TRGOVACKA SKOLA ZAGREB
E-mail: [email protected]
Address: J. F. Kennedy Square 4, Zagreb Telephone no.: +385 1 23 357 02 Fax: +385 1 23 229 44 Webpage: www.trgovacka-skola.hr |
We educate students in the field of sales and commerce.
The school offers two courses, salesperson (3 years) and commercialist (4 years). We have 761 students and more that 50 teachers. It is evident from our archives that the school has educated salespersons since 1937, and we can only assume this started earlier. The building alone dates back to 1956. The name Trgovačka škola goes back to the school year 1991/1992, and we have been enrolling commercialists since 1995. |
The school motto is "Our students don't have to be excellent, but they all need to become good people!"
We do our best in becoming a school where students can learn new things and skills and love to study, and where they feel good. Also, our mission is to have a school as a place of tolerance, nonviolence and dialogue. |
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ZAGREB
Zagreb is the capital and the largest city of the Republic of Croatia.
It is located in the northwest of the country, along the Sava river, at the southern slopes of the Medvednica mountain. Zagreb lies at an elevation of approximately 122 m above sea level. In the last official census of 2011 the population of the City of Zagreb was 790,017. The wider Zagreb metropolitan area includes the City of Zagreb and the separate Zagreb County bringing the total metropolitan area population up to 1,113,111. It is the only metropolitan area in Croatia with a population of over one million. |
Zagreb is a city with a rich history dating from the Roman times to the present day. The oldest settlement in the urban area of the city is Andautonia, a Roman settlement in the place of today's Ščitarjevo.
The name "Zagreb" is mentioned for the first time in 1094 at the founding of the Zagreb diocese of Kaptol, and Zagreb became a free royal town in 1242, whereas the origin of the name still remains a mystery in spite of several theories. In 1851 Zagreb had its first mayor, Janko Kamauf, and in 1945 it was made the capital of Croatia when the demographic boom and the urban sprawl made the city as it is known today. |
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