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Glas Istre (lit. ' Voice of Istria ' ) is a Croatian regional daily newspaper published in Pula which mainly covers stories of interest from the Istria region in the northwest of the country. Established in 1943 as a regional newsletter of the Yugoslav Partisans , [ 1 ] the paper continued to be published after World War II , and became a daily ...
Glas Istre (based in Pula; covers Istria region) glasistre.hr; Glas Slavonije (based in Osijek; covers Slavonia) glas-slavonije.hr; Dubrovački vjesnik (based in Dubrovnik, covers the city and south Dalmatia) dubrovacki.hr; Zadarski list (based in Zadar, covers Zadar County) zadarskilist.hr; Weekly. Narodni list (est. 1862, based in Zadar ...
Pages in category "Mass media in Pula" ... Glas Istre This page was last edited on 27 April 2020, at 09:05 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
He was born on 6 October 1955 in Pula, in a family originating from an unspecified village on the Ćićarija hill. [1]He graduated from Pula Technical School, and from 1978 till death he worked at Uljanik Electric Machines and Equipment Factory (TESU), where he eventually became a head of a department; he was a trade-union representative for the Trade Unions of Istria, Kvarner and Dalmatia ...
Igor Štoković (December 16, 1959 – April 9, 2015) was a Croatian economist, musician and politician.. Štoković was born in Pula, on December 16, 1959. [1] [2] He graduated from the Faculty of Economics at the University of Rijeka, and obtained his doctorate in 1990 at the same faculty.
The Pula Airport incident occurred on November 10, 1991 in Pula, Croatia, during the Croatian War of Independence, when four technicians were blown up in an attempt to the demine Pula Airport. The airport had been left heavily mined by the Serb forces, who had just left the airport.
Borders and roads in Istria. The geographical features of Istria include the Učka/Monte Maggiore mountain range, which is the highest portion of the Ćićarija/Cicceria mountain range; the rivers Dragonja/Dragogna, Mirna/Quieto, Pazinčica, and Raša; and the Lim/Canale di Leme bay and valley.
Pula (Croatian: ⓘ), also known as Pola [4] (Italian:; Venetian: Pola; Istriot: Puola; Slovene: Pulj; Hungarian: Póla), is the largest city in Istria County, Croatia, and the seventh-largest city in the country, situated at the southern tip of the Istrian peninsula in western Croatia, with a population of 52,220 in 2021. [3]