With its 280.000
inhabitants, Ljubljana most certainly ranks among the smaller European capitals,
but we are convinced that many bigger cities could be envious of all that
it has, and many who would not. Ljubljana did not become a capital overnight,
it prepared for this for centuries. When it was still "only" a provincial
capital of Carniola, it became the capital for all Slovenians in 1918, when
the Austro-Hungarian monarchy collapsed. A year later, in 1919, it acquired
a university, in 1938 the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, a radio
station as early as 1926 and TV in 1957. It had its own Philharmonic in 1701
and its opera exactly one hundred years ago, not to speak of its theaters.
In short, if smallness is its only deficiency, let it be so, as long as it
can.
Even a good thirty years ago the trade mark of Ljubljana was its skyscraper
and castle. The castle, which is about a thousand years old, has been under
reconstruction for quite a few years now, so that apart from seeing its renovated
chapel of St. George, with its coats-of-arms, the pentagonal tower and wedding
Hall, we most strongly recommend a visit to its high tower. The points is,
there is a fantastic view from there (as you can see below), not only of the
city (the rooftops of Old Ljubljana) and its surroundings (like the moody
marsh Barje, the green park Tivoli) but also to the Kamnik Alps in the north
and the Julian Alps with Triglav and the Karavanke Alps to the north-west.