Is a picturesque village in the Boko-Kotorsky Bay, at the foot of the Vrmac mountain range, located opposite the ancient city of Perast. The name of the village acquired the merger of the words "one hundred olive", tk. according to the old tradition, when a young man was wooing a kdelevke, he had to plant a hundred olive trees. Thanks to this, the village dwells in olive groves. In the upper part of the village, at an altitude of 240m, there are two magnificent churches - St. Ilya (16th century) and St. Anny (12-13th centuries), surrounded by a pomegranate grove. From the lower part of the village there is an ancient stone road leading through a chestnut grove, along the road you will see a lot of cyclamen who have chosen this creek. In the lower (coastal) part of the Church of St. Mary and St. Basil's Church with unique frescoes of the late 15th century. Here, the beautiful camellia bushes grow in abundance, according to legend, brought here in the 18th century by one of the sailors for their spouse, there is also an annual camellia festival with an exhibition of flowers, an art gallery and an obligatory choice of Queen Camelia. On the mountain slopes of Stoliv there are many medicinal herbs and flowers that saturate sea air is a useful substance, making it even more useful.
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