PRICES
PROMOTIONAL PRICES (for
room)
20 % off room prices. Applies only to payments in cash, does not apply to credit card payments.
During some periods (from 1 August to 16 August, and from 30 December to 3
January) and during major events in Koper the discount does not apply (see
the regular prices).
| ROOM |
EURO |
| 1/1 |
47,20 + TT* |
| 1/2 |
70,40 + TT |
| 1/3 |
85,60 + TT |
| 1/4 |
100,80 + TT |
 |
The price includes the lodging with a self-service breakfast, parking
and VAT. |
 |
* TT: Tourist Tax of €
1.01 per person per night |
 |
We kindly inform our guests that promotional rates and
reductions are offered only when the expense is paid in cash. |
ACCOMODATION
PRICES (for room)
| ROOM |
EURO |
| 1/1 |
59 + TT |
| 1/2 |
88 + TT |
| 1/3 |
107 + TT |
| 1/4 |
126 + TT |
 |
The price includes the lodging with a self-service breakfast,
parking
and VAT. |
 |
* TT: Tourist Tax of €
1.01 per person per night |
 |
We kindly inform our guests that the price of the room
is determined
by the number of guests per room. |
 |
The guests are kindly asked to pay their bills between
7 and 12 am
at the reception and vacate the room by 12 am. |
OTHER
SERVICES
 |
Room service: 1,25 EURO |
 |
Pets: 5 EURO |
 |
Rest (until 4 hours): 40 EURO |
 |
Safety deposit box: 2,29 EURO per day, with a deposit
of 50 EURO
to be refunded when you return the box key.
Ask for your key at the reception. Under no
circumstances will the hotel accept the responsibility
for the objects left in the room or in the safety
deposit box. |
 |
Internet corner: GRATIS. |
 |
All rooms are equipped with free Internet. |
INFORMATION
 |
We kindly inform our guests that rates are based on
the number
of persons per room. |
 |
Guests are kindly
asked to pay their bill between 7 and 12 am
at the
reception.
Guests are kindly asked to vacate the room
by 12 am. |
We reserve the right to change our rates.
Why visit
Koper ?



Koper
has been
known by many names during its long and turbulent
history. As an island separated from the mainland by
a canal, it was called Aegida by ancient Greek
sailors, Capris by the Romans (who found it being
used to raise goats) and Justinopolis by the
Byzantines. The Patriarchs of Aquileia, who took
over the town in the 13th century and made it the
base for their estates on the Istrian peninsula,
renamed it Caput Histriae – Capital of Istria – from
which its Italian name Capodistria is derived. They
fortified the town and erected some of Koper’s most
beautiful buildings, including its cathedral and
palaces.
Koper’s golden age came during the 15th and 16th
centuries under the Venetian Republic. Trade
increased and Koper became the administrative and
judicial centre for much of Istria. It also had a
monopoly on salt, which Austria so desperately
needed. But when Trieste, 20km to the northeast, was
proclaimed a free port in the early 18th century,
Koper lost its importance.
Between the world wars Koper was controlled by the
Italians, who launched a programme of Italianisation.
After the defeat of Italy and Germany in WWII the
disputed Adriatic coast area – the so-called Free
Territory of Trieste – was divided into two zones.
Under the 1954 London Agreement, Zone B and its
capital, Koper, went to Yugoslavia while Zone A,
including Trieste, fell under Italian jurisdiction.
Up to 25, 000 Italian-speaking Istrians fled to
Trieste, but 3000 stayed on in Koper and other
coastal settlements. Today Koper is the centre of
the Italian ethnic community of Slovenia, and
Italian is widely spoken here.
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