Skip to product information
Dubrovnik, City On The Cliffs
$44.99
Taxes included.

History records little about how this famous city started. Some say it was refugees from Roman Epidaurus, a city nearby, who took shelter here after the destruction of their own town. Regardless, it seems that the first name for Dubrovnik came from the cliffs that overhang the blue sea, Lau, and the people who lived on them, the Lausi. Lausi became Rausi and so the city got its name that it bore for centuries, Ragusa. But Ragusa had another name as well, a name that the Slavic settlers of Dalmatia brought with them for the dark pine forests. Hemmed in as it is on the West by the warm Adriatic sea, on the west the mountains rise up sharply and the trees stand thick just beyond the walls. So from these forests it got its second name, derived from the Slavic word for forests, Dubrovnik. So Dubrovnik has a double history, not separate but intertwined. The sea, Roman and Italic culture, and the deep forests that line the mountain passes, the heritage of the Slavs. Bring the beauty and heritage of this city home with this limited art print.

Size
Configuration
CARE & MAINTENANCE

To maintain the beauty and integrity of your purchase, we recommend treating it with care. Simple maintenance practices, such as gentle washing and proper storage, can effectively preserve the longevity of your favorites. We encourage you to refer to the care instructions included with each item, designed to help you keep your purchase in top condition.

SHIPPING & RETURNS

We strive to process and ship all orders in a timely manner, working diligently to ensure that your items are on their way to you as soon as possible. Need to return something? Just let us know.

Not art, but connections

This piece doesn't exist for its own sake. It exists for you.

That sounds strange to say, but following beauty means connecting you from one kind of beauty to another. It connects you to other people, to other places, to other times, and to God.

In almost 20 years of working across different industries and continents I've learned that respect for people, individually, is what counts.

So while each image is a product of effort, it's also a product of providence. I made this for you.

Brendan

You may also like