Brijuni National Park
Brijuni National Park protects an archipelago of fourteen islands in the northern Adriatic, separated from the western coast of the Istrian peninsula by the narrow Fažana Strait. Declared a national park in 1983, the islands combine exceptional Mediterranean biodiversity with layered history spanning Roman villas, Venetian stone quarries, an Austro-Hungarian resort developed around 1900, and the private summer residence of Yugoslav president Josip Broz Tito, who received nearly a hundred foreign heads of state here. The park today is one of the most distinctive heritage landscapes on the Croatian coast.
At a glance
- Type
- National park (archipelago)
- Period
- Roman era to present; national park status from 1983
- Style
- Natural heritage; historic resort architecture; diplomatic heritage site
- Location
- Fažana Strait, off western Istria, Croatia
- Area
- 14 islands; total land area approx. 7.5 km²; largest island Veli Brijun 5.6 km²
- Coordinates
- 44.9165° N, 13.7675° E
Overview
The Brijuni Islands were known to the ancient Greeks as Pollariae and later developed by Rome, whose aristocrats built extensive villas on the fertile, well-watered terrain. Venice controlled the archipelago through the Middle Ages, quarrying its limestone for the palaces and bridges of the Serenissima. After passing through Napoleonic and Austro-Hungarian rule, the islands achieved international fame in the 20th century as Tito’s personal retreat and the site of the 1956 Brioni Declarations, a foundational moment of the Non-Aligned Movement.
History
In 1893 the Viennese industrialist Paul Kupelwieser purchased the entire archipelago and transformed it into an exclusive Adriatic resort, draining malarial marshes with the help of bacteriologist Robert Koch around 1900. After World War I the islands became Italian territory; after World War II they passed to Yugoslavia. President Tito established his official summer residence on Veli Brijun and hosted an extraordinary roster of guests — Elizabeth Taylor, Sophia Loren, Indira Gandhi, Haile Selassie. The 1956 Brioni Meeting with Nasser of Egypt and Nehru of India laid groundwork for the Non-Aligned Movement. Following Tito’s death in 1980 the islands were opened to the public, and a national park was declared in 1983.
What you see
The main island, Veli Brijun, retains Tito’s White Villa and the Museum of Tito on Brijuni with personal memorabilia, vehicles, and diplomatic gifts. Roman ruins — including a large first-century villa with mosaics — are preserved along the shore. The Safari Park houses exotic animals once gifted to Tito by foreign governments, including Asian elephants from India, alongside native fallow deer, mouflons, and chital. The surrounding marine protected area shelters sea turtles and dolphins in remarkably clear Adriatic waters.
Cultural significance
Brijuni represents a rare convergence of natural and political heritage: within a few square kilometres visitors move from Roman imperial leisure culture through Venetian maritime economy to the geopolitics of the Cold War Non-Aligned Movement. The archipelago is recognised as one of Croatia’s most significant protected areas, combining Mediterranean biodiversity with layers of historical memory that span more than two thousand years.
Practical information
- Access
- The islands are accessible only by official park ferry from the port of Fažana (approx. 15 minutes); private boats may not land independently
- Address
- National Park Brijuni, Brijuni 10, 52212 Fažana, Croatia
- Tickets
- Check the official park website (np-brijuni.hr) for current ferry schedules and entrance fees
Getting there
Fažana, the departure point for park ferries, is 8 km south of Pula. By car from Pula follow the coastal road to Fažana harbour (approx. 15 minutes). Pula Airport connects with major European cities seasonally. Bus services run from Pula bus station to Fažana throughout the day.
