Croatia 🇭🇷 Makarska 4K Walking Tour
Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Heat. Heat. Hey, hey, hey. I’ve been working on myself. I really try my best to change something right. Maybe we can stay away just for you. We said forever whatever means nothing if we don’t give it all we got. We can cry when it’s over. We can But maybe you love we forever. Forever means something and we don’t give it up. We can cry when it’s over. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Don’t you Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Heat up here. You’re the me. Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Every time I close my eyes, Every time I close my eyes, every time I close my eyes, Heat. Heat. Yeah. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Every time I close my eyes, every time I close my eyes. Heat up here. Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Close my eyes. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Can you ever get it right? Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. I promise you. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. You get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Get Yeah. Can you ever get it right? Get it right. Get it right. Get it right. Hey. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. I got my feeling. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Hey, hey, hey. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Hey, heat. Hey, heat. Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat up here. Yeah. Heat. Put it all your stuff away and check out for the day. There’s no time to waste when it’s 100° burns under my feet. Won’t you have a drink with me? We We head into town. See what it’s about. Barely need a shirt. The sun is almost set. Make the most of it. I know we dance and sing. There’s a heat. There’s a heat wave rolling in. There’s a heat. Yeah. There’s a party in the streets and the city is on fire. Music in the streets. We’re moving to the beat. There’s something in the air that makes the city come alive. A breeze that makes you high. We’ll be up till late tonight. Love. Get another chance. Pretty people holding hands. A blifted by the night the way that it should be. Let’s slip away cuz this might be our final summer day. There’s a heat. There’s a way. There’s a heat. Heat. Heat. There’s a heat wave rolling in. Tell me what you thinking. Give me what you drinking. Tell me what you’re thinking. Give me what you’re drinking. You and me, we got something special. Baby, you and me. You and me. I can’t think. This was never meant to happen. You and me. You and me. I can’t help it. I can’t stop it. I can’t help it. I can’t help it, baby. I can’t help it. I can’t help it, baby. Tell me what you’re thinking. Give me what you’re drinking. Tell me what you’re thinking. Give me what you’re drinking. You and me, we got something special, baby. You and me. You and me. I can’t think. This was never meant to happen. You and me. You and me. I can’t help it. I can’t help it. Baby, I can’t. I can’t help it. Baby, I can’t. I can’t help it, baby. Heat. Heat. Heat. Heat. Hey, hey, hey.
Makarska, Croatia 🇭🇷 — Walking Tour 4K
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Makarska (Croatian pronunciation: [mâkarskaː]) is a town on the Adriatic coastline of Croatia, about 60 km (37 mi) southeast of Split and 140 km (87 mi) northwest of Dubrovnik, in the Split-Dalmatia County.
Makarska is a prominent regional tourist center, located on a horseshoe-shaped bay between the Biokovo mountains and the Adriatic Sea. The city is noted for its palm-fringed promenade, where cafes, bars and boutiques overlook the harbor. Adjacent to the beach are several large capacity hotels as well as a camping grounds.
Makarska is the centre of the Makarska Riviera, a popular tourist destination under the Biokovo mountain. It stretches for 60 km (37 mi) between the municipalities of Brela and Gradac.
History
Map depicting the Turks trying to recapture Makarska after the Battle of Lepanto in 1571.
Pre-history
Near present-day Makarska, there was a settlement as early as the middle of the 2nd millennium BC. It is thought that it was a point used by the Cretans on their way up to the Adriatic (the so-called Amber Road). However it was only one of the ports with links with the wider Mediterranean, as shown by a copper tablet with Cretan and Egyptian systems of measurement.
A similar tablet was found in the Egyptian pyramids. In the Illyrian era this region was part of the broader alliance of tribes, led by the Ardaeans, founded in the third century BC in the Cetina area (Omiš) down to the River Vjosë in present-day Albania.
The Roman era
Although the Romans became rulers of the Adriatic by defeating the Ardiaei in 228 BC, it took them two centuries to confirm their rule. The Romans sent their veteran soldiers to settle in Makarska. After the division of the Empire in 395 AD, this part of the Adriatic became part of the Eastern Roman Empire and many people fled to Muccurum from the new wave of invaders. The town appears in the Tabula Peutingeriana as the port of Inaronia, but is mentioned as Muccurum, a larger settlement that grew up in the most inaccessible part of Biokovo mountain, probably at the very edge of the Roman civilisation. It appears as Macrum on the acts of the Salonan Synod of 4 May 533 AD held in Salona (533), when also the town’s diocese was created.
Early Middle Ages
During the Migration Period, in 548, Muccurum was destroyed by the army of the Ostrogoth king Totila. The byzantine Emperor expelled the Eastern Goths (Ostrogoths).
In the 7th century the region between the Cetina and Neretva was occupied by the Narentines, with Mokro, located in today’s Makarska, as its administrative centre. The doge of Venice Pietro I Candiano, whose Venetian fleet aimed to punish the piratesque activities of the town’s vessels, was defeated here on September 18, 877 and had to pay tribute to the Narentines for the free passage of its ships on the Adriatic.
Late Middle Ages
The principality was annexed to the Kingdom of Croatia in the 12th century, and was conquered by the Republic of Venice a century later. Making use of the rivalry between the Croatian leaders and their power struggles (1324–1326), the Bosnian Ban Stjepan II Kotromanić annexed the Makarska coastal area. There were many changes of rulers here: from the Croatian and Bosnian feudal lords, to those from Zahumlje (later Herzegovina).
In the eventful 15th century the Ottomans conquered the Balkans. In order to protect his territory from the Turks, Duke Stjepan Vukčić Kosača handed the region to the Venetians in 1452. The Makarska coastal area fell to the Turks in 1499.
Under the Turks
Under Ottoman rule, the town was surrounded with walls that had three towers. The name Makarska was cited for the first time in a 1502 document telling how nuns from Makarska were permitted to repair their church. The Turks had links with all parts of the Adriatic via Makarska and they therefore paid a great deal of attention to the port’s maintenance. In 1568 they built a fortress as defence against the Venetians. During Turkish rule the seat of the administrative and judicial authority was in Foča, Mostar, for a short time in Makarska itself and finally in Gabela on the River Neretva.[citation needed]
During the Cretan War between Venice and the Turks (1645–1669), the desire among the people of the area to be free of the Turks intensified. In 1646, Venice recaptured the coastline. A period of dual leadership, marked with armed conflicts, destruction, and reprisals, lasted until 1684, until the danger of the Turks ended in 1699.