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Split Summer Festival (Splitsko ljeto) established in 1954, the second oldest festival of performing arts in the country (after the Dubrovnik Summer Festival).The festival is usually held over a 30-day period between mid-July and mid-August and includes a great number of various events like open-air jazz and classical concerts, art exhibitions, theatre plays staged in public squares and modern ...
Croatian National Theatre in Split. Originally opened in 1893, the Croatian National Theatre in Split is owned and operated by the City of Split and is one of the oldest surviving theatres in Dalmatia. When first opened, the auditorium that could accommodate 1,000 with three tiers of boxes, a gallery and parterre circle.
The theatre was first established as the Croatian National Theatre in 1860, and in 1861 it gained government support, putting it on par with many other European national theatres. In 1870 an opera company was added to the theatre, and in 1895 it moved to the new purpose-built building on Republic of Croatia Square in Zagreb's Lower Town , where ...
National Theatre Mostar; Croatian National Theatre in Mostar [2] [3] [4] Brazil: Teatro Nacional Cláudio Santoro in Brasília; Theatro Municipal do Rio de Janeiro; Bulgaria: Ivan Vazov National Theatre; Canada: National Arts Centre of Canada in Ottawa; China: The National Centre for the Performing Arts in Beijing; Costa Rica: Teatro Nacional ...
Croatian National Theatre in Šibenik ("HNK Šibenik"), located in Šibenik; not to be confused with HNK Šibenik (the football club) Croatian National Theatre in Split ("HNK Split"), a theatre located in Split, Croatia. Originally opened in 1893, the theatre is owned and operated by the City of Split and is one of the oldest surviving theatres ...
The Croatian National Theatre Ivan pl. Zajc in Rijeka (Croatian: Hrvatsko narodno kazalište Ivana pl. Zajca Rijeka. Italian: Teatro Nazionale Croato Ivan de Zajc), commonly referred to as HNK Zajc , is a theatre, opera and ballet house located in Rijeka.
The local organization of Croatian Falcon [] (Croatian: Hrvatski sokol) was founded in 1893 in Split.Its first leader was Vinko (Vicko) Katalinić. The idea of building the “Croatian Home” emerged in 1896 and its was purpose gathering Split's Croatian-nationalist cultural, artistic, and sports societies. These include: National Reading Room,
Split: Croatian House: Ivo Tijardović Concert Hall 1908 250 Small Hall 50–70 Varaždin: Croatian National Theatre in Varaždin: Great Concert Hall 1873 Varaždin Chamber Orchestra Zagreb: Vatroslav Lisinski Concert Hall: Great Hall 1973 1,847 Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra, Croatian Radiotelevision Symphony Orchestra [24] Small Hall 1973 304