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Media in category "Featured pictures of Bulgaria" The following 19 files are in this category, out of 19 total. Balkan fritillary (Boloria graeca balcanica) Bulgaria.jpg 2,840 × 1,893; 2.4 MB
Barracks in Bulgaria (1 P) H. Houses in Bulgaria (5 C, 6 P) Pages in category "Residential buildings in Bulgaria" This category contains only the following page.
Featured pictures of Bulgaria (19 F) Media in category "Images of Bulgaria" The following 3 files are in this category, out of 3 total. MFC Varna.jpg 250 × 288; 61 KB.
The roots of the houses of Bulgarian Revival follows a tradition of buildings from the architecture of the Second Bulgarian Empire. There are cities in Bulgaria with preserved Revival architecture are:the old town of Plovdiv, the mountain towns of Tryavna, Kotel, Sopot, Koprivshtitsa, Elena, the old Bulgarian capital - Veliko Tarnovo and others.
Mic Sokoli tower house in Bujan, northern Albania. Tower houses (singular: Albanian: kullë; Bosnian: odžak Bulgarian: кули, kuli; Serbian: кула, Romanian: culă) developed and were built since the Middle Ages in the Balkans, [1] particularly in Albania, Kosovo and Montenegro, [2] but also in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Greece, North Macedonia and Serbia, as well as in Oltenia ...
Bozhentsi (Bulgarian: Боженци [boˈʒɛnt͡si]; also variously transliterated as Bozhenci, Bojenci, Bojenzi, Boženci, Bojentsi, Bojentzi, Bozhentzi, etc.), officially but not commonly Bozhentsite (Боженците), is a village and architectural reserve in Gabrovo municipality, Gabrovo Province, in central northern Bulgaria.
Nunnery "Vavedenie Bogorodichno" (Blessed Virgin),dating from 1665 – one of the 100 Tourist Sites of Bulgaria of the Bulgarian Tourist Union. [2] – The monastery church "Blessed Virgin" was built in the 15th century on the site of an old chapel. The monastery itself was founded in 1665 when living quarters were built around the temple.
Pavel Banya (Bulgarian: Павел баня) is a small town in Stara Zagora Province, South-central Bulgaria, located between the towns of Kalofer and Kazanlak. It is the administrative centre of the homonymous Pavel Banya Municipality. As of December 2009, the town had a population of 2,918. [1] The place is famous for its mineral springs.