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From The Daily Mail, July 9th 2005, by Esther Rantzen:
Croatia was a revelation, a unique combination of Latin and Slavonic... One of the most celebrated casualties of the war, Dubrovnik, seems to have recovered completely. I'd heard of the town's beauty of course, and it deserves its fame. We walked around the towering stone walls, hanging on to a steel railing with both hands as we looked down at the sea far below.
Croatia probably has Europe's most spectacular coastline, with mountains tumbilng into the island-scattered, clear sea. Ruled for centuries by Venice, the architecture of the surprisingly well-preserved medieval towns is gorgeous. Marvel at the remains of Diocletian's Palace in hectic Split, then take a ferry to the sleepy island of Brac and chill out on the magnificent, ever-shifting Y-shaped beach at Bol. Go there before it's too late.
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There's a bubbling just below the surface in Zagreb, the Croatian capital of one million people, and most visitors sense it instantly. It's a well-worn, East-meets-West passion called Balkan culture that equally embraces a consumer's desire to visit a newly opened fragrance shop and the cafe next door where an entire goat turns slowly on a spit.



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