- Roč
Roč (Italian: "Rozzo") is a village in
Istria , north-westCroatia , with a population of only 180 people. It is about 50 km south-east ofTrieste ,Italy , located on the road Trieste —Koper — Učka tunnel —Rijeka . Its other names are "Rus" (quoted as such in a document of 1064), "Ronz" and "Rozzo". Together with Roč, they all derive from the Celtic name Roz: the related name Roc is very common in wide areas underCelts influence. The Romans called it Castrum Rotium or Rocium.Roč is considered a town rather than a village due to its rich cultural heritage. The local Church of St. Anthony holds the precious Roč
Glagolitic Abecedarium from the1200s . The first Croatian printed book, the Missal of1483 , was prepared in Roč by one Juri Žakan.The town of Roč is declared by the authorities as an important cultural monument, as it has a well preserved city walls from the
Middle Ages with two entrances, a Romanlapidarium , a Venetian bombardacannon and a functionalwatchtower . Furthermore, it has the church of St. Anton from the 12th, St. Rok from the 14th and St. Bertol from the15th century , and numerous other smaller artifacts preserved in the ancient buildings.Seven kilometers from Roč is Hum, with a population of only 22 people often called the smallest town in the world. Along the road from Roč to Hum is
Glagolitic avenue , a memorial avenue of ten monuments from the history of theGlagolitic alphabet .
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