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TRAU (Serbo-Croatian Trogir; See also: Austria
.
Pop
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(1900) of See also: town and commune, 17,064
.
Trail is situated 16 m
.
W. of Spalato by road, on an islet in the Trail channel, and is connected with the mainland and the adjoining See also: island of Bua by two See also: bridges
.
The city walls are intact on the See also: north, where a 15th-century fort, the See also: Castel Carnerlengo, overlooks the See also: sea
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Above the See also: main gateway the See also: lion of St Mark is carved, and the general aspect of Trail is Venetian
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Its streets, which are too narrow for wheeled See also: traffic, contain many interesting churches and See also: medieval houses. including the birthplace of the historian Giovanni Lucio (See also: Lucius of Trail), author of De regno Dalmatiae et Croatiae (See also: Amsterdam, 1666)
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The loggia, built by the Venetians, is a See also: fine specimen of a 16th-century See also: court of See also: justice; and the See also: cathedral is a See also: basilica of rare beauty, founded in 1200 and completed about 1450
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It was thus mainly built during the See also: period of Hungarian supremacy; and, in consequence, its architecture shows clear signs of See also: German influence
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Among the treasures preserved in the sacristy are several interesting examples of See also: ancient jewellers' See also: work
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Trail has some See also: trade in See also: wine and fruit
.
It is a steamship station, with an indifferent harbour . Tragurium was probably colonized about 38o B.C. by Syracusan Greeks from Lissa, and its name is sometimes derived from Troghilon a place near Syracuse .See also: Constantine Porphyrogenitus writing in the loth century, regards it as a corruptionof &yyvpiov, See also: water melon, from a fancied similarity in shape
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He states that Trail was one of the few Dalmatian cities which preserved its See also: Roman character
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In 998 it submitted to Venice; but in 1105 it acknowledged the supremacy of Hungary, while retaining its municipal freedom, and receiving, in 1108, a charter which is quoted by Lucio
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After being plundered by the See also: Saracens in 1123, it was ruled for brief periods by See also: Byzantium, Hungary and Venice
.
In 1242 the Tatars pursued See also: King
See also: Bela IV. of Hungary to Trail, but were unable to See also: storm the island city
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After 1420, when the See also: sovereignty of Venice was finally established, Trail played no conspicuous See also: part in Dalmatian See also: history
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See T
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G
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See also: Jackson, Dalmatia, the Quarnero, and See also: Istria (See also: Oxford, 1887); E
.
A
.
Freeman, Sketches from the Subject and Neighbour Lands of Venice ( See also: London, 1881); and G
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Lucio, Memorie istoriche di Tragurio, ora detto Trail (Venice, 1673)
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