|
CETTIGNE (Servian, Tsetinye; also written Cettinje, Tzetinje, and Tsettinye) , the capital ofSee also: Montenegro; in a narrow plain deeply sunk in the See also: heart of the See also: limestone mountains, at a height of 2093 ft. above the See also: sea
.
Pop
.
(1900) about 3200
.
The•surrounding country is See also: bare and stony, with carefully cultivated patches of See also: rich red See also: soil among the crevices of the See also: rock
.
In winter it is often so deeply covered with snow as to be well-nigh inaccessible, while in spring and autumn it is frequently flooded by the See also: waters of a small See also: brook which becomes a torrent after rain or a thaw
.
Cettigne itself is little more than a walled See also: village, consisting of a cluster of whitewashed cottages and some unadorned public buildings
.
These include a See also: church; a fortified monastery"which was founded in 1478, but so often burned and rebuilt as to seem quite
See also: modern, and which is visited by pilgrims to the See also: tomb of See also: Peter I
.
(1782-1830); residences for the archimandrite and the vladika or metropolitan of Cettigne; a palace built in 1863, which accommodates the ministries; the See also: court of See also: appeal, and a school modelled on the gymnasia of See also: Germany and See also: Austria; the newer palaces of the See also: prince and his heir; See also: foreign legations; barracks; a seminary for priests and teachers, established by the See also: tsar See also: Alexander II
.
(1855-1881), with a very successful girls' school founded and endowed by the tsaritsa
See also: Marie; a library and See also: reading-See also: room; a theatre, a museum and a hospital
.
In an open space near the old palace stood the celebrated See also: plane See also: tree, beneath which Prince See also: Nicholas gave See also: audience to his subjects, and administered See also: justice until the closing years of the 19th century
.
A zigzag See also: highway, regarded as a See also: triumph of See also: engineering, winds through the See also: mountain passes between Cettigne and the See also: Austrian seaport of See also: Cattaro; and other See also: good roads give See also: access to the richest parts of the interior
.
There is, however, little See also: trade, though See also: mineral waters are manufactured
.
Cettigne owes its origin to See also: Ivan the Black, who was forced, towards the end of the 15th century, to withdraw from Zhabliak, his former capital
.
It has often been taken and sacked by the See also: Turks, but has seldom been occupied by them for long
.
|
|
|
[back] CETTE |
[next] CETUS (" The Whale ") |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.