" was in 2007 supported as the most probable by the linguist Tijmen Pronk, a specialist in comparative Indo-European linguistics and Slovene dialectology, from the University of Leiden.[21] He supported the thesis that the name of the river derived from the name of the settlement.[22] The linguist Silvo Torkar, who specialises in Slovene personal and place names,[23] argued at the same place for the thesis that the name Ljubljana derives from Ljubija, the original name of the Ljubljanica River flowing through it, itself derived from the Old Slavic male name Ljubovid, "the one of a lovely appearance". The name Laibach, he claimed, was actually a hybrid of German and Slovene and derived from the same personal name.[24]

The symbol of the city is the Ljubljana Dragon. It is depicted on the top of the tower of Ljubljana Castle in the Ljubljana coat of arms and on the Ljubljanica-crossing Dragon Bridge (Zmajski most).[25] It symbolises power, courage, and greatness.

There are several explanations on the origin of the Ljubljana Dragon. According to a Slavic myth, the slaying of a dragon releases the waters and ensures the fertility of the earth, and it is thought that the myth is tied to the Ljubljana Marshes, the expansive marshy area that periodically threatens Ljubljana with flooding.[26] According to the celebrated Greek legend, the Argonauts on their return home after having taken the Golden Fleece found a large lake surrounded by a marsh between the present-day towns of Vrhnika and Ljubljana. It was there that Jason struck down a monster. This monster has evolved into the dragon that today is present in the city coat of arms and flag.[27]

It is historically more believable that the dragon was adopted from Saint George, the patron of the Ljubljana Castle chapel built in the 15th century. In the legend of Saint George, the dragon represents the old ancestral paganism overcome by Christianity. According to another explanation, related to the second, the dragon was at first only a decoration above the city coat of arms. In the Baroque, it became part of the coat of arms, and in the 19th and especially the 20th century, it outstripped the tower and other elements in importance.

History

Prehistory

Around 2000 BC, the Ljubljana Marshes in the immediate vicinity of Ljubljana were settled by people living in pile dwellings. Prehistoric pile dwellings and the oldest wooden wheel in the world[28] are among the most notable archeological findings from the marshland. These lake-dwelling people lived through hunting, fishing and primitive agriculture. To get around the marshes, they used dugout canoes made by cutting out the inside of tree trunks. Their archaeological remains, nowadays in the Municipality of Ig, have been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site since June 2011, in the common nomination of six Alpine states.[29][30]

Later, the area remained a transit point for numerous tribes and peoples, among them the Illyrians, followed by a mixed nation of the Celts and the Illyrians called the Iapydes, and then in the 3rd century BC a Celtic tribe, the Taurisci.[31]

Antiquity

Excavations at the building site of the planned new National and University Library of Slovenia. One of the discoveries was an ancient Roman public bath house.[32]

Around 50 BC, the Romans built a military encampment that later became a permanent settlement called Iulia Aemona.[33][34][35] This entrenched fort was occupied by the Legio XV Apollinaris.[36] In 452, it was destroyed by the Huns under Attila's orders,[33] and later by the Ostrogoths and the Lombards.[37] Emona housed 5,000–6,000 inhabitants and played an important role during numerous battles. Its plastered brick houses, painted in different colours, were already connected to a drainage system.[33]

In the 6th century, the ancestors of the Slovenes moved in. In the 9th century, they fell under Frankish domination, while experiencing frequent Magyar raids.[38] Not much is known about the area during the settlement of Slavs in the period between the downfall of Emona and the Early Middle Ages.

Middle Ages

The parchment sheet Nomina defunctorum ("Names of the Dead"), most probably written in the second half of 1161, mentions the nobleman Rudolf of Tarcento, a lawyer of the Patriarchate of Aquileia, who had bestowed a canon with 20 farmsteads beside the castle of Ljubljana (castrum Leibach) to the Patriarchate. According to the historian Peter Štih's deduction, this happened between 1112 and 1125, thus representing the earliest mention of Ljubljana.[39]

Originally owned by a number of possessors, until the first half of the 12th century, the territory south of the Sava where the town of Ljubljana developed gradually became property of the Carinthian family of the Dukes of Sponheim.[39] Urban settlement in Ljubljana started in the second half of the 12th century.[39] At around 1200, market rights were granted to Old Square (Stari trg),[40] which at the time was one of the three districts that Ljubljana originated from. The other two districts were an area called "Town" (Mesto), built around the predecessor of the present-day Ljubljana Cathedral at one side of the Ljubljanica River, and New Square (Novi trg) at the other side.[41] The Franciscan Bridge, a predecessor of the present-day Triple Bridge, and the Butchers' Bridge connected the walled areas with wood-made buildings.[41] Ljubljana acquired the town privileges at some time between 1220 and 1243.[42] Seven fires erupted in the town during the Middle Ages.[43] Artisans organised themselves into guilds. The Teutonic Knights, the Conventual Franciscans, and the Franciscans settled in the town.[44] In 1256, when the Carinthian duke Ulrich III of Spanheim became lord of Carniola, the provincial capital was moved from Kamnik to Ljubljana.

In the late 1270s, Ljubljana was conquered by King Ottokar II of Bohemia.[45] In 1278, after Ottokar's defeat, it became—together with the rest of Carniola—property of Rudolph of Habsburg.[37][38] It was administered by the Counts of Gorizia from 1279 until 1335,[40][46][47] when it became the capital town of Carniola.[38] Renamed Laibach, it would be owned by the House of Habsburg until 1797.[37] In 1327, the Ljubljana's "Jewish Quarter"—now only "Jewish Street" (Židovska ulica) remains—was established with a synagogue, and lasted until Emperor Maximilian I in 1515 succumbed to medieval antisemitism and expelled Jews from Ljubljana, for which he demanded a certain payment from the town.[40] In 1382, in front of St. Bartholomew's Church in Šiška, at the time a nearby village, now part of Ljubljana, a peace treaty was signed between the Republic of Venice and Leopold III of Habsburg.[40]

Early modern

"Laybach" (Ljubljana) in Johann Weikhard von Valvasor's work The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola of 1689

In the 15th century, Ljubljana became recognised for its art, particularly painting and sculpture. The Roman Rite Catholic Diocese of Ljubljana was established in 1461 and the Church of St. Nicholas became the diocesan cathedral.[38] After the 1511 Idrija earthquake,[48][49][50][51] the city was rebuilt in the Renaissance style and a new wall was built around it.[52] Wooden buildings were forbidden after a large fire at New Square in 1524.

In the 16th century, the population of Ljubljana numbered 5,000, 70% of whom spoke Slovene as their first language, with most of the rest using German.[52] The first secondary school, public library and printing house opened in Ljubljana. Ljubljana became an important educational centre.[53]

From 1529, Ljubljana had an active Slovene Protestant community. After they were expelled in 1598, marking the beginning of the Counter-Reformation, Catholic Bishop Thomas Chrön ordered the public burning of eight cartloads of Protestant books.[54][55]

In 1597, Jesuits arrived in the city, followed in 1606 by the Capuchins, to eradicate Protestantism. Only 5% of all the residents of Ljubljana at the time were of Catholic confession, so it took quite a while to make it Catholic again. Jesuits organised the first theatrical productions in the town, fostered the development of Baroque music and established Catholic schools. In the middle and the second half of the 17th century, foreign architects built and renovated numerous monasteries, churches, and palaces in Ljubljana and introduced Baroque architecture. In 1702, the Ursulines settled in the town, where, the following year, they opened the first public school for girls in the Slovene Lands. Some years later, the construction of Ursuline Church of the Holy Trinity started.[56][57] In 1779, St. Christopher's Cemetery replaced the cemetery at St. Peter's Church as the main Ljubljana cemetery.[58]

Late modern

Ljubljana in the 18th century
Celebration during the Congress of Laibach, 1821
Ljubljana, c. 1900
The 1895 earthquake destroyed much of the city centre, enabling an extensive renovation program
The oldest preserved film recordings of Ljubljana (1909), with a depiction of streets, the Ljubljana tram, and a celebration. Salvatore Spina Company, Trieste.[59]

From 1809 to 1813, during the Napoleonic interlude, Ljubljana (under the name Laybach) was the capital of the Illyrian Provinces.[37][60] In 1813, the city became Austrian again and from 1815 to 1849 was the administrative centre of the Kingdom of Illyria in the Austrian Empire.[61] In 1821, it hosted the Congress of Laibach, which fixed European political borders for years to come.[62][63] The first train arrived in 1849 from Vienna and in 1857 the line was extended to Trieste.[60]

In 1895, Ljubljana, then a city of 31,000, suffered a serious earthquake measuring 6.1 degrees Richter and 8–9 degrees MCS.[64][65][66][67] Some 10% of its 1,400 buildings were destroyed, although casualties were light.[64] During the reconstruction that followed, a number of districts were rebuilt in the Vienna Secession style.[60] Public electric lighting appeared in the city in 1898. The rebuilding period between 1896 and 1910 is referred to as the "revival of Ljubljana" because of architectural changes from which a great deal of the city dates back to today and for reform of urban administration, health, education and tourism that followed. The rebuilding and quick modernisation of the city were led by the mayor Ivan Hribar.[60]

In 1918, following the end of World War I and the dissolution of Austria-Hungary, the region joined the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.[37][68][69] In 1929, Ljubljana became the capital of the Drava Banovina, a Yugoslav province.[70]

In 1941, during World War II, Fascist Italy occupied the city, and on 3 May 1941 made Lubiana the capital of Italy's Province of Ljubljana[71] with the former Yugoslav general Leon Rupnik as mayor. After the Italian capitulation, Nazi Germany with SS-general Erwin Rösener and Friedrich Rainer took control in 1943,[68] but formally the city remained the capital of an Italian province until 9 May 1945. In Ljubljana, the occupying forces established strongholds and command centres of Quisling organisations, the Anti-Communist Volunteer Militia under Italy and the Home Guard under German occupation. Since February 1942, the city was surrounded by barbed wire, later fortified by bunkers, to prevent co-operation between the resistance movement that operated within and outside the fence.[72][73] Since 1985, the commemorative trail has ringed the city where this iron fence once stood.[74] Postwar reprisals resulted in a number of mass graves in Ljubljana.[75][76][77][78]

After World War II, Ljubljana became the capital of the Socialist Republic of Slovenia, part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. It retained this status until Slovenia became independent in 1991.[18]

Contemporary

Ljubljana remains the capital of independent Slovenia, which joined the European Union in 2004.[68]

Geography

Map with the city's motorway ring from OpenStreetMap MapBox map
Mount Saint Mary, the highest hill in Ljubljana, with the peak Grmada reaching 676 m (2,218 ft)

The city, with an area of 163.8 square kilometers (63.2 sq mi), is situated in the Ljubljana Basin in Central Slovenia, between the Alps and the Karst. Ljubljana is located some 320 kilometers (200 mi) south of Munich, 477 kilometers (296 mi) east of Zürich, 250 kilometers (160 mi) east of Venice, 350 kilometers (220 mi) southwest of Vienna, 224 kilometers (139 mi) south of Salzburg and 400 kilometers (250 mi) southwest of Budapest.[79] The extent of Ljubljana has changed considerably in the past 40 years, mainly because some of the nearby settlements have merged with Ljubljana.[80]

Geology

The city stretches out on an alluvial plain dating to the Quaternary era. The mountainous regions nearby are older, dating from the Mesozoic (Triassic) or Paleozoic.[81] A number of earthquakes have devastated Ljubljana, including in 1511 and 1895.[67]

Topography

Ljubljana has an elevation of 295 meters (968 ft)[2] The city centre, located along the Ljubljanica River, has an elevation of 298 meters (978 ft).[82] Ljubljana Castle, which sits atop Castle Hill (Grajski grič) south of the city centre, has an elevation of 366 meters (1,201 ft). The highest point of the city, called Grmada, reaches 676 meters (2,218 ft), 3 meters (9.8 ft) more than the nearby Mount Saint Mary (Šmarna gora) peak, a popular hiking destination.[83][84] These are located in the northern part of the city.[83]

View to the south from Ljubljana Castle with the Ljubljana Marshes in the back. The building density there is substantially lower due to unsuitable ground for construction.
View to the north from Ljubljana Castle with the Karawanks (left), Mount Saint Mary (center), and Kamnik–Savinja Alps (right) in the background

Waters

River in the centre of Ljubljana.
Many bridges across the Ljubljanica River are popular tourist attractions.
Koseze Pond is used for rowing, fishing, and ice skating in winter.

The main watercourses in Ljubljana are the Ljubljanica, the Sava, the Gradaščica, the Mali Graben, the Iška and the Iščica Rivers. From the Trnovo District to the Moste District, around Castle Hill, the Ljubljanica partly flows through the Gruber Canal, built according to plans by Gabriel Gruber from 1772 until 1780. Next to the eastern border of the city, the Ljubljanica, the Sava, and the Kamnik Bistrica Rivers flow together.[85][86] The lowest point of Ljubljana, with an elevation of 261 meters (856 ft), is located at the confluence.[82]

Through its history, Ljubljana has also been struck by floods. The latest floods took place in 2010.[87] Southern and western parts of the city are more flood-endangered than northern parts.[88] The Gruber Canal has partly diminished the danger of floods in the Ljubljana Marshes, the largest marshes in Slovenia, south of Ljubljana.

There are two major ponds in Ljubljana. Koseze Pond is located in the Šiška District and Tivoli Pond is located in the southern part of Tivoli City Park.[89] Koseze Pond is home to a number of rare plant and animal species and is a popular place of meeting and recreation.[90] Tivoli Pond is a shallow pond with a small volume that was originally used for boating and ice skating, but has been abandoned over the years and is now only used for fishing.[91]

Climate

Ljubljana's climate is an oceanic climate (Köppen climate classification: Cfb), bordering on a humid subtropical climate zone (Köppen climate classification: Cfa), with continental characteristics such as warm summers and moderately cold winters.[92][93] July and August are the warmest months with daily highs generally between 25 and 30 °C (77 and 86 °F), and January is the coldest month with temperatures mostly oscillating around 0 °C (32 °F). The city experiences 90 days of frost per year, and 11 days with temperatures above 30 °C (86 °F). The precipitation is relatively evenly distributed throughout the seasons, although winter and spring tend to be somewhat drier than summer and autumn. Yearly precipitation is about 1,400 mm (55 in), making Ljubljana one of the wettest European capitals. Thunderstorms are very common from May to September and can occasionally be quite heavy. Snow is common from December to February; on average, there are 48 days with snow cover recorded each winter season. The city is known for its fog, which is recorded on average on 64 days per year, mostly in autumn and winter, and can be particularly persistent in conditions of temperature inversion.[94]

Climate data for Ljubljana
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.8
(60.4)
19.7
(67.5)
24.3
(75.7)
27.8
(82.0)
32.4
(90.3)
35.6
(96.1)
37.1
(98.8)
40.2
(104.4)
30.3
(86.5)
25.8
(78.4)
20.9
(69.6)
16.7
(62.1)
40.2
(104.4)
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 3.4
(38.1)
6.4
(43.5)
11.4
(52.5)
16.1
(61.0)
21.4
(70.5)
24.6
(76.3)
27.3
(81.1)
26.7
(80.1)
21.6
(70.9)
15.9
(60.6)
8.8
(47.8)
3.8
(38.8)
15.6
(60.1)
Daily mean °C (°F) 0.3
(32.5)
1.9
(35.4)
6.5
(43.7)
10.8
(51.4)
15.8
(60.4)
19.1
(66.4)
21.3
(70.3)
20.6
(69.1)
16.0
(60.8)
11.2
(52.2)
5.6
(42.1)
1.2
(34.2)
10.9
(51.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) −2.5
(27.5)
−2.0
(28.4)
1.7
(35.1)
5.8
(42.4)
10.3
(50.5)
13.7
(56.7)
15.5
(59.9)
15.2
(59.4)
11.5
(52.7)
7.7
(45.9)
2.8
(37.0)
−1.1
(30.0)
6.6
(43.9)
Record low °C (°F) −20.3
(−4.5)
−23.3
(−9.9)
−14.1
(6.6)
−3.2
(26.2)
0.2
(32.4)
3.8
(38.8)
7.4
(45.3)
5.8
(42.4)
3.1
(37.6)
−5.2
(22.6)
−14.5
(5.9)
−14.5
(5.9)
−23.3
(−9.9)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 69
(2.7)
70
(2.8)
88
(3.5)
99
(3.9)
109
(4.3)
144
(5.7)
115
(4.5)
137
(5.4)
147
(5.8)
147
(5.8)
129
(5.1)
107
(4.2)
1,362
(53.6)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.1 mm) 11 9 11 14 14 15 12 12 12 13 14 14 153
Mean monthly sunshine hours 71 114 149 178 235 246 293 264 183 120 66 56 1,974
Source 1: Slovenian Environment Agency (ARSO)[95] (data for 1981–2010)
Source 2: Slovenian Environment Agency (ARSO)[96] (some extreme values for 1948–2013)

Cityscape

View of Ljubljana from Nebotičnik; Ljubljana Castle is on the left.

The city's architecture is a mix of styles. Despite the appearance of large buildings, especially at the city's edge, Ljubljana's historic centre remains intact. Although the oldest architecture has been preserved from the Roman period, Ljubljana's downtown got its outline in the Middle Ages.[97] After the 1511 earthquake, it was rebuilt in the Baroque style following Italian, particularly Venetian, models.

After the quake in 1895, it was once again rebuilt, this time in the Vienna Secession style, which today is juxtaposed against the earlier Baroque style buildings that remain. Large sectors built in the inter-war period often include a personal touch by the architects Jože Plečnik[98] and Ivan Vurnik.[99] In the second half of the 20th century, parts of Ljubljana were redesigned by Edvard Ravnikar.[100]

Main sights

The central square in Ljubljana is Prešeren Square (Prešernov trg) where the Franciscan Church of the Annunciation (Frančiškanska cerkev) is located. Built between 1646 and 1660 (the belltowers following later), it replaced an older Gothic church on the same site. The layout takes the form of an early-Baroque basilica with one nave and two rows of lateral chapels. The Baroque main altar was executed by the sculptor Francesco Robba. Much of the original frescos were ruined by the cracks in the ceiling caused by the Ljubljana earthquake in 1895. The new frescos were painted by the Slovene impressionist painter Matej Sternen.

Ljubljana Castle (Ljubljanski grad) is a medieval castle with Romanesque, Gothic, and Renaissance architectural elements, located on the summit of Castle Hill, which dominates the city centre.[101] The area surrounding today's castle has been continuously inhabited since 1200 BC.[102] The castle was built in the 12th century and was a residence of the Margraves, later the Dukes of Carniola.[103] The castle's Viewing Tower dates to 1848; this was inhabited by a guard whose duty it was to fire cannons warning the city in case of fire or announcing important visitors or events, a function the castle still holds today.[102] Cultural events and weddings also take place there.[104] Since 2006, a funicular has linked the city centre to the castle atop the hill.[105]

Ljubljana Cathedral.

Town Hall (Mestna hiša, Magistrat), located at Town Square, is the seat of the City Municipality of Ljubljana. The original building was built in a Gothic style in 1484.[106] Between 1717 and 1719,[98] the building underwent a Baroque renovation with a Venetian inspiration by the architect Gregor Maček, Sr..[107] Near Town Hall, at Town Square, stands a replica of the Baroque Robba Fountain. The original has been moved into the National Gallery in 2006. The Robba Fountain is decorated with an obelisk at the foot of which there are three figures in white marble symbolising the three chief rivers of Carniola. It is work of Francesco Robba, who designed numerous other Baroque statues in the city.[108]

Ljubljana Cathedral (ljubljanska stolnica), or St. Nicholas's Cathedral (stolnica sv. Nikolaja), serves the Archdiocese of Ljubljana. Easily identifiable due to its green dome and twin towers, it is located at Cyril and Methodius Square (Ciril-Metodov trg, named for Saints Cyril and Methodius) by the nearby Ljubljana Central Market and Town Hall.[109] The Diocese of Ljubljana was set up in 1461.[109] Between 1701 and 1706, the Jesuit architect Andrea Pozzo designed the Baroque church with two side chapels shaped in the form of a Latin cross.[109] The dome was built in the centre in 1841.[109] The interior is decorated with Baroque frescos painted by Giulio Quaglio between 1703–1706 and 1721–1723.[109]

Nebotičnik (pronounced [nɛbɔtiːtʃniːk], "Skyscraper") is a thirteen-story building that rises to a height of 70.35 m (231 ft). It combines elements of the Neoclassical and the Art-Deco architecture. Predominantly a place of business, Nebotičnik is home to a variety of shops on the ground floor and first story, and various offices are located on floors two to five. The sixth to ninth floors are private residences. Located on the top three floors are a café, bar and observation deck.[110] It was designed by the Slovenian architect Vladimir Šubic. Construction began in July 1930 and the building opened on 21 February 1933.[111] It was for some time the tallest residential building in Europe.[111]

Parks and other green spaces

Tivoli City Park (Mestni park Tivoli) is the largest park in Ljubljana.[112][113] It was designed in 1813 by the French engineer Jean Blanchard and now covers approximately 5 km2 (1.9 sq mi).[112] The park was laid out during the French imperial administration of Ljubljana in 1813 and named after the Parisian Jardins de Tivoli.[112] Between 1921 and 1939, it was renovated by the Slovene architect Jože Plečnik, who unveiled his statue of Napoleon in 1929 in Republic Square and designed a broad central promenade, called the Jakopič Promenade (Jakopičevo sprehajališče) after the leading Slovene impressionist painter Rihard Jakopič.[112][113] Within the park, there are different types of trees, flower gardens, several statues, and fountains.[112][113] Several notable buildings stand in the park, among them Tivoli Castle, the National Museum of Contemporary History and the Tivoli Sports Hall.[112]

Tivoli–Rožnik Hill–Šiška Hill Landscape Park is located in the western part of the city.[114]

The Ljubljana Botanical Garden (Ljubljanski botanični vrt) covers 2.40 hectares (5.9 acres) next to the junction of the Gruber Canal and the Ljubljanica, south of the Old Town. It is the central Slovenian botanical garden and the oldest cultural, scientific, and educational organisation in the country. It started operating under the leadership of Franc Hladnik in 1810. Of over 4,500 plant species and subspecies, roughly a third is endemic to Slovenia, whereas the rest originate from other European places and other continents. The institution is a member of the international network Botanic Gardens Conservation International and cooperates with more than 270 botanical gardens all across the world.[115]

In 2014, Ljubljana won the European Green Capital Award for 2016 for its environmental achievements.[116]

Streets and squares

Čop Street.
Stritar Street with Robba fountain.

Existing already in the 18th century, the Ljubljana central square, the Prešeren Square's modern appearance has developed since the end of the 19th century. After the 1895 earthquake, Max Fabiani designed the square as the hub of four streets and four banks, and in the 1980s, Edvard Ravnikar proposed the circular design and the granite block pavement.[117][118] A statue of the Slovene national poet France Prešeren with a muse stands in the middle of the square. The Prešeren Monument was created by Ivan Zajec in 1905, whereas the pedestal was designed by Max Fabiani. The square and surroundings have been closed to traffic since 1 September 2007.[119] Only a tourist train leaves Prešeren Square every day, transporting tourists to Ljubljana Castle.[119]

Republic Square, at first named Revolution Square, is the largest square in Ljubljana.[120] It was designed in the second half of the 20th century by Edvard Ravnikar.[120] On 26 June 1991, the independence of Slovenia was declared here.[120] The National Assembly Building stands at its northern side, and Cankar Hall, the largest Slovenian cultural and congress centre, at the southern side.[120] At its eastern side stands the two-storey building of Maximarket, also work of Ravnikar. It houses one of the oldest department stores in Ljubljana and a cafe, which is a popular meeting place and a place of political talks and negotiations.[121]

Congress Square (Kongresni trg) is one of the most important centres of the city. It was built in 1821 for ceremonial purposes such as Congress of Ljubljana after which it was named. Since then it became an important centre for political ceremonies, demonstrations and protests, such as the ceremony at creation of Kingdom of Yugoslavia, ceremony of liberation of Belgrade, protests against Yugoslav authority in 1988 etc. The square also houses several important buildings, such as the University of Ljubljana Palace, Philharmonic Hall, Ursuline Church of the Holy Trinity, and the Slovene Society Building. Star Park (Park Zvezda) is located in the centre of the square. In 2010 and 2011, the square was heavily renovated and is now mostly closed to road traffic on ground area, however there are five floors for commercial purposes and a parking lot located underground.[122]

Čop Street (Čopova ulica) is a major thoroughfare in the centre of Ljubljana. The street is named after Matija Čop, an early 19th-century literary figure and close friend of the Slovene Romantic poet France Prešeren. It leads from the Main Post Office (Glavna pošta) at Slovene Street (Slovenska cesta) downward to Prešeren Square and is lined with bars and stores, including the oldest McDonald's restaurant in Slovenia. It is a pedestrian zone and regarded as the capital's central promenade.

Bridges

Ljubljana's most known bridges, listed from northern to southern ones, include the Dragon Bridge (Zmajski most), the Butchers' Bridge (Mesarski most), the Triple Bridge (Tromostovje), the Fish Footbridge (Slovene: Ribja brv), the Cobblers' Bridge (Slovene: Šuštarski most), the Hradecky Bridge (Slovene: Hradeckega most), and the Trnovo Bridge (Trnovski most). The last mentioned crosses the Gradaščica, whereas all other bridges cross the Ljubljanica River.

The Dragon Bridge

Dragon statue on the Dragon Bridge

The 1901 Dragon Bridge, decorated with the Dragon statues[123] on pedestals at four corners of the bridge[124][125] has become a symbol of the city[126] and is regarded as one of the most beautiful examples of a bridge made in Vienna Secession style.[25][127][126][128] It has a span of 33.34 meters (109 ft 5 in)[25] and its arch was at the time the third largest in Europe.[124] It is protected as a technical monument.[129]

The Butchers' Bridge

Butchers' Bridge love locks.

Decorated with mythological bronze sculptures, created by Jakov Brdar, from Ancient Greek mythology and Biblical stories,[130] the Butchers' Bridge connects the Ljubljana Open Market area and the restaurants-filled Petkovšek Embankment (Petkovškovo nabrežje). It is also known as the love padlocks-decorated bridge in Ljubljana.

The Triple Bridge

File:Ljubljana in Ljubljanica.jpg
The scenic Triple Bridge, decorated with stone balusters and stone lamps on all of the three bridges.

The Triple Bridge is decorated with stone balusters and stone lamps on all of the three bridges and leads to the terraces looking on the river and poplar trees. It occupies a central point on the east-west axis, connecting the Tivoli City Park with Rožnik Hill, on one side, and the Ljubljana Castle on the other,[131] and the north-south axis through the city, represented by the river. It was enlarged in order to prevent the historically single bridge from being a bottleneck by adding two side pedestrian bridges to the middle one.

The Fish Footbridge

The Fish Footbridge offers a good view of the neighbouring Triple Bridge to the north and the Cobbler's Bridge to the south of it. It is a transparent glass-made bridge, which is illuminated at night by in-built LEDs.[132] From 1991 to 2014 the bridge was a wooden one and decorated with flowers, while since its reconstruction in 2014, it is made of glass. It was planned already in 1895 by Max Fabiani to build a bridge on the location, in 1913 Alfred Keller planned a staircase, later Jože Plečnik incorporated both into his own plans which, however, were not realised.[133]

The Cobbler's Bridge

The 1930 'Cobblers' Bridge' (Šuštarski, from German Schuster – Shoemaker) is another Plečnik's creation, connecting two major areas of medieval Ljubljana. It is decorated by two kinds of pillars, the Corinthian pillars which delineate the shape of the bridge itself and the Ionic pillars as lamp-bearers.[134]

The Trnovo Bridge

Trnovo Bridge

The Trnovo Bridge is the most prominent object of Plečnik's renovation of the banks of the Gradaščica. It is located in the front of the Trnovo Church to the south of the city centre. It connects the neighbourhoods of Krakovo and Trnovo, the oldest Ljubljana suburbs, known for their market gardens and cultural events.[135] It was built between 1929 and 1932. It is distinguished by its width and two rows of birches that it bears, because it was meant to serve as a public space in front of the church. Each corner of the bridge is capped with a small pyramid, a signature motif of Plečnik's, whereas the mid-span features a pair of Art-Deco male sculptures. There is also a statue of Saint John the Baptist on the bridge, the patron of the Trnovo Church. It was designed by Nikolaj Pirnat.

The Hradecky Bridge

Hradecky Bridge [hinged bridge]

The Hradecky Bridge is one of the first hinged bridges in the world,[136] the first[137] the only preserved cast iron bridge in Slovenia,[138] and one of its most highly valued technical achievements.[139][140] It has been situated on an extension of Hren Street (Hrenova ulica), between the Krakovo Embankment (Krakovski nasip) and the Gruden Embankment (Grudnovo nabrežje), connecting the Trnovo District and the Prule neighbourhood in the Center District.[141] The Hradecky Bridge was manufactured according to the plans of the senior engineer Johann Hermann from Vienna in the Auersperg iron foundry in Dvor near Žužemberk,[140] and installed in Ljubljana in 1867, at the location of today's Cobblers' Bridge.[142]

Culture

Accent

Ljubljana accent and/or dialect (Slovene: ljubljanščina [luːblɑːŋʃnɑː] ) is considered border dialect, since Ljubljana is situated where Upper dialect and Lower Carniolan dialect group meet. Historically[143] Ljubljana dialect in the past displayed features more similar with the Lower Carniolan dialect group, but it gradually grew closer to the Upper dialect group, as a direct consequence of mass migration from Gorenjska region into Ljubljana in the 19th and 20th century. Ljubljana as a city grew mostly to the north, and gradually incorporated many villages that were historically part of Upper Carniola and so its dialect shifted away and closer to Upper dialects. The Ljubljana dialect has also been used as literary means in novels, such as in the novel Nekdo drug by Branko Gradišnik,[144] or in poems, such as Pika Nogavička (Slovene for Pippi Longstocking) by Andrej Rozman - Roza.[145]

The central position of Ljubljana and its dialect had crucial impact[143] on the development of Slovenian language. It was the speech of 16th century Ljubljana that Primož Trubar a Slovenian Protestant Reformer took as a foundation of what later became standard Slovenian language, with small addition of his native speech, that is Lower Carniolan dialect.[143][146] While in Ljubljana, he lived in a house, on today's Ribji trg, in the oldest part of the city. Living in Ljubljana had profound impact on his work, he considered Ljubljana the capital of all Slovenes, not only because of its central position in the heart of the Slovene lands, but also because it always had an essentially Slovene character. Most of its inhabitants spoke Slovene as their mother tongue, unlike other cites in today's Slovenia. It is estimated that in Trubar's period around 70% of Ljubljana's 4000 inhabitants attended mass in Slovene language.[143] Trubar considered Ljubljana's speech most suitable, since it sounded much more noble, than his own, simple dialect of his hometown Rašica.[147] Trubar's choice was later adopted also by other Protestant writers in the 16th century, and ultimately led to a formation of more standard language.

In literary fiction

Ljubljana appears in the 2005 The Historian, written by Elisabeth Kostova, and is called by its Roman name (Emona).[148]

Ljubljana is also the setting of Paulo Coelho's 1998 novel Veronika Decides to Die.

Festivals

Each year, over 10,000 cultural events take place in the city, including ten international theatre, music, and art festivals.[62] The Ljubljana Festival is one of the two oldest festivals in former Yugoslavia (the Dubrovnik Summer Festival was established in 1950, and the Ljubljana Festival one in 1953). Guests have included Dubravka Tomšič, Marjana Lipovšek, Tomaž Pandur, Katia Ricciarelli, Grace Bumbry, Yehudi Menuhin, Mstislav Rostropovich, José Carreras, Slid Hampton, Zubin Mehta, Vadim Repin, Valerij Gergijev, Sir Andrew Davis, Danjulo Išizaka, Midori, Jurij Bašmet, Ennio Morricone, and Manhattan Transfer. Orchestras have included the New York Philharmonic, Israel Philharmonic, Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, Orchestras of the Bolshoi Theatre from Moscow, La Scala from Milan, and Mariinsky Theatre from Saint Petersburg. In recent years there have been 80 different kinds of events and some 80,000 visitors from Slovenia and abroad.[citation needed] Other cultural venues include Križanke, Cankar Hall and the Exhibition and Convention Centre. During Book Week, starting each year on World Book Day, events and book sales take place at Congress Square. A flea market is held every Sunday in the old city.[149] On the evening of International Workers' Day, a celebration with a bonfire takes place on Rožnik Hill.

Museums and art galleries

Interior of the Slovenian Railway Museum
Main building of the Slovenian National Gallery

Ljubljana has numerous art galleries and museums. The first purpose-built art gallery in Ljubljana was the Jakopič Pavilion, which was in the first half of the 20th century the central exhibition venue of Slovene artists. In the early 1960s, it was succeeded by the Ljubljana City Art Gallery, which has presented a number of modern Slovene and foreign artists. In 2010, there were 14 museums and 56 art galleries in Ljubljana.[150] There is for example an architecture museum, a railway museum, a school museum, a sports museum, a museum of modern art, a museum of contemporary art, a brewery museum, the Slovenian Museum of Natural History and the Slovene Ethnographic Museum.[149] The National Gallery (Narodna galerija), founded in 1918,[68] and the Museum of Modern Art (Moderna galerija) exhibit the most influential Slovenian artists. In 2006, the museums received 264,470 visitors, the galleries 403,890 and the theatres 396,440.[150] The Metelkova Museum of Contemporary Art (Muzej sodobne umetnosti Metelkova), opened in 2011,[151] hosts various simultaneous exhibitions, a research library, archives, and a bookshop.

Entertainment and performing arts

The front of the Opera and Ballet Theatre
The Slovenian National Theatre

Cankar Hall is the largest Slovenian cultural and congress center with multiple halls and a large foyer in which art film festivals, artistic performances, book fairs, and other cultural events are held.

Cinema

The cinema in Ljubljana appeared for the first time at the turn of the 20th century, and quickly gained popularity among the residents. After World War II, the Cinema Company Ljubljana, later named Ljubljana Cinematographers, was established and managed a number of already functioning movie theatres in Ljubljana, including the only Yugoslav children's theatre. A number of cinema festivals took place in the 1960s, and a cinematheque opened its doors in 1963. With the advent of television, video, and recently the Internet, most cinema theatres in Ljubljana closed, and the cinema mainly moved to Kolosej, a multiplex in the BTC City. It features twelve screens, including an IMAX 3D screen. The remaining theatres are Kino Komuna, Kinodvor, where art movies are accompanied by events, and the Slovenian Cinematheque.

Classical music, opera and ballet

The Slovenian Philharmonics is the central music institution in Ljubljana and Slovenia. It holds classical music concerts of domestic and foreign performers as well as educates youth. It was established in 1701 as part of Academia operosorum Labacensis and is among the oldest such institutions in Europe. The Slovene National Opera and Ballet Theatre also resides in Ljubljana, presenting a wide variety of domestic and foreign, modern and classic, opera, ballet and concert works. It serves as the national opera and ballet house. Numerous music festivals are held in Ljubljana, chiefly in European classical music and jazz, for instance the Ljubljana Summer Festival (Ljubljanski poletni festival), and Trnfest.

Theatre

In addition to the main houses, with the SNT Drama Ljubljana as the most important among them, a number of small producers are active in Ljubljana, involved primarily in physical theatre (e.g. Betontanc), street theatre (e.g. Ana Monró Theatre), theatresports championship Impro League, and improvisational theatre (e.g. IGLU Theatre). A popular form is puppetry, mainly performed in the Ljubljana Puppet Theatre. Theatre has a rich tradition in Ljubljana, starting with the 1867 first ever Slovene-language drama performance.

Modern dance

The modern dance was presented in Ljubljana for the first time at the end of the 19th century and developed rapidly since the end of the 1920s. Since the 1930s when in Ljubljana was founded a Mary Wigman dance school, the first one for modern dance in Slovenia, the field has been intimately linked to the development in Europe and the United States. Ljubljana Dance Theatre is today the only venue in Ljubljana dedicated to contemporary dance. Despite this, there's a vivid happening in the field.

Folk dance

Several folk dance groups are active in Ljubljana.

Jazz

In July 2015, over four days, the 56th Ljubljana Jazz Festival took place. A member of the European Jazz Network, the festival presented 19 concerts featuring artists from 19 countries, including a celebration of the 75th anniversary of James Blood Ulmer.[152]

Kino Šiška Centre for Urban Culture in Ljubljana
The Barn building located in Metelkova, the Ljubljana equivalent of the Copenhagen's Freetown Christiania.

In the 1980s with the emergence of subcultures in Ljubljana, an alternative culture begun to develop in Ljubljana organised around two student organisations.[153] This caused an influx of young people to the city centre, caused political and social changes, and led to the establishment of alternative art centres.[154]

Metelkova and Rog

A Ljubljana equivalent of the Copenhagen's Freetown Christiania, a self-proclaimed autonomous Metelkova neighbourhood, was set up in a former Austro-Hungarian barracks that were built in 1882 (completed in 1911).[155][156]

In 1993, the seven buildings and 12,500 m2 of space were turned into art galleries, artist studios, and seven nightclubs, including two LGBTQ+ venues, playing host to all range of music from hardcore to jazz to dub to techno. Adjacent to the Metelkova are located the Celica Hostel[157] with rooms all artistically decorated by the Metelkova artists, and a new part of the Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Contemporary Art.[158] Another alternative culture centre is located in the former Rog factory. Both Metelkova and Rog factory factory located in Tabor neighbourhood are walking distance from the city centre and visited by various tours.

Šiška Cultural Quarter

The Šiška Cultural Quarter hosts a number of art groups and cultural organisations dedicated to contemporary and avant-garde arts. Part of it is also Kino Šiška Centre for Urban Culture, a venue where music concerts of indie, punk, and rock bands as well as exhibitions take place. Museum of Transitory Art (MoTA) is a museum without a permanent collection or a fixed space. Instead, its programs are realised in different locations and contexts in temporary physical and virtual spaces dedicated to advancing the research, production and presentation of transitory, experimental, and live art forms. Yearly MoTA organises Sonica Festival. Ljudmila (since 1994) strives to connect research practices, technologies, science, and art.

Sports

Clubs

A tension between German and Slovene residents dominated the development of sport of Ljubljana in the 19th century. The first sport club in Ljubljana was the South Sokol Gymnastic Club (Gimnastično društvo Južni Sokol), established in 1863 and succeeded in 1868 by the Ljubljana Sokol (Ljubljanski Sokol). It was the parent club of all Slovene Sokol clubs as well as an encouragement for the establishment of the Croatian Sokol club in Zagreb. Members were also active in culture and politics, striving for greater integration of the Slovenes from different Crown lands of Austria–Hungary and for their cultural, political, and economic independence.

In 1885, German residents established the first sports club in the territory of nowadays Slovenia, Der Laibacher Byciklistischer Club (Ljubljana Cycling Club). In 1887, Slovene cyclists established the Slovene Cyclists Club (Slovenski biciklistični klub). In 1893 followed the first Slovene Alpine club, named Slovene Alpine Club (Slovensko planinsko društvo), later succeeded by the Alpine Association of Slovenia (Planinska zveza Slovenije). Several of its branches operate in Ljubljana, the largest of them being the Ljubljana Matica Alpine Club (Planinsko društvo Ljubljana-Matica). In 1900, the sports club Laibacher Sportverein (English: Ljubljana Sports Club) was established by the city's German residents and functioned until 1909. In 1906, Slovenes organised themselves in its Slovene counterpart, the Ljubljana Sports Club (Ljubljanski športni klub). Its members were primarily interested in rowing, but also swimming and football. In 1911, the first Slovene football club, Ilirija, started operating in the city. Winter sports started to develop in the area of the nowadays Ljubljana already before World War II.[159] In 1929, the first ice hockey club in Slovenia (then Yugoslavia) SK Ilirija was established.

Nowadays, the city's football team which plays in the Slovenian PrvaLiga is NK Olimpija Ljubljana. Ljubljana's ice hockey clubs are HK Slavija and HK Olimpija. They both compete in the Slovenian Hockey League. The basketball teams are KD Slovan and KK Cedevita Olimpija. The latter, which has a green dragon as its mascot, hosts its matches at the 12,480-seat Arena Stožice. Handball is more or less popular in female section. RK Krim is one of the best women handball team in Europe. They won EHF Champions League twice, also 2nd and 3rd places are not a rare thing. AMTK Ljubljana is the most successful speedway club in Slovenia. The Ljubljana Sports Club has been succeeded by the Livada Canoe and Kayak Club.[160]

Mass sport activities

The Ljubljana Marathon, 2015

Each year since 1957, on 8–10 May, the traditional recreational Walk Along the Wire has taken place to mark the liberation of Ljubljana on 9 May 1945.[161] At the same occasion, a triples competition is run on the trail, and a few days later, a student run from Prešeren Square to Ljubljana Castle is held. The last Sunday in October, the Ljubljana Marathon and a few minor competition runs take place on the city streets. The event attracts several thousand runners each year.[162]

Sport venues

The Tacen Whitewater Course on the Sava

The Stožice Stadium, opened since August 2010 and located in Stožice Sports Park in the Bežigrad District, is the biggest football stadium in the country and the home of the NK Olimpija Ljubljana. It is one of the two main venues of Slovenia national football team. The park also has an indoor arena, used for indoor sports such as basketball, handball and volleyball and is the home venue of KK Olimpija, RK Krim and ACH Volley Bled among others. Beside football, the stadium is designed to host cultural events as well. Another stadium in the Bežigrad district, Bežigrad Stadium, is closed since 2008 and is deteriorating. It was built according to the plans of Jože Plečnik and was the home of the NK Olimpija Ljubljana, dissolved in 2004. Joc Pečečnik, a Slovenian multimillionaire, plans to renovate it.[163]

Ljubljana Sports Park is located in Spodnja Šiška, part of the Šiška District. It has a football stadium with five courts, an athletic hall, outdoor athletic areas, tennis courts, a Boules court, and a sand volleyball court. The majority of competitions are in athletics. Another sports park in Spodnja Šiška is Ilirija Sports Park, known primarily for its stadium with a speedway track. At the northern end of Tivoli Park stands the Ilirija Swimming Pool Complex, which was built as part of a swimming and athletics venue following plans by Bloudek in the 1930s and has been nearly abandoned since then, but there are plans to renovate it.

A number of sport venues are located in Tivoli Park. An outdoor swimming pool in Tivoli, constructed by Bloudek in 1929, was the first Olympic-size swimming pool in Yugoslavia. Currently, the Tivoli Recreational Centre in Tivoli is Ljubljana's largest recreational centre and has three swimming pools, saunas, a Boules court, a health club, and other facilities.[164] There are two skating rinks, a basketball court, a winter ice rink, and ten tennis courts in its outdoor area.[165] The Tivoli Hall consists of two halls. The smaller one accepts 4,050 spectators and is used for basketball matches. The larger one can accommodate 6,000 spectators and is primarily used for hockey, but also for basketball matches. The halls are also used for concerts and other cultural events. The Slovenian Olympic Committee has its office in the building.[166]

The Tacen Whitewater Course, located on a course on the Sava, 8 kilometers (5 miles) northwest of the city centre, hosts a major international canoe/kayak slalom competition almost every year, examples being the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships in 1955, 1991, and 2010.[167]

Since the 1940s,[159] a ski slope has been in use in Gunclje,[168] in the northwestern part of the city.[169] It is 600 meters (2,000 ft) long and has two ski lifts, its maximum incline is 60° and the difference in height from the top to the bottom is 155 meters (509 ft).[168] Five ski jumping hills stand near the ski slope.[159] Several Slovenian Olympic and World Cup medalists trained and competed there.[159][170] In addition, the Arena Triglav complex of six jumping hills is located in the Šiška District.[171][172] A ski jumping hill, build in 1954 upon the plans by Stanko Bloudek, was located in Šiška near Vodnik Street (Vodnikova cesta) until 1976. International competitions for the Kongsberg Cup were held there, attended by thousands of spectators.[173] The ice rinks in Ljubljana include Koseze Pond and Tivoli Hall. In addition, in the 19th century and the early 20th century, Tivoli Pond and a marshy meadow in Trnovo, named Kern, were used for ice skating.[174]

Economy

BTC City is the largest shopping mall, sports, entertainment and business area in Ljubljana.

Industry remains the most important employer, notably in the pharmaceuticals, petrochemicals and food processing.[62] Other fields include banking, finance, transport, construction, skilled trades and services and tourism. The public sector provides jobs in education, culture, health care and local administration.[62]

The Ljubljana Stock Exchange (Ljubljanska borza), purchased in 2008 by the Vienna Stock Exchange,[175] deals with large Slovenian companies. Some of these have their headquarters in the capital: for example, the retail chain Mercator, the oil company Petrol d.d. and the telecommunications concern Telekom Slovenije.[176] Over 15,000 enterprises operate in the city, most of them in the tertiary sector.[177]

Numerous companies and over 450 shops are located in the BTC City, the largest business, shopping, recreational, entertainment and cultural centre in Slovenia. It is visited each year by 21 million people.[178][179] It occupies an area of 475,000 square meters (5,110,000 sq ft) in the Moste District in the eastern part of Ljubljana.[180][181][182]

About 74% of Ljubljana households use district heating from the Ljubljana Power Station.[183]

Government

The city of Ljubljana is governed by the City Municipality of Ljubljana (Slovene: Mestna občina Ljubljana; MOL), which is led by the city council. The president of the city council is called the mayor. Members of the city council and the mayor are elected in the local election, held every four years. Among other roles, the city council drafts the municipal budget, and is assisted by various boards active in the fields of health, sports, finances, education, environmental protection and tourism.[184] The municipality is subdivided into 17 districts represented by district councils. They work with the municipality council to make known residents' suggestions and prepare activities in their territories.[185][186]

Between 2002 and 2006, Danica Simšič was mayor of the municipality.[187] Since the municipal elections of 22 October 2006 until his confirmation as a deputy in the National Assembly of Slovenian in December 2011, Zoran Janković, previously the managing director of the Mercator retail chain, was the mayor of Ljubljana. In 2006, he won 62.99% of the popular vote.[188] On 10 October 2010, Janković was re-elected for another four-year term with 64.79% of the vote. From 2006 until October 2010, the majority on the city council (the Zoran Janković List) held 23 of 45 seats.[188] On 10 October 2010, Janković's list won 25 out of 45 seats in the city council. From December 2011 onwards, when Janković's list won the early parliamentary election, the deputy mayor Aleš Čerin was decided by him to lead the municipality. Čerin did not hold the post of mayor.[189] After Janković had failed to be elected as the Prime Minister in the National Assembly, he participated at the mayoral by-election on 25 March 2012 and was elected for the third time with 61% of the vote. He retook the leadership of the city council on 11 April 2012.[190]

Public order in Ljubljana is enforced by the Ljubljana Police Directorate (Policijska uprava Ljubljana).[191] There are five areal police stations and four sectoral police stations in Ljubljana.[192] Public order and municipal traffic regulations are also supervised by the city traffic wardens (Mestno redarstvo).[193] Ljubljana has a quiet and secure reputation.[192][194]

Demographics

In 1869, Ljubljana had about 22,600 inhabitants,[195] a figure that grew to almost 60,000 by 1931.[68]

At the 2002 census, 39% of Ljubljana inhabitants were Catholic; 30% had no religion, an unknown religion or did not reply; 19% atheist; 6% Eastern Orthodox; 5% Muslim; and the remaining 0.7% Protestant or another religion.[196]

Approximately 91% of the population speaks Slovene as their primary native language. The second most-spoken language is Bosnian, with Serbo-Croatian being the third most-spoken language.[197]

Demographic evolution[195][198][199][200][201]

1600 1700 1754 1800 1846 1869 1880 1890 1900 1910 1921 1931 1948 1953 1961 1971 1981 1991 2002 2010 2013 2014 2015
6,000 7,500 9,400 10,000 18,000 22,593 26,284 30,505 36,547 41,727 53,294 59,768 98,599 113,340 135,366 173,853 224,817 258,873 267,008 271,885 282,994 277,554 278,789

Education

Primary education

In Ljubljana today there are over 50 public elementary schools with over 20,000 pupils.[150][202] This also includes an international elementary school for foreign pupils. There are two private elementary schools: a Waldorf elementary school and a Catholic elementary school. In addition, there are several elementary music schools.

Historically the first school in Ljubljana belonged to Teutonic Knights and was established in the 13th century. It originally accepted only boys; girls were accepted from the beginning of the 16th century. Parochial schools are attested in the 13th century, at St. Peter's Church and at Saint Nicholas's Church, the later Ljubljana Cathedral. Since 1291, there were also trade-oriented private schools in Ljubljana. In the beginning of the 17th century, there were six schools in Ljubljana and later three. A girls' school was established by Poor Clares, followed in 1703 by the Ursulines. Their school was for about 170 years the only public girls' school in Carniola. These schools were mainly private or established by the city.[203]

In 1775, the Austrian Empress Maria Theresa proclaimed elementary education obligatory and Ljubljana got its normal school, intended as a learning place for teachers. In 1805, the first state music school was established in Ljubljana. In the time of Illyrian Provinces, "école primaire", a unified four-year elementary school program with a greater emphasis on Slovene, was introduced. The first public schools, unrelated to religious education, appeared in 1868.

Secondary education

The first complete Realschule (technical grammar school) was established in Ljubljana in 1871.

Currently in Ljubljana there are ten public and three private grammar schools. The public schools divide into general gymnasiums and classical gymnasiums, the latter offering Latin and Greek as foreign languages. Some general schools offer internationally oriented European departments, and some offer sport departments, allowing students to more easily adjust their sport and school obligations. All state schools are free, but the number of students they can accept is limited. The private secondary schools include a Catholic grammar school and a Waldorf grammar school. There are also professional grammar schools in Ljubljana, offering economical, technical, or artistic subjects (visual arts, music). All grammar schools last four years and conclude with the matura exam.

Historically, upon a proposal by Primož Trubar, the Carniolan Estates' School (1563–1598) was established in 1563 in the period of Slovene Reformation. Its teaching languages were mainly Latin and Greek, but also German and Slovene, and it was open for both sexes and all social strata. In 1597, Jesuits established the Jesuit College (1597–1773), intended to transmit general education. In 1773, secondary education came under the control of the state. A number of reforms were implemented in the 19th century; there was more emphasis on general knowledge and religious education was removed from state secondary schools. In 1910, there were 29 secondary schools in Ljubljana, among them classical and real gymnasiums and Realschules (technical secondary schools).

Tertiary education

The main building of the University of Ljubljana, formerly the seat of the Carniolan Parliament

In 2011, the University had 23 faculties and three academies, located in different parts of Ljubljana. They offer Slovene-language courses in medicine, applied sciences, arts, law, administration, natural sciences, and other subjects.[204] The university has more than 63,000 students and some 4,000 teaching faculty.[202] Students make up one-seventh of Ljubljana's population, giving the city a youthful character.[202][205]

Historically, higher schools offering the study of general medicine, surgery, architecture, law and theology, started to operate in Ljubljana during the French occupation of the Slovene Lands, in 1810–11. Austro-Hungarian Empire never allowed Slovenes to establish their own university in Ljubljana and the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia's most important university, was founded in 1919 after Slovenes joined the first Yugoslavia.[68][202] When it was founded, the university comprised five faculties: law, philosophy, technology, theology and medicine. From the beginning, the seat of the university has been at Congress Square in a building that served as the State Mansion of Carniola from 1902 to 1918.

Libraries

The building of the National and University Library, designed in the 1930s by Jože Plečnik.
National and University Library of Slovenia

The National and University Library of Slovenia is the Slovene national and university library. In 2011, it held about 1,307,000 books, 8,700 manuscripts, and numerous other textual, visual and multimedia resources, altogether 2,657,000 volumes.[206]

Central Technological Library

The second largest university library in Ljubljana is the Central Technological Library, the national library and information hub for natural sciences and technology.

Municipal Library and other libraries

The Municipal City Library of Ljubljana, established in 2008, is the central regional library and the largest Slovenian general public library. In 2011, it held 1,657,000 volumes, among these 1,432,000 books and a multitude of other resources in 36 branches.[207] Altogether, there are 5 general public libraries and over 140 specialised libraries in Ljubljana.[150]

Besides the two largest university libraries there are a number of libraries at individual faculties, departments and institutes of the University of Ljubljana. The largest among them are the Central Humanist Library in the field of humanities, the Central Social Sciences Library, the Central Economic Library in the field of economics, the Central Medical Library in the field of medical sciences, and the Libraries of the Biotechnical Faculty in the field of biology and biotechnology.[208]

History

The first libraries in Ljubljana were located in monasteries. The first public library was the Carniolan Estates' Library, established in 1569 by Primož Trubar. In the 17th century, the Jesuit Library collected numerous works, particularly about mathematics. In 1707, the Seminary Library was established; it is the first and oldest public scientific library in Slovenia. Around 1774, after the dissolution of Jesuits, the Lyceum Library was formed from the remains of the Jesuit Library as well as several monastery libraries.

Science

The first society of the leading scientists and public workers in Carniola was the Dismas Fraternity (Latin: Societas Unitorum), formed in Ljubljana in 1688.[209] In 1693, the Academia Operosorum Labacensium was founded and lasted with an interruption until the end of the 18th century. The next academy in Ljubljana, the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, was not established until 1938.

Transport

Ljubljana Bus Station and the building of the Ljubljana Railway Station in the background
Railway near the central workshop in Moste

Air transport

Ljubljana Jože Pučnik Airport (IATA code LJU), located 26 kilometers (16 mi) northwest of the city, has flights to numerous European destinations. Among the companies that fly from there are Air France, Air Serbia, Brussels Airlines, easyJet, Finnair, Lufthansa, Montenegro Airlines, Swiss, Wizz Air, Transavia and Turkish Airlines. The destinations are mainly European.[210] This airport has superseded the original Ljubljana airport, in operation from 1933 until 1963.[211][212] It was located in the Municipality of Polje (nowadays the Moste District), on a plain between Ljubljanica and Sava next to the railroad in Moste.[212] There was a military airport in Šiška from 1918 until 1929.[213]

Rail transport

In the Ljubljana Rail Hub, the Pan-European railway corridors V (the fastest link between the North Adriatic, and Central and Eastern Europe)[214] and X (linking Central Europe with the Balkans)[215] and the main European lines (E 65, E 69, E 70) intersect.[216] All international transit trains in Slovenia drive through the Ljubljana hub, and all international passenger trains stop there.[217] The area of Ljubljana has six passenger stations and nine stops.[218] For passengers, the Slovenian Railways company offers the possibility to buy a daily or monthly city pass that can be used to travel between them.[219] The Ljubljana railway station is the central station of the hub. The Ljubljana Moste Railway Station is the largest Slovenian railway dispatch. The Ljubljana Zalog Railway Station is the central Slovenian rail yard.[217] There are a number of industrial rails in Ljubljana.[220] At the end of 2006,[221] the Ljubljana Castle funicular started to operate. The rail goes from Krek Square (Krekov trg) near the Ljubljana Central Market to Ljubljana Castle. It is especially popular among tourists. The full trip lasts 60 s.

Roads

Ljubljana is located where Slovenia's two main freeways intersect,[222] connecting the freeway route from east to west, in line with Pan-European Corridor V, and the freeway in the north–south direction, in line with Pan-European Corridor X.[223] The city is linked to the southwest by A1-E70 to the Italian cities of Trieste and Venice and the Croatian port of Rijeka.[224] To the north, A1-E57 leads to Maribor, Graz and Vienna. To the east, A2-E70 links it with the Croatian capital Zagreb, from where one can go to Hungary or important cities of the former Yugoslavia, such as Belgrade.[224] To the northwest, A2-E61 goes to the Austrian towns of Klagenfurt and Salzburg, making it an important entry point for northern European tourists.[224] A toll sticker system has been in use on the Ljubljana Ring Road since 1 July 2008.[225][226] The centre of the city is more difficult to access especially in the peak hours due to long arteries with traffic lights and a large number of daily commuters.[227] The core city centre has been closed for motor traffic since September 2007 (except for residents with permissions), creating a pedestrian zone around Prešeren Square.[228]

Historical Ljubljana tram system was completed in 1901 and was replaced by buses in 1928,[229] which were in turn abolished and replaced by trams in 1931[229] in its final length of 18.5 kilometers (11.5 mi) in 1940,[230] In 1959, it was abolished in favor of automobiles;[231] the tracks were dismantled and tram cars were transferred to Osijek and Subotica.[232] Reintroduction of an actual tram system to Ljubljana has been proposed repeatedly in the 2000s.[233][234]

There are numerous taxi companies in the city.

City bus

Older type of city bus on the streets of Ljubljana

The Ljubljana Bus Station, the Ljubljana central bus hub, is located next to the Ljubljana railway station. The city bus network, run by the Ljubljana Passenger Transport (LPP) company, is Ljubljana's most widely used means of public transport. The fleet is relatively modern. The number of dedicated bus lanes is limited, which can cause problems in peak hours when traffic becomes congested.[235] Bus rides may be paid with the Urbana payment card (also used for the funicular) or with a mobile phone. Sometimes the buses are called trole (referring to trolley poles), harking back to the 1951–71 days when Ljubljana had trolleybus (trolejbus) service.[236] There were five trolleybus lines in Ljubljana, until 1958 alongside the tram.[231]

Another means of public road transport in the city centre is the Cavalier (Kavalir), an electric vehicle operated by LPP since May 2009. There are three such vehicles in Ljubljana. The ride is free and there are no stations because it can be stopped anywhere. It can carry up to five passengers; most of them are elderly people and tourists.[237] The Cavalier drives in the car-free zone in the Ljubljana downtown. The first line links Čop Street, Wolf Street and the Hribar Embankment, whereas the second links Town Square, Upper Square, and Old Square.[238] There is also a tractor with wagons decorated to look like a train for tourists in Ljubljana, linking Cyril and Methodius Square in the city centre with Ljubljana Castle.[239]

Bicycles

BicikeLJ, a Ljubljana-based self-service bicycle network, is free of charge for the first hour.

There is a considerable amount of bicycle traffic in Ljubljana, especially in the warmer months of the year. It is also possible to rent a bike. Since May 2011, the BicikeLJ, a self-service bicycle rental system offers the residents and visitors of Ljubljana 600 bicycles and more than 600 parking spots at 60 stations in the wider city centre area. The daily number of rentals is around 2,500.[240][241] There was a possibility to rent a bike even before the establishment of BicikeLJ.[242]

There are still some conditions for cyclists in Ljubljana that have been criticised as unfortunate to date. This refers to cycle lanes in poor condition and constructed in a way that motorised traffic is privileged. There are also many one-way streets which therefore cannot be used as alternate routes so it is difficult to legally travel by bicycle through the city centre.[243][244] Through years, some prohibitions have been partially abolished by marking cycle lanes on the pavement.[245][246] Nevertheless, the situation has been steadily improving; in 2015, Ljubljana placed 13th in a ranking of the world's most bicycle-friendly cities.[247] In 2016 Ljubljana was already 8th on the Copenhagenize list.[248]

Water transport

The river transport on the Ljubljanica and the Sava was the main means of cargo transport to and from the city until the mid-19th century, when railroads were built. Today, the Ljubljanica is used by a number of tourist ships, with wharves under the Butchers' Bridge, at Fish Square, at Court Square, at Breg, at the Poljane Embankment, and elsewhere.

Healthcare

Ljubljana has a rich history of discoveries in medicine and innovations in medical technology. The majority of secondary and tertiary care in Slovenia takes place in Ljubljana. The Ljubljana University Medical Centre is the largest hospital centre in Slovenia. The Faculty of Medicine (University of Ljubljana) and the Ljubljana Institute of Oncology are other two central medical institutions in Slovenia. The Ljubljana Community Health Centre is the largest health centre in Slovenia. It has seven units at 11 locations. Since 1986, Ljubljana is part of the WHO European Healthy Cities Network.[249]

International relations

Twin towns and sister cities

Ljubljana is twinned with:[250]

See also

References

Bibliography

  • Jarrett, Mark (2013). The Congress of Vienna and its Legacy: War and Great Power Diplomacy after Napoleon. London: I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited. ISBN 978-1780761169.
  • Jörg Stabenow (2009). "Ljubljana". In Emily Gunzburger Makas; Tanja Damljanovic Conley (eds.). Capital Cities in the Aftermath of Empires: Planning in Central and Southeastern Europe. Routledge. pp. 223–240. ISBN 978-1-135-16725-7. {{cite book}}: External link in |chapterurl= (help); Unknown parameter |chapterurl= ignored (|chapter-url= suggested) (help)
  • Velušček, Anton (ed.) (2009). Stare Gmajne Pile-Dwelling Settlement and its Era (bilingual English and Slovenian edition). Založba ZRC. ISBN 978-961-254-155-2.

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