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Ravda is a small seaside resort on the Black Sea, located 3 km from Nesebar and 5 km from Sunny Beach. 30 km from Bourgas airport. After 1924, Bulgarian refugees from the villages of Koufalia , Bozets, Kirkalovo, Mikro Monastiri , Barovitsa, Ramel, Krya Vrysi , Kadinovo and Axos in Aegean Macedonia settled in Ravda.
The resort was opened in 1967 by the top Bulgarian communist officials of the People's Republic of Bulgaria Georgi Traykov, Todor Zhivkov and several others. The resort is 5-km long, 150 m wide beach with fine sand. Sea depth does not exceed 1.6 metres at a distance up to 100–150 metres from the beach. The tourist season lasts from May till ...
Crvena Glavica beach, Sveti Stefan; Hotel Albatros in Ulcinj has two beaches, a textile beach, and a nudist beach. Jaz, the southernmost part of the beach used to be declared nudist but was made regular in 2007; Njivice, a village on the south-western shore of the Bay of Herceg Novi (Boka Kotorska bay) the nudist beach is located on Hotel ...
The Bulgarian Black Sea Coast (Bulgarian: Черноморие, romanized: Chernomorie), also known as the Bulgarian Riviera, [1] covers the entire eastern bound of Bulgaria stretching from the Romanian Black Sea resorts in the north to European Turkey in the south, along 378 km of coastline.
Sunny Beach (1 C, 2 P) Pages in category "Seaside resorts in Bulgaria" The following 33 pages are in this category, out of 33 total.
Borovets is the closest (large) resort to the capital, Sofia, located under 90 minutes’ drive south of the airport. It sits among the country’s tallest mountain range, the Rila mountains, at ...
The Rusalka seaside resort. Rusalka (Bulgarian: Русалка, "mermaid"; also Russalka and Roussalka) is a seaside resort on the northern Bulgarian Black Sea Coast located in Dobrich Province, northeastern Bulgaria (the historical region of Southern Dobruja).
Until the Balkan Wars, Varvara was a small Ottoman village of ethnic Turkish refugees from northern Bulgaria who settled there following the Liberation of Bulgaria in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78. After 1913, the Turks moved out and were replaced by Bulgarian refugees from Eastern Thrace