A visit to the cultural attraction can be combined with Župan’s cave and Vodomčeví gaj.
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The camp above Cerov was built by the hands of the locals as a safe haven for the farming population against the incursions of Turkish marauding groups. PHOTO: Blaž Samec
Tabor nad Cerovim near Grosuplje may be a small tourist attraction, but it has a big story. The church, which rises from a 492-meter-high hill, is celebrating the 500th anniversary of its first mention this year. They will be celebrating in the fall, but until then, the landmark, which is mentioned most often as the best-preserved anti-Turkish camp in our country, is open on weekends as usual. Although this year they celebrate the 500th anniversary of the mention, the history of the camp, which in Visit Grosuplje is also called the stone guardian of the land, is much longer. We can go all the way back to prehistoric times, when the hill was already inhabited. Later, there was a Roman fortress on it, on its remains, at the beginning of the 13th century, they began to build a church, first only its nave. Today it is considered one of the few preserved camps. PHOTO: Blaž…
















