Podgora () is a town in the Split-Dalmatia County of Croatia. It is located on the Adriatic coastline of Dalmatia, 65 km south of Split and 135 km north of Dubrovnik. Podgora has a largely tourism-based economy. With its five hotels, it has four times as many beds as inhabitants.

Population

In 2021, the municipality had 2233 residents in the following 5 settlements:

In the Ottoman pashaluk censuses in 1624 and 1690, 80 and 125 houses respectively were recorded. An 1828 status animarum recorded 955 inhabitants living in 194 family households.

Podgora is the birthplace of Don Mihovil Pavlinović, a priest, politician and writer, best known as the first person to speak Croatian in the Dalmatian parliament, seeking the unification of Dalmatia and Croatia.

Organized tourism started in Podgora in 1922, when the first hotel "Praha" was built.

During World War II, on September 10, 1942, the Yugoslav Partisans formed the Partisan Navy in Podgora. In 1962, president Josip Broz Tito unveiled a monument on a hill above the port of Podgora, The wings of a seagull, in remembrance of World War II events.

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References

Bibliography