


Base manager: Mr. Dragan Igic
Phone / Fax: +385 23 384 855
Calling from Croatia: 023 384 855
Mobile: +385 98 299 872
Calling from Croatia: 098 299 872
Email: biograd@euromarine.hr
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Euromarine charter fleet is located on pier B.
In the marina premises there is a restaurant, a toilet block (toilets and showers), a service station and a car park for personal vehicles.
All moorings are equipped with water and electricity ports. Fuel station is near the marina, as well as the Port Authority. All the necessary cruising equipment can be purchased in the nearby shops and shopping centres.
Marina Kornati
Address: 23 210 Biograd na moru, Croatia
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Biograd na Moru
((Italian: Zaravecchia, Venetian: Xara Vecia, Hungarian: Tengerfehérvár) is a town and municipality in northern Dalmatia, Croatia and is noted as the former capital of the medieval Croatian Kingdom. Its population is 6,059 (2005). Biograd is administratively part of Zadar County. It is located on the Adriatic Sea coast, overlooking the island of Pašman, on the road from Zadar and Sukošan towards Vodice and Šibenik.
The town of Biograd is a noted tourist resort with a long tradition. Its first tourists started arriving in the 1920s from Czechoslovakia and its first hotel was built in 1935.
The town's native Slavic name fully translates as "the white town on the sea". The name Biograd is a compound literally meaning "white city", and etymologically corresponding to several other toponyms spread throughout the Slavdom: Beograd, Belgorod, Białogard etc. The name was first mentioned in the 10th century as a town founded by Croatian kings.
It became the capital of Croatian kings as well as bishops, and was the town where Coloman of Hungary was crowned in 1102, marking Croatia's joining the Kingdom of Hungary.
In 1202, when the Crusaders of the Fourth Crusade occupied the city of Jadra (Zadar), many of its citizens took refuge in Biograd, then noted as Jadra Nova ("New Zadar"). Two years later, most of them left back to Zadar, after which the city was also referred to as Zara vecchia ("Old Zadar").
During the 13th and 14th century the city was run by the dukes of Cetina, the Knights Templar of Vrana and the dukes of Bribir the Šubićes. It was acquired by the Venetian Republic in 1409 and would remain its property until its downfall in 1797.
During the Venetian-Turkish wars, the town was gravely damaged, and on two occasions, in 1521 and in 1646, it was destroyed and burned down. In the 16th and 17th century, the Croatian militia formed in Biograd and had much involvement in the wars against the Turks.
General remarks:
Biograd has regular bus and rail connections with all Croatian cities.
Zemunik airport in Zadar is located 40 km from the marina.
Distances:
Trieste - 420 km
Milan - 820 km
Roma - 340 km (via Ancona)
Graz - 730 km
Vienna - 610 km
Budapest - 650 km
Munich - 930 km