Area: 110,993.6 sq km
Population: 7,973, 673 (2001)
The national flag of the Republic of Bulgaria is in three
colours: white, green and red bands, following horizontally from top to bottom.

A legend associates the origin of these three colours with the colour symbols
of the Old Bulgarian Army. Its left wing was set apart by white strips on
the spears, the right one by red, while arranged in the centre were the
elite troops with a green strip, the traditional colour of the ruler. The
three-colour flag had first been used by the First Bulgarian Legion of Georgi Raklovski (1861). By force of the Turnovo Constitution
(1879), the three-colour flag - white, green and red, was confirmed as Bulgaria's national
flag.
The coat-of-arms of the Republic of Bulgaria is
a rampant gold crowned lion against a dark-red background in the form of
a shield. Above the shield there is a big crown, whose original shape was
that of the crowns of medieval Bulgarian rulers, with five crosses and one
other cross, separately, over the crown itself. The shield is supported by
two golden crowned rampant lions, facing the shield from the left and right
heraldic side. They are standing on two crossed oak tree twigs with acorns.
Inscribed in golden letters onto a white strip with a three-colour edging,
placed under the shield across the ends of the oak twigs, is Unity makes
power.

Anthem of the republic of Bulgaria
Proud Stara Planina Mountain,
Blue Danube river by its side,
Sun shining over
Thrace
,
Over Mount Pirin in a fiery way.
Beloved Homeland,
You are a paradise on earth,
Your beauty, your magic,
Oh, they have no end!
Official language: Bulgarian
Alphabet: Cyrillic
Capital city: Sofia (1.2 mil. Inhabitants)
International automobile sign: BG
International telephone code: +359
Religion: There is freedom of religious confessions. Traditional
religion in the Republic of Bulgaria is Eastern Orthodox Christianity-(85%),
Muslim (8%), others (7%)
National holiday: March 3, the day of the Liberation of
Bulgaria from Ottoman domination (1878)
Monetary unit: the Bulgarian Lev
Administrative division: 28 regions, named after their
respective regional centers.
Time zone: GMT (London) + 2 hours, East-European time (
Germany
) + 1 hour
Electricity: 220 V, 50 Hz
State system: a parliamentary republic with a one-chamber
parliament (National Assembly), consisting of 240 national representatives,
elected for a four-year term of service. The head of state of the republic
is the President, elected for a five-year term of service. The Council of
Ministers is the main body of executive power.
Relief: most diverse. Average height above sea level 470 m. Some 31.5% of the country’s territory is plain
(up to 200 m above sea level), 41% are lowlands and hilly regions (from 200
to 600 m above sea level), and 27.5% are mountains (from 600 to more than
1,600 m above sea level).
Climate: Continental to Mediterranean in the South parts
of the country. Average temperatures during January vary from -2 to 2 degrees
centigrade in the valleys to – 10 degrees centigrade in the mountains. Average
temperatures for June vary from 19-25 degrees centigrade in the valleys to
10 degrees centigrade in the high mountains. Rainfalls are 450-600 mm in
the valleys to 1300 mm in the mountains.
Waters: rivers (main rivers are Danube, Maritsa, Mesta, Strouma, Iskar, Yantra);
warm and cold mineral springs (more than 600); lakes , coastal (some
with curative mineral mud) and of glacial origin (in the Rila and Pirin mountains).
Plant and animal world: extremely diverse. An Act on the
Protected Territories is operating in
Bulgaria
, aimed at the preservation of the country’s flora and fauna. It has specified
the following categories in the country: a national and Nature Park, a reserve
and a tended reserve, a natural sight, a protected locality.
Economy:
Bulgaria
has been an associated member of the European Union (EU) since 1992. In 1997
an agreement was signed with the International Monetary Fund and the World
Bank for economic stabilization and for the carrying through of economic
reforms in the country. A currency board was introduced. The national monetary
unit has been referred to the EURO. A structural reform is underway aimed
at an economic growth, a functioning market economy and at paving the way
for foreign investments in the country.
Money exchange: The Bulgarian Lev is pegged to the Euro.
1 EUR = 1.955 BGN.
You may exchange money in banks and in any of the numerous exchange offices.
Some of those offices are opened during the holidays. Euro-checks may be
cashed on a lot of banks.
Entrance in the country: Most of the foreign citizens entering
Bulgaria
don’t need visa but they must carry their valid international passport. The
list of the countries which citizens need visa, when entering
Bulgaria
, can be found at www.mfe.government.bg
Custom’s formalities and limitations:
Upon crossing the state border of the Republic of Bulgaria passengers may
import and export duty free commodities that in type, quantities, and value
are not of a commercial nature and personal belongings. Common custom declarations
and restrictions are applied for import and export of currency, food, alcohol
and goods. There is a special custom regime for antiquarian objects, historic
and cultural treasures, medicines, narcotics, weapons, ammunitions.
Approximate Exchange Rates for 1 BGN:
1 USD 1.40 LEVA
1 EURO 1.95 LEVA
1 CHF 1.20 LEVA
1 GBP 2.85 LEVA
Credit cards: Most of the hotels work with VISA, Master
Card or American Express.
Transportation: Roads - 37.3 thousand km.; railways - 6.5
thousand km. (65 % electrical). Sea ports – Varan and Burgas.
Danube ports – Russe, Lom , Vidin, Silistra etc.
International airports: Sofia, Plovdiv, Burgas and Varna.
Taxi-cabs: In towns and resorts there are taxi-cabs situated
in the respective taxi ranks. People can take a taxi by calling a taxi company
or in the street.
Urban transport: In towns there is urban transport: buses
and mini-buses. In Sofia there are trams, trolley buses and underground.
Tickets are usually bought before getting on the vehicle.
Car rental : You
can rent a car from international rent-a-car companies such as AVIS, Hertz,
Budget , Eurocar, etc. Many of the hotels in
Bulgaria
offer this service through a licensed Bulgarian rent a car companies.
Post offices and telecommunication: Working time of post
offices is from 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Postage stamps and postcards may be
bought from the desks in the post office or from pavilions selling newspapers.
There are a lot of internet-cafes from which you may talk cheap or send e-mails
(most of them work 24 hours).
Local and international telephone services are covered through automatic
street telephones operating with tokens and calling cards. Tokens for local
calls (0.20 leva) and calling cards are available for purchase from any post
office or places where newspapers are sold.
Important phones:
Fire-brigade 160
First aid 150
Police 166
Road assistance 146
Telephone information 144
Traffic police – car accidents: 166 or +359 (2) 9824901, 9824902
The Bulgarian lands have rich and most diverse cultural heritage. Inhabited
since prehistoric times, they keep lasting traces from different ages with
rich traditions. Their location on a crossroads explains the intertwining,
mixing, the mutual influences of the culture, mores, and religions of tribes
and peoples, having lived and crisscrossed the region. Getting in touch with
the thousands of cultural messages, bequeathed to us by those living before
us is very exciting indeed. Invaluable is the cultural and historical heritage
of ancient Thracians, Greeks, Romans, of generations of Bulgarians leaving
through their achievements intriguing and useful information about their
lifestyle, traditions and their spiritual enlightenment.
One of the earliest traces from Antiquity was found in the Bacho Kiro Cave close to the Dryanovo Monastery. These
are flint and bone implements of labour and pottery
from the middle and late Paleolithic Age. Of value to science are the finds
from the settlement mounds near the village of Hotnitsa (Hotnitsa treasure)
and the village of Karanovo (Karanovo settlement
mound). The gold objects found in the Varna Chalcolithic necropolis have been described as the
oldest processed gold in the world. The most ancient copper mines in
Europe have been found in the vicinities of Stara Zagora.
Copper ore had been mined in their galleries as far back as at the end of
the 5th millennium B.C. and copper products were made. Featuring
among the preserved masterpieces of the late prehistoric art in the Balkan
Peninsula are the unique cave drawings in the Magoura Cave (northwest
of Belogradchik).
Among the most precious relics unearthed in the Bulgarian lands has been
the cultural heritage of the Thracians, who had produced incredible artistic
and architectural masterpieces. The Thracian art, passing through a long
and complicated path of development from the beginning of the late Bronze
Age to the end of Antiquity has left remarkable treasures, temples, sanctuaries
and cities.
The magnificence of the Thracian treasures is stunning. Standing out among
them are the Panagyurishte gold
treasure, the Rogozen treasure, the Vulchitrun gold treasure, the Borovo silver
treasure, the Vratsa treasure,
etc. Valuable and beautiful with their exquisite decorations are also the Kralevsko gold
treasure, the Letnitsa treasure, the Lukovit treasure.
Listed among the favourite sites of cultural tourism
in
Bulgaria
are the Kazanluk tomb and
the Sveshtari tomb,
included in the list of the UNESCO-protected world cultural heritage. Of
interest is the Alexandrovo tomb (near
the village of Alexandrovo, Haskovo region) with valuable murals, the Mezek Thracian tomb (Haskovo region). Intriguing details of the building technique
and artistic methods from Antiquity can also be identified in the remains
of the royal Thracian cities of Kabile (in
the vicinity of Yambol) and Seuthopolis (under the waters of the Koprinka Dam near Kazanluk), as
well as in the Greek Black Sea coast colonies of Odessos (Varna), Apollonia (Sozopol), Messembria (Nessebur), Dionysopolis (Balchik),
to mention just a few. Quite a few of which developed over old Thracian settlements.
The region of the Kazanluk valley (known as the Valley
of Roses) became particularly popular in the 1990s, as new tombs were
unearthed there, presenting the evolution of the Thracian culture in the
5th-4th century BC.
Bulgaria
and the world started to speak about the Valley of the Thracian kings.
During the last few years the findings of the Bulgarian archaeologists have
been bordering on sensations. Enormous interest has been shown in the Starosel Thracian cult centre (near Hissarya, Plovdiv region),
in Perperikon (by the side of Kurdzhali,
in the eastern parts of the Rhodope Mountains), where a rock-built sacred city of the
Thracians has been unearthed, in Tatoul, in
the treasures of Zlatinitsa and Sinemorets.
Traces of structures from Roman times can be identified to this day: fortress
walls and forums, temples and thermae, amphitheatres,
stadiums and buildings of various assignment in the ancient cities of Philipopolis/Trimontium (present-day Plovdiv), Serdica (present-day
Sofia), Odessos (present-day Varna), Pautalia (present-day Kyustendil), Diocletianopolis (present-day Hissarya), Abritus (present-day Razgrad), Nicopolis ad Istrum (north
of Veliko Turnovo), Nicopolis ad Nestrum (east
of present-day Gotse Delchev), Novae (next
to Svishtov), Sexaginta Prista (present-day
Rouse). Many of them, partially restored and adequately presented, give an
idea of the skills of the builders and architects of yore. Among the best
known are the ancient theatre in Plovdiv, the
Roman thermae in Varna, the
museum display in the open of Sexaginta Prista in the central part of Rouse, the impressive
remains of ancient thermae (the Asclepion of Pautalia) in Kyustendil and many more. Very interesting and highly valuable
are the late Antiquity floor mosaics from Augusta Trajana (present-day Stara Zagora), the Roman and early Byzantine mosaics of what had
once been Martianopolis (an archaeological
reserve), the mosaics in the Mosaics Museum, the only one
of its kind, in Devnya. Dated to that same age
are: the Silistra vaulted
tomb, the Pomorie domed tomb, the Hissarya family tomb, known for its original frescoes.
When in the 4th century A.D. the Christian religion gained equal
rights with the rest of the religious confessions, the construction of Christian
temples began in the Bulgarian lands. Interesting from a scholarly point
of view and much frequented are the early Christian churches of St
Sophia and the rotunda of St George in Sofia, the Church of St
Sophia (the old Bishopric) in Nessebur, the Chervenata [Red] Church near Perushtitsa and
some others.
There is keen and fully justified interest in the cultural and historical
monuments that have survived from the time of Danubian
Bulgaria
, founded by Khan Asparouh. The stunning remains
of Pliska and Veliki Preslav (the
first and the second capital of Danubian
Bulgaria
) are living evidence of the traditional building skills, brought by the
old Bulgarians. Their grand architecture is kind of a symbol of the political,
economic and cultural upsurge of the medieval Bulgarian state. The reign
of Simeon the Great, marked by an exceptional political upsurge and the flowering
of culture and letters, has been referred to as a Golden Age of Bulgarian
Culture.
The Madara Horseman rock
relief is the most significant Early Medieval item of Bulgarian monumental
art and the only one of its kind in the European cultural history (located
near the village of Madara, Shoumen region). It has
been included in the list of the world heritage under UNESCO protection.
Veliko Turnovo has
been the living symbol of Bulgarian statehood over the ages. It is one of
the most visited towns in
Bulgaria
. Part of the city territory has been declared a museum reserve. The brilliant
capital of the Bulgarian Kingdom during the 12th-14th centuries, Turnovo was
among the largest cities in terms of area and population in the Southeast
Europe of that time. What has survived to date (partially or wholly restored)
takes us again to the time of the regal Turnovgrad city,
when magnificent palaces, monasteries, churches, fortifications, bridges
and big buildings were erected. The flowering of the remarkable Turnovo School of Art was directly related to the economic
and political strengthening of the kingdom, with the large-scale construction
and intensive literary activities in the royal court, in the bishopric and
the monasteries. Among the peak artistic achievements are the book miniatures,
some of which can be seen to this day (in the Gospel of Ivan Alexander,
the Manases Chronicle, the Tomichov Psalmbook and some others). The most remarkable cultural
achievement in the late Middle Ages in
Bulgaria
and the most remarkable Bulgarian literary phenomenon during the 14th century
was the Turnovo Literary School, connected with
the activities of Patriarch Euthymius.
Featuring among the cultural monuments that have survived from that period
are the murals in some of the Turnovo churches,
the icons in the churches in Nessebur and elsewhere.
Worthy of special attention are the unique frescoes in the Boyana Church and the Ivanovo rock
churches, appreciated for their true value and included in the list
of the world cultural heritage under the protection of UNESCO. These indisputable
masterpieces of medieval Bulgarian art present to the world the achievements
of the Bulgarian creative genius.
Church murals painted during the period of Ottoman domination can be seen
in the churches of the Kremikovtsi, Dragalevtsi and
some other monasteries in what has been referred to as the Sofia (Small) Mount Atho,s near the city
of Sofia; in the Orlitsa Nunnery of the Rila Monastery;
in Arbanassi and other churches and monasteries.
The exclusive upsurge in architecture and the fine arts, accompanying the
National Revival Period, found expression in the erection of remarkable housing
and public buildings, in representative churches and monasteries. The remarkable art
schools of Samokov, Tryavna and Bansko came into
being in that serene period rife with constructive energy. Their representatives
produced extraordinary pieces of woodcarving, icon painting and painting.
Objects of cultural tourism are both a number of settlements and town districts,
having preserved the atmosphere of the National Revival period like Koprivshtitsa, the Old Plovdiv, Veliko Turnovo, Arbanassi, Zheravna, Bozhentsi, Tryavna, Bansko, Melnik and some others (some of them have the status
of cultural and historical reservations), as well as remarkable monasteries
and churches, among which are the Rila, Bachkovo, Troyan, Rozhen, Preobrazhenski [Transfiguration]
monasteries, the Church of the Holy Virgin in Pazardzhik, the Church of the Holy Trinity in Bansko and
some others. Becoming lively centers of the cultural and socio-political
life in the 18th-19th centuries, the Bulgarian monasteries
became natural breeding grounds for the spiritual and material creativity
of the awakening Bulgarian nation.
The period following
Bulgaria
’s Liberation (1878) was characterized by sweeping construction. Urban development
plans were made en masse, the town and city centers were shaped, solid buildings
of a new, European look were put up and decoration of the urban houses was
modernized. Special saloons, deluxe cafes and clubs came into being, where
topical matters, associated with the culture and policy of post-liberation
Bulgaria
were discussed in an agreeable and refined atmosphere. The European influence
spread increasingly more tangibly both in the lifestyle and customs of the
people and in the architectural outline of the newly built structures. Cities
like Sofia, Plovdiv, Varna, Rouse, Bourgas and
others were undergoing rapid and visible changes over the years.
A great number of the present-day Bulgarian cities naturally combine their
centuries-long history and the artistic samples from various ages with the
living and noisy presence of contemporary life. Some of them are university
centers focusing the lively cultural life of our time, while others are fashionable
resorts, offering fine conditions for holidaymaking, convenience and entertainment.
And no matter where they are located in the mountains, in the fields or at
the seaside they are attractive because of their most varied and unexpected
opportunities of cultural tourism in the country.
Bulgarian artists, writers and actors, musicians and singers, architects,
scholars and inventors, established or rising, produce the Bulgarian cultural
heritage of tomorrow, addressing the spiritual messages of contemporary
Bulgaria
to the world and the future generations. Having inherited the creative potential
of a millennial culture, they produce original musical and verbal images;
they mould sculptures and shape new architectural outlines; they create unique
paintings, drawings and sculptures. The world is familiar with the
outstanding people of art, in which
Bulgaria
takes deserved pride. Among them are Boris Christov and
Nikolai Giaourov, Gena Dimitrova and Raina Kabaivanska, Alexandrina Milcheva and Hristina Angelakova, Mincho Minchev and Mila Georgieva, Vasko Vassilev and Lyudmil Angelov; the choirs The Mystery of the Bulgarian Voices, Gousla [Rebec] and Yoan Koukouzel, the children's radio choir and the Bodra Smyana Choir;
artists Ivan Milev and Vladimitrov Dimitrov-
the Master, Tsanko Lavrenov and Zlatyu Boyadjiev, Zhorzh Papazov and Dimitur Kazakov, Nikola Manev, Vezhdi Rashidov,
and Svetlin Rousev.
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