Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Petrova Gora

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Location
  
Elevation
  
512 m

Petrova Gora httpsarchpapercomwpcontentuploads201107p

Similar
  
Korana, Monument to the Revolutio, Monument to the uprising o, Klek mountain - Croatia, Kupa

Petrova Gora (English: Peter's Mountain) is a mountain range in central Croatia. The range used to be named Gvozd (Croatian for 'forest'), but was renamed after 1097 to honour Petar Svačić, the last native king of Croatia who died on the mountain in a battle against Coloman of Hungary.

Map of Petrova Gora, 47220, Selakova Poljana, Croatia

During World War II, Petrova Gora was the location of the communist Partisan's central military hospital which consisted of a system of underground chambers and log cabins scattered throughout the mountain range. The hospital was never discovered by any of the armed forces of the Axis powers and remained in operation until May 1945. Starting in 1940, the League of Communists of Yugoslavia, from makeshift underground printing rooms on the mountain, started printing Vjesnik, a daily newspaper that was printed daily in Croatia until 2012.

References

Petrova Gora Wikipedia