Discover the best top things to do in , Bosnia and Herzegovina including Art Studio Pandur, Bosnaseum, ARK D-0: Tito's Nuclear Bunker, Muzej Sarica Kuca, War Photo Exhibition, The Mak House / Makova Hiza, Museum of War and Genocide Victims 1992-1995, Old Bridge Museum, Bosnian National Monument Muslibegovic House, Museum of Herzegovina.
Restaurants in Herzegovina-Neretva Canton
5.0 based on 25 reviews
Art Studio Pandur is copperwork gallery where you can find only originally made art pieces and souvenirs affordable for everyone. Art Studio Pandur has been established in 1965, and has strong tradition in which you can enjoy all year long. At the site you can explore the process of work, as well as to see work demonstration.
5.0 based on 44 reviews
Bosnaseum has a goal to present whole Bosnian culture and history in one place. With more than 800 square meters of area you can feel Bosnian history as nowhere else.
The Bosnaseum museum is very interesting, showing the history, culture, tradition of all peoples of Bosnia and Herzegovina. It also shows the war period in Mostar(exhibition of war photographs, a short movie about the destruction of the Old bridge). A very useful time spent visiting Mostar.
4.5 based on 122 reviews
When I heard about this place during my research for this trip I knew I wanted to visit, but as a solo traveller finding an agency to go with was no easy matter since most have a minimum group size and I could not afford the high price for a solo tour. I was lucky though that half an hour after I left the agency they had a booking for a large group whom I was able to join - I was definately meant to go! The tour was amazing and such an eye opener. The guide was very knowledgeable and enthusiastic, telling us not only the history of the bunker but also many interesting facts about life in Mostar both before and after the War - most of which you will not find in the guide books. The bunker though is so interesting with so many rooms you could explore - we only saw a small part of course as much is off limits for visitors. I can't imagine what life must have been like for those who were stationed here or indeed built the complex, and it is strange to think that Tito in all likelihood never set foot in the place. We criticise our own Government for wasting money - but! I have viisted a much smaller nuclear bunker in Prague but it was nothing compared to this, which dwarfs what I saw there. One of the most interesting parts apart from of course Tito's private quarters was the area where you can view all the artwork - there is so much you could read into a lot of this, which tells a thousand stories. If you get the chance to go then do so, you won't regret it.
4.5 based on 102 reviews
Moving, powerful and informative. A great way to get a historical and emotional snapshot of the war in Mostar from the perspective of a New Zealand photo-journalist who was living there at the time. Haunting to put the pictures in perspective, as many of the streets and buildings pictured will be familiar to you if you have spent the day wondering in Mostar. Cheap and takes 20-40 mins - leave a donation - they deserve it.
4.5 based on 3 reviews
The nucleus of The Mak House is a memorial room containing an exhibition of Mak's original manuscripts, annotated books, documents, photographs and Mak's portraits by different well known authors. The memorial room also holds different editions of Mak's works, translations of his poetry into numerous languages, essays and reflections on his work.
4.5 based on 159 reviews
The museum explains what happened during the 1992-1995 war, with all its brutality - genocide,concentration camps,mass graves,crimes against children...The Museum shows personal belongings and statements of victims, personal items exhumed from mass graves, photos, testimonies, court evidences, documentaries, etc.
A sister museum to the one in Sarajevo, this museum is very similar in how it tells the story of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia during the 1990s along with references to the siege of Sarajevo. In places it can be really harrowing, especially some of the video exhibits, however it is worth sticking through this to get a clearer view of what happened and why it should never happen again. Really well executed and very informative. You can spend a couple of hours here easily reading and soaking up the information.
4.5 based on 14 reviews
My main purpose for visiting Mostar was to see the famous bridge crossing. Built in the 1560's by the Ottomans as a way of securing and controlling the trade routes, the bridge was an engineering and architectural marvel. It was destroyed in 1993 and subsequently rebuilt in the same way as the original, by an international coalition. I spent a lot of time in the Old Bridge Museum located in one of the fortifications studying the reconstruction design drawings. What amazing engineering.
4.0 based on 84 reviews
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