Macedonia Square (Macedonian: Плоштад Македонија, Albanian: Sheshi Maqedonia) is the main square[1] of Skopje, the capital of North Macedonia. The square is the biggest in North Macedonia with a total extent of 18,500 m2.[2] It is located in the central part of the city, and it crosses the Vardar River. The Christmas festivals are always held there and it commonly serves as the site of cultural, political and other events. The independence from Yugoslavia was declared here by the first president of Macedonia, Kiro Gligorov. The square is part of the Skopje 2014 project.
Macedonia Square
Плоштад Македонија Sheshi Maqedonia | |
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Public square | |
Macedonia Square from the Stone Bridge | |
Owner | Skopje |
Coordinates: 41°59′46″N 21°25′54″E / 41.996123°N 21.431698°E |
History
editIn 2007, the Macedonian government announced plans to reconstruct the Army House, which together with the Old Theatre (also being reconstructed on the other side of Macedonia Square, across the Vardar River) that was severely destroyed in the 1963 Skopje earthquake.
In December 2008, a flagpole with the Macedonian flag was erected on Macedonia Square, near the Stone Bridge, as it was done on 68 other important locations throughout the country.
On 2 May 2010, two monuments of Goce Delčev and Dame Gruev were erected near the Stone Bridge.[3] The Centar Municipality built a high monument of a Warrior on a Horse and fountain which was unveiled on 8 September 2011, on the 20-year anniversary of Macedonia's independence referendum from Yugoslavia.[4]
The three main streets that merge onto the square are Maksim Gorki, Dimitar Vlahov and Street Macedonia. Dimitar Vlahov Street was converted into a pedestrian street in 2011. Maksim Gorki, while not a pedestrian zone, is lined with Japanese Cherry trees, whose blossoms in spring mark a week-long series of Asian cultural events. Finally, Macedonia Street, the main pedestrian street, connects Macedonia Square to the Old Railway Station (destroyed by the 1963 earthquake), which houses the City of Skopje Museum. Along Macedonia Street is the Mother Teresa Memorial House, which features an exhibit of artefacts from Mother Teresa's life. Mother Teresa's original family home was located near Macedonia Square, and a plaque marking the location can be found today. A feudal tower from the Middle Ages next to the Mother Teresa House still stands today, surprisingly withstanding the devastating 1963 earthquake. The most popular tourist walk starts from the Old Railway Station down Macedonia Street, past the Mother Teresa Memorial House and Feudal Tower, past Mother Teresa's birth house location, down Macedonia Square, across the Stone Bridge, past the Holocaust Museum, Museum of Macedonian Independence, towards the Turkish Bazaar and ending at the Kale Fortress. The reconstructed Old Theater and the new Archaeological Museum add additional cultural landmarks along the main tourist vertical.
In May 2010, Marriott Hotels announced the construction of the first Marriott Hotel in the Balkans in Skopje on Macedonia Square.[5][6]
Gallery
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Ristiḱ Palace
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Warrior on a Horse statue by night
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Warrior on a Horse by day
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Dame Gruev statue
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Goce Delčev statue
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Boatmen of Thessaloníki monument
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Justinian I statue
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Samuil statue
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Metodija Andonov-Čento statue
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Dimitrija Čupovski statue
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The Pavilion
Historical sights
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Skopje in 1594
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Other statues found in the same place before the 1941: on the left, King Peter I of Serbia (the inscription is: King Peter I, The Liberator)
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The square, in the late 2000s
References
edit- ^ Government of the Republic of Macedonia Sculpture "Tree" unveiled at Skopje's main square (in English)
- ^ Square Macedonia
- ^ Macedonian Information Agency Archived 19 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Goce Delčev, Dame Gruev monuments erected at Skopje square
- ^ Dnevnik newspaper Archived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine (in Macedonian)
- ^ Marriott Hotels
- ^ Link to the Hotel Project
External links
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