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St. Mark's Square, Zagreb

Coordinates:45°48′59″N15°58′26″E / 45.81639°N 15.97389°E /45.81639; 15.97389
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Public square in the historic center of Zagreb, Croatia

St. Mark's Square
Trg Svetog Marka
Public square
St. Mark's Square with Croatian Parliament, St. Mark's Church and Banski Dvori
LocationZagreb,Croatia
Map
Coordinates:45°48′59″N15°58′26″E / 45.81639°N 15.97389°E /45.81639; 15.97389

St. Mark's Square (Croatian:Trg svetog Marka, abbreviatedTrg sv. Marka, also known asMarkov trg) is a square located in the old part ofZagreb,Croatia, calledGradec or Gornji grad (English:Upper town).

In the center of square is locatedSt. Mark's Church. The square also sports important governmental buildings:Banski dvori (the seat of theGovernment of Croatia),Sabor Palace (the seat of theCroatian Parliament) andConstitutional Court of Croatia. On the corner of St. Mark's Square and the Street of Ćiril and Metod is theOld City Hall, where the Zagreb City Council held its sessions. The square is surrounded with museums including:Croatian History Museum,Croatian Museum of Naïve Art,Zagreb City Museum andMuseum of Broken Relationships.[1]

History

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The story ofMatija Gubec, the leader of the great uprising of the Croatian peasants, would also be extracted from the long history of Mark's Square. Matija Gubec led the peasant army in the battle against the nobles nearStubičke Toplice in1573. In that battle, the peasants were defeated, and their leader Matija Gubec was captured and executed on February 15. Before he was executed, he was allegedly publicly tortured in Markov Square, and it is believed that the face on the corner of the building on Mark's Square represents him.[2]

After theassassination of Stjepan Radić in 1928, the Square changed its name in honor ofStjepan Radić, which was then called "Trg. Stjepana Radića" ("Square of Stjepan Radić / Stjepan Radić Square") but eventually the historical name was returned in 1990.[3]

Croatian Parliament has been sitting on this location since the first session held in1737. The buildings have their present appearance from the beginning of the 20th century. Decisions onsecession fromAustria-Hungary in1918 and exit fromYugoslavia in1991 were made there.[4]

In modern times

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Aerial view of St. Mark's Square

2000s

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In 2006, the square underwent a renovation project, paved with granite blocks[5] In August 2005, the Government forbid any form of protests on St. Mark's Square, which caused controversies in Croatian civil society. This ban was partially lifted in 2012.

2020 shooting

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Main article:2020 St. Mark's Square shooting

On morning of 12 October 2020, a 22-year-old Danijel Bezuk fromKutina came on St. Mark's Square withassault rifle (AK-74) and started shooting at theCroatian Police who were protecting the entrance ofBanski Dvori, in his attempt to enter the Banski Dvori wherePrime Minister of Croatia has his office. He wounded a police officer, a 33-year-old Oskar Fiuri, who was guarding the main entrance, wounding him with four rounds, after which he continued shooting on Banski dvori. Another police officer who was guarding the Parliament on the opposite side of the square noticed what was happening, so he took out his personalweapon and fired at the attacker. Bezuk ran to the nearby street to take cover and reloaded his gun. He then returned and fired on the police again, but was again suppressed by the police fire, and fled the scene in response. After the aftermath, Bezuk ran to Jabukovac street where hetook his own life.[6]

In February 2021,Prime Minister Andrej Plenković stated that the motive of the attack was his partyCroatian Democratic Union's (HDZ) coalition with theIndependent Democratic Serb Party (SDSS). In the immediate aftermath of the shooting,President Zoran Milanović held a press conference in which he called the government to protect the central state institutions, saying that "they are not a tourist destination". Therefore, since October 2020, the St. Mark's Square remains closed for visitors, tourists and residents who live at nearby buildings.[7]

Until 2020 the square was also the site of the inaugurations ofCroatia's presidents.Franjo Tuđman took his oath as President of the Republic in 1992 and 1997,Stjepan Mesić in 2000 and 2005,Ivo Josipović in 2010, andKolinda Grabar-Kitarović in 2015. However, in 2020Zoran Milanović decided to take his oath in thePresidential Palace instead.

2024 self-immolation incident

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On Tuesday around 9:40 a.m. on 12 June 2024, on the south side of Zagreb's Mark's Square, a 57-year-old doused himself in gasoline andlit himself on fire. The male person who set himself on fire on was treated at the Traumatology Clinic of theKBC Sisters of Mercy in the intensive care unit where he later died of his injuries after 9 p.m., according to the press release. Although the police did not announce his identity, it was found out that he was a 57-year-old man fromVirje, who lived inKoprivnica, a pensioner, who previously worked atCroatian Railways Cargo. The motive is still unknown, and the St. Mark's square is still closed for public.[8]

St. Mark's Square, Zagreb –Left-to-right:Banski dvori,St. Mark's Church andSabor Palace

References

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  1. ^"Gornjogradski trg".LiceGradaHR. Retrieved12 May 2023.
  2. ^"Markov trg".LiceGradaHR. Retrieved15 May 2023.
  3. ^"Znamenitosti".CroVista. Retrieved12 May 2023.
  4. ^"Trg svetog Marka, Zagreb".Nikoo.eu. Retrieved12 May 2023.
  5. ^"Gradonačelnik Bandić otvorio obnovljeni Trg svetog Marka" [Mayor Bandić opened the renovated St. Mark’s Square].jutarnji.hr (in Croatian). 16 September 2006. Retrieved15 February 2017.
  6. ^"Terrorist Attack on St. Mark's square".Washington Post. Retrieved13 October 2020.
  7. ^"Plenkoviću i Božinoviću poslan apel da otvore Markov trg za građane i turiste" [An appeal sent to Plenković and Božinović to reopen St. Mark's Square to citizens and tourists].N1 (in Croatian). Retrieved15 June 2021.
  8. ^"Umro čovjek koji se zapalio na Markovu trgu, na Odjelu nije bilo dežurnog kirurga?" [Man who set himself on fire at St. Mark's Square has died — was there no on-call surgeon in the department?].JutarnjiList (in Croatian). Retrieved12 June 2024.

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