2024
MAKEDONIUM

MAKEDONIUM

Memorial to visit
4/5
1 review

This 12-hectare memorial complex (Македониум) houses one of the most beautiful monuments inherited from socialist Yugoslavia: a futuristic "dome" often compared to a spaceship. Commemorating the Ilinden Uprising of August 2, 1903, it dominates Kruševo at an altitude of 1,320 m. The Makedonium, also known as the Ilinden Monument (Споменик Илинден/Spomenik Ilinden), was inaugurated on August 2, 1974. It is the major work of sculptor Jordan Grabulovski (1925-1986). He collaborated with his wife, architect Iskra Grabulovski (1936-2008), and painters Borko Lazeski (1917-1993) for the stained-glass windows and Petar Mazev (1927-1993) for the mosaics. The country's most renowned artist, Jordan Grabulovski - known in the West as Jordan Grabul - helped create the modern sculptural movement in Yugoslavia in the 1950s. Makedonium is his most accomplished project. His style is resolutely "optimistic", with the sculpture forming a whole with its functional environment.

The path. Conceived as a pathway, the complex offers a magnificent panorama of Kruševo and the surrounding area. The entrance is marked by the Chains monument (Пранги/Prangi): five concrete arches painted white, representing the five centuries of Ottoman "oppression". Two of them are open, forming the letter "С" of the word Слобода/Sloboda ("freedom"). A 100 m-long paved path then climbs up to the Crypt monument (Криптата/Cryptata). This is a circular esplanade surrounded by white walls. These bear 58 cones on which are inscribed the names of revolutionaries, intellectuals, fighting units and locations of the various insurrectionary movements of the 19th and 20th centuries. These include the name of Nozhot/Ножот, a village in the Prilep region where a battle took place in 1907, or that of revolutionary Dimitar Vlahov (1878-1953). The path continues to climb for around 100 m to theAmphitheater (Амфитеатар/Amfiteatar). Located in line with the dome, this space is composed of two concentric circles. The outer circle is decorated with colorful mosaics forming eight geometric figures that represent the different motifs of traditional carpets from the country's regions. The inner circle houses an alignment of 270 white studs, each 30 cm high. The significance of this installation is little-known today: the staff on site evoke both the representation of the molecular composition of water and that of the symbol of revolutionaries who died in battle. The path continues for 50 m to the ramp that leads to the entrance to the dome.

The Dome. This Dome (Купола/Cupola) is the major feature of the complex. It's a white concrete sphere 34 m in diameter and 12.5 m high, spiked with twelve excrescences pierced with openings. The wooden entrance door is embellished with the letter M for "Makedonia". Inside, the single circular room, immaculate and bathed in soft natural light, houses the tomb of Nikola Karev (1877-1905). This is adorned with a polished white marble cube resting on a corner, one edge of which is hollowed out to symbolize the unfinished life of the leader of the 1903 insurrection. The four side openings, pointing towards the cardinal points, feature large bay windows. Their walls are decorated with white figurative sculptures representing, from left to right, the four major stages in the country's creation: the Ottoman invasion (1392), the Ilinden uprising and the division of Macedonia after the Balkan wars (1912-1913), the war of national liberation (1941-1945), freedom and unity (1945). The four openings in between feature colorful stained-glass windows evoking the seasons and the different components of the Macedonian people. The last series of openings, at the top, is made up of skylights, some of whose conical shape is reminiscent of the wooden cannons built by the Kruševo insurgents in 1903. Finally, in the center of the room is the Eternal Flame: a block originally in polished white marble (now in plastic), representing a Macedonian sun with 16 rays. These concentrate into eight rays to attract the "cosmic energy" represented by a faint orange light in the center, symbolizing both fire and a beating heart. Because of its shape, the building has a special acoustic feature. The designers wanted to take advantage of this by asking composer Toma Prošev (1931-1996) to write a work especially for the site. This is the oratorio Sonce na prastarata zemja ("Sun of the Ancient Land"), which is rarely broadcast to visitors.

The memorial today. Every year on August 2, the Makedonium is the setting for the great national celebration commemorating the 1903 uprising. Although it also features on 10,000-denar banknotes, it is no longer held in high esteem by the authorities, who criticize it for its Yugoslav past. With its futuristic form evoking molecular structures, the Makedonium is nevertheless a masterpiece in its refusal of figuration. It remains particularly moving in that it does not seek to use images of war and death, but to convey the idea of the spirit of resistance and life that animated the heroes of Ilinden. It's a monument of hope, marking the beginning of a new society that was once thought to be ideal.

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2024

MARTINOVSKI GALLERY

Fine arts museum
4/5
1 review

This gallery (Галерија Мартиноски/Galerija Martinovski) was founded in 1968 in a beautiful traditional 19th-century house. It is dedicated to the Aromanian painter from Kruševo Nikola Martinovski (1903-1973). Trained at the Grande Chaumière academy in Paris between 1927 and 1828, he is considered the founder of contemporary art in what is now North Macedonia. The two floors feature 62 works by the painter (oils, tempera, drawings, etc.), some of his personal effects and an exhibition of traditional local costumes.

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2024

MEČKIN KAMEN

Natural site to discover

The "Bear Rock" site (Мечкин Камен) is a national historical landmark and an important base for paragliding jumps. It lies on the Birinska plateau, at an altitude of 1,443 m, and enjoys a grandiose panorama over the Pelagonian plain. It can be reached by following the R 1306 towards Demir Hisar and Bitola, then taking the first road on the left after the Makpetrol petrol station. This is where the Battle of Mečkin Kamen took place on August 12, 1903, ten days after the start of the Ilinden Uprising. The last 300 Kruševo insurgents fought to the death against the surrounding Ottoman troops. Since 1983, the site has been adorned with an 8 m-high statue. It depicts one of the insurgents, the Aromanian hero Pitu Guli (1865-1903), frozen in mid-exertion, throwing a huge rock. The plinth bears the words "freedom or death" (Слобода или Смрт), the slogan of all anti-Ottoman insurrections in the Balkans. This was the last major statue by Dimo Todorovski (1910-1983), whose works can be found mainly in the Museum of Contemporary Art, Skopje. Mečkin Kamen hosts a Republic Day national holiday ceremony every August 2. The place owes its name to a legend according to which farmers managed to kill a huge bear living here in a fierce battle. From now on, no more risk. Mečkin Kamen is renowned for its views, picnic spots and is one of the best paragliding sites in the world.

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2024

MUSÉE DE LA LIBÉRATION NATIONALE À KRUŠEVO

Specialized museum

Opened in 1989, this national museum (Музеј на Народно Ослободителната Војна/Muzej na Narodno Osloboditelnata Vojna) is dedicated to the region during the Second World War. Here you'll find weapons used by the partisans, as well as period documents. But the main attraction is the superb fresco by Prilep-born artist Borko Lazeski (1917-1993). His local work includes the stained glass windows of the Makedonium and a vast mural in Prilep.

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2024

ILINDEN UPRISING MUSEUM

Specialized museum

The National Museum of the Ilinden Uprising and the Republic of Kruševo (Музеј на Илинденското Востание и Крушевската Република/Muzej na Ilindenskoto Vostanie i Kruševskata Republik) is housed in an attractive 19th-century house that belonged to the Tomalevski family. It was here that the Republic of Kruševo was declared on August 4, 1903, at the start of the Ilinden uprising against the Ottoman Empire (August 2-November 25, 1903). In the weeks leading up to the uprising, the place served as a clandestine arsenal: it was here that lead was smelted to make ammunition, that the famous little wooden cannons were cobbled together, but also that hundreds of bought or stolen weapons and thousands of cartridges stolen from Ottoman garrisons were stored. Established in 1953, the museum houses an eclectic collection of weapons used by the Kruševo insurgents until the fall of the Republic on August 13, 1913: handguns, sabres, knives, old petrels and Western-made rifles. These include Mauser rifles and Smith & Wesson pistols from the Ottoman army, a pistol from the Manufacture d'armes de Saint-Étienne, a Winchester M1897 pump-action shotgun and Lebel rifles from Châtellerault. The exhibition is accompanied by period photos, maps and documents. But the highlights are the Belgian Nagant revolver and the Austro-Hungarian Steyr-Mannlicher rifle that belonged to uprising leader Nikola Karev.

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2024

SAINT-NICOLAS CHURCH IN KRUŠEVO

Churches cathedrals basilicas and chapels

This Orthodox church (Црква Свети Никола/Crkva Sveti Nikola) is the largest in Kruševo. Founded in 1832, it dominates the bazaar district. Destroyed during the 1903 uprising and rebuilt in 1907, it houses a superb iconostasis attributed to Petar Filipovski (1780-1854). It is believed to be the last work of the great cabinetmaker, who was also responsible for the iconostases of the St. John-Bigorski monastery and the Church of St. Saviour in Skopje. Among the icons, the oldest dates back to 1884.

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