Sunday, May 31, 2009

Dubrovnik

May 29
Friday morning we started the morning very early and loaded the bus on the way to Dubrovnik. Dubrovnik is a city situated along the coast about 3 hours away from Makarska and we had to go through Bosnia to get there. We were given a brief history of the city. Dubrovnik was founded by refugees, but has a much more interesting history than that. To maintain peace in their city, they paid off other countries to leave them alone. The city is noted for heavy promotion of freedom and liberty. Dubrovnik was more interested in trade than territorial conquest and is also noted for progressive ideas for systems of governance.

There was (and still is) a fountain in the middle of the walled portion of the city and anyone was allowed to come and get clean water. A statue also stands inside the city walls that has a very important role for those not of nobility or wealth. The statue is a man, but that is not the interesting part. On the bottom of the statue, on one side only, there is a line carved in the stone. This line looks like it is part of the statue, so it is very easy to miss. The significance of the line is that it was used for people to measure their bought goods. People who were members of the peasant class were often short-changed on their cloth purchases because they didn’t know how much a specific measurement was supposed to be. The line was etched in the statue to allow these peasant people to come and measure their purchased goods and contest with the seller that they were indeed short changed.

Dubrovnik was heavily attacked in the Homeland War like Vukovar. They were attacked from the sea and because the attacks were so intense, this is actually the place that put Croatia on the worldwide map. There was a public outcry about the city being destroyed because of the cease-fire from 1992-1995 in the rest of the country, but there were bombings still occurring in Dubrovnik. Many of the old historical buildings and relics of the town were destroyed. There was terror among the people because random bombings still occurred during this time and made it unsafe for the citizens.

Dubrovnik was one of the first cities to recognize the United States independence and supported the country in their efforts to promote freedom and liberty.

As far as public health goes, Dubrovnik was well ahead of others concerning infectious diseases. Dubrovnik initialized the first systematic quarantine in 1337 because of the plague. They were realizing how the disease was being spread from ships coming into the ports bringing in vermin and fleas and separated out potential exposures as well as complete cases of the plague. Quarantine is when people are kept separate from the general population that have been exposed to the infection until they present with symptoms. This was utilized at the sea ports. Isolation is separating out people who have specific diseases from the general population, such as the plague or lepers. The public health office looked at data from registries of ships in 1337 and realized that more people equaled more diseases. Caravans and travelers came through Dubrovnik and had to swear that they had not been in an area exposed to the plague for two months. The place where people were traveling from determined the length of their quarantine, lasting from days up until months for some areas. This initialization of quarantine stopped the plague from being endemic in the area. The model was utilized in other parts of Europe because of how effective it was at controlling the spread of disease. The program was based on real data and it still heavily utilized in times today, such as the recent scare of the H1N1 Flu.

During our time in Dubrovnik, we toured a small museum of the “Defenders of Dubrovnik” from the Homeland war and visited the City Hall to meet with a local city planner. The speaker talked to us about urban planning for the city of Dubrovnik. The designer of the city wanted everything in a block and this model was utilized in other parts of the world after Dubrovnik was designed. The designer for Washington D.C. visited Dubrovnik to see how a city could be put in grids on a sloping land. We also discussed Manhattan and Philadelphia’s city layout, and Dubrovnik had small roles in their implementation as well.

The rest of the time we were in Dubrovnik we had free time to explore. Many students walked the outside city walls and saw how the city was during ancient times, as well as how life is there today. The city wall provided the students with amazing landscape photos.
-Rachel

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.