Danube Park
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Danube Park or Dunavski Park ( sr, Дунавски парк) is an urban park in the downtown of Novi Sad, the capital of the Vojvodina Province, Serbia. Formed in 1895, it is protected as the natural monument and is one of the symbols of the city.


Location

The park is located in the city's central neighborhood of Stari Grad. It is bounded by the streets of ''Dunavska'' on the north, ''Ive Lole Ribara'' on the east, ''Bulevar Mihajla Pupina'' on the south, ''Pionirska'' on the southwest and ''Ignjata Pavlasa'' on the west. Being close to the Danube river, after passing next to the park, ''Bulevar Mihajla Pupina'' extends into the Varadin Bridge, which connects Novi Sad to Petrovaradin. Notable buildings in the vicinity include
Museum of Vojvodina The Museum of Vojvodina ( sr-cyr, Музеј Војводине) is an art and natural history museum in Novi Sad, Serbia. The museum houses a collection of over 400,000 specimens and a library of over 50,000 volumes. Notable paintings Among other ...
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Youth Theatre Youth Theatre or Youth Theater may refer to: Generic *Theatre for Early Years *Theatre for Young Audiences *Young Spectator's Theatre Australia *Perth Youth Theatre * Platform Youth Theatre * Track Youth Theatre * Victorian Youth Theatre Unit ...
, Vojvodina's Museum of the contemporary arts, Museum of Novi Sad and Archive of Vojvodina.


Name

The name of the park, ''Dunavski park'', means the Danube park. However, though near the river, the park was named after the ("Danube Street"), which encircles it on the north.


History


Origin

In the 19th century, the area of modern park was an arm of the Danube, or '' liman''. Neighborhood south of the park, and former municipality of Novi Sad, is called Liman today. The area was a proper, large bog, known for the abundance of reeds, willows, mosquitos and frogs. Additionally, the entire locality was lower than the surrounding land, as the earth was dug and used for the construction of the embankment on the Danube's left bank (''Mostobran''), across the Petrovaradin Fortress. Some paintings from the period show boats navigating through the bog.


Park

In 1895 it was decided that a park will be formed instead of a bog. The filling of the marsh began that same year, in the extension of the Dunavska Street. The street itself is today differently positioned as a result, and first a walkway was formed, which became the most popular one in Novi Sad, known simply as ''Promenada''. The muddy and sandy watery depression was covered with earth, leaving a small body of water which was bricked and turned into a lake. A small island remained in the lake. It was named ''Eržebet'', after the Empress Elisabeth of Austria, empress consort of Austria-Hungary. When she was assassinated in 1898, a weeping willow was planted in her honor on the island. The lake was formed on an altitude of . The lake and the island are today simply called ''Jezero'' and ''Ostrvce'', meaning "lake" and " islet". Photographs from 1900 show people skating on the lake. The thorough arrangement of the park began in the early 1900s. The kafana ''Kod engleske kraljice'' ("Chez Queen of England") was demolished and a building of the court was built, which today hosts the Museum of Vojvodina. The grass was planted, so as new trees and the earth pathways were placed throughout the park. First sculpture, the Nymph (officially, The girl with a cornucopia, work of Đorđe Jovanović), was erected in 1912. The park was further arranged in the 1920s and 1930s. The park was also originally named ''Promenada''. In the mid-1930s the filling of the swamp was finally completed, so as the completion of the pathways and the park was renamed to Danube Park. The park was refurbished from 1958 to 1962, on the project of Ratibor Đorđević, when it was shaped in the form in which it exists today. All the sick and dried trees were removed and flower arrangements were introduced. Another major reconstruction occurred in 1978. When the Marshall Tito Boulevard was constructed in 1963 (modern Liberation Boulevard), the old Armenian Church was demolished as it was blocking the route. The façade fragments were used for paving some of the pathways in the park. Due to the seasonal skating rink which has been placed during the winter since the late 2010s, the officials used a moniker Frozen Forest for the park, for marketing purposes. By the early 2020s, there were 640 trees in the park. A massive, over €1 million reconstruction was announced for spring-autumn 2022.


Wildlife


Plant life

There are over 600 individual trees and 7,000 decorative plants in the park, with 250 different plant species. Deciduous trees include plane trees (as of 2017, some are over 100 years old), Lombardy poplar,
silver linden ''Tilia tomentosa'', known as silver linden in the US and silver lime in the UK, is a species of flowering plant in the family (biology), family Malvaceae, native plant, native to southeastern Europe and southwestern Asia, from Romania and the Ba ...
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European nettle tree ''Celtis australis'', the European nettle tree, Mediterranean hackberry, lote tree, or honeyberry, is a deciduous tree native to Southern Europe, North Africa, and Asia Minor. The tree was introduced to England in 1796.Hillier Nurseries Ltd. (19 ...
, hazelnut, birch, maple, horse-chestnut and penduculate oak, which is under protection, while evergreen trees are Pinus nigra, black pine, thuja, cypress, fir. Decorative plants include Populus alba, white poplar, Taxodium ascendens, pond cypress, Prunus cerasifera, cherry plum, Turkish hazel, Quercus robur, pyramidal oak and numerous shrubs (common box, Maule's quince, common barberry, European cornel). The vegetation in park is exceptionally lush compared to the other parks in Serbia and it is not known why the trees and plants thrive more than in other similar places. The flowers, like Aztec marigold or African arrowroot last long into the autumn. The ground is wet, so one of the possible explanations is the closeness of the Danube and a fact that the land used to be a swamp.


Animal life

The lake is mostly inhabited by ducks. For a long time, a symbol of the park was a couple of swans, called Isa and Bisa. Their offspring were attacked in 2015 by the red-eared sliders, which were probably released in the lake by their owners who kept them as pets. One chick was killed and two others had their wings bitten off, one wing each. However, some experts thought that the turtles couldn't do that. Still, the lake was emptied, all sliders were removed and transferred to the Lake Palić, and only the European pond turtles which are harmless for the birds, were kept.


Characteristics

The park covers an area of , of which green area occupy . Apart from the Nymph, there are several other sculptures in the park. Busts of poets Branko Radičević (by Ivanka Acin; 1953) and Miroslav Antić (by Pavle Radovanović; 1992), bronze monument to poet and painter Đura Jakšić (by Jovan Soldatović; 1990) and a monument to the Venerable Sergius of Radonezh (by Vyacheslav Kulikov; 1992). There was another sculpture by Soldatović in the park, the "Roe deer", but it was transferred to the military complex and hunting ground of Karađorđevo hunting ground, Karađorđevo later. There are also a drinking fountain and the small fountain. A white gazebo (''saletla'') was constructed in the park. It hosts the smaller concerts and shows, literary evenings and exhibitions. Almost all newlyweds have photo sessions in the park and in front of the gazebo. In 1998, government of the Republic of Serbia declared the Danube Park a natural monument of the II category and placed it under protection.


References


External links

{{coord, 45.25528, 19.85114, region:RS_type:landmark, display=title Parks in Serbia