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Lastovo

Lastovo
LastovoTown.jpg
Croatia - Lastovo.PNG
Geography
Location Adriatic Sea
Coordinates 42°45′N 16°52′E / 42.750°N 16.867°E / 42.750; 16.867Coordinates: 42°45′N 16°52′E / 42.750°N 16.867°E / 42.750; 16.867
Archipelago Central Dalmatian
Area 46.87 km2 (18.10 sq mi)
Length 9.8 km (6.09 mi)
Width 5.8 km (3.6 mi)
Coastline 46.4 km (28.83 mi)
Highest elevation 415 m (1,362 ft)
Highest point Hum
Administration
Croatia
County Dubrovnik-Neretva
Largest settlement Lastovo (pop. 344)
Demographics
Population 792 (2011)
Pop. density 16.9 /km2 (43.8 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups 93% Croats

Lastovo (pronounced [lâstɔv̞ɔ]; Italian: Lagosta, German: Augusta, Latin: Augusta Insula, Greek: Ladestanos, Illyrian: Ladest) is an island municipality in the Dubrovnik-Neretva County in Croatia. The municipality consists of 46 islands with a total population of 792 people, of which 93% are ethnic Croats, and a land area of approximately 53 square kilometres (20 sq mi). The biggest island in the municipality is also named Lastovo, as is the largest town. The majority of the population lives on the 46 square kilometres (18 sq mi) island of Lastovo.

Lastovo, like the rest of the Roman province of Dalmatia, was settled by Illyrians. The Romans conquered and settled the entire area, retaining control until the Avar invasions and Slavic migrations in the 7th century. The Croats and other Slavic tribes subjugated by the Croats secured most of the Dalmatian seaboard, but some cities and islands (like Lagosta) of the romanised Dalmatians remained independent under the nominal rule of the Byzantines. In 1000 AD the Venetians attacked and destroyed the settlement due to the island's participation in piracy along the Adriatic coast. After the Venetian domination, in the 13th century Lagosta joined the Republic of Ragusa where for several centuries it enjoyed a certain level of autonomy until the republic's conquest by the French, under Napoleon. Austria then ruled the island for the next century, then Italy for 30 years after World War I, and finally Yugoslavia until it became a part of the independent Republic of Croatia.


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