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Osijek | Sightseeing | Essential Osijek

Housed in an eighteenth-century mansion built for the town magistrate, the museum displays a motley collection of local archeological finds, most impressive of which are the Roman-era tombstones which fill the ground-floor hallway. Several rooms of clocks, muskets and other oddities [...]


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Trg svetog trojstva 6, Tvrđa
tel. (+385-31) 25 07 30

Open:
08:00-14:00
Sunday:
10:00-13:00
Monday:
Closed
Saturday:
10:00-13:00
This all-embracing collection of Slavonian art contains smething for everyone, kicking off with some imposing nineteenth-century portraits of local aristocrats. Most striking of these is The Pejačević Family in the Park (1811) by German society painter Friedrich Johann L [...]


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Europska avenija 9
tel. (+385-31) 25 12 80; 25 12 87
fax. (+385-31) 25 12 81

Open:
10:00-18:00
Sunday:
10:00-13:00
Monday:
Closed
Saturday:
10:00-13:00
Parish Church of St Peter and Paul
The multi-tiered 90-metre spire of this red-brick neo-Gothic beast provides the city with its defining visual trade-mark. The church was built in the 1890s on the initiative of energetic Đakovo-based Bishop Josip Juraj Strossmayer, who reckoned that a 3000-capacity parish church was just what a growing town like Osijek needed.
The church is entered via a small door to the right of the main portal, overlooked by a ferocious-looking trio of gargoyles. The interior is a treasure trove of neo-gothic ornamentation, with a succession of pinnacled altars overlooked by exhuberant stained glass windows. The interior was finished off in 1938-42 when leading Croatian painter Mirko Rački covered the walls and ceilings with brightly coloured frescoes illustrating episodes from the Old and New Testaments - most of which will be easily identifiable to anyone who paid attention during Bible class. Holly masses are held daily at 07:00 and 18:30 and on Sun at 06:30, 07:30, 08:30, 10:00, 11:30 and 18:30. [...]


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Trg Pape Ivana Pavla II
tel. (+385-31) 31 00 20
fax. (+385-31) 31 00 21
The Kompa
Looking not much more than a wooden platform with a hut-like cabin on top, Osijek’s much-loved “Kompa” (“ferry’) transports foot passengers from Gornji Grad to the opposite bank of the Drava. It’s a remarkably simple contraption, using the force of the river current as the main means of propulsion – the ferry is held by as chain to prevent it from simply floating off downriver. Popular with families making their way to Osijek zoo (see p.00), the Kompa, shuttles back and forth whenever the komparoš (captain) espies enough passengers to make the trip worthwhile.
May – Sept: 09:00 – 20:00. April & Oct: 09:00 – 18:00. 5kn.
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The broad tree-lined boulevard that streaks eastwards from Gornji Grad towards Tvrđa is famed throughout Europe for harbouring one of the best-preserved ensembles of Art Nouveau houses in this corner of the continent. Ranked side by side on the north side of the avenue (numbers 12 to 22), they were [...]


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The Riva Drava is an essential part of Osijek’s character and its difficult to see how the locals would survive without strolling along its southern bank at least a couple of times a week. Main focus of activity is the Zimska Luka (“Winter Harbour”), a row of boat moorings below the Hotel Osijek wh [...]


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Tvrđa
An eighteenth- -century complex of cobbled streets, grandiose buildings and open squares, Tvrđa (“Citadel”) is the best-preserved ensemble of Baroque buildings anywhere in Croatia. It began life in 1687, when Habsburg armies kicked Ottoman forces out of Osijek and decided to turn the town into the [...]


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