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Gintong Gate
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To the north of the palace, Golden Gate was a main exit from the Diocletian palace, connecting palace to Salona. Today Ivan Mestrovic’s statue of Bishop Grgur is just in front of this gate. It has a guardhouse that contains the 9th-century Church of St. Martin.
Porta septemtrionalis is their Roman name. Through them, Diocletian walked to the Palace on June 1, 305. They were constructed in a square with double doors, as part of a defense propognaculum. The front was decorated with niches in which four sculptures of the tetrarch (Diocletian, Maximilian, Galeria and Constance Chlorine) were figuratively figured. This gate, through which from Peristyle, on Cardo Street, led directly to Salona as the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia, only the car and members of their family could be used. Today, with a nearby monument to Bishop Grgur Ninski, the work of the great Croatian sculptor Ivan Meštrović, one of the favorite Split tourist points.
Porta septemtrionalis is their Roman name. Through them, Diocletian walked to the Palace on June 1, 305. They were constructed in a square with double doors, as part of a defense propognaculum. The front was decorated with niches in which four sculptures of the tetrarch (Diocletian, Maximilian, Gale…
Porta septemtrionalis is their Roman name. Emperor Diocletian walked through them as he entered the Palace on the 1st of June 305. They were built in the shape of a rectangle, with double doors, as part of the defensive military tactics (propugnaculum). The facade was decorated with niches containing figure sculptures of the four tetrarchs (Diocletian, Maximian, Galerius and Constantius Chlorus). These doors, starting from Peristyle, and then through Cardo street, led directly towards Salona as the capital city of the Roman Province Dalmatia, and could only be used by the emperor and the members of his family. Today they are, together with the nearby monument to the Bishop Gregius of Nin (Grgur Ninski), the work of a great Croatian sculptor Ivan Meštrović, one of the favourite Split tourist spots. Under the influence of Venice, in the 16th century, the gates change their name to Porta Aurea or Golden Gates, and this name stayed with them to this day.
Porta septemtrionalis is their Roman name. Emperor Diocletian walked through them as he entered the Palace on the 1st of June 305. They were built in the shape of a rectangle, with double doors, as part of the defensive military tactics (propugnaculum). The facade was decorated with niches containi…
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7 Dioklecijanova ul.
Split, Splitsko-dalmatinska županija