Did you know
- That the Dalmatian
dog from the film "101 Dalmatians" was named after Dalmatia, in which most
of the Croatian Adriatic is located.
- That the first public
theatre in Europe was opened in 1612 on the island of Hvar, in the town
which "Conde Nast Traveler Magazine" entered at the fifth place on its
Top Ten list of best island towns in the world.
- That by the end of
the third century AD, the Roman emperor Diocletian decided for construction
of his palace the place where the city of Split is located today. The Palace
of Diocletian is one of the best known integral architectural and cultural
constructions in the world, which, due to its preservation and beauty,
UNESCO entered in its registry of World Cultural Heritage in 1979.
- That in the small
town of Trogir, 30 km away from Split, founded in 3rd century BC, there
is one of the best preserved Romanesque-Gothic complexes in the world.
Trogir is an excellent example of a medieval town built on and conforming
with the layout of a Hellenistic and Roman city and it is therefore also
on the World Cultural Heritage list of UNESCO.
- That, before Newton's
discovery, the town of Dubrovnik, which has been on the World Cultural
Heritage list of UNESCO since 1979, owned a telescope which was constructed
by Marin Getaldic (1568-1626), the greatest Croatian scientist of that
time.
- That the necktie
has its origin in Croatia (in Croatian: Kravata, English: Cravat, French:
Cravate, German: Krawatte, Italian: Cravatta, Spanish: Corvatta) and that
the word "cravat" came from the word "Croat" (Hrvat in Croatian); so called
because worn by Croats in the French army during the Thirty Years' War.
In their own way, with the cravat, the Croats have started conquering the
world from the coasts of the Adriatic Sea from 17th century. The consequences
of that conquering are today felt around the necks by 600 million businessmen
worldwide.
- That Marco Polo (1254-1324),
an adventurer, merchant and one of the best known world travelers, whose
book "The Travels of Marco Polo" is the first tourist book in the world,
comes from Korcula on Korcula island in Croatia.
- That in 1458 Benko
Kotruljevic from Dubrovnik wrote one of the first books on world economic
literature, "On Trading and the Perfect Merchant", and that he was the
first to establish the basis of modern double-entry book-keeping.
- That Shakespeare's
Twelfth Night was staged in Dalmatia.
- That the writer Vladimir
Nabokov always spent his summers in Opatija as a boy.
- That Agatha Christie
spent her second honeymoon in Dubrovnik and Split.
- That James Joyce
was a teacher of English in Pula from 1904 and 1905, in the town that has
existed for three millennia with one of the best preserved Roman amphitheatres
worldwide.
- That the Duke of
Windsor and Wallis Simpson spent their vacations in Dalmatia.
- That Luka's pit ("Lukina
jama"), the tenth by depth in the world (1392 m), is located in Croatia
on Velebit Mountain.
- That the founder
of San Marino, a small independent republic in the northeast of Italy,
was the sculptor Marin from the village Lopar from the island of Rab.
- That the ball-point
pen was invented by a Croat, Eduard (Slavoljub) Penkala (1871-1922), that
it bears his name and is in daily use.
- That the names of
two Croats are on the map of the Moon - names of scientists J. R. Boskovic
and A. Mohorovicic.
- That two winners
of the Nobel Prize in chemistry came from Croatia - Lavoslav Ruzicka (1939)
and Vladimir Prelog (1975).
- That Nikola Tesla
(1856-1943), the father of alternative current electricity and technology
of wireless communications, after which the unit for magnetic induction
is named, was born in Croatia, and that he refused to receive the Nobel
prize he had to share with T. A. Edison.
- That Anthony Maglica,
the owner of the well-known company Mag-Lite, comes from Zlarin island
from Dalmatia. Mag-Lite flashlights are among the ten most famous American
export products, used by astronauts and deep sea explorers, amongst others.

To establish yourself or your business in Croatia will require securing relationships with key partners such as government officials, bankers
and corporate professionals. You need experienced consultants to build a network of contacts
and help you to become established in your new environment.
The specialised services of Henley & Partners are a resource and complement to major law and consulting firms. We can help other firms and their clients with the unique and specific details required by the business relocation process and related tax planning.