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From First Christmas to Last Christmas in Konavle
The winter period in Konavle is full of celebrations and joy, and among them Christmas is the crown of all events. In autumn, as the agricultural activities end, days dedicated to different saints are more and more frequent. Most of those days are celebrated as Krsno ime of Konavle families. Most weddings and engagements take place around Christmas. No wonder, because pre-industrial agriculture engaged the family members in the fields every day, so there was no time for celeb


Konavle in Pula, 2024
The Pula Book Fair, entitled "Dreaming of Books in Istria”, saw its 30th edition this year. The program of the Fair was held from November 29 to December 8 in the Home of Croatian Veterans at Leharova 1 in Pula. During those 10 days, Pula was alive with authors, publishers, photographers, cartoonists, musicians, winemakers and other guests, and above all with a large and diverse audience. The Pula Book Fair has always been known as a vibrant meeting place for book lovers, an


Konavle women's headwear
In the entire Mediterranean area, including the Balkans and beyond, there were always ways in which women styled their hair and covered it. In traditional societies, a woman's headwear carried a lot of personal information. It marked her origins as well as her social status and personal wealth. In urban areas the headdress was influenced by the fashions of the time, and in rural areas it also indicated a woman’s geographical area — where she lived. The types and styles of w


Konavle Earrings — Vežilice
Earrings are one of the most popular and oldest forms of jewelry in the world. They were mostly worn by women, though men occasionally wore them too. Reasons for wearing them varied. In ancient Egypt they were worn as status symbols; in Rome women wore them for good luck. They were worn by women in ancient Greece and Byzantium both for decoration and status symbols. Avars and Slavic women wore them, and most other women throughout history. In the Middle Ages, when the luxur


Who was Mijo Šiša Konavljanin?
In the heart of Konavle, in the village Mihanići, the artist Mijo Šiša Konavljanin was born in 1946. He became a visual chronicler of everyday life in Konavle. In the time of Mijo’s youth, days in Konavle were counted by the agricultural calendar. Everyone worked the land, and food was produced in every home. That was how Konavle people made their living. Each season of the year brought different kinds of labor — in the fields, in the house or in the barn. And for hardworki


The Mijo Šiša Collection
Mijo Šiša Konavljanin* (1946 – 2017) was the only self-taught Konavle folk painter. Though he is often referred to as a naïve painter, he realistically recorded traditional life in his paintings and drawings, and is considered by most authorities to be a folk painter. Mijo Šiša’s work depicts the traditional life that he witnessed as a young man. He painted many aspects of Konavle peasant life — agricultural and domestic work, house interiors, tools, social and religious gath


Undivided Family Households of Konavle
Undivided family households [ 1 ] were found all over the Balkans, dating back hundreds of years. The names they used for their groups varied by geographical location. In Konavle an undivided family household is called velika kuća or velika korta . These terms mean “big houses” and “big courtyards” respectively but other English terms could be “extended families” or “communal family households” or “cooperative family households”. In these communities, descendants of on
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