+385 1 555 2222



Base manager: Mr. Davor Korda

Phone / Fax: +385 20 451 465
Calling from Croatia:
020 451 465
Mobile:
+385 98 223 375
Calling from Croatia:
098 223 375

Secretary:
Mrs. Dijana Vrlic

Mobile: +385 98 291 013
Calling from Croatia: 098 291 013
Email:
 dubrovnik@euromarine.hr

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Euromarine charter fleet is located on pier E.


In the marina premises there is an exchange office, a coffee bar, an aperitif bar, a restaurant, a pub, a tennis court, a swimming pool, a toilet block (toilets and showers), a laundry, a small shopping centre, a nautical equipment shop, a service station and a car park for personal vehicles. All moorings are equipped with water and electricity ports. Fuel station is inside the marina premises, some 500 meters away.


ACI
marina Komolac

Address: 20 000 Dubrovnik, Croatia

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Dubrovnik

 

Dubrovnik (Italian: Ragusa), is a Croatian city on the Adriatic Sea coast in the extreme south of Dalmatia, positioned at the terminal end of the Isthmus of Dubrovnik. It is one of the most prominent tourist destinations on the Adriatic, a seaport and the center of Dubrovnik-Neretva county. Its population was 43,770 in 2001 down from 49,728 in 1991. In 1979, the city of Dubrovnik joined the UNESCO list of World Heritage Sites.
 
The prosperity of the city of Dubrovnik has always been based on maritime trade. In the Middle Ages, as the Republic of Ragusa, also known as the fifth Maritime Republic (together with Amalfi, Pisa, Genoa and Venice), it became the only eastern Adriatic city-state to rival Venice. Supported by its wealth and skilled diplomacy, the city achieved a remarkable level of development, particularly during the 15th and 16th centuries. Although demilitarized in 1970s with a purpose to prevent it from war devastation forever, in 1991 after the breakup of Yugoslavia it was besieged by Serb-Montenegrin forces for 7 months and heavily damaged by bombing.
 

 

Historical lore indicates that Ragusa (Dubrovnik) was founded in the 7th century on a rocky island named Laus, which provided shelter for Dalmatian refugees from the nearby city of Epidaurus. The Romance-Dalmatian founders were escaping from the Slavic invasions.
 
Another theory appeared recently, based on new archaeological excavations. New findings (a Byzantine basilica from the 8th century and parts of the city walls) contradicts the traditional theory. The size of the old basilica clearly indicates that there was quite a large settlement at that time. There is also increasing support in the scientific community for the theory that major construction of Ragusa took place during B.C. years. This "Greek theory" has been boosted by recent findings of numerous Greek artifacts during excavations in the Port of Dubrovnik. Also, drilling below the main city road has revealed natural sand, which contradicts the theory of Laus (Lausa) island.
 
Between the 14th century and 1808 Ragusa ruled itself as a free state. The Republic had its peak in the 15th and 16th centuries, when its thalassocracy rivalled that of the Republic of Venice and other Italian maritime republics.
 
Italian and Venetian would become important languages of culture and trade in the Republic of Ragusa. The Italian language replaced Latin as official language of the Republic of Ragusa from 1472 until the end of the republic itself. At the same time, due to a peaceful cohabitation with the Slavic element and the influence of the Italian culture on this, during the Renaissance Ragusa became a cradle of the Croatian literature.
 
The economic wealth of the Republic was partially the result of the land it developed, but especially of the seafaring trade it did. With the help of skilled diplomacy, Ragusa merchants travelled lands freely, and on the sea the city had a huge fleet of merchant ships (argosy) that travelled all over the world. From these travels they founded some settlements, from India to America, and brought parts of their culture and vegetation home with them. One of the keys to success was not conquering, but trading and sailing under a white flag with the word freedom (Latin: Libertas) prominently featured on it. That flag was adopted when slave trading was abolished in 1418.


General remarks:
ACI marina Dubrovnik is located near Komolac, about 2 km from the city port Gruz and only 6 km from the old city centre.
Dubrovnik airport is 27 km from the marina, and it is well-connected with other Croatian regions and the rest of the world.

Distances:
Trieste - 681 km
Milan - 1108 km
Roma - 1374 km
Graz - 775 km
Vienna - 960 km
Budapest - 947 km
Munich - 1136 km

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