Online Encyclopedia

CETTIGNE (Servian, Tsetinye; also wri...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 776 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CETTIGNE (Servian, Tsetinye; also written Cettinje, Tzetinje, and Tsettinye)  , the capital of
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Montenegro; in a narrow plain deeply sunk in the heart of the
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limestone mountains, at a height of 2093 ft. above the sea . Pop . (1900) about 3200 . The•surrounding country is
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bare and stony, with carefully cultivated patches of rich red
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soil among the crevices of the 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 waters of a small
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brook which becomes a torrent after rain or a thaw . Cettigne itself is little more than a walled
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village, consisting of a cluster of whitewashed cottages and some unadorned public buildings . These include a church; a fortified monastery"which was founded in 1478, but so often burned and rebuilt as to seem quite
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modern, and which is visited by pilgrims to the tomb of 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 court of
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appeal, and a school modelled on the gymnasia of Germany and Austria; the newer palaces of the prince and his heir;
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foreign legations; barracks; a seminary for priests and teachers, established by the
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tsar Alexander II . (1855-1881), with a very successful girls' school founded and endowed by the tsaritsa
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Marie; a library and
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reading-
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room; a theatre, a museum and a hospital . In an open space near the old palace stood the celebrated
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plane tree, beneath which Prince Nicholas gave audience to his subjects, and administered justice until the closing years of the 19th century . A zigzag
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highway, regarded as a triumph of
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engineering, winds through the mountain passes between Cettigne and the
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Austrian seaport of Cattaro; and other good roads give access to the richest parts of the interior . There is, however, little trade, though
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mineral waters are manufactured .

Cettigne owes its origin to

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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
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Turks, but has seldom been occupied by them for long .

End of Article: CETTIGNE (Servian, Tsetinye; also written Cettinje, Tzetinje, and Tsettinye)
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