Pre-history Evidence of the presence of
Homo erectus one million years ago has been found in the cave of Šandalja near Pula. Pottery from the
Neolithic period (6000–2000 BC), indicating
human settlement, has been found around Pula. In the
Bronze Age (1800–1000 BC), a new type of settlement appeared in Istria, called 'gradine', or hill-top fortifications. Many late Bronze Age bone objects, such as tools for smoothing and drilling, sewing needles, as well as spiral bronze pendants, have been found in the area around Pula. The type of materials found in Bronze Age sites in Istria connects these with sites along the Danube. Greek tradition attributed the foundation of
Polai to the
Colchians, mentioned in the context of the story of
Jason and
Medea, who had stolen the
Golden Fleece. The Colchians, who had chased Jason into the northern Adriatic, were unable to catch him and ended up settling in a place they called
Polai, signifying "city of refuge".
Ancient period In classical antiquity, it was inhabited by the
Histri, a
Venetic or
Illyrian tribe.
Strabo,
Pomponius Mela and
Lycophron wrote that it was inhabited by
Colchians. The
Istrian peninsula was conquered by the Romans in 177 BC, During that time the town grew and had at its zenith a population of about 30,000. It became a significant Roman port with a large surrounding area under its jurisdiction. During the civil war of 42 BC of the triumvirate of
Octavian,
Mark Antony and
Lepidus against Caesar's assassins
Brutus and
Cassius, the town took the side of Cassius, since the town had been founded by
Cassius Longinus, brother of Cassius. After Octavian's victory, the town was demolished. It was soon rebuilt at the request of Octavian's daughter Iulia and was then called
Colonia Pietas Iulia Pola Pollentia Herculanea. The colony was part of
Venetia et Histria, a region of
Roman Italy. Great classical constructions were built of which a few remain. A great
amphitheatre,
Pula Arena, was constructed between 27 BC and 68 AD, much of it still standing to this day. The Romans also supplied the city with water and sewage systems. They fortified the city with a wall with ten gates. A few of these gates remain: the triumphal
Arch of the Sergii, the Gate of Hercules (in which the names of the founders of the city are engraved), and the Twin Gates. During the reign of the emperor
Septimius Severus the name of the town was changed to "Res Publica Polensis". The town was the site of an execution of two reigning
caesares,
Crispus in 326 AD and
Constantius Gallus in 354 AD. In 425 AD the town became the centre of a diocese, attested by the remains of foundations of a few religious buildings. The town was ruled by the
Ostrogoths from 493 to 538 AD. The
Basilica of Saint Mary Formosa was built in the 6th century. Under the Franks it was part of the
Kingdom of Italy. Pula became the seat of the elective counts of Istria until 1077. The town was taken in 1148 by the Venetians and in 1150 Pula swore allegiance to the
Republic of Venice, thus becoming a Venetian possession. For centuries thereafter, the city's fate and fortunes were tied to those of Venetian power. It was conquered by the
Pisans in 1192 but soon reconquered by the Venetians. In 1238
Pope Gregory IX formed an alliance between Genoa and Venice against the Empire, and consequently against Pisa too. As Pula had sided with the Pisans, the city was sacked by the Venetians in 1243. It was destroyed again in 1267 and again in 1397 when the
Genoese defeated the Venetians in a naval battle. Pula then slowly went into decline. This decay was accelerated by the infighting of local families: the ancient Roman Sergi family and the Ionotasi (1258–1271) and the clash between Venice and Genoa for the control of the city and its harbour (late 13th and 14th centuries). In 1291, by the Peace of Treviso, Patriarch Raimondo della Torre gained the city as part of the
secular realm of the Patriarchate of Aquileia, only to lose it to Venice in 1331, which then held it until its downfall in 1797. Pula is mentioned by the Italian poet
Dante Alighieri, who had visited Pula, in the
Divine Comedy: "Sì come a Pola, presso del Carnaro, ch'Italia chiude e i suoi termini bagna" or "As Pola, along the
Quarnero, that marks the end of Italy and bathes its boundaries".
Venetian, Napoleonic and early Habsburg rule The
Venetians took over Pula in 1331 and would rule the city until 1797. During the 14th, 15th and 16th centuries, Pula was attacked and occupied by the Genoese, the Hungarian army and the Habsburgs; several outlying medieval settlements and towns were destroyed. In addition to war, the
plague,
malaria and
typhoid ravaged the city. By the 1750s there were only 3,000 inhabitants left in ancient city, an area now covered with weeds and ivy. With the collapse of the Venetian Republic in 1797 following
Napoleon's
Treaty of Campo Formio, the city became part of the
Habsburg monarchy. It was invaded again in 1805 after the French had defeated the Austrians. It was included in the
French Empire of Napoleon as part of the
Kingdom of Italy, then placed directly under the French Empire's
Illyrian Provinces.
Austrian Littoral province and union with Italy in
Rome, Italy. Pola was at the time a so-called "
irredent land" In 1813, Pola (with Istria) came back to the
Austrian Empire. Under the
compromise of 1867, the town – under the original Italian name, Pola – remained in
Austria-Hungary until the latter's defeat and dissolution in 1918. Under Austrian rule, Pola regained prosperity. Its large
natural harbour became Austria's main naval base and a major shipbuilding centre. During this period many inhabitants were Italian speaking. The 1910 Austrian census recorded a city population of 58,562 (45.8% Italian speaking; 15.2% Croatian, the rest were mostly German-speaking military). Following the collapse of Austria-Hungary in 1918, Pola and the whole of Istria, except the territory of Castua/
Kastav, went to Italy. Pola became the capital of the
Province of Pola. The decline in population after World War I was mainly due to economic difficulties caused by the withdrawal of Austro-Hungarian military and bureaucratic facilities and the dismissal of workers from the shipyard. Under the
Italian Fascist government of
Benito Mussolini, non-Italians, especially Croatian residents who came to Pola under
Austro-Hungarian rule, faced stringent political and cultural repression because they had now to integrate themselves into the Kingdom of Italy and learn the Italian language. Many left the city and went back to the newly created
Yugoslavia. After the collapse of Fascist Italy in 1943, the city was occupied by the German
Wehrmacht and remained a base for U-boats. Consequently, the city was subjected to repeated Allied bombing from 1942 to 1944. In the last phase of the war, Pola saw the arrest, deportation, and execution of people suspected of aiding the Axis, by the partisans who together with the Yugoslav communists liberated but also killed many soldiers and civilians, in the first episodes of what would have been named, later on, the
Foibe massacres. File:Pula Hotel Riviera 1904.jpg|Pula Riviera in 1904 File:Adolf Hirémy-Hirschl Matrosen.jpg|
Adolf Hirémy-Hirschl, Sailors in the Harbor of Pola, pastel on paper, c. 1916. The
Jack Daulton Collection, Los Altos Hills, California. File:Austro-Hungarian Dreadnoughts At Pula.jpg|Austro-Hungarian dreadnoughts at Pola File:Flag of Pula (1923-1947).svg|alt=Flag in use during the Italian rule of the city[22]|Flag in use during the Italian rule of the city File:Pola-Stemma (1918-1943).svg|Coat of arms in use during the Italian rule of the city
Post–World War II and modern era building After
World War II, the
Istrian Italians of Pula left Yugoslavia towards Italy (
Istrian-Dalmatian exodus). For two years after 1945, Pola was administered by the
Allied Military Government for Occupied Territories (AMG). Pola formed an enclave within south Istria that was administered by Yugoslavia since 1945 with the help of Churchill. The AMG was occupied by a company of the United States 351st Infantry and a
British battalion of the 24th
Guards Brigade. Istria was partitioned into occupation zones until the region became officially united with the
Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia on 15 September 1947, under terms of the
Paris Peace Treaties. The city became part of the
People's Republic of Croatia, a federal state within
FPR Yugoslavia, upon the ratification of the Paris Peace Treaties on 15 September 1947 – which also created the
Free Territory of Trieste. Initially, Pola's population of 45,000 was largely made up of ethnic Italians, however, between December 1946 and September 1947, the vast majority of Italians fled to Italy. Subsequently, the city's Croatian name, Pula, became the official name. Today the city of Pula or Pola is officially bilingual, Croatian and Italian, hence both Pula and Pola are official names. == Geography and climate ==