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[[File:Rue Cara Dušanova à Belgrade.jpg|right|300px|thumb|Main street in Dorćol (Cara Dušana St)]]
'''Dorćol''' ([[Serbian Cyrillic]]: Дорћол, {{IPA-sh|dɔ̝̌rt͡ɕɔ̝l}}) is an [[List of Belgrade neighborhoods|urban neighborhood]] of [[Belgrade]], the capital of [[Serbia]]. It is located in Belgrade's municipality of [[Stari Grad, Belgrade|Stari Grad]].
== Location ==
Dorćol begins already some 700 meters north of [[Terazije]], the central square of Belgrade. It roughly can be divided in two sections, Gornji (or Upper) Dorćol, which covers the area from ''Akademski park'' to the ''[[Dušan of Serbia|Cara Dušana]]'' street, and Donji (or Lower) Dorćol which occupies the area between the ''Cara Dušana'' and ''Bulevar despota Stefana'' streets and the right bank of the [[Danube]]. The Lower Dorćol used to be known as '''Jalija''' (Turkish ''yali'', strand, bank). It borders (and largely overlaps) the neighborhoods of Stari Grad and [[Jevremovac]] (east and south) and the fortress of [[Kalemegdan]] (west), which is sometimes considered as part of Dorćol as well. The population of the neighborhood in the widest sense was 22,707 in 2002.
== History ==
[[File:Najstarija zgrada u Beogradu.JPG|thumb|left|The oldest house in Belgrade, in district of Dorćol]]
The name of the neighborhood comes from [[Turkish language|Turkish]] words ''dört'' (four) and ''yol'' (road), literally meaning "four roads" or colloquially "intersection (of four roads)", "crossroads". There is a town in [[Anatolia]]n section of modern [[Turkey]] with the same name ([[Dörtyol]]).
During the Turkish occupation of Belgrade, Dorćol was a well known trading centre, with many markets and traders of different nationalities, among others it was a center of Belgrade's Jewish community, remnant of which is the modern ''Jevrejska'' ("Jewish") street in Dorćol. After Belgrade became a capital of independent Serbia, Dorćol kept its multinational character for a long time. During the temporary Austrian occupation of northern Serbia 1717-1739, Jalija (Lower Dorćol) was the seat of the [[Prince Eugene of Savoy]]'s court. Eventually the old low houses and narrow streets were changed into modern buildings. Still, some parts, though vanishing one by one, resemble the old look.
== Economy ==
Western and northern sections of Dorćol are mainly residential, but eastern and riverside regions are heavily industrialized: depots and workshops of "GSP" (Belgrade City's transportation company), Belgrade City's Waterworks and Sewage company, [[heat plant]] "Dunav", Belgrade power station,"Žitomlin", "Jugošped",
"Kopaonik", "Kompresor", numerous depots and hangars, etc. On the opposite, clothing company "Beko" is located in the westernmost section of Dorćol.
Traffic facilities include the railway which circles around the fortress of Kalemegdan, from the main railway station of Belgrade, through Dorćol, and over the [[Pančevo Bridge]] further into [[Vojvodina]]. Small marina is projected to be in the future one of the most modern and expensive parts of the neighborhood. The western part of the [[Port of Belgrade]] "Dunav" also belongs to Dorćol.
The area is known for its promenade on the [[Danube]] bank, which is well developed with a long bicycle path for recreation and many night clubs on water. The promenade is called ''Obala majora Gavrilovića'' ("the riverbank of major Gavrilović") after [[Dragutin Gavrilović]], a Serbian officer who took part in defense of Belgrade in [[World War I]] from the Austrian army on this place.
== Characteristics ==
Being one of the original settlements outside the Kalemegdan fortress, Dorćol is a location of some of the oldest city buildings.
Belgrade's only [[mosque]], [[Bajrakli Mosque, Belgrade|Bajrakli Mosque]], is located in the southernmost part of the neighborhood, in the ''Gospodar Jevremova'' street. Originally built from 1660 to 1688 as Çohaci mosque, it was turned into a [[Roman Catholic]] church during the [[Austrian monarchy|Austrian]] rule in central Serbia in 1717-1739, then a mosque again. Renamed Bajrakli mosque (Turkish: ''bayrak'', flag) in 18th century, it has been demolished and rebuilt several times.
The oldest surviving private house in downtown Belgrade that is still used as a residence is located in the Cara Dušana Street number 10. Not much is known about its history except that it was built in 1790. The house has an arched ceiling and until recently was used as a bakery.
Church of [[Alexander Nevsky]] was originally built by the Russian monks in 1876. Original stone church was demolished in 1891 due to the urban expansion of Dorćol. The [[foundation stone]] for the new church was laid down by the Serbian [[heir apparent]] [[Alexander I of Yugoslavia|Aleksandar Karađorđević]] in 1912 but the [[Balkan Wars]] and [[World War I]] prevented to completion of the church until 1930 with the Royal family of [[Karađorđević]] being the largest donors. The church is built in the medieval Serbian Moravian style.
Since the late 1990s, ''Strahinjića Bana'' street became a "café-street", with dozens of bars, restaurants and cafés. Since then, it became favorite entertainment place of the emerging classes of Belgrade's [[nouveau riche]] and [[wikt:gold digger|gold digger]]s, and the street has been sarcastically nicknamed "Silicon Valley".
== Culture and sports ==
The [[Museum of Vuk and Dositej]] in ''Gospodar Jevremova'' street was officially opened in 1949 and dedicated to [[Dositej Obradović]], a novelist, major Serbian enlightener and first minister of education, and [[Vuk Karadžić]], the most important Serbian language reformer. The building itself is older and it was the seat of the former [[Belgrade HIgher School]], which became the [[University of Belgrade]].
Galerija fresaka (Gallery of the Frescoes) was opened in 1973. It hosts the reproduction of the most important frescoes from the Serbian medieval monasteries (11th-15th century, many of them located today in [[Montenegro]] and [[Republic of Macedonia|Macedonia]]), including the famed [[White Angel]] from [[Mileševa]]. The gallery is part of the [[National Museum of Serbia]].
Other important features are the [[avant-garde]] [[BITEF]] Theater on the Square of [[Mira Trailović]], the monument to the [[Greece|Greek]] national hero [[Rigas Feraios]] (who was killed by the Turks in the nearby Kalemedan), [[Ethnographic Museum (Belgrade)|Ethnographic museum]], Jewish museum, Pedagogical museum, Museum of the Theatrical Arts and the Academic park with the PMF, The faculty for the natural sciences and mathematics.
Leading [[Serbs|Serbian]] female novelist [[Svetlana Velmar-Janković]] wrote a book named "[http://www.dereta.rs/knjiga.jsp?id=5681 Dorćol]", which is composed from short stories, each named after a street in Dorćol.
Neglected for many years, the sports and recreational complex of "Milan Gale Muškatirović" (formerly and better known as "25. maj") is also located on the riverside. The clay tennis courts have been restored in 2009 to host the [[Serbia Open]], held for the first time from 4–10 May 2009. Bank around the complex is, with the altitude of 75,3 meters above sea level, one of the lowest parts of Belgrade urban area.
Dorćol [[Rugby league]] Club won ten consecutive [[Serbian Rugby League Championship]] titles (2002–2011) and are current "double crown" (domestic championship and Cup) holders. (See [[Rugby league in Serbia]]).
Based on the kind request of the members of the Dorćol Rugby League Club, Dorćol rapper [[Škabo]] alongside [[DJ Ape]] and beatmaker [[Šonsi Ras]] made the song named "Dorćol" - both: the anthem of the club and dedication to the neighbourhood - and published it on his album [[Remek delo]] in 2008.
== External links ==
* [http://www.virtualtourist.com/travel/Europe/Republic_of_Serbia/Belgrade-723780/Things_To_Do-Belgrade-Dorcol-BR-1.html Dorćol at Virtualtourist]
* [http://www.svastara.com/muzika/?tekst=19725 Lyrics of the song "Dorćol" - Škabo feat. DJ Ape & Šonsi Ras]
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