Nadan Vidosevic, former head of the Croatian Chamber of Commerce, was found guilty in December of buying art for himself with public money
An exhibition in Split shows that being 1,600 years old does not take you out of politics
Zagreb was hit by an earthquake in March at the height of Covid-19, and now by a severe storm
Over a third of Zagreb’s museums are unsafe or dangerous to use
City is "fighting two enemies" as it continues to deal with the spread of coronavirus
Contrast of city's devastated buildings and monuments and some of their remarkable restorations is heartening
Documents seen by The Art Newspaper reveal that five bowls, 37 cups and 187 spoons were offered with the 14 pieces which make up the Roman treasure
Last month the auction house told us it would not sell the hoard, but now it says it might
Scholars, curators, dealers and collectors have been invited to the private exhibition of the treasure known for its astonishing provenance
The devastation wreaked by war in pictures
Yugoslav air force guilty of destroying historic monuments in Dubrovnik
Work is underway, but worst hit town Vukovar still 'deserted'
Hungary's appeal of the verdict that was reached in spring awaits a decision
30% of the movable cultural property in Croatia needs emergency treatment
Old historical ties revived as the Kunsthistorisches Museum, with government blessing, devises a conservation package
A harrowing look into the damage wreaked during the last seven months
Report of the Institute for the Protection of Monuments, Croatian Ministry of Education and Culture, with information collected by 5 October 1991
Signatories include The Art Newspaper's own Anna Somers Cocks