CHARM
OF TUROPOLJE AND VUKOMERICKE GORICE Southeast of Zagreb, on the
hills of Vukomericke gorice and the Turopolje lowlands from the
River Sava to the northeast and the Kupa to the southwest covering
up the area of 566 square kilometres, stretches the region of
Velika Gorica. The population of about 70.000 inhabitants resides
in the town of Velika Gorica, municipality of Pokupsko, Orle and
Kravarsko. The economy of the region is based on wood processing
industry, food industry, construction, leather processing and
graphic industries and last but not least land cultivation.
Many cultural and historic monuments
whose traces can be found as far back as prehistoric times characterize
this region. Unique feature of Turopolje are wooden chapels and
aristocratic kurijas (traditional wooden country houses) often
referred to as Turopolje beauties. Vicinity of Vukomericke gorice,
and the rivers Lomnica, Sava and Odra add to the versatility of
the Turopolje region. The area is rich in oak, one of the main
natural resources. Oak is the reason why these famous wooden sacral
and temporal buildings were built. Not far from Velika Gorica
you can see the old �Turkish� common oak, which is a protected
monument of nature.
VELIKA GORICA is only 16 km away from Zagreb, it is in a way retained
as broader Zagreb area. In the immediate vicinity of the village
of Pleso is the Zagreb airport. The main road and railway line
connecting Zagreb and Sisak pass through Velika Gorica. Some 33.000
inhabitants live there. Not far from the town is an intersection
of major highways, which all gives Velika Gorica an extremely
good position.
Valuable archaeological sites have
been located in Velika Gorica and its environs. These date back
to prehistoric times (burial grounds), ancient times (graves from
the period of early Roman emperors) and early Middle Ages (different
artefacts, china that was used in Carolinian cultural circle).
ANDAUTONIA
- ROMAN HERITAGE �citarjevo, a settlement 8 km northwest of Velika
Gorica, is the home of many valuable and important archaeological
sites. This is where Andautonia, the seat of an Illyrian tribe
and a Roman municipality, used to be. The town was built in the
shape of an irregular hexagon. Archaeologists found the remains
of Roman buildings, thermal complex, roads, wall paintings, plastering
featuring herbal decorations. They also found tools, tableware,
glassware, jewellery, money from the period between the 1st and
4th centuries. Altar dedicated to the god of the River Sava was
also found, along with reliefs. A relief featuring Nemesis might
lead to a conclusion that Gladiator games were once held most
probably in an amphitheatre made of wood. Stone monuments were
found scattered around farmyards. The traces of ancient Roman
times were found in Donja Lomnica as well (5 km west of Velika
Gorica): the remains of a Roman road and a grave from the 2nd
century. In Bu�evac, 10 km southeast of Velika Gorica the remains
of ancient Roman road were also found.
ARISTOCRATIC
TUROPOLJE MUNICIPALITY In Velika Gorica region you�ll be able
to see valuable monuments from later periods. In the town centre
for example you can visit the so-called Turopolje grad. It is
in fact a one-storey building square-shaped with a porch facing
the park. It was built somewhere around the year 1765. This used
to be the seat of �Aristocratic Turopolje Municipality�. In the
upstairs hall decorated with stucco and fresco ornaments the assembly
meetings used to be held. Today this building is the house of
the Museum of Turopolje that was established in 1960. The Museum
has archaeological, ethnographic, cultural and historic collections.
The parish church of the Annunciation built between 1686 and 1990
was restored in 1893 by architect H. Boll� in classicist style.
The church furniture is from that period, too.
In
�citarjevo you should also see the church of St. Martin that was
first mentioned in 1334. The church was reconstructed in the first
half of the 18th century. It is a single-nave church with sacristy
adjacent to a round-shaped shrine, steeple next to the main facade
and a side chapel representing the older part of the church. Around
the church is a fence that was built in 1772. Inside the church
one can see partly preserved Baroque artefacts: statues, monstrance
(1765), two reliquaries, bells from 1630 and 1761 respectively.
The attraction of Donja Lomnica is
a Modic-Bedekovic wooden one-storey kurija from 1806.The kurija
is a beautiful example of the original secular country architecture
that used to be built by the members of lower aristocracy.
Nine
kilometres west of Velika Gorica is a Baroque castle Lukavec.
This square-shaped castle features the inner ward with arcades
and four prismal towers on each corner. Above the entrance with
a Baroque portal and coat of arms from 1752 there is a high tower.
Under the tower there was a chapel of St Lucy in which assembly
meetings of the Turopolje aristocracy used to be held. The castle
is surrounded by a ditch and has embrasures. In front of the castle
there used be a town made of wooden houses first mentioned in
the 15th century.
In Vukovina, 4 km southeast of Velika
Gorica there is a late Baroque-Classicist parish church of St
Mary. This is a single nave church, the dome with lantern is above
the nave while the apse of the shrine is oval. Adjacent to the
shrine is sacristy. The steeple was built later. The church furniture
originates from the period when the church was reconstructed i.e.
around 1805 and some objects are from the baroque period, chalice
for example. In the neighbouring Stari Cic don�t miss the wooden
parish kurija from 1831. A single nave wooden kurija called Alapic,
with rococo details, features a high hipped roof.
WOODEN
BEAUTIES Turopolje is widely known for its wooden architecture.
Temporal and sacral wooden buildings have the same features, the
same elements and materials used, and the same rustic manner of
processing applied. The only difference is that church builders
had more opportunity to show their artistic abilities when decorating.
One of the distinct features of wooden
churches of Turopolje, especially those built earlier, are the
entrance halls that were sometimes painted. Walls and ceilings
were decorated sometimes even the choir. Each of these churches
also had a small tower above the entrance hall. The floor was
usually made of brick, somewhere oak was used. The inventory was
mostly Baroque, and sometimes a bit rustic.
A
wooden chapel of St. Barbara in Velika Mlaka is the most attractive
and certainly the most representative example of wooden church
architecture in Croatia. The chapel was built in 1642 and reconstructed
several times. The present look was given to the chapel in 1867
when a steeple was added to it, which was thoroughly restored
between 1972 and 1977. This chapel is single nave with trilaterally
shaped shrine next to sacristy. The chapel is richly decorated.
Wooden panelling is painted with ornaments, flowers in vases and
pictures of saints. Among the latter the most interesting, from
iconographic point of view, is St Kummernisse with a donor M.
Basarovic (1759). Several masters participated in the painting
of the chapel, which lasted from 1710 to 1759. The oldest layer
from 1699 was destroyed. The wing altar of St Barbara (1679) features
the scenes from the Saint�s life and those from the Passion of
Christ. The altars of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Snow from 1701
and of the Lord�s Assumption from 1759 are to be mentioned also.
The bell from 1642 is the work of C. Seisser from Graz.
Wooden
chapel of the Holy Apostles in Bu�evac was made in 1768. The interior
of the chapel is pained with figures and ornaments. It features
altars, chalices and mass vestments from the periods between the
17th and 19th centuries. In Pleso near the Zagreb airport is the
chapel of the Wounded Christ that was built in 1758 by the widow
of Ladislav Plepelic, local nobleman. Local masters restored the
chapel and today people come to admire its facade decoration.
The chapel of St Anthony of Padua
in Gustelnica was first mentioned in 1678, and throughout centuries
it was to be restored, repaired and even built all over again.
Today�s chapel was built in 1888 where previous chapels stood.
Construction of the chapel of St Rocco on Cvetkovic hill started
in 1867, but the chapel was completed in 1888.
TRADITION
OF BUILDING IN WOOD The size of wooden churches in Turopolje ranges
from 4 x 2 m in Gustelnica to some 18 x 6 m in Velika Mlaka. Even
though the tradition of using wood as the main building material
has gone well into the 20th c. only five sacral objects have been
preserved. These are: the chapels in Bu�evac, Gustelnica, Pleso,
Velika Mlaka and one on Cvetkovic hill. Another six churches and
chapels are located in the neighbourhood but considered to be
in the area that is outside the Turopolje region border what makes
up the total of 11 preserved wooden sacral objects.
THE BIGGEST ACHIEVEMENT IN BUILDING
Wooden churches and chapels have stood as signs of unique value
of Turopolje ever since early Middle Ages. Moreover in the 17th
century when Turkish attacks were common, it was customary to
rebuild in wood even those churches that originally were made
of other materials.
These wooden churches and chapels
are the biggest achievement of folk Baroque architecture in north
Croatia.
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