Montenegro along the coast

Persevere
Pat and Bruce
Sun 20 Jun 2010 20:35

Montenegro like all the former Yugoslavia countries has a very complex history based on being invaded and occupied for many centuries.  Illyrians (Indo-European tribes), Greeks and Romans came.  The Romans occupied most of the Dalmatia coast in order to deal with the Illyrian pirates.  When the Roman Empire split into the Empires of Rome and Byzantium (Constantinople – Istanbul) this lead to the split of the Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches right in the future Montenegro area.

 

With the disintegration of the Roman Empire in the fifth century and the Age of Migration series of invasions from Central Europe and Asia occurred.  The Goths (Germans), Huns (Attila who died in 453), Avars (Turkish tribe), and Slavs (7th century) settled here.  The Slavs were comprised of three separate groups; The Slovenes who settled in the north, Croats in the west and Serbs in the south.  Due to the mountainous country the groups grew apart and spoke different dialects.

 

Still under Byzantine rule they sent two Thessaloniki missionaries, Cyril and Methodius with the task to create an alphabet for the Slav language.  St. Clement, a disciple of Cyril, devised a simplified version known as Cyrillic.

 

A Slav state was formed under Jovan Vladimir and his successor, nephew Stefan Vojislav, was a great battle in 1042 that broke them away from Byzantine rule.  In the 12th century a dominant family emerged and the House of Nemanjic ruled for two centuries.  They also established and independent Serbian Orthodox church in 1219, however coastal towns such as Kotor and Bar were still Catholic.  Over time the Serbian empire declined, especially under Uros V (1355-71), Uros the Weak.

 

The Ottoman Empire was growing at the time and began to encroach into Bulgaria and Kosovo.  The beginnings of Montenegro (Crna Gora) was formed with a principality in Cetinje in 1482. 

 

During the 16th and 17th centuries the local clans gained strength as the mountainous country provided a degree of protection from the Ottoman rule.  Danilo Petrovic gain control and created a hereditary theocracy that united the Montenegro tribes against the Turkish rule.  In 1715 he paid a visit to Peter the Great in Russia and gained an alliance with Orthodox Russians against the Ottomans.  The connection with Russia continued into 1785 under Petar I Petrovic Njegos who was well educated, spoke Italian, French, German and Russian.

 

Much of the creation of the state of Montenegro came from Petar II Petrovic Njegos who ruled during 1830 to 1851.  Six foot eight inches tall, crack shot, Montenegros most famous poet, brought the first printing press to the country from Russia and created governmental bodies, schools and libraries.

 

Post WWI Yugoslavia was created which is a recent history I will not delve into except that Tito took control post WWI, split with Russia and Yugoslavia became a bit more liberal and tourism increased in Montenegro.  Following Tito’s death on 4 May 1980 national sentiment and ethnic tensions rose.  Milosevic came into power, fighting began but Montenegro was not heavily involved.  It did have a large influx of refugees from Kosovo when the NATO bombing began.

 

In September 2006 Montenegro became an independent country.  It uses the Euro a currency and is working toward entry into the EU.

 

Enough condensed history.  What did we see.  Our visit was generally confined to the coast areas but we did go inland for a couple of day trips.  It is interesting in those trips we got a flavor of the people and the country.  Most readers will not remember but Yugoslavia was devastated by a large earthquake in 1979.  With much assistance they rebuilt many of the old cities, in fact over-restored in some areas.  The old towns (Stari Grad)of Kotor and Budva are fully restored and have kept the city plan intact.

 

Many local and tour books state that the roads are full of potholes and poor.  I found this is not the case in comparison to crumbling roads in rural New England, potholes in NYC or the sliding away roads along the California coast after heavy winter rains.  I did not find of hit a pothole driving around.  There is a relatively high accident fatality rate but that seems more related to refusal to wear seat belts and pass cars with a bit of the Italian sense of urgency.  I did find it curious that nearly all motor bike and scooter riders wore helmets but the girlfriend hanging on was not.  I was told if they become more serious, then a helmet usually appears!

 

We found the Garmin type GPS to be essentially useless.  There are only a few roads and the chips do not have the data current.  Nearly all the time it thought we were driving across open fields and then just gave up and told us to drive to the town with no directions provided.  It calculated the distance to the town as the crow flies but ignored the rivers, mountains and valleys.  We were only 9 kilometers from Kotor according to Garmin but we were 30 kilometers by road.  Not an issue, there are enough road signs to get you everywhere.

 

Prices?  Haircut and wash 8 Euros.  Rental car 50 per day.  Meals ½ to 1/3 the cost of Italy or Switzerland.  VAT 17%.  Fuel 1.20 Euro per liter.  Taxis are higher but inline with the rest of Europe.  And yes there are still Yugo cars driving around.  But most of the cars are VWs, Skodas, Fiats, and Japanese city cars.

 

Weather? First days were 35 degrees C and no wind.  Then rain like Houston rain.  Made the boat shiny clean!  Gusts of wind, enough to part a mooring line, lucky I always want two line at the bow.

 

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Old Town (Stari Grad) Kotor taken from the defensive wall above.

 

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Old Town Budva taken from the Citadel.  Looking into the harbor with all the tourist shops and beaches in the background.  Not a quiet place at all.

 

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Another Budva beach shot.  Clear water but stoney beaches.

 

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Herceg Novi, town near Gulf of Kotor entrance.  Mostly vacation place with restaurants and hotels.

 

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Lake Skadar, largest lake in Balkans which is shared with Albania.  Location of picture is 42013’.8N 19006’.2E

 

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Mountains and roads near lake Skadar.  Looks like California road or even a Swiss road.  By the way it is only 1.5 cars wide.

 

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Orthodox church in Kotor

 

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Chapel on an island in Perast in Gulf of Kotor.  Annual event is to carry rocks out to the island by boat to reinact its creation.

 

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Town of Perast from the water.