Zobacz
European Capitals of Culture
European Cities of Culture
- 1985: Athens (Greece)
- 1986: Florence (Italy)
- 1987: Amsterdam (Netherlands)
- 1988: West Berlin (West Germany)
- 1989: Paris (France)
- 1990: Glasgow (United Kingdom)
- 1991: Dublin (Ireland)
- 1992: Madrid (Spain)
- 1993: Antwerp (Belgium)
- 1994: Lisbon (Portugal)
- 1995: Luxembourg (Luxembourg)
- 1996: Copenhagen (Denmark)
- 1997: Thessaloniki (Greece)
- 1998: Stockholm (Sweden)
- 1999: Weimar (Germany)
- 2000: Reykjavik (Iceland), Bergen (Norway), Helsinki (Finland), Brussels (Belgium), Prague (Czech Republic), Krakow (Poland), Santiago de Compostela (Spain), Avignon (France), Bologna (Italy)
- 2001: Rotterdam (Netherlands), Porto (Portugal)
- 2002: Bruges (Belgium), Salamanca (Spain)
- 2003: Graz (Austria)
- 2004: Genoa (Italy), Lille (France)
European Capital of Culture
- 2005: Cork (Ireland)
- 2006: Patras (Greece)
- 2007: Luxembourg (Luxembourg), Sybiu (Romania)
- 2008: Liverpool (United Kingdom), Stavanger (Norway)
- 2009: Vilnius (Lithuania), Linz (Austria)
- 2010: Essen (Germany), Pécs (Hungary), Istanbul (Turkey)
- 2011: Turku (Finland), Tallinn (Estonia)
- 2012: Guimarăes (Portugal), Slovenia
Countries, whose cities will bear the title of European Capitals of Culture in the years to follow
- 2013: France and Slovakia
- 2014: Sweden and Latvia
- 2015: Belgium and Czech Republic
- 2016: Spain and Poland
- 2017: Denmark and Cyprus
- 2018: Netherlands and Malta
- 2019: Italy