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This is a list of villages in Bulgaria by province.. List of villages in Blagoevgrad Province; List of villages in Burgas Province; List of villages in Dobrich Province; List of villages in Gabrovo Province
Map of Bulgaria. This is a complete list of all cities and towns in Bulgaria sorted by population. Province capitals are shown in bold. Primary sources are the National Statistical Institute (NSI) [1] and the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences. [2] The largest city is Sofia with about 1.4 million inhabitants and the smallest is Melnik with about 300 ...
It was carved in a 100 m (330 ft) tall cliff, at a height of 23 m (75 ft), near the village of Madara. It dates to the beginning of the 8th century, when Madara was a sacred site of the First Bulgarian Empire. Near the relief, there are inscriptions in Medieval Greek, describing the events of the early Bulgarian state and its khans. [6] [7]
Near Paisiy village there are traces of Thracian and Roman settlements and a preserved old Roman road. Before 1934 the village was known as Arnauti ( Арнаути [ɐrnɐˈuti] ), so named because of the Arnauts (Bulgarian: Arnauti ) living there during Ottoman times .
Lists of villages in Bulgaria (6 P) B. Villages in Blagoevgrad Province (2 C, 250 P) Villages in Burgas Province (1 C, 204 P) D. Villages in Dobrich Province (209 P) G.
The village of Bozhentsi was proclaimed an architectural and historical reserve in 1964 and is part of UNESCO's cultural monuments. The National Revival architecture has been preserved in Bozhentsi due to this, and there is a ban on the construction of any buildings that do not fit with the village's style.
79a. Belchin village (added in the 2010s) – Tsar Mali Town. Rila — Musala Peak; Botevgrad — the Clocktower. (Slivnitsa town cemetery occupied this position prior to 2005.) Skravena village — monument at St. Nikolai Monastery to the members of Hristo Botev's detachment; Smolyan — Museum of History. (Uhlovitsa Cave formerly occupied ...
Burgas (Bulgarian: Бургас, pronounced ⓘ), sometimes transliterated as Bourgas, is the second largest city on the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast in the region of Northern Thrace and the fourth-largest city in Bulgaria after Sofia, Plovdiv, and Varna, with a population of 210,284 inhabitants, while 219,747 live in its urban area.