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News of the Slovenian capital (Part 1)

News of the Slovenian capital (Part 1)
News of the Slovenian capital (Part 1)
News of the Slovenian capital (Part 1)
News of the Slovenian capital (Part 1)

On October 20, 2018, I was sightseeing in Vienna, the capital of Austria, and after that, I took a tourist bus to Venice, passing through Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, on the way, which made people feel different.

According to the itinerary plan and arrangement, the European tour group will be suspended in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, and the tour guide will not only punch in here, but also the european tour group will visit and spend money here.

However, I came to Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, especially when I stepped off the tourist bus, parked in Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, and went to the streets of Ljubljana for a tour, and there was no sense of freshness in the capital of a country. However, Ljubljana is still an ancient city. According to sources, in the first century BC, the Romans built a city here (called "Emona"), which was changed to its current name in the twelfth century. From 1809 to 1813, it was a local administrative center in France, and in 1821, Austria, Russia, Prussia, France, and Britain held a meeting of the members of the "Holy League", that is, the Conference of Le Baja. In the nineteenth century, it was the center of the Slovenian national movement, which belonged to Yugoslavia from 1919, and in 1895 a major earthquake in Ljubljana caused severe damage to the ancient city, and it is said that only some important buildings have been preserved, such as the ruins of the roman city in the third and fourth centuries BC, the general church of St. Nicholas in the eighteenth century, the music hall built in 1702 and some baroque buildings of the seventeenth century.

Members of the European tour and I walked on the streets of Ljubljana, and did not walk and see places of interest such as the ruins of the ancient city of Rome from the 3rd and 4th centuries BC, the church of St. Nicholas in the 18th century, and the music hall built in 1702. I may have been sightseeing around the area near Ljubljana parking, but I didn't see too many dazzling monuments and influential buildings.

To be honest, not only did I not see the glorious history of Ljubljana, nor did I see its ancient cultural sites, but I also did not see the beautiful side of the capital city firsthand. At the same time, it allowed me to see the gap between Ljubljana and other EU cities. That is, Ljubljana's urban architecture is mediocre and economically depressed. To put it bluntly, Ljubljana, the capital city, is not very popular. Therefore, I was only polite and did not lose the requirements of the regulations, so I had to take a tour of the area around this parking lot, and then I quickly got on the bus. After that, I wondered if there were many direct reasons why tourists didn't go away, didn't look, didn't go shopping, and didn't appreciate this city with ancient civilizations. In my opinion, the municipal officials of Ljubljana, the capital of Slovenia, have some responsibilities. Because local officials did not show the glorious side of Ljubljana, the capital of the Republic of Slovenia, to tourists from afar, they were disappointed. And because Ljubljana government officials did not pay enough attention to the arrival of tourists, the parking spot was not well chosen. It should be said that Ljubljana is the capital of Slovenia, but also the political, economic and cultural center of Slovenia, and must have its glorious history and culture, but unfortunately it is not seen and understood by tourists. However, I, a not-so-picky foreign tourist, do not like Ljubljana, the capital of a country, and it should be said that this is still the first. (To be continued)