Belgrade cityscape |
Incidentally, the rumours were true: a staff sleeper car from Tito’s Blue Train is indeed in use on this service. Unfortunately, I wasn’t in it.
Blue Train carriage at Bijelo Polje |
The rest of the journey passed without incident, and we arrived into Belgrade just before 9, at the misleadingly-named Beograd Centar, which is 3km from the centre. I didn’t have any local currency to get a taxi or a tram, so I set off on foot.
Belgrade is enormous compared to everywhere else I’ve visited on this trip – well over a million inhabitants, as I suppose befits the former capital of Yugoslavia. In my sleep-deprived haze, the skyline that hit me as I walked into town reminded me most of cities I’ve seen in China. But, deeper in, it is most things Sarajevo is – a clash of architectural styles, in particular, with gleaming high-rises next to the burnt-out husks of buildings alongside art nouveau and grand neoclassical cuboids. I was mostly interested in finding some dinars so that I could buy myself some breakfast.
(Money is a harsh taskmaster. I’d adopted the unutterably clever policy of tucking a €50 note under the insole of my shoe in case I was mugged. Last night when I checked it I found that it had sheared clean in half underfoot. An expensive insurance policy, to be sure. Be careful if you do this.)
Buildings in Belgrade |
Buildings in Belgrade |
Buildings in Belgrade |
By the time I’d finished breakfast it had started to rain hard, so I spent a little time wandering around Republic Square and environs, then hung around in a smoke-filled café behind the theatre until I could check into my hotel and catch up on some sleep.
In the evening, I headed to the nearby Skadarlija neighbourhood, which Lonely Planet describes as “Belgrade’s Montmartre”. As they say: yeah, no. The absence of picturesque church, enormous numbers of steps, and bracelet scammers made the analogy quite tenuous for me. But it was nice, and I got a decent meal and some craft beer in a bar where some live jazz appears to be about to kick off.
Skadarlija street |
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