MUZEJI!!!!!

https://www.muzej.losinj.hr/

https://gmvt.com.hr/muzej/o-muzeju/

https://muzejvk.hr/ http://www.muzej-sibenik.hr/hrv/default.asp

https://www.muzejporec.hr/hr/o-muzeju/

https://muzej-sisak.hr/o


makskimir povijest https://aktivnosti.zagreb.hr/gradske-cetvrti-19/maksimir/iz-povijesti-14043/14043



http://ss-drvodjeljska-zg.skole.hr/skola/povijest

https://prehrambeno-tehnoloska-skola.hr/about-us/

http://ss-cazma.skole.hr/skola/povijest

https://ss-krapina.hr/o_skoli/povijest-skole/

http://ss-glina.skole.hr/skola/povijest

http://ss-druga-ekonomska-zg.skole.hr/skola/povijest

bosnia

https://gimnazijamostar.ba/

http://treca-gimnazija.edu.ba/historijat/

User:Lararuzic/Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Zagreb


User:Lararuzic/Faculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry, University of Zagreb

User:Lararuzic/Music School Blagoja Bersa Zagreb

User:Lararuzic/III Gymnasium



Faculty of Veterinary Medicine
University of Zagreb
Veterinarski fakultet
Sveučilišta u Zagrebu
TypePublic
Established26 september, 1919
DeanProf. Nenad Turk, PhD
Studentsc. 600
Location,
CampusHeinzelova
NicknameVER
AffiliationsUniversity of Zagreb
WebsiteThe Faculty of Veterinary Medicine


The Faculty of Veterinary Medicine is a faculty of Zagreb University which consists of four departments: Fundamental and preclinical science, animal production and biotechnology, public health and food safety, and clinic sciences.




Medvešcak is a neighbourhood of the district Gornji grad-medveščak in Zagreb, Croatia. According to the 2011 census, 2 648 people make up its population.

The neighbourhood is best known for its theatre, 'Small Stage Theatre' (Croatian: Kazalište Mala Scena), and Zagreb University's school of medicine. There is also a small park, Glogovac, situated in the centre. The neighbourhood boasts is a variety of high schools, including the II and XVII gymnasiums, a school of midwifery, and various specializing in the creative arts.[1]

An ice hockey club - HLK Medveščak - is the most well-known club from Medveščak, and the most successful ice hockey club throughout Croatia. The neighourhood also has a fairly successful waterpolo team, VL Medveščak, which was established in 1947.

The library of Medveščak[2]


Stream edit

A stream



Also, it has a primary school.


Medvešcak is a neighbourhood of the district Gornji Grad-Medveščak in Zagreb, Croatia. According to the 2011 census, 2 648 people make up its population.



High school of Food Technology
Prehrambeno-Tehnološka škola
Location
Map
31 Đure Prejac Street,10040 Zagreb
Croatia
Coordinates45°49′59.7″N 16°3′36.288″E / 45.833250°N 16.06008000°E / 45.833250; 16.06008000
Information
School typeSpecialized public school
Established1959; 65 years ago (1959)
HeadmasterJosip Šestak
Staff60
Grades4 (9 to 12)
Number of students526
Classes22
LanguageCroatian, English, German
WebsitePrehrambeno tehnološa škola



Lararuzic/sandbox
Strojarska tehnička škola Faust Vrančić'
Location
Map
14 Marin Držić Avenue, 10000 Zagreb
Croatia
Coordinates45°47′52.8″N 15°59′46.716″E / 45.798000°N 15.99631000°E / 45.798000; 15.99631000
Information
School typeSpecialized public school
Established1946; 78 years ago (1946)
HeadmasterDubravko Diklić
Grades4 (9 to 12)
Number of students660
Classes26
LanguageCroatian, English
NicknameStrojarska
WebsiteStrojarska Tehnička Škola



The High school of technical mechanics, (langhr) is a public high school in Zagreb, Croatia, which provides specialised prepatory education for students who wish to pursue a career in (civil?) enigeering or mechanical and industrial engineering.


History edit

The school was established in 1946, for the purpose of educating students in industrial metalworking after a demand arose from Zagreb's industry, specifically Prvomajska Factory.


On the 31st of March, 1977, the reforms of the Croatian-Yugoslav politican Stipe Šuvar became official, and the institution of gymnasiums were officially eliminated.[10] The name, and instituion became The Technical education centre of Prvomajska (Croatian: (Tehnički obrazovni centar Prvomajska). It was more commonly referred to by its abbreviation, TOC.


a year after the formation of socialist Yugoslavia when a need for more people in the metal industry arose.




The school was established in 1946,

Utemeljenje škole datira od sredine prošlog stoljeća, točnije od 1946. godine, kada je upisan jedan razred za potrebe metalske industrije grada Zagreba i tvornice Prvomajska. Slijedećih godina broj polaznika se povećava i školske godine 1947/48. škola nosi naziv – Škola učenika u privredi.


https://prehrambeno-tehnoloska-skola.hr/about-us/








The Seventh Gymnasium, (Croatian: Sedma Gimnazija) commonly known as VII Gymnasium, is a public co-educational secondary school in Zagreb, Croatia.







Second Gymnasium
II. gimnazija
Location
Map
4 Juraj Križanić Street, 10000 Zagreb
Croatia
Coordinates45°48′30.528″N 15°59′12.48″E / 45.80848000°N 15.9868000°E / 45.80848000; 15.9868000
Information
School typeAll-purpose grammar school
Established1912; 112 years ago (1912)
HeadmasterDrago Bagić
Staff54
Grades4 (9 to 12)
LanguageCroatian, English, Russian, Spanish, Italian, German, French
NicknameDruga
WebsiteDruga gimnazija


Druga :D!

The Second Gymnasium (Croatian: Druga Gimnazija), commonly known as II gymnasium, is a public co-educational high school in Zagreb, Croatia. It was the second secular gymnasium to be established in Zagreb. The school was founded in 1912, as a result of limited room in the First Gymnasium. As of 2021, the principal is Drago Bagić.

History edit

commonly known as I. gymnasium,



http://osagm.hr/povijest-skole/


PRIMARY SCHOOL ZAGREB

http://www.os-ikrsnjavi-zg.skole.hr/skola/povijest


In the 106 years of its existence, the name of the First school of Economics has changed thirteen times:

  • Royal school of commerce (1883-1892)
  • Royal school of higher commerce (1892-1909)
  • Royal academy of commerce (1910-1917)
  • National academy of commerce (1918-1938)
  • Academy of commerce (1939-1940)
  • First national academy of commerce (1941-1945)
  • National academy of commerce (1945-1946)
  • Tehnicum of economics (1947-1948)
  • First technicum of economics (1948-1951)
  • First high school of economics (1951-1953)
  • First high school of economics 'Boris Kidrič'(1953-1978)
  • Educational centre of economics 'Boris Kidrič' (1978-1991)
  • First school of economics (from 1991 to present)


U 106 godina svog postojanja ime Prve ekonomske škole mijenjalo se trinaest puta:

- Kraljevska trgovačka škola (1883.-1892.) - Kraljevska viša trgovačka škola (1892.-1909.) - Kraljevska trgovačka akademija (1910.-1917.) - Državna trgovačka akademija (1918.-1938.) - Trgovačka akademija (1939.-1940.) - Prva državna trgovačka akademija (1941.-1945.) - Državna trgovačka akademija (1945.-1946.) - Ekonomski tehnikum (1947.-1948.) - Prvi ekonomski tehnikum (1948.-1951.) - Prva srednja ekonomska škola (1951.-1953.) - Prva ekonomska škola "Boris Kidrič" (1953.-1978.) - Ekonomski obrazovni centar

  "Boris Kidrič" (1978.-1991.)

- Prva ekonomska škola (od 1991.)




SCHOOL MUSEUM:

Sources -

https://www.hsmuzej.hr/hr/sadrzaj/o-muzeju/povijest


Dubrovnija Avenue

Buildings edit

The multiple pavilions hosting the Zagreb Fair are located on the street. Additionally, the First Gymnasium is on 36 Dubrovnik Avenue.




Ivan Tkalčić, a Croatian priest and historian, mentioned the settlment in his work upon the history of Zagreb.


Sources:

http://kurziv.net/kratka-povijest-zagrebackog-jezera-jarun/

https://aktivnosti.zagreb.hr/gradske-cetvrti-19/tresnjevka-jug/iz-povijesti-13526/13526

https://mapiranjetresnjevke.com/kvartovi/jarun/

https://blog.dnevnik.hr/jarun-zanimljivosti/2012/10/1631141647/povijest-jaruna.html

https://povijest.hr/jesteliznali/po-kome-ili-cemu-su-nazvani-zagrebacki-toponimi/

https://www.zgportal.com/o-zagrebu/povijest-zagrebackih-naselja/jarun/

https://najarunu.webs.com/apps/blog/show/42016713-video-povijest-jaruna-kako-je-nastalo-zagrebacko-more-

http://icolim.hep.hr/default.aspx?id=55


THE SECOND GYMNASIUM















First Gymnasium
I. gimnazija
Location
Map
36 Dubrovnija Avenue, 10010 Zagreb
Croatia
Coordinates45°47′50.352″N 15°57′43.416″E / 45.79732000°N 15.96206000°E / 45.79732000; 15.96206000
Information
School typeAll-purpose grammar school
Established1854; 170 years ago (1854)
HeadmasterDunja Marušić
Staff54
Grades4 (9 to 12)
LanguageCroatian, English, Russian, Spanish, Italian, German, French
NicknamePrva
WebsitePrva gimnazija

The First Gymnasium (Croatian: Prva Gimnazija), commonly known as I. gymnasium, is a co-educational public secondary school in Zagreb, Croatia. It was the first secular gymnasium to be established in Zagreb, and second throughout Croatia.[3] It was founded in 1854, as a three-year schooling institution for exclusively boys. As of 2021, the principal is Dunja Marušić.



History edit

Following the Austro-Hungarian Empire's advancements in modern secondary education, on the 20th November 1854 the first secular gymnasium was opened in Zagreb. [4]. It was situated on Ćirilometodska ulica, near the Church of Saint Mark. The following year, after an influx of enrollments, the school was re-located to the Priest's tower.[5]. The school expanded during this time, to offer three grades instead of only one. In 1858, the school moved for the third time, now to Strossmayer's street, where it would stay for thirty-seven years, and a year later in 1859, a fourth grade level was implemented.

Ćirilomedotska street, where the school was initially located

In 1860, the centralist policies of Alexander von Bach were abolished. Bach's reforms forced all schools in the empire to conduct their lessons in the German language. Now, for the first time, lessons were able to be conducted in Croatian.[6]

During Izidor Kršnjavi's reforms on education in the early 1890s, the school began a process of modernization. A wide range of new buildings and facilites were constructed and the learning conditions of the school improved drastically.[7] In 1895, during Emperor Franz Joseph visit to Zagreb, he officially opened the installations. Also, around this period, writer Franjo Bučar was introducing sports such as football, hockey, gymnastics, and fencing to the nation of Croatia. He encouraged of sport as a school subject, and thus it was implemented in the school.[8]

In 1895, the school moved to Roosevalt Sqaure, into the building which now houses the Museum of Mimara.

Six years later, 1901 marked the year of girls being allowed to take end-of-high school exams on-site, enabling them to have/giving them the qualifications to be able to enrol in higher education.

During the First World War, the school's building served as a military hospital, the actual institution temporarily re-locating to the site of an orphanage on Vladimir Nazor street. After the war finished, the students returned to Roosevalt Sqaure. However, they could not use the full extent of the building for many years afterwards as it was also utilised for housing refugees who escaped Istria after its annexation by the Kingdom of Italy.

On the 26th of May, 1941, the stuedents of the first gymnasium and all high-school students of Zagreb were required to congregate in the Maksimir Stadium and seperate themselves into groups based on ethcnitiy, an attempt by the newly-instated NDH to ethnically segregate the city.[9] However, those who were Croatian did not comply and walked over to stand with the Jewish and Serbian minorities. The school suffered heavily from the 1944 bombing of Zagreb.

Following the establishment of Yugoslavia, sweeping education reforms across the country required all public schools to co-educational. Girls were accepted into the school from 1954 onward, and thus the official name of the school changed to The First Gymnasium.[10] Also in 1954, the school celebrated its 100th year anniversary by erecting a plaque with the names of all the students who had died as a result of the Second World War. Ten years later, people left homeless by Zagreb's catastrophic flood in 1964 were housed in the school's buildings while their homes were being repaired.

Players from the school's handball team compete at the World School Handball championships in 1978, and won a silver medal.[11]

On the 31st of March, 1977, the reforms of the Croatian-Yugoslav politican Stipe Šuvar became official, and the institution of gymnasiums were officially eliminated.[12] This meant that the first gymnasium would merge with the Fourth Gymnasium, and change the name of their institution to 'The Centre for directed education for administration and judiciary' (Croatian: Centar usmjerenog obrazovanja za upravu i pravosuđe), or CUP for short.

By an official decision from the Zagreb assembly and Croatian parliament, in 1980s a decision was made that the building of the school was to be converted into a museum. In response, the staff of the school went on a protest strike in the spring of 1986. However, a few months later, the school was forced to re-locate from the premises[13]. The school split their students into two seperate facilities - grades 9 and 10 were situated on Warsaw Street, while grades 11 and 12 moved to Gundulić street.

In 1990, the system of gymnasiums were returned to Yugoslavia.[14] The school now split up into three seperate instituions - the original first and fourth gymnasiums, and an administrative faculty.

At the outbreak of the Homeland War, the basement of the school was used as a shelter for refugees. In Janurary of 1993, the school undertook a decision to move buildings once again. On December 23rd that same year, the new site on Dubrovnik Avenue in New Zagreb was officially opened.

In 2004, on the school's 150th anniversay, they recieved City of Zagreb award. [15]

Notable Alumni edit


političar, državnik i marksistički teoretičar, jedan od osnivača ZAVNOH-a i prvi predsjednik NR Hrvatskebr htv


In the years of the war,


Despite this, they used the field around Roosevelt Sqaure for their physical activity lessons.

The facility re-located to Warsaw street, where they stayed for six more years.

The school was evicted from

officially
reforms of the Croatian politican Stipe Šuvar were implemented. This resulted in a


Gimnazije su ukinute 31. 3. 1977. zakonom o financiranju (srednja škola mora se udružiti u interesnu zajednicu s privredom svoje struke koja ju financira).


the schools' handball team competed


During the years of educational reforms that made schools be self-managing,



After the war, following the creation of the socialist state of Yugoslavia, the school resumed its operations after a reconstruction


The school was additionally affected by the second world war.

.


Physical sport was created as a subject in this gymnasium, with the constu

was as a result of his

A variety of sports were implemented in


there were reforms on the education system,

The Zagreb Earthquake of 1880 heavily affected the school, severely damaged its buildings.


As a result of the Austro-Prussian War, a military court was set up within the school during the summer of 1866.



In 1860, the centralist reforms by Bach were abolished. Bach's reforms

Baron Alexander von Bach

Notable Alumni edit

  • Vladimir Prelog, a nobel prize-winning organic chemist
  • August Cesarec, književnik, pjesnik i revolucionar, sudionik u Španjolskom građanskom ratu
  • Vladimir Bakarić, političar, državnik i marksistički teoretičar, jedan od osnivača ZAVNOH-a i prvi predsjednik NR Hrvatske
  • Dobroslav Cesarić, akademik i pjesnik


with only one grade.




On the 15th of October, 1856, the Austro-Hungarian emperor King Franz Joseph declared the school officially independent.


Tek rješenjem kralja Franje Josipa I. od 15. listopada 1856.“Kraljevska zemaljska mala realka“ postaje samostalnom

ad je gradska uprava odlučila malu realku pretvoriti u veliku, kupuje zgradu na Strossmayerovu šetalištu na Griču, kamo realka seli ujesen 1958.


, now the building of the Zagreb Observatory.




i


n education

modern secondary education in the Habsburg Monarchy began in the mid-19th century, with a legal reform


Čirilometodska ulica

(File:Zagreb 23.jpg)





as a 'Real Gymnasium' for boys.


As of 2021, it provides education to 






'The Upper town Gymnasium, known in Croatian as Gornjogradska Gimnazija, is a co-educational public secondary school in Zagreb, Croatia.








The Seventh Gymnasium (Croatian: Sedma Gimnazija), more commonly known as VII. gymnasium, is a public and co-educational secondary school in Zagreb, Croatia. Founded in 1891, it currently has 600 students enrolled. As of 2021, the principal is Ivka Nevisić.[16]

History edit

Curriculum edit

Source for curriculum: https://issuu.com/sedma.gimnazija/docs/bro_ura_najnovije

Subject Amount of hours learnt during a week
First year - 9th grade Second year - 10th grade Third year - 11th grade Fourth year - 12th grade

Croatian language 4 4 4 4
First foreign language 3 3 3 3
Second foreign language 2 2 2 2
Mathematics 4 4 3 3
Physics 2 2 2 2
Chemistry 2 2 2 2
Biology 2 2 2 2
Latin 2 2 - -
Music 1 1 1 1
Creative arts 1 1 1 1
Psychology - 1 1 -
Logic - - 1 -
Philsophy - - - 2
Sociology - - 2 -
History 2 2 2 3
Geography 2 2 2 2
Information Technology/Computer Science 2 - - -
Politics and economics - - - 1
Sport 2 2 2 2
Elective subject: ethics OR religious studies 1 1 1 1
Grade socialising 1 1 1 1

Notable Alumni edit

Tenth Gymnasium edit

Tenth Gymnasium - officially the X. Gymnasium of Ivan Supek - (Croatian: Deseta Gimnazija 'Ivan Supek') is a co-educational public secondary school in Zagreb, Croatia, for students aged 15 to 19.

In Croatia, and throughout Central and Eastern Europe, a gymnasium typically refers to a all-purpose school with no speciality in any subject.




History edit

Who it was named after

Ivan Supek (8th April 1915 - 5th March 2007) was a Croatian physicist, philosopher, and peace activist.






XI Grammar School
XI. gimnazija
Location
 
77 Savska street 9
10000 Zagreb
Croatia
Coordinates45°47′50.352″N 15°57′43.416″E / 45.79732000°N 15.96206000°E / 45.79732000; 15.96206000
Information
School typeAll-purpose grammar school
MottoDobra lokacija, još bolja edukacija.
(Good location, even better education.)
Established1926; 98 years ago (1926)
FounderStjepan Radić
HeadmasterMaja Sečić-Končić
Grades4 (9 to 12)
Number of pupils465
Classes16
LanguageCroatian, English, German, French
NicknameJedaneasta, XI.
WebsiteJedanaesta gimnazija


The Eleventh Gymnasium (Croatian: Jedanaesta Gimnazija) is a public secondary school in Zagreb, Croatia, established in 1926. The school, as of 2021, has 465 students enrolled, and 16 classes. [17] The principal is Maja Sečić-Kopinč.

The school shares a building with the teaching faculity of Zagreb Univeristy.

History edit

The establishment of the school was approved in 1926, the first principal being Branko Škare.[18] The building which the school currently is located inside was constructed in 1937, by the Catholic women's order Sisters of Charity (Croatian: Sestre Milosrdnice). The order founded an all-purpose same-sex gymnasium for girls. Alozije Stepinac personally blessed the opening of the new building.

During the Second World War, it temporarily served as a hospital for the wounded, housing up to 300 soilders and civilians. After the war, however, the name of General Women's Gymnasium was abolished, and became known as the Eleventh Gymnasium.[19] It adopted to a co-educational system and secular curriculum from that point on. In 1962, the school moved to Doboj street in the neighbourhood of Trešnjevka.

In 1977, following the educational reforms by Stipe Šuvar, the school merged with the Fifth and Seventh Gymnasiums and changed its name to the Education Centre of Bogan Ogrizović (Croatian: Pedagoško-obrazovnog centra „Bogdan Ogrizović“). Šuvar was a prominent Croatian politican and sociologist and member of the communist party who greatly influenced the education system of 1970s Yugoslavia.[20]

In 1991, the newly-fledged nation of Croatia re-named it to the Eleventh (although better known in its roman numeral form, XI) Gymnasium.

During Croatia's earthquake in March of 2020, the school's buildings were heavily damaged.[21]

Curriculum edit

The school offers a multitude of subjects, compulsary or optional depending on the grade of a student, and a few permanently mandatory or optional.

Subject Language grammar school
1st grade 2nd grade 3rd grade 4th grade

Croatian language 4 4 4 4
First foreign language 4 4 4 4
Second foreign language 4 3 3 3
Latin language 2 2 - -
Music Appreciation 1 1 1 1
Art History 1 1 1 1
Psychology - - 2 -
Logics - - 1 -
Philosophy - - - 2
Sociology - - 2 -
History 2 2 2 2
Geography 2 2 1 2
Mathematics 3 3 3 3
Physics 2 2 2 2
Chemistry 2 2 2 2
Biology 2 2 2 2
Information Technology - 2 - -
Politics and Economics - - - 1
Physical Education 2 2 2 2
Elective (Religious Education or Ethics) 1 1 1 1
Foreign language - - 2* 2*


Mathermatics, Croatian language, physics, chemistry, biology, one foreign language (English geography, information science, art, music, philsophy, logic, and sport. . .[22]


Furthermore, the school has organized mathematics competitions for other high-school age students in Zagreb.


The students score amongst the top twenty schools in Croatia in end-of-school exams. ('Matura' in Croatian.)

XI Gimnazija https://www.physicsclassroom.com/Physics-Interactives/Waves-and-Sound/Standing-Wave-Patterns/Standing-Wave-Patterns-Interactive


Notable Alumni edit

langhr: Jedanaesta Gimnazija)










The Women's General Gymnasium (full name: Women's Gymnasium of the Sisters of Mercy) (Croatian: Ženska opća Gimnazija družbe sestara milosrdnica) is a single-sex high school in Zagreb, Croatia, which provides secondary education to girls. It has an integreal Catholic component.







Ivan Anušić (born 13th October 1973) is a politician who is currently serving as the head of Osijek-Baranja County in the region of Slavonija in Croatia. He is a member of the nation's leading political party, HDZ, the Croatian Democratic Union, however was formerly a part of the nationalist and right-wing party Croatian Party of Rights (HSP).

Life edit

Early life edit

Anušić was born on the 13th of October 1973, in SR Croatia, in the town of Osijek, to mother and father He attended and graduated from Zagreb University achieveing a degree in Sports Sciences.[23]

In June 1991, some months after the breakout of the war in Croatia, Anušić, who was not yet 18, joined the army as a volunteer. He was a member of the Croatian National Guard, and joined the freshly-created Ministry of Internal Affairs as a member of the special police.[24] His brother died during the war.[25]

Personal life edit

Anušić has a wife, Mandica. He has four children, the youngest one only recently being born in 2016.


Political Career edit

In 1993, Anušić enrolled as a member of the HSP, alternatively known as the Croatian party of rights.

2018 onwards edit

He joined the Croatian Party of Rights in 1993. He rose up the ranks and became the leader of the municipality of Antunovac from 2005 to 2017. achieved a position eventually rose From the

June 1991, he has been a minor volunteer in the Homeland War. As a member of the National Guard Corps, 106th and 130th Brigades, a member of the special police of the Ministry of the Interior, the Military Police and the 3rd Guards Brigade, he went through numerous battlefields in the fight for Croatian independence. He is the holder of military decorations of the Republic of Croatia, the Homeland War Memorial and decorations for participation in the military-police operation Flash.

(in what is now modern-day Croatia)





First Gymnasium edit

The First Gymnasium is a public high school in Zagreb, Croatia,




History

The First Gymnasium (Croatian: I. gimnazija, Prva gimnazija) was founded in 1854, among the first high school institutions to be established in Zagreb.[26]


The Third Gymanasium ((Croatian: III. gimnazija, Treća gimnazija)

  1. ^ "Gornji grad-Medveščak - a project" (PDF) (in Croatian). Zagreb Office of city planning and development. 2019. p. 30. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  2. ^ "Library Medveščak". Association of libraries of Zagreb. Retrieved 1 October 2021.
  3. ^ Gelenčir, Martina. "The oldest secular gymnasium is Zagreb celebrates it's 163rd birthday". High School portal of Croatia. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  4. ^ Radeka, Igor. "The development and prospects of teacher education in Croatia". Research Gate. University of Zadar. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  5. ^ "First Men's Gymnasium in Zagreb". State Archives of Zagreb. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  6. ^ Krajcar, Dražen. "Bach's absolutism in the Hapsburg Monarchy". History Croatia. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  7. ^ Župan, Dinko. "Mažuranić's and Kršnjavii's reforms on education". Croatian Institute of History.
  8. ^ "About Dr. Franjo Bučar". Student Home Franjo Bučar.
  9. ^ Tena Banjeglav; Kristina Dilica; Alice Staniero. "Zagreb in the war: Resistance, Creativey, and collective memory" (PDF). Documents of Croatia - Centre for facing the past. p. 36. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  10. ^ Tomić, Vera. "Education in Yugoslavia and the New Reform" (PDF). Institute of Education Services - Archives. University of California. p. 69. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  11. ^ "A look at the history of the first gymnasium". First Gymnasium of Zagreb. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  12. ^ Perišić, Helena. "Vocation-oriented education reform in Croatia in the 1970s". CORE UK. University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  13. ^ "History of the Museum Mimara". Museum Mimara. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  14. ^ "The Croatian Education System" (PDF) (in Croatian). The Croatian ministry for education and spiort. 2002. p. 51.
  15. ^ "Recipients of the award of the city of Zagreb, 2004". City of Zagreb. City of Zagreb assembly. Retrieved 9 September 2021.
  16. ^ "About our school". Seventh Gymnasium of Zagreb. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  17. ^ "About out school: Eleventh Gymnasium of Zagreb". XI. gymnasium Zagreb. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  18. ^ "Archive record of decision to split up the education centre and create three new gymnasiums up the". Official Herald. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  19. ^ "Get to know: The Eleventh Gymnasium". HIgh school portal of Croatia. News portal for high school students. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  20. ^ Perišić, Helena. "Vocation-oriented education reform in Croatia in the 1970s". CORE UK. University of Zagreb, Faculty of Humanities and Social. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  21. ^ Kršul, Dora. "In this building, the primary and secondary school were heavily damaged by the earthquake". Telegram - the portal for social and cultural questions. Telegram Croatia. {{cite web}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help); Missing or empty |url= (help)
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