Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/lower-carniola

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Lower Carniola

Traditional region of Slovenia


Traditional region of Slovenia

FieldValue
nameLower Carniola
native_name_lang
settlement_typeTraditional region
image_skylineSveti Vrh.jpg
image_captionTypical Lower Carniolan landscape in Sveti Vrh
image_mapTabula Ducatus Carnioliae, Vindorum Marchiae et Histriae.jpg
map_caption1714 map of Carniola by Johann Homann, Lower Carniola in green
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameSlovenia
area_urban_footnotes
area_rural_footnotes
area_metro_footnotes
area_magnitude
elevation_m400
population_density_km2auto
population_demonymLower Carniolan
website

tags --

Lower Carniola ( ; ) is a traditional region in Slovenia, the southeastern part of the historical Carniola region. Its largest town and urban center is Novo Mesto, with other urban centers including Kočevje, Grosuplje, Krško, Trebnje, and Ribnica.

Geography

Lower Carniola is delineated by the Ljubljana Basin with the city of Ljubljana to the northwest, by the Kolpa River and the border with Croatia with the Gorjanci Mountains to the south and southeast, by the Sava River to the north and northeast, and by Mount Krim, the Bloke Plateau, and the Potok Plateau () to the west. The southernmost region down to the border with Croatia on the Kolpa River is called White Carniola and usually considered part of Lower Carniola.

Within the Kočevje Rog karst plateau, the mountains reach an elevation of up to 1099 m. The historic centre of Lower Carniola is Novo Mesto, and other towns include Kočevje, Grosuplje, Krško, Trebnje, Mirna, Črnomelj, Semič, and Metlika.

History

In the 17th century, the Habsburg duchy of Carniola was internally divided into three administrative districts. This division was thoroughly described by the scholar Johann Weikhard von Valvasor in his 1689 work The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola. The districts were known in German as Kreise (kresija in old Slovene). They were: Upper Carniola with its centre in Ljubljana (formerly Kranj), comprising the northern areas of the duchy; Inner Carniola comprising the southwest, with its centre in Postojna, and Lower Carniola in the southeast, roughly corresponding to the medieval Windic March of the Holy Roman Empire. While the bulk of the population spoke Slovene, the German-speaking exclave of the Gottschee Germans existed around Kočevje in the south.

This division remained, in various arrangements, up to the 1860s, when the old administrative districts were abolished and Lower Carniola was subdivided into the smaller Bezirke of Novo Mesto (Rudolfswert), Kočevje (Gottschee), and Krško (Gurkfeld). Nevertheless, the regional identity remained strong also thereafter. Upon the dissolution of Austria-Hungary after World War I, Carniola was incorporated first into the State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs and then into the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes and it ceased to exist as a separate political and geographical unit. The Carniolan regional identity soon faded away, but the regional identification with its sub-units (Upper Carniola, Lower Carniola, and, to a lesser extent, Inner Carniola) remain strong.

Since the 1890s, Lower Carniola has become significantly more connected with the surrounding regions through the construction of the Ljubljana–Novo Mesto Railway (1894), Sevnica–Trebnje Railway (1908, 1938), and the Brotherhood and Unity Highway (1958) linking Ljubljana and Zagreb. In the early 21st century the Brotherhood and Unity Highway was replaced with the modern A2 motorway (completed in 2011).

Culture

Language

People of Lower Carniola speak various dialects with common characteristics, grouped together under the Lower Carniolan dialect group.

In the 16th century, the Lower Carniolan reformer and writer of the first Slovene book, Primož Trubar, laid the foundation for what later became standard Slovene, giving it additions of his native speech, the Lower Carniolan dialect, combined with the capital Ljubljana's dialect.

Music

Folklore

Lower Carniola has had an important impact on Slovene folk music, with many great local musicians, the most notable being Lojze Slak.

Pouring Cvicek.jpg|Lower Carniolan in folk costume pouring Cviček Noša Dobrnič.JPG|A variety of Lower Carniolan folk costume Franz Kurz zum Thurn und Goldenstein - Narodna noša okoli Osilnice pri Kočevju.jpg|Folk costumes from Osilnica by Kočevje Franz Kurz zum Thurn und Goldenstein - Narodna noša Poljan (Dolenjska).jpg|Folk costumes from Poljane

Musical events

Since 2013, Woodland Pristava, an annual electronic dance music festival, has been held in Pristava nad Stično.

Cuisine

Lower Carniola shares most of the common Slovene cuisine, with emphasis on grilled meat and local wine, such as Cviček. Some other regional dishes include matevž, mlinci, and belokranjska povitica.

Cviček - Gospodična Trdinov vrh - Dolenjska.jpg|Cviček wine Matevž (Slovenian cuisine).jpg|Plate with matevž as a side Mlinci Slovenia.jpg|Dry mlinci

Notable people

  • Primož Trubar (1508–1586), writer of the first book in Slovene
  • Jurij Dalmatin (1547–1589), writer and translator
  • Jacobus Gallus (1550–1591), late-Renaissance composer
  • Joannes Adamus Gaiger (1667–1722), philologist and lexicographer
  • Peter Kosler (1824–1879), lawyer and cartographer
  • Fran Levstik (1831–1887), writer
  • Josip Stritar (1836–1923), writer
  • Josip Jurčič (1844–1881), writer
  • Minca Krkovič (1858–1933), Slovenian field laborer and folk singer
  • Oton Župančič (1878–1949), poet
  • Louis Adamic (1898–1951), writer
  • Anton Podbevšek (1898–1981), poet
  • Božidar Jakac (1899–1989), painter
  • Leon Štukelj (1898–1999), athlete
  • Tone Kralj (1900–1975), sculptor and painter
  • Edvard Ravnikar (1907–1993), architect
  • Bojan Adamič (1912–1995), composer
  • Tone Pavček (1928–2011), poet
  • Lojze Slak (1932–2011), pioneer of ensemble music
  • Lojze Peterle (born 1948), politician
  • Janez Janša (born 1958), former prime minister of Slovenia
  • Nina Pušlar (born 1988), musician

References

References

  1. Ferenc, Tone. 1988. "Dolenjska." ''Enciklopedija Slovenije'', vol. 2, pp. 287–298. Ljubljana: Mladinska knjiga, p. 287.
  2. Topole, Maja. (1998). "Mirnska dolina: regionalna geografija porečja Mirne na Dolenjskem". Znanstvenoraziskovalni center Slovenske akademije znanosti in umetnosti.
  3. (2012). "Daily Commuters in Slovenia". Geografski Vestnik.
  4. (28 October 2011). "Slovenian A2 Motorway Completed". Government Communication Office, Republic of Slovenia.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Lower Carniola — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report