Priscapac Apartments
The location of our 50 apartments and suites are directly by the sea on a privately owned peninsula with a pebbly beach. All the rooms are facing to the sea, but the houses are standing in two lines behind each other, in the first line close to the sea we have 22 Suites-apartments with minibar instead of kitchen and 100 % see view. In the second line we have 28 apartments provided also with one or two bedroom, bathroom and living room which are opened together with the dinning room and the
kitchen ...
Korčula (Italian Curzola, Latin Corcyra Nigra, Greek Korkyra Melaina, Old-Slavic: Krkar) is an island in the Adriatic Sea, in the Dubrovnik-Neretva county of Croatia. The island has an area of 279 km˛ — it is 46.8 km long and on average 7.8 km wide — and lies just off the Dalmatian coast. Its 16,138 (2001) inhabitants make it the second most populous Adriatic island after Krk. Around 97 per cent of the population are ethnic Croats. The walled old city, with streets arranged in a herringbone pattern allowing free circulation of air but protecting against strong winds, is tightly built on a promontory that guards the narrow sound between the island and the mainland. Building outside the walls was forbidden until the 18th century, and the wooden drawbridge was only replaced in 1863. All of Korčula's narrow streets are stepped with the notable exception of the street running alongside the southeastern wall, called the Street of Thoughts as one did not have to worry about the steps. The town includes several interesting historic sights: the central Roman Catholic cathedral of St Mark (built from 1301 to 1806), the 15th-century Franciscan monastery with its beautiful Venetian Gothic cloister, the civic council chambers, the palace of the former Venetian governors, grand 15th and 16th century palaces of the local merchant nobles, and the massive city fortifications.