Mostar

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Introducing Mostar

The slim, elegant Stari Most (Old Bridge), which arches over the swirling Neretva River, provides this ancient town with its icon and name: Mostar meaning ‘keeper of the bridge’. The rebuilt bridge was reopened on 22 July 2004 with fine words of reconciliation and hope.

Flanking the bridge is the old cobbled Ottoman Quarter, a haven for the city’s artists and craftsmen, along with 16th-century mosques, old Turkish houses and endless cafés. On the western side restaurant terraces hug the steep rocky riverbanks jostling for perfect views of the Old Bridge and its river.

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Reconstructed Old Bridge spanning the Neretva River with reconstructed buildings and mosques of the Ottoman/Turkish quarter in background.
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Reconstructed Old Bridge spanning the Neretva River with reconstructed buildings and mosques of the Ottoman/Turkish quarter in background.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Patrick Horton
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Overlooking the old buildings and cobbled street of Kujundziluk (east side of bridge) lined with souvenir shops.
  • Cobbled street of Kujundziluk (west side of bridge) lined with souvenir shops.
  • Overhead of Stari Most (Old Bridge) at night.
  • Old Town (Stari Grad) seen from Old Bridge (Stari Most).
  • Kitchen of a traditional 17th-century Turkish house.
  • 16th-century Tekija (Dervish monastery) at Blagaj, about 15km southeast of Mostar on edge of River Buna. which gushes out of a gaping cave at the base of a cliff.
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