The Town Of Jelsa
Jelsa is situated
in the middle of the north coast of the island of Hvar. The settlement is
concentrated by the sea while the hinterland is surrounded by dense pine woods
on the sloping hills of the island's ridge. Jelsa is the only place on the
island with an abundance of fresh water, which is the cause of more luxuriant
vegetation than in the other areas of the island.
Entering Jelsa by road one passes
through the alley of poplars that leads into the town park of lush vegetation,
which is a certain surprise and very much a rarity in a distinctly stony area.
At first sight Jelsa appears to be a relatively new town with 19th century characteristics in its urban and architectural sense. However, one gradually discovers later on that it is an old town with a history dating back to ancient times.

The evidence that this part of the
island was inhabited from neolithic times is the Grabceva cave (Grabceva
spilja) within reach of Jelsa, the discoveries of which gave the essential
information for the study of the life of neolithic man and his culture on the
island Hvar in general, and the wider area around it. The immediate vicinity of
the Greek Pharos and the exceptional location of Jelsa indicate the existence
of the settlement from Greek times.
On the mountain spur that projects
to the south above Jelsa, is Tor, a solid, massive fortification built of huge
regular shaped blocks of stone joined without mortar. It was a Greek
observation point, which stands on an older Illyrian fort. The location is
ideal for observation as it dominates the valley of Stari Grad, the Hvar
channel and Jelsa, and there are high cliffs behind it. Slightly east of Tor
there are the ruins of the fort of Grad (Galesnik), which as an observation
point has the same importance as Tor. It is probable that this fort is from the
late ancient period, even though it was of great importance in the Middle Ages.
The material remains of the Roman
period prove the existence of a settlement in the area of Jelsa. Several villas
are preserved in the area of Kutac, round St. Rock and in the cove called
Carkvica of St. Luke.

The
medieval settlement of Jelsa formed at the end of the 14th century as the port
of the village of Pitve, was mentioned in the Statute of 1331 as a "Fons
vocata Jelsa" and "Portus se Pitve". The same statute mentioned
"Civites vetus Jelsae" (the old town of Jelsa), which referred to the
already dilapidated remains of the port of the Middle Ages on the peninsula of
Gradina . On this site in 1605 the Augustinian monastery, of which only the
church remained, was deserted, the cemetery was laid out in the 19th century
and has been in use up to the present day.
Jelsa developed primarily,
especially in the 19th century, due to shipbuilding and navigation, from small
seaport town whose inhabitants dealt mainly with fishing and agriculture. This
conditioned its urban expansion and its acquisition of the main role on the central
part of the island. The harbour and break-waters were begun around 1830, after
which in about 1850 the reclamation of marshy land started, round Vela and Mala
Banda and Soline, and on the resulting dyke poplars were the town park was
created.
On the sea-board next to the town,
a town council building and a town hall were built. The town hall has
neo-Gothic furniture from the end of the 19th century, made by Perisuti, an
artist from Jelsa.
In the area of Mala Banda there is
the Dubokovic-Nadalini house from the end of the 19th century, partly built in
the 16th century. The house has some well-preserved antique furniture, an
extensive library, the family archive, and a series of paintings and items of
art; the house alone is a small museum.

Tightly packed around the picturesque
square, which reaches the waterfront, and in its trapezoid form approaches the
churches of St. Fabian and Sebastian, the town branches off into a labyrinth of
small streets, ruled by a small square with the small church of St. John,
which, like the town of Jelsa itself, has been through many reconstructions.
Consequently, the town of Jelsa has been always featured by the quality of
adapting itself to the changes.
Once the town of seamen and wine, nowadays it is the town of tourism. One of
the windows of the island is open towards the inquisitive world that is coming
to visit it.

On both sides of the harbour there
are wooded coves ideal for relaxation and swimming. The picturesqueness of the
landscape and the wooded coves with rock and sand beaches are a permanent
reason to vacation in Jelsa again and again.