Šćedro
Šćedro is a small Croatian island in the Adriatic Sea, lying south of Hvar opposite the village of Zavala. It covers with a deeply indented north coast forming well-sheltered anchorages such as Lovišće and Mostir. The island's Croatian name is commonly said to derive from štedri in Old Slavic, referring to its protective coves. In antiquity it was known as Tauris.
Name
Already recorded as Tavris on the Tabula Peutingeriana, the accent must have been on the in the later form Táuricula, or the would not be syncopated, as occurred to produce the form Torcola. The island is called Torcola on the 1373 portolan chart of Francesco Pizzigano, the 1490 portolan printed by Bernardino Rizo da Novara, the 1663 map Congregatio nationis Illyricae, maps by Vincenzo Coronelli from 1688 and 1694, the 1718 map HR-DAZD-383, the 1771 map by Jacques-Nicolas Bellin, the 1771 map HR-SKST R-684, the 1781 map by Giuseppe Antonio Grandis and the map by Vincenzo de Lucio drawn around 1790.Geography
Šćedro lies in the Korčula Channel between Hvar and Korčula. Its highest point is Zelenikova glava (. The island is sparsely occupied seasonally, with no town and only a few restored stone houses around Mostir and Lovišće bays.Nature protection
The island's landscape was declared a značajni krajobraz in 1968. Its surrounding waters form the Natura 2000 marine site HR3000119 Šćedro – podmorje, designated for habitats including reefs and Posidonia oceanica beds. Management information and monitoring for Posidonia meadows follows national/UNEP protocols.History
Antiquity
Ancient sources and modern scholarship record a naval engagement during Caesar's Civil War near the island Tauris in 47 BC, between Publius Vatinius and Marcus Octavius. The exact identification of Tauris is debated: earlier literature sometimes equated it with Šćedro or Šipan, while more recent work argues for the Pakleni Islands off Hvar. Underwater finds of amphorae attest to intensive ancient navigation in the area, consistent with regional surveys.Middle Ages
According to the Hvar Statute of 1331, Šćedro was communal property reserved primarily for pasture and maritime use. A Dominican monastery dedicated to St Mary of Mercy was founded in Mostir Bay in 1465 and later abandoned; the remains are a protected cultural good.19th century to present
Following Venetian and briefly French control, Šćedro came under Habsburg administration within the Kingdom of Dalmatia. Small agrarian hamlets developed in the 19th century; today they are largely abandoned or used seasonally for tourism.Archaeology
Prehistoric activity on Šćedro includes numerous stone tumuli across the island. In 2025, test excavations in Ratina Cave on the south-eastern coast reported Neolithic pottery and lithics, extending the island’s occupation back to the 5th millennium BC.Submerged cultural heritage is recorded in nearby waters; targeted dives are regulated because the area falls within the Natura 2000 marine site.