The Petrovaradin Fortress was an almost unconquerable fortification and every army that succeeded in taking it could feel assured that it gained a superior stronghold. There, in a suburb of the Balkans where the Western and Eastern worlds had been in collision for centuries, Petrovaradin was an obstacle for the advancement of numerous invaders. Today, while strolling along its paths above the Danube, traces of its history and past wars are still visible, but only as Baroque features and a tourist attraction.
Civilizations have succeeded one another at the Danube boundary for seventy thousand years. Today the river divides the regions known as Bačka and Srem. The present appearance of Petrovaradin Fortress dates to the period from 1692 to 1780.
- These were the years of the great Turkish-Austrian wars and the Serbian migration northward. The construction of Petrovaradin began during the reign of the Emperor Leopold I and ended under Joseph II. When construction of this fortification was completed, further advancement by the Ottomans was simply impossible, - says Siniša Jokić, a historian and custodian at this cultural-historical monument.
In addition to its admirable strategic position, a crucial element in the defence of this fortification was subterranean corridors that led to gun holes. These provided daily light and served as observation posts from where the movements of besiegers could be watched.
- The subterranean corridors extended on four levels under the fortification and the Hornwerk (the protruding part of the southern fortress) and further led to a fifth and the sixth semi-level. In total, the corridors stretch almost twenty kilometres in length and lead to some twelve thousand gun holes. The principal idea of the Austrian Empire's military architects was to protect and hide troops in the corridors, because wars were then led mostly during the day, - says Jokić, while guiding us through the underground military galleries. |