4K 60FPS UltraHD World Trip Virtual Walking Tour Travel Footage of Zadar (Croatia), showing Street Scenes of this historical city. Walk, discover, explore and see the city life, the Roman and Venetian Ruins in the peninsular Old Town and much more; project finished & uploaded on 2022-06-16 by One Man Wolf Pack UltraHD Drone Footage. #travel #zadar #croatia
▶️ Highlights 0:00
▶️ Walking Tour - Zadar (Croatia) 2022 4:54
▶️ Further Street Scenes of Zadar 25:14
» Media data: This video (Internal ID 1220, shots taken in between 2021 & 2022 and video published in 2022) is an extraction of our self-captured Zadar 4K Video Footage & Zadar Pictures. Copyright protected Footage and Photos on Sale. For inquiries, please contact us via E-Mail or our Blog.
About Zadar: Zadar, a city on Croatias Dalmatian coast, is known for the Roman and Venetian ruins of its peninsular Old Town. There are several Venetian gates in the city walls. Surrounding the Roman-era Forum is 11th-century St. Marys Convent, with religious art dating to the 8th century. Theres also the grand, 12th-century St. Anastasias Cathedral and the round, 9th-century pre-Romanesque Church of St. Donatus // Zadar (US: /ˈzɑːdɑːr/ ZAH-dar, Croatian: zâdar (listen); see also other names) is the oldest continuously inhabited Croatian city. It is situated on the Adriatic Sea, at the northwestern part of Ravni Kotari region. Zadar serves as the seat of Zadar County and of the wider northern Dalmatian region. The city proper covers 25 km2 (9.7 sq mi) with a population of 75,082 in 2011, making it the second-largest city of the region of Dalmatia and the fifth-largest city in the country. The area of present-day Zadar traces its earliest evidence of human life from the late Stone Age, while numerous settlements date as early as the Neolithic. Before the Illyrians, an ancient Mediterranean people of an Indo-European culture inhabited the area. Zadar traces its origin to its 9th-century BC founding as a settlement of the Illyrian tribe of Liburnians known as Iader. In 59 BC, it was renamed Iadera when it became a Roman municipium. In 48 BC it became a Roman colonia. During Roman rule Zadar acquired the characteristics of a traditional Ancient Roman city with a regular road network, a public square (forum), and an elevated capitolium with a temple. // Panoramic view from Cathedral Bell Tower, University of Zadar, Monument to the Sun, Peoples Square, St Dominics Church, Church of St. Donatus and Bishops palace on the Ancient Roman Forum.