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Sozopol
Location:
The town of Sozopol has population of about 7,000
people and is situated 31km south of Bourgas. The
town lies on a small rocky peninsula in the farthest
southern part of the Bourgas Bay. A one hundred-metre
long strip of land connects it to the mainland. From
1925 on, the town has expanded in the direction of
the Harmanite Area (the so-called 'new town').
History:
The earliest settlements in the area belonged to the
Thracian tribes of Nipsei and Skirimian. In the 7th
century BC Greek colonisers settled there and called
the town after their god of Apollo, Apolonia. To the
honour of Apollo, the construction of a thirteen-metre
high bronze statute of the god was carried out by
a sculptor named Kalamis. Apolonia developed mainly
as a trading centre for honey, wax, corn, wine, olive
oil, olives, textiles, jewellery, and pottery. Apolonia
was frequently in economic and political disputes,
including occasional wars, with the Doric inhabitants
of Messembria (present-day Nessebar). Apolonia was
included in the territory of the Macedonian State
at the time of Alexander the Great. It was frequently
subject to, but warded off, invasions of Nomads. The
town fell under Roman domination in the 1st century
BC after it was severely ruined by the armies of Marcus
Lucul. The latter sent the famous statute of Apollo
to Rome as a symbol of his victory. Yet Romans quickly
restored the ruins, built new temples. Already in
the 6th century BC Apolonia minted coins of its own.
The high level of cultural development of the town
at that time is testified by items found in its necropolis
- ceramics, vases made of Egyptian glass, silver and
golden decorations. The upturn of the town was so
great, that Sozopol managed to establish its own colony,
Anhialo (present-day Pomorie).
Roman
domination secured three centuries of peace before
the next invasion of barbarian tribes. It was only
in the 5th century that the town was included in the
territory of Byzantium. During the reign of Khan Kroum
it was within the borders of Bulgaria and like all
other sea towns it frequently changed hands between
Bulgaria and Byzantium. It was severely devastated
in the middle of the 14th century during an attack
of the Genoa fleet. Later it was conquered and sold
to the Romans by the knights of Amadeus of Savoy.
After a long siege the town fell under Turkish rule
in 1453. Only wooden houses have been built there
ever since; the oldest of these can be still seen
in the old quarter of the town. A small fishermen's
settlement at the time of the Liberation, Sozopol
gradually became the biggest fishing centre of the
Bulgarian Black Sea coast, which also developed a
tourism industry. The famous Tsar's Beach is located
to the north of the town. Raiski Zaliv (Paradise Bay)
is nestled among rocks to the south of the town, while
further southwards are the Kavatsite beach and camping
site. The Harmanite Beach is immediately to the south
of the so-called 'new town'. An ancient necropolis
was found here in 1993 and excavations are still going
on.
Places
of Interest: The sights of Sozopol are many, but
none of them can be separated from the rest since
all of them impact the visitors as an attractive ensemble.
Among these are two ancient churches from the Renaissance
period - St. Zosim Church and The Holy Virgin Church.
The houses of Dimitur Laskaridis, who used to be a
fish trader (built in the 17th century, and now hosting
an art gallery), Ana Trendafilova, Kourtidis, Una
Psarianova (now redesigned into a restaurant, Stenata
Restaurant), Grandmother Koukoulissa Hadzhinikolova
(today housing the office of Sturshel Newspaper),
Metropoliev (a medical centre at present), Kreanoolu,
are only a few of the more than 45 architectural monuments
of Sozopol. The ancient atmosphere of the town is
further fed by cobbled streets and high fences in
front of which the old women sit and chat, knit laces
and sell jams. Interestingly, one can still hear Greek
speech among natives, particularly in the old town.
Interesting places to visit are the Archaeological
Museum and the Art Gallery. Moreover, at the beginning
of September each year the town hosts the big Apolonia
International Art Festival, which attracts artists
and art lovers from all over the country and abroad.
The
isle of St. Ivan is situated just 2km away from the
old town in northern direction. St. Ivan is the biggest
Black Sea isle in Bulgarian territorial waters. The
isle shelters a sonar lighthouse, which together with
the lighthouse on the Emine cape shows the way to
the Bourgas Bay. Once upon a time, the isle hosted
a monastery called the Holy Virgin, which was later
renamed into St. Ivan Prodromos.
Outside
Sozopol, there are a number of fjord-like formations
to the south. The coast here is particularly high
and jagged by the incoming waves. There are numerous
secluded caves as well. Some 20km to the south is
the mouth of the Ropotamo River, which is declared
a natural reserve. The Duni Resort is situated 12
km north of Primorsko and was completed in 1987 as
a Bulgarian-Austrian project. It offers lots of hotels,
villas and bungalows. The Alepou Beach and Arkoutino
Beach just next to the resort in southern direction
are wild and beautiful places where the sea is traditionally
rough. Cape Maslen is situated just after the mouth
of the Roporamo River. Its rocky profile and steep
slope down to the sea offer a great view to tourists
on top of it. Beneath the cape, one can see small
and quiet coves among the fiords, covered with pebbles
and seashells. Further southwards is the Perla Camping
located in one of the most beautiful bays along the
Black Sea coast. Here the beach gradually turns into
a green grove. Nearby is the marsh of Stomoplo. Two
natural reserves cover this area - Vodna Lilia (water
lily) and Velyov Vir. Via Pontica - the way of migrating
birds flying to the south passes through here. Every
year at the end of the summer thousands of storks,
pelicans, and about 30 species of birds of prey gather
in the area before they head southwards to spend the
winter.
Transport: High-frequency
bus lines connect Sozopol to Bourgas. Route taxis,
minibuses and ordinary taxis run along the same route
as well.
Located 34 km south of Bourgas on a slender
rocky peninsula, Sozopol is one of the earliest towns on
the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast and dates from 2,610 years
ago. The archaeological findings testify to the presence
of the Thracians as its first inhabitants. In 620 B.C. immigrants
from the rich city of Milet - the largest Southern Greek
centre on the Asia Minor coast - turned the old Thracian
settlement into a rich Hellenic colony - the independent
city-state Apollonia-Pontica. Its strategic position gave
it the opportunity to dominate the ways to the coast of
Black Sea Thrace and the Stranja Mountains, which were rich
in raw materials, and gave it an active intermediary role
in commerce among the Athenian sea unions, the Hellenistic
states in the Mediterranean area and the Thracian formations.
Culture and art started flourishing, temples and public
buildings were built, as well as exquisite sculptures in
the classical style of ancient Greek art. Artefacts were
made from gold, silver, bronze and marble, coins were minted.