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The
island of Korcula was inhabited already in pre-historic times, and
the trails of pre-historic life were discovered on many places.
The oldest funds are the stone knives from the Neolithic found on
the small island of Badija next to the town of Korcula.
The richest and best investigated fund place from the Neolithic
is the Vela spila (the big cave) in Vela Luka. They found and investigated
there several stratums of pre-historic life with fire places, ceramic
pieces, graves (5000-3000 before Christ). From that time originate
numerous Neolithic heaps, culture places and graves - stone pieces,
and they can be found everywhere on the island. In the 6th century
before Christ the island was inhabited by Greek; at first next to
Vela Luka. The colonists were Knids that named the island Corcyra
Melaina (black ). some time later, on the other end of the island,
on the part of todays Lumbarda, came Greek from the island
of Vis (Issa) and founded the significant settlement that is mentioned
in the PHSEPHISMA, found by the end of the 19th century and that
originates from the 3rd century before Christ. In Lumbarda were
found Greek graves with additional gnathia vases from that time.
A systematically archeological excavation would certainly discover
not only a whole Greek metropolis but other trails of their settlement.
In the 1st century after Christ the island, as well as whole Dalmatia,
were occupied by the Romans and they named it Illyricum. In the
7th century the Slaves came to the Adriatic Coast - the Croats -
and they established their own state, that was at first a principality,
and from the year 925, with the crowning of the first king Tomislav,
it became a kingdom. Within the framework of that state was Korcula
as well. Running from the invasion of the Slaves the Roman population
from Salona came to the islands of Brac, Hvar and Korcula, and,
after the claming of the circumstances, most of them returned to
their old dwelling, the rest assimilated with the settlers. In the
year 1000 the Venetian doge Peter II Orseolo took over the Dalmatian
towns and islands, and Korcula came under the rulership of Venice,
too. Right here on the nearby small island of Majsan the doge had
his camp from where he led his campaign towards Korcula and Lastovo.
They resisted but were soon subjugated. After that the government
over Krocula changed quite often: Venice was replaced by the Zahumlje
governors, Croat-Hungarian kings, again Venice, from 1413 to 1420
the Republic of Dubrovnik, then from 1420 to 1793 Venice. When Napoleon
pulled down the Venetian Republic, Dalmatia was taken over by Austria
for a short time, but soon came the Frenchmen. In the period from
1807 to 1813 the governors were Frenchmen, then the Englishmen till
1815, when on the Congress in Vienna it was decided about the new
borders of the European countries. Dalmatia came under the rulership
of Austria and stayed there until the end of the I World War (1919).
It was annexed to the new established state Kingdom of Serbs, Croats
and Slovenians in 1921 and that state was named later Yugoslavia.
After the multipartial elections in 1990 the population of Croatia
decided on a referendum to separate from Yugoslavia and the independent
state Republic of Croatia was declared.
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