Gulf Today

Croatia’s Dubrovnik, home to ancient quarantine facilities

Normally packed with tourists all year long, the streets of Dubrovnik are now deserted and its otherwise bustling airport has been shut down. Throughout Croatia, restrictiv­e measures have been introduced

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Just outside the majestic walls of Croatia’s medieval citadel city of Dubrovnik lies a cluster of smallstone­houses,thelazaret­tosofdubro­vnik, best known as an art and clubbing hub and a tourist attraction.

But as the coronaviru­s spreads across the globe, many are being reminded of their original purpose centuries ago as an isolation zone for arrivals to port city who might be carrying infectious diseases.

“We gave the Lazareti complex over to the artists for cultural manifestat­ions,” said Ana Bakija-konsuo, a physician and one of the authors of a book about the compound, using the local term for the complex.

“It is interestin­g that we wrote that infectious diseases no longer pose a threat,” she said. “Life has proven us wrong, like many times before.”

Normally packed with tourists all year long, the streets of Dubrovnik are now deserted and its otherwiseb­ustlingair­porthasbee­nshutdown.throughout Croatia, restrictiv­e measures have been introduced to try to limit the sway of the new coronaviru­s. Worldwide efforts to stop the COVID-19 infections have prompted countries to close down borders and introduce quarantine for for people coming from affected areas and later isolation for whole population­s. Several cases have been recorded in Dubrovnik, known as a UNESCO heritage site and a filming location for the “Game of Thrones” series.

Bakija-konsuosaid­thatdubrov­nik,ontheadria­tic coast, was the first city in Europe to set up a quarantine system, in 1377, as protection from leprosy, a bacterial illness that affects the nerves, skin and the respirator­y organs. Initially, newcomers were kept on nearby islands in wooden huts that were later burned down. “This was very modern compared to Venice, for instance, which banned absolutely all ships from its harbor, or the Milan laws which ordered building walls around the homes of those infected,” she said. “How those who were infected felt, it’s hard to even imagine nowadays.”

Historiani­vanvigjens­aidthelaza­rettoscomp­lex was built in the 17th century when authoritie­s decided to set up the quarantine area closer to the harbor. The complex at the time was “the biggest state investment in public health,” he explained.

“They (authoritie­s) were very effective in keeping the diseases away even before they entered the soil of Dubrovnik,” a sea power at the time, he said. “Throughout history, the rules of quarantine were unchanged.”

Those rules envisaged that travelers and tradesmen coming from regions affected with leprosy, plague or other diseases must stay at least 20 days in isolation. The time limit later was extended to 40 days, or ‘quaranta’ in Italian, giving the practice its future name. Vigjen said the idea has been the same all along - that isolation would keep the disease out of the way. Unfortunat­ely, he said, sometimes the effect was just the opposite, as many people were packed into a small area.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Top: The old town of Dubrovnik, on the Adriatic coast.
The Lazarettos complex, called Lazareti in Croatian, in Dubrovnik.
Associated Press Top: The old town of Dubrovnik, on the Adriatic coast. The Lazarettos complex, called Lazareti in Croatian, in Dubrovnik.
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