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Zemun, A Slice Of Old Austria-Hungary

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  • Zemun, A Slice Of Old Austria-Hungary

    ZEMUN, A SLICE OF OLD AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
    By Aleksandar Vasovic

    BalkanInsight.com
    13 October 2008
    Serbia

    It may have been swallowed up by Belgrade in recent decades but
    'Zemunci' remain fiercely proud of their town and of its very different
    history and identity.

    One does not always have to leave Belgrade to find oneself in a
    completely different place. Right across the confluence of Sava
    and Danube and in full view of the Kalemegdan fortress lies Zemun,
    or Semlin, as it was called in the days of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

    Cross the city's Branko's bridge and head to the right. Past the former
    Communist Party Central Committee tower and the sprawling compound of
    the former federal government and another five minutes' drive brings
    you to a town within the city, which is, and isn't, Belgrade.

    In the 1970s, the rapidly expanding city of Belgrade and its
    conglomerate of drab apartment blocks enthusiastically called Novi
    Beograd (New Belgrade) swallowed up Zemun.

    According to historians, a settlement at Zemun dates back as far as
    the 3rd Century BC. But the present name was first mentioned in the
    12th century, by which time the area formed the southern frontier of
    medieval Hungary. As wars devastated the Balkans over the next 500
    years, control over Zemun passed back and forth between the Hungarians
    and the Ottoman Turks. Habsburg Austrian armies finally took over in
    1717, to stay for two centuries.

    Zemun grew as a border town, located in a highly strategic position,
    next to the Ottomans' northern fortress of Belgrade. It was a key
    port and an assembly point for smugglers, rebels, insurgents, spies
    and politicians coming and going from Serbia. The population was
    mixed, comprising Serbs, Croats, Hungarians, Germans, Jews, Gypsies,
    Armenians, Turks, Slovaks and even a few Italians. "It is like that
    even now," says Zdenko, a Zemun-born Croat. "The local community is
    more multiethnic than any other in Belgrade and we are proud of that."

    After the collapse of Austria-Hungary in 1918, Zemun became a part
    of the new Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes, later renamed
    Yugoslavia. Between 1941 and 1945 it formed part of the Nazi-style
    Independent State of Croatia and thousands of Jews and others perished
    in a nearby death camp, the Judenlager Zemlin, located at the former
    Belgrade Fair compound. After the Partisan victory, it again became
    part of Yugoslavia.

    In administrative terms, Zemun is now no more than a municipality
    of Belgrade. But it still fights to preserve its distinct identity
    as a town with a very different history from that of Belgrade. Its
    Central European architecture and character remain strikingly different
    from those of its more Byzantine neighbour. Locals stubbornly insist
    they are "Zemunci", not "Beogradjani". "It is a different mentality,
    a different way of living," according to Zdenko.

    Sadly, Zemun became famous for altogether different reasons in the
    1990s, when the town spawned an infamous underworld clan that played
    a key part in the 2003 assassination of prime minister Zoran Djindjic,
    among others.

    Zemun is best explored on foot, starting at the Danube quay, which
    begins right after the Hotel Jugoslavija and is good for rollerblading
    and cycling. A sprawling marina that spans more than a kilometre
    offers views of roughly half of all the boats moored in Belgrade. For
    the tired or the hungry there are plenty of floating restaurants and
    cafes, dubbed "splavovi", or rafts, often boasting live music.

    Fish, often caught nearby in the Danube, is the real specialty of
    Zemun's restaurants but there is also a good selection of alternatives
    on local menus. Venues range from more traditional Stara Carinarnica
    (Old Customs Depot), with its exhibition of historic photographs
    and artefacts, to Sent Andreja, Kod Kapetana (Captain's Inn), Saran
    (Carp), Reka (River), with its live music and colourful local artwork,
    and Radecki (Radetsky), a dilapidated watering hole frequented by
    colourful local characters.

    Past the Radecki, some steep steps bring amblers to the Old Town,
    containing Gardos hill and Pregrevica. With its narrow cobbled streets
    and Austro-Hungarian atmosphere, this old quarter is a step back in
    time. Dozens of cafés such as Burence (Barrel) or Majcina (the word
    forms part of a famous Serbian curse), restaurants and churches dot
    the area. The most striking landmark is the Millennium Tower, built
    in 1896 on the site of a medieval fort to commemorate the 1,000th
    anniversary of the Kingdom of Hungary. Years ago it housed a café
    at the top. Now it is in a state of disrepair but it may be restored
    soon enough. "It looks a sorry sight now but Belgrade city hall has
    allocated funds for renovation," a city official said.

    Downtown Zemun has a couple of interesting more modern buildings,
    too. The Air Force command is a fine an example of the pre-Second
    World War Bauhaus architecture, though it was badly damaged in the
    1999 NATO bombing. The Magistrates' building, near the green market,
    is another local landmark. Built in the 19th century, it is worth a
    look before taking the road back to Belgrade proper.

    --Boundary_(ID_ZlT+za8jWKQOawfhpbGn9g)--
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