Published
6.9.2026
In this newest Toural Travel article, we examine why the ultimate luxury in Croatia this summer isn't about paying the highest price, but about discovering the highest value.

Published
6.25.2026
While today the square serves as a peaceful pedestrian haven, a romantic backdrop for concerts, and the gateway to Croatia’s oldest public park, its origins lie in a high-stakes story of military threat and brilliant Renaissance engineering. To understand why Five Wells Square exists, one must travel back to the mid-16th century. At the time, Zadar was the crown jewel of the Venetian Republic’s maritime defensive network on the eastern Adriatic. However, the city faced a constant, looming existential threat: the westward expansion of the Ottoman Empire. The Turks had advanced deep into the Dalmatian hinterland, frequently cutting off Zadar from its mainland food and water supplies.

During a prolonged siege, an army could survive weeks without fresh food, but a city without water would fall in days. The Venetians knew they needed a foolproof solution to guarantee clean drinking water for both the local citizenry and the military garrison.
In 1574, Venetian engineers cleared a portion of the defensive moat on the eastern side of the city walls to construct an architectural marvel: an enormous underground water cistern. To feed this subterranean reservoir, they built an intricate catchment system that collected rainwater from the roofs of the surrounding fortifications. The water was channeled into the cistern, filtering through layers of gravel and stone to ensure purity. To draw the water up from this massive underground vault, builders erected five decorative stone wellheads, lined up in a perfectly straight, symmetrical row across the paved square. For centuries, these five wells were the literal lifeblood of Zadar, ensuring that even if the city was completely cut off from the outside world, life inside the walls could endure.

The cistern remained the city's primary water source well into the 19th century, serving as a testament to the durability of Renaissance infrastructure.
Today, Five Wells Square is a captivating layer of Zadar's living history. The smooth, gleaming white stones of the square are flanked by other historical giants. On one side stands the majestic Captain’s Tower (Kapetanova kula), a rugged, pentagonal medieval remnant of the oldest defensive layout. On the other side, an elegant stone ramp leads visitors up onto the bastions, where the 19th-century Queen Jelena Madijevka Park sits directly on top of the old military fortifications. For guests traveling with Toural, Five Wells Square is a mandatory stop. It perfectly encapsulates the dual soul of Zadar: a city defined by the rugged necessity of survival, beautifully dressed in the elegant stone architecture of the Italian Renaissance.

Planning a trip to the historic coast? Contact the Toural Travel team today to discover our curated Zadar walking tours and explore the hidden engineering marvels of Dalmatia.
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