Thursday, November 4, 2010

Maribor, my hometown

and Slovenia's second biggest town

Images of Maribor

Maribor (pronounced as Mah-ree-bore) is the second biggest town in Slovenia and also the town where I was born. Although I don't exactly live in town now, but few kilometers away, Maribor is still my place of birth and the town, where I went to primary and secondary school, as well as lived over half of my life. And everywhere I go, Maribor is the only place where I really feel like home. I know every corner, every street and all the beautiful and the ugly parts. But of course like any guide and proud citizen, I will only show you the beautiful sides of my hometown. I'm sure you would do that, too.

✰ Introduction of Maribor

Maribor (a town municipality) has around 120.000 inhabitants and is the economic and cultural capital of northeastern Slovenia, with the second biggest university in the country. The town is divided in two parts by the river Drava, the old historic part on the left side, the newer and bigger part on the right side. The town grew next to Slovenske Gorice (literally "Slovenian Hills"), a hilly region famous for wine yards, which surround the northern part of Maribor, which makes the town one of the centers of the Slovenian wine industry. The southern part of the town lays under Pohorje, a famous 70km long mountain range in northeastern Slovenia, that makes Maribor one of the centers of the winter tourism in Slovenia. Every year, there's a women's ski competition in Maribor called Zlata Lisica (literally "Golden Fox"), which attracts a lot of ski fans from all over the world. But Maribor is also in the spotlight in summer. Every June there is a big international summer festival named Festival Lent, which attracts people from all over the world. There are theaters, concerts, performances, parties and a lot of food all along the river bank of Drava at the oldest part of Maribor, that's called Lent. In the same area is also one of the most famous tourist attractions in Maribor and one of natural wonders of the world: Stara Trta or the Old Vine, which is with over 400 years the oldest vine in the world (it made it even in the Guinness Book of Records). If you ask me personally, the most interesting thing about Maribor is its rich history, a well preserved medieval center and of course the friendly people.

There used to be a big castle above the town, that gave Maribor it's name.

✰ The history of Maribor

The Slavs (Slovenian ancestors) settled in this part of Europe in the 6th century and lived in the rural parts all around in the area, that now lays in the vicinity of Maribor. Franks (an old West German tribe) came here in the 8th century with their royals and started to settle and rule over the Old Slovenians. Maribor was first mentioned in the 12th century as in old German Marchburch (1164). The name was related to the castle one one of the hills above the town and is put together with march (old German for "border region") and burch (old German for "castle"). The castle was neglected in the 18th century and gradually disappeared. The name, which officially remained German until the 20th century, later changed to Marburg an der Drau (Drau is German for river Drava). The Slovenian name Maribor was invented in the 19th century by a Slovenian poet.


Maribor's old center from a bird's eye view:

[Show bigger map]

✰ Our Maribor tour

After my girlfriend and I finished touring western Slovenia, we returned back to my home, which is very close to Maribor. We took a day off, stayed home and rested. A day later we decided to have a sightseeing tour around Maribor. Let me show you what we saw that day:

We went to Europark, Maribor's biggest shopping mall, located on the right side of the river Drava. The old medieval part is on the left side, but not so far from here. You just cross a bridge and in 5 min you're already in Maribor's center. I always leave my car in Europark, because it's for free and there's always enough parking space.

Walking along Drava, we saw Kolosej (pronounced "Co-lo-say") on the other side. This modernist black box is Maribor's first multiplex (cinemas), completed in 2004. It was very popular in the beginning, but it's pretty much empty these days, because there's another more popular multiplex on the other side of Maribor.

The railway bridge or železniški most (pronounced "she-lez-neesh-key most"). It was completed in 1866 and replaced a wooden bridge, that was already built in 1846. It was bombed in 1945 and rebuilt again after the war.

The eastern Lent, the oldest part of Maribor. Most of these buildings destroyed during World War II and the area was neglected until the 1980s, where the town started to rebuild and revitalize the whole area.

The Water tower or Vodni stolp is one of the most famous historic buildings in Maribor. Constructed in 1555, it was meant to secure the southeast part of the medieval Maribor. It was connected to the wall that surrounded the town (source).

The Old bridge or Stari most was completed in 1912 and was one of the most beautiful bridges in former Austrian monarchy. Prior to the steel construction, there used to be a wooden bridge, that connected the central part with the other side, called Tabor. The bridge was partly destroyed during WWII, rebuilt after the war and renovated in 1990 and 1998. The bridge is 166m long.

Revolution square or Trg revolucije.

This is Lent, the oldest part of Maribor. The name comes from the old German word "lander", which meant "a harbor for the traditional rafts", that were very common in the area in the middle ages.

Lent is the most picturesque part of Maribor.

Church of St. Aloysius or Cerkev Svetega Alojzija has no bell tower, which makes it pretty special. It's like an "incognito church" and one of Maribor's famous buildings (18th century).

The river Drava as seen from the Old Bridge. There are many hydroelectric power plants on Drava, which transformed the once rushing river into a very slowly flowing waterway.

The Judgement tower or Sodni stolp was a former fortified tower at the end of the protective wall around Maribor, that guarded the southwestern part of town. The original one from the 13th century was enhanced in 1540. The current form is from 1830. There was a prison inside the tower as well as a court, where even women, who were seen as witches, were persecuted in the so called witchcraft trials. The last such trial in Maribor was in 1711.

The Main Square or Glavni trg is the oldest and biggest square in Maribor. On the left is the famous Plague Monument or Kužno znamenje, in the center is Maribor's Town hall (Mestna hiša) or commonly Rotovž.

Part of the Main square looking to the west.

In the next part I will show you the famous old vine and much much more. Stay tuned.

Bohinj :Before [Slovenia Tour 2010] Next: Maribor Old Vine>>

[My post about LENT][All photos by MKL, 2010, except the historic drawings]

23 KAFKAESQUE COMMENTS:

fufu said...

definitely will try to visit your hometown when i go to slovenia

November 4, 2010 7:31 PM  

Bananazஇ said...

A lovely town in between River Drava..You are asking the bird to 'Go Away' or the bird is asking the bridge to go away? hahaha. Nice informative post with clear pixz. tQ

November 4, 2010 9:25 PM  

Kym said...

your town looks so peaceful and quiet... so full of history and architecture, i would love to visit one day! (especially that shopping mall, haha) ;P

November 5, 2010 2:16 AM  

adamantixx said...

i can see why you're so proud of your home town, it looks very beautiful and packed full of intriguing history.

November 5, 2010 2:28 AM  

Gnetch said...

I feel so frustrated that I only get to see beautiful places like this in pictures.

November 5, 2010 2:56 AM  

MKL said...

@fufu: Thanks. It's good to stop by in Maribor and one afternoon will be enough to explore the old center :)

@Bananaz: Bird's asking me to go away, haha. Cuz I took his pic :P

@LilyRiani: Indeed.

@Kym: Oh.. Shopping girl!

@AdamAntixx: Yes, it's really rich with history :)

@Gnetch: Oh, sorry, Gnetchy.. -_-

November 5, 2010 4:14 AM  

Karen said...

Maribor (Love how you included how to pronounce it!) is such a beautiful quiet looking place. Looks like it came out of a fairy tale book :) It must be nice to have some modern parts to the city like a cinema (I like empty cinemas!!!) and large shopping complex, yet on the other side of the river it's kept many of it's historical buildings and structures. How nice! And not to mention your stretch of mountain range....so scenic!
And that's a huge black bird in the picture of the railway bridge btw....

November 5, 2010 6:51 AM  

Jasna said...

Hey,
I discovered your blog by chance and I really like it. I can't wait to read all your posts. :)
I love Maribor too. I used to study there and those were the best days of my life so far.

Lep pozdrav iz Primorske!

Jasna

November 5, 2010 6:53 AM  

MKL said...

@Karen: Thank you. And I think it's a pigeon, no idea how he flew straight into my lens :P

@Jasna: Pozdravljena :) Moj blog je odprta knjiga mojih misli, doživetij in potovanj. Bi bil vesel, če bi me več Slovencev bralo :) In vesel sem vsakega komentarja, tudi na starejših postih :)

And thanks for loving Maribor. I used to be in Koper a lot few years ago and I love Primorska :)

November 5, 2010 7:04 AM  

Traveling Hawk said...

It's time for us to go to Maribor, MKL! Thank you for letting us know how nice it is!

November 5, 2010 7:09 AM  

MKL said...

@Traveling Hawk: Yes, it's time :)) Always welcome here :)

November 5, 2010 7:15 AM  

Karen said...

Nino, what I noticed is that Maribor looks so clean!! The streets.. water.. buildings all peaceful and well-maintained if that makes sense. I guess that is partially due to the town being reconstructed after WWII and that you're only showing us the beautiful sides? :P Thank you for the beautiful photos as always.

p.s. I usually only leave my nails a little long but after a while I can't stand it when they get in the way :\

November 5, 2010 7:18 AM  

MKL said...

@Karen USA: Well, I do show the pretty parts of course, but our cities are mostly clean, I didn't hide trash on the streets, cuz it's gotten a lot better in the recent 20 years. What I didn't show are some run down buildings with the facade falling off and there's also a lot of graffiti on some historic buildings, that annoys me. Glad you liked my photos :)

November 5, 2010 7:22 AM  

Carina the Blogarina said...

Beautiful!! I wouldn't mind living in a place like that! I see there is 120.000 people live there, that's not a lot... do you get in the big city feeling or not? How many people in the capital?

November 5, 2010 8:35 AM  

MKL said...

@Carina: No, you don't have a big city feeling in Maribor, it's a small town. In Slovenia only Ljubljana feels like a city, it has around 280.000 inhabitants, but in the whole area around the capital most Slovenians live (around half a million).

November 5, 2010 4:10 PM  

Rizalenio said...

It's my first time to hear about Maribor. Thanks for introducing that wonderful place to us.

November 5, 2010 5:55 PM  

MKL said...

@Rizalenio: You're welcome. Which part of Maribor did you like most?

November 5, 2010 6:15 PM  

Jasna said...

Sem prepričana da bi veliko Slovencev z veseljem bralo tvoj blog, če bi le vedeli za njega, še posebej pa moji kolegi geografi, bi tako kot jaz uživali v branju zanimivosti iz tvojih popotovanj po svetu.
Te lahk priporočim, če želiš. ;)
Občudujem tvoj pogum, da si se sam odpravil v svet in si želim, da bi ga premogla tudi sama.
Dokler pa se to ne zgodi se bom zadovoljila z branjem o tvojih dogodivščinah.

lp

PS.Sicer prihajam iz S Primorske ampak Koper je tudi kul. :)

November 8, 2010 5:59 AM  

MKL said...

@Jasna: Me veseli, da ti je moj blog všeč. Res nisem preveč znan v Sloveniji, ker se ne gibam preveč v naši blogosferi in ker sem se odločil, da pišem v Angleščini, ker sem pač po naravi bolj internacionalen :) Pa seveda hočem Slovenijo približat ljudem iz celega sveta iz svoje perspektive :) Ti kar linkaj in priporočaj moj blog, samo vedi, da včasih pišem tudi kakšne bedarije, hehe. Kakor kdaj :)) Se pa kmalu odpravljam nazaj na Tajvan, pa upam, da drugo leto vidim še Japonsko, tako, da zna biti precej pestro. Si brala moj post o Gorici in Novi Gorici? Škoda, da me nisi našla prej, bi te prišel pozdravit :) Še v Kanalu ob Soči sem bil, hehe...

Lepo se imej in hvala za prijazne besede :)

November 8, 2010 6:11 AM  

Jasna said...

Hej, ja sem brala tvoj post o Novi in Stari Gorici. Sem vesela, da sta s punco videla Staro Gorico zdaj, ko je že precej obnovljena (Travnik, Raštel, Star plac...). Prej so bli ti deli kar nekaj let gradbišče. Žal pa mesto takorekoč izumira, saj ni perspektive za mlade ljudi, ki se zato izseljujejo.
Kar se tiče Nove Gorice se pa strinjam, da ni nič kaj privlačna. Sta bla v grobnici Bourbonov? Mogoče je to še edina zanimiva reč tu pri nas poleg Soče in Solkanskega mostu.
Sem pa bla presenečena ko sem prebrala, da naj bi bli Novogoričani prijazni in gostoljubni. Sej ne pravim da niso/smo, samo prvič slišim to. Enako velja glede punc.

Boljše, da se počasi nesem dol, da ti ne napišem romana(ja, znam bit rahlo preveč gobčna, ko se govori o meni zanimivih temah). Drugače pa komaj čakam na nove poste o Tajvanu in Japonski. :)

Pozdrav iz deževne Goriške!

November 9, 2010 1:52 AM  

MKL said...

@Jasna: Haha.. ti kar komentiraj, pa nima veze pod kateri post, sem zmeraj vesel (gobčnih) komentarjev.

Res je bila stara Gorica strašljivo prazna, sicer lepa, a kot muzej na prostem. Škoda.

Nisva bila pri grobnici Bourbonov, Nova Gorica je bila bolj postijanka za oddih, ker sem vozil cel dan, od Kopre do Trsta in gor do Gorice. Solkanski most je super, lahko bi bolj urejen. Pa Kanal ob Soči je tudi lep, tako, da je blo vseeno super na Severni Primorski.

Najlepša hvala za lepe besede.

November 9, 2010 1:58 AM  


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