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The Split Airport in Kaštela, located about 20 km outside of Split, is the second largest in Croatia in terms of passenger numbers (3.62 million in 2024). [81] It has services to national and some European destinations year-round and sees lots of additional seasonal connections in the summer.
The administrative center is Split. The population of the county is 455,242 (2011). The land area is 4.540 km 2, [4] the total area is 14.106,40 km 2. [5] Split-Dalmatia County is Croatia's most rapidly urbanising and developing region, as economic opportunities and living standards are among the highest alongside capital Zagreb and Istria County.
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The largest mountain massive in Croatia, exhibiting a wide range of karst landforms. [26] Diocletian's Palace and the Historical Nucleus of Split (extension) Split-Dalmatia County: 2005 i, ii, iii, iv, v (cultural) Extension to the existing World Heritage Site, to include additional sites, including the Diocletian Aqueduct. [27] Lubenice
Diocletian's Palace (Croatian: Dioklecijanova palača, pronounced [diɔklɛt͡sijǎːnɔʋa pǎlat͡ʃa], Latin: Palatium Diocletiani) was built at the end of the third century AD as a residence for the Roman emperor Diocletian, and today forms about half of the old town of Split, Croatia. While it is referred to as a "palace" because of its ...
Kaštela (pronounced [kǎʃte̞la]) is a town and a suburb of Split, in Split-Dalmatia County, Croatia.The town is an agglomeration of seven individual settlements which are administered as a single municipality with populations individually ranging from 3,000 to 7,000 residents.
Panoramic view of Split as seen from Marjan hill. The Split Oceanographic Institute, situated on Marjan. Church of St. Nicholas on Marjan hill Cross on Marjan hill. Marjan (Croatian pronunciation:) is a hill on the peninsula of the city of Split, the second largest city of Croatia.
The following is a complete list of all officially designated 128 cities/towns in Croatia, sorted by population according to the 2021 population census. At the time of the 2001 census, there had been 123 cities/towns in the country and four former municipalities were administratively upgraded to towns prior to the 2011 census: Vodnjan (in 2003 ...