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Bulgaria (, , located in Southeastern
Europe, bordering five other countries: Romania to the
north (mostly along the Danube), Serbia and the
Republic
of Macedonia to the west, and Greece and Turkey to the south.
The Black
Sea defines the extent of the country to the east.
Bulgaria comprises the classical
regions of Moesia, Thrace, and Macedonia.
Old
European culture in the region started to produce golden
artifacts by the fifth millennium BCE.
The country preserves the traditions (in ethnic
name, language, and alphabet) of the First
Bulgarian Empire (632/681 1018), which at times covered most of
the Balkans and spread its alphabet, literature and culture among
the Slavic and
other peoples of Eastern Europe. Centuries later, with the decline
of the Second
Bulgarian Empire (1185 1396/1422), the country came under
Ottoman
rule for nearly five centuries. Diplomacy re-established Bulgaria
as a constitutional
monarchy in 1878, with the Treaty
of San Stefano marking the birth of the
Third Bulgarian Kingdom. After World War
II, Bulgaria became a communist
state and part of the Eastern
Bloc. In 1990, after the Revolutions
of 1989, the Communist
party gave up its monopoly on power and Bulgaria transitioned
to democracy and
free-market
capitalism.
Currently
Bulgaria functions as a parliamentary democracy under a unitary
constitutional
republic. A member of the European
Union since 2007 and of NATO since 2004, it
has a population of approximately 7.7 million, with Sofia as its capital and largest city.
Geography
Geographically and in terms of climate, Bulgaria
features notable diversity with the landscape ranging from the
Alpine
snow-capped peaks in Rila, Pirin and the
Balkan
Mountains to the mild and sunny Black Sea coast; from the
typically continental
Danubian
Plain (ancient Moesia) in the north
to the strong Mediterranean
climatic influence in the valleys of Macedonia
and in the lowlands in the southernmost parts of Thrace.
Phytogeographically,
Bulgaria is shared between the Illyrian and Euxinian provinces of
the Circumboreal
Region within the Boreal
Kingdom. According to the
WWF and Digital Map of European Ecological Regions by the
European Environment Agency, the territory of Bulgaria can be
subdivided into two main ecoregions: the Balkan
mixed forests and
Rodope montane mixed forests. However, small parts of four
other ecoregions can be found on Bulgarian territory.
Relief
The Balkan peninsula
derives its name from the Balkan or Stara
Planina mountain-range, which runs through the centre of
Bulgaria and extends into eastern Serbia.
Bulgaria comprises portions of the regions known
in classical
times as Moesia, Thrace, and Macedonia.
The mountainous southwest of the country has two alpine ranges —
Rila and
Pirin — and
further east stand the lower but more extensive Rhodope
Mountains. The Rila range includes
the highest peak of the Balkan Peninsula, Musala, at
2,925 meters (9,596 ft); the long range of the
Balkan
mountains runs west-east through the middle of the country,
north of the famous Rose
Valley. Hilly country and plains lie in the southeast, along
the
Black Sea coast in the east, and along Bulgaria's main river,
the Danube
in the north.
Mineral resources
The country possesses relatively rich
mineral-resources, including vast reserves of lignite and anthracite coal; non-ferrous ores such as
copper, lead, zinc and gold. It has large deposits of
manganese ore in the
north-east. Smaller deposits exist of iron, silver, chromite, nickel and others. Bulgaria has
abundant non-metalliferous minerals such as rock-salt,
gypsum, kaolin, marble.
Hydrography
Bulgaria has a dense network of about 540 rivers,
but with the notable exception of the Danube, most have short
lengths and low water-level.
Most rivers flow through mountainous areas; fewer
in the Danubian Plain, Upper
Thracian Plain and especially Dobrudzha. Two catchment basins
exist: the Black Sea (57% of the territory and 42% of the rivers)
and the Aegean Sea
(43% of the territory and 58% of the rivers) basins. The longest
river located solely in Bulgarian territory, the Iskar, has a length
of 368 km. Other major rivers include the Struma and
the Maritsa
river in the south.
Rila and Pirin feature around 260 glacial lakes;
the country also has several large lakes on the Black Sea coast and
more than 2,200 dam lakes. Many mineral springs exist, located
mainly in the south-western and central parts of the country along
the faults between the mountains.
The Bulgarian word for spa, баня, transliterated as banya,
appears in some of the names of more than 50 spa towns and
resorts including Sapareva
Banya, Hisarya,
Sandanski,
Bankya,
Varshets,
Pavel
Banya, Devin, Velingrad and
many others.
Climate
Bulgaria has a temperate climate, with cool and damp winters, very hot and dry summers, and Mediterranean influence along the Black Sea coast. The barrier effect of the Balkan Mountains influences climate throughout the country: northern Bulgaria gets slightly cooler and receives more rain than the southern regions. Precipitation in Bulgaria averages about 630 millimetres per year. Drier areas include Dobrudzha and the northern coastal strip, while the higher parts of the Rila and Stara Planina mountains receive the highest levels of precipitation. In summer, temperatures in the south of Bulgaria often exceed 40 degrees Celsius, but remain cooler by the coast. A site near Plovdiv has recorded the highest known temperature: 46.7 degrees Celsius.Urban geography
Bulgaria's larger cities include: Bulgaria operates a scientific station, the St. Kliment Ohridski Base, on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands off the coast of Antarctica.History
Prehistory and Antiquity
}Prehistoric cultures in the Bulgarian lands
include the Neolithic Hamangia
culture and Vinča
culture (6th to 3rd millennia BC), the eneolithic Varna
culture (5th millennium BC; see also Varna
Necropolis), and the Bronze Age Ezero
culture. The Karanovo
chronology serves as a gauge for the prehistory of the wider
Balkans region.
The Thracians, the earliest known identifiable
people to inhabit the present-day territory of Bulgaria, have left
traceable marks among all the Balkan region despite its tumultuous
history of many conquests. The Panagyuriste
treasure ranks as one of the most splendid achievements of the
Thracian culture.
The Thracians lived divided into numerous
separate tribes until King Teres united most of
them around 500 BC in the Odrysian
kingdom, which peaked under the kings Sitalces and
Cotys I
(383-359 BC). In 188 BC the Romans
invaded Thrace, and warfare
continued until 45 AD when Rome finally conquered the region. The
conquerors quickly romanized
the population. By the time the Slavs arrived, the
Thracians
had already lost their indigenous identity and had dwindled in
number following frequent invasions.
The Slavs and Old Great Bulgaria
The Slavs emerged from their original homeland
(which scholars most commonly locate in Eastern Europe) in the
early 6th century, and spread to most of the eastern Central
Europe, Eastern Europe and the Balkans, thus forming three main
branches — the West Slavs, the East Slavs and the South Slavs. The
eastern South Slavs became part of the ancestors of the modern
Bulgarians. They assimilated what remained of the Thracians. Modern
Bulgarians
derive much of their culture, language and self-determination from
these early immigrants.
In 632, the Bulgars, an ancient
civilization/nation that formed numerous kingdoms throughout
Eurasia, yet stemming from a largely enigmatic socio-cultural
lineage (theorized to be of either Aryan or Turkic descent)
originally from Central Asia, formed under the leadership of Khan
Kubrat an
independent state called Great
Bulgaria, situated between the lower course of the Danube to the west,
the Black
Sea and the Azov Sea to the
south, the Kuban River
to the east, and the Donets River
to the north.
Pressure from the Khazars led to the
subjugation of Great Bulgaria in the second half of the seventh
century. Some of the Bulgars from that territory later migrated to
the northeast to form a new state called Volga
Bulgaria (around the confluence of the Volga and
Kama
Rivers), which lasted until the thirteenth century.
First Bulgarian Empire
Kubrat’s successor,
Khan Asparuh,
migrated with some of the Bulgar tribes to the lower courses of the
rivers Danube, Dniester and
Dniepr
(known as Ongal), and conquered Moesia and Scythia
Minor (Dobrudzha) from
the Byzantine
Empire, expanding his new khanate further into the Balkan
Peninsula. A peace treaty with Byzantium in 681 and the
establishment of the Bulgar capital of Pliska south of the
Danube mark the beginning of the First
Bulgarian Empire. At the same time one of Asparuh's brothers,
Kuber,
settled with another Bulgar group in
present-day
Macedonia.
In 718, the Bulgars raised the
Arab
siege of Constantinople,
killing some 40,000 to 60,000 Arab soldiers.
The influence and territorial expansion of
Bulgaria increased further during the rule of Khan
Krum, who in 811 won a decisive victory against the Byzantine
army led by Nicephorus I
in the Battle of
Pliska.
In 864, Bulgaria accepted Eastern
Orthodox Christianity.
Bulgaria became a major European power in the
ninth and the tenth centuries, while fighting with the Byzantine
Empire for the control of the Balkans. This happened under the rule
(852–889) of Boris
I. During his reign, the Cyrillic
alphabet originated in Preslav and
Ohrid,
adapted from the Glagolitic alphabet invented by the monks
Saints Cyril and Methodius.
The Cyrillic alphabet became the basis for
further cultural development. Centuries later, this alphabet, along
with the Old
Bulgarian language, fostered the intellectual written language
(lingua franca) for Eastern Europe, known as Church
Slavonic. The greatest territorial extension of the Bulgarian
Empire — covering most of the Balkans — occurred under Simeon
I, the first Bulgarian Tsar (Emperor), son of
Boris I.
However, Simeon's greatest achievement consisted
of Bulgaria developing a rich, unique Christian Slavonic culture,
which became an example for the other Slavonic peoples in Eastern
Europe and ensured the continued existence of the Bulgarian nation
regardless of the centrifugal forces that threatened to tear it
into pieces throughout its long and war-ridden history.
Following a decline in the mid-tenth century
(worn out by wars with Croatia, by
frequent Serbian rebellions sponsored by Byzantine gold, and by
disastrous Magyar and Pecheneg
invasions,) Bulgaria collapsed in the face of an assault of the
Rus'
in 969-971.
The Byzantines then began campaigns to conquer
Bulgaria. In 971, they seized the capital Preslav and
captured Emperor Boris II.
Resistance continued under Tsar Samuil
in the western Bulgarian lands for nearly half a century. The
country managed to recover and defeated the Byzantines in several
major battles taking the control of the most of the Balkans and in
991 invaded the Serbian state. However, the Byzantines led
by Basil
II (Basil the Bulgar-Slayer) destroyed the Bulgarian state in
1018 after their victory at Kleidion.
Byzantine Bulgaria
In the first decade after the establishment of
Byzantine rule, no evidence remains of any major attempt at
resistance or any uprising of the Bulgarian population or nobility.
Given the existence of such irreconcilable opponents to Byzantium
as Krakra,
Nikulitsa,
Dragash and others, such apparent passivity seems difficult to
explain. Some historians explain this fact by concessions that
Basil II
granted the Bulgarian nobility in order to gain their obedience. In
the first place, Basil II
guaranteed the indivisibility of Bulgaria in its former geographic
borders and did not abolish officially the local rule of the
Bulgarian nobility that now became part of
Byzantine aristocracy as archons or strategs. Second, special
charters (royal decrees) of Basil II
recognised the autocephaly of the
Bulgarian Archbishopric of Ohrid and set up its boundaries,
dioceses, property and
other privileges.
The people of Bulgaria challenged Byzantine rule
several times in the 11th and then again later in the early 12th
century. The biggest
uprising occurred under the leadership of Peter II
Delyan, (proclaimed Emperor of Bulgaria in Belgrade in 1040).
In the mid to late 11th century, the Normans, fresh from their
recent conquests in southern Italy and Sicily, landed in the
Balkans and began advancing against the Byzantine Empire. It took
the Byzantines until 1185 before the Normans were driven out but
until then they posed a constant threat to Byzantine Bulgaria. In
1091 another invasion came in the form of the Pechenegs.
However, these too were crushed at Levounion
and again in c. 1120 by the Byzantine Empire. After that, the
Hungarians made an attempt to increase their influence beyond the
Danube river; John Comnenus' campaigns along the Danube eventually
drove back the Hungarians as well by c.1140. It would be another 45
years before Bulgaria would attain independence. Until that time,
Bulgarian nobles ruled the province in the name of the Byzantine
Empire until a rebellion by Ivan Asen I
and Peter
IV of Bulgaria led to the establishment of the Second
Bulgarian Empire.
Second Bulgarian Empire
From 1185, the Second Bulgarian Empire once again established Bulgaria as an important power in the Balkans for two more centuries. With its capital based in Veliko Turnovo and under the Asen dynasty, this empire fought for dominance in the region against the Byzantine Empire, the Latin Empire and Hungary, reaching its zenith under Ivan Asen II (1218–1241). As a result of the Tatar invasions (beginning in the later 13th century), of internal conflicts and of the constant attacks from the Byzantines and the Hungarians, the power of the country declined until the end of the 13th century. From 1300, under Emperor Theodore Svetoslav Bulgaria regained its strength, but by the end of the fourteenth century the country had disintegrated into several feudal principalities, which the Ottoman Empire eventually conquered. A Polish-Hungarian crusade under the rule of Władysław III of Poland to free the Balkans was crushed in 1444 in the battle of Varna.During the 13th and 14th centuries, Bulgarian
culture flourished. The
architecture of the Tarnovo Artistic School and the
painting of the Tarnovo Artistic School produced some splendid
achievements. Emperor
Ivan Alexander won a reputation as a great maecenas and patron of
culture.
Ottoman rule
In the mid 13th century, the Second Bulgarian Empire dominated the Balkan Peninsula. By the end of the following century factional divisions between Bulgarian feudal landlords (boyars) had gravely weakened the cohesion of the Empire which therefore collapsed before the invading Ottoman armies in the 1390s. The Bulgarians, most of whom lived in the quadrilateral contained by the lower Danube, the Aegean coast of Thrace, the Black Sea and the valley of the Vardar in the west, now entered upon five hundred years of Ottoman domination.During the second half of the 14th century
Bulgaria became an Ottoman vassalage. Ottoman Sultan Bayezid I
annexed Bulgaria following his victory against a crusade at the Battle
of Nicopolis in 1396. According to some historians the five
centuries of Ottoman rule featured violence and oppression. The
Ottomans decimated the Bulgarian population, which lost most of its
cultural relics. Turkish authorities destroyed most of the medieval
Bulgarian fortresses in order to prevent rebellions. Large towns
and the areas where Ottoman power predominated remained severely
depopulated until the nineteenth century.
The new authorities dismantled Bulgarian
institutions at anything above the village or communal level, and
merged the separate Bulgarian
Church into the
Orthodox Patriarchate in Constantinople (Istanbul),
although a small, semi-independent Bulgarian Church did survive
until 1767. The conquerors also assumed virtual ownership of the
land, though they vested legal ownership in Allah’s
representative on earth, the Sultan.
The new system of land-tenure imposed by the Turks functioned to
provide the Ottoman army with cavalry troops: the sipahi or landlord had to provide
a number of men proportionate to the amount of land he held, while
maintained economically by his tenants, or rayahs. For the
Bulgarian peasant the new system offered greater security than the
old Bulgarian Empire had provided and exceptional privileges
accrued to peasants living on vakif land — land with its income
permanently entailed for the upkeep of a religious or charitable
institution. All tenants, Christian or
Muslim, who
lived on vakif land had
the right to such privileges, but in general the Christian subjects
of the Sultan had to endure a number of disabilities; they usually
paid more taxes than Moslems, they
lacked legal equality with Moslems, they could not carry arms,
their clothes could not rival those of Moslems in color, nor could
their churches tower as high as mosques. The new rulers made few
attempts to enforce conversion to Islam and relatively few
Bulgarians felt attracted to the new ruling faith by the legal
privileges its adherents enjoyed. Those who did convert, the
Pomaks,
retained their native language, dress and customs, and lived
primarily in the Rhodope
mountains.
In the 18th and especially during the 19th
century, conditions improved in certain areas. Some towns such as
Gabrovo,
Tryavna,
Karlovo,
Lovech,
Skopie
prospered. The Bulgarian peasants actually possessed their land,
although it officially belonged to the sultan. The nineteenth century
also brought improved communications, transportation and trade. The
first factory in the Bulgarian lands opened in Sliven in 1834, and
the first railway system started running (between Ruse and Varna) in 1865.
Throughout the five Ottoman centuries Bulgarian
people organized many attempts to re-establish their own state. The
National awakening of Bulgaria became one of the key factors in
the struggle for liberation. In the 19th
century, there came into existence the
Bulgarian Revolutionary Central Committee and the
Internal Revolutionary Organisation led by liberal
revolutionaries such as Vasil
Levski, Hristo
Botev, Lyuben
Karavelov and many others. In 1876, the April
uprising broke out: the largest and best-organized Bulgarian
rebellion against the Ottoman Empire. This rebellion, however, did
not receive the expected support from the Bulgarian masses.
The Kingdom of Bulgaria
Following the
Russo-Turkish War, 1877-1878 (when Russian soldiers together
with a Romanian
expeditionary force and volunteer Bulgarian troops defeated the
Ottoman armies), the Treaty
of San Stefano (3 March 1878), set up an
autonomous Bulgarian principality. The Western Great Powers
immediately rejected the treaty: they became aware that a large
Slavic country in the Balkans might serve
Russian interests. This led to the Treaty
of Berlin (1878) which provided for an autonomous Bulgarian
principality comprising Moesia and the
region of Sofia. Alexander
von Battenberg took the position of Bulgaria's first Prince.
Most of Thrace was included
in the autonomous region of Eastern
Rumelia, whereas the rest of Thrace and all of Macedonia
was returned under the sovereignty of the Ottomans. After
the Serbo-Bulgarian
War and unification
with Eastern
Rumelia in 1885, the principality was proclaimed a fully
independent kingdom on October 5
(September 22
O.S.),
1908, during the reign of Ferdinand
I of Bulgaria.
Ferdinand, a prince from the ducal family of
Saxe-Coburg-Gotha,
became the Bulgarian Prince after Alexander
von Battenberg abdicated in 1886 following a coup d'état staged
by pro-Russian army-officers. (Although the counter-coup
coordinated by Stefan
Stambolov succeeded, Prince Alexander decided not to remain the
Bulgarian ruler without the approval of Alexander
III of Russia.) The struggle for liberation of the Bulgarians
in the Adrianople,
Vilayet and Macedonia continued throughout the late nineteenth and
early twentieth centuries culminating with the
Ilinden-Preobrazhenie Uprising organised by the
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization in 1903.
The Balkan Wars and World War I
In 1912 and 1913, Bulgaria became involved in the
Balkan
Wars, first entering into conflict alongside Greece, Serbia and
Montenegro against the Ottoman Empire. The First
Balkan War (1912-1913) proved a success for the Bulgarian army,
but a conflict over the division of Macedonia arose amongst the
victorious allies. The Second
Balkan War (1913) pitted Bulgaria against Greece and Serbia,
joined by Romania and Turkey. After its defeat in the Second Balkan
War, Bulgaria lost considerable territory conquered in the first
war, as well as Southern
Dobrudzha and parts of the region of
Macedonia.
During World War
I, Bulgaria found itself fighting on the losing side as a
result of its alliance with the Central
Powers. Defeat in 1918 led to new territorial losses (the
Western
Outlands to Serbia, Western
Thrace to Greece and the
re-conquered Southern
Dobrudzha to Romania). The
Balkan Wars and World War I led to the influx of over 250,000
Bulgarian refugees from Macedonia,
Eastern
and Western
Thrace and Southern
Dobrudzha.
The interwar years
In September 1918, Tsar Ferdinand abdicated in
favour of his son Boris
III in order to head off revolutionary tendencies. Under the
Treaty of
Neuilly (November 1919), Bulgaria ceded its Aegean coastline to
Greece, recognized the existence of Yugoslavia,
ceded nearly all of its Macedonian territory to that new state, and
had to give Dobrudzha back to the Romanians. The country had to
reduce its army to 20,000 men, and to pay reparations exceeding
$400 million. Bulgarians generally refer to the results of the
treaty as the "Second National Catastrophe".
Elections in March 1920 gave the
Agrarians a large majority, and Aleksandar
Stamboliyski formed Bulgaria's first peasant government. He
faced huge social problems, but succeeded in carrying out many
reforms, although opposition from the middle and upper classes, the
landlords and the officers of the army remained powerful. In March
1923 Stamboliyski signed an agreement with the Kingdom
of Yugoslavia recognising the new border and agreeing to
suppress
Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization (VMRO), which
favoured a war to regain Macedonia from Bulgaria. This triggered a
nationalist reaction, and the
Bulgarian coup d'état of June 9, 1923 eventually
resulted in Stamboliykski's assassination. A right-wing government
under Aleksandar
Tsankov took power, backed by the army and the VMRO, which
waged a White terror
against the Agrarians and the Communists. In 1926 the Tsar
persuaded Tsankov to resign, a more moderate government under
Andrey
Lyapchev took office and an amnesty was proclaimed, although
the Communists remained banned. A popular alliance including the
re-organised Agrarians won elections in 1931 under the name Popular
Bloc.
In May 1934
another coup took place, removing the Popular Bloc from power
and establishing an authoritarian military régime headed by
Kimon
Georgiev. A year later Tsar Boris
managed to remove the military régime from power, restoring a form
of parliamentary rule (without the re-establishment of the
political parties) and under his own strict control. The Tsar's
regime proclaimed neutrality, but gradually Bulgaria gravitated
into alliance with Nazi Germany
and
Fascist Italy.
World War II
After regaining control over Southern
Dobrudzha in 1940, Bulgaria became allied with the Axis Powers,
although no Bulgarian soldiers participated in the war
against the USSR. During
World War II Nazi Germany
allowed Bulgaria to occupy parts of Greece and of
Yugoslavia.
Bulgaria became one of only three countries (along with Finland and
Denmark) that saved its entire Jewish population (around 50,000
people) from the Nazi camps by
refusing to comply with a 31 August
1943
resolution. The Bulgarian authorities did however send Jews in
territories newly-acquired (from Greece and Yugoslavia) to
death-camps in response to a direct request from Germany.
In September 1944, the Soviet army entered
Bulgaria, enabling the Bulgarian Communists (the Bulgarian
Workers Party) to seize power and establish a communist state.
In 1944, Bulgaria's forces turned against the country's former
ally, Germany. The 450,000-man army in 1944 dwindled to 130,000 by
1945.
The People's Republic of Bulgaria
After World War II, Bulgaria fell within the
Soviet sphere
of influence. It became a People's
Republic in 1946 and one of the USSR's staunchest
allies. In the late 1970s, it began normalizing relations with
Greece. The People's Republic ended in 1989 as many Communist
regimes in Eastern
Europe, as well as the Soviet Union itself, began to collapse.
Opposition forces removed the Bulgarian Communist leader Todor
Zhivkov and his right-hand man Milko Balev
from power on 10 November
1989.
The Republic of Bulgaria
In February 1990, the Communist Party voluntarily gave up its monopoly on power, and in June 1990 the first free elections since 1931 took place, won by the moderate wing of the Communist Party (renamed the Bulgarian Socialist Party — BSP). In July 1991, the country adopted a new constitution which provided for a relatively weak elected President and for a Prime Minister accountable to the legislature.The anti-Communist
Union of Democratic Forces took office, and between 1992 and
1994 carried through the privatization of land and
industry, but faced massive unemployment and economic difficulties.
The reaction against economic reform allowed BSP to take office
again in 1995, but by 1996 the BSP government had also encountered
difficulties, and in the presidential elections of that year the
UDF's Petar
Stoyanov was elected. In 1997, the BSP government collapsed and
the UDF came to power. Unemployment, however, remained high and the
electorate became increasingly dissatisfied with both
parties.
Relations with Turkey began to normalise in the
1990s.
On June 17 2001, Simeon
II, the son of Tsar Boris III and the former Head of state (as
Tsar of Bulgaria from 1943 to 1946), won a narrow victory in
democratic elections. The king's party —
National Movement Simeon II ("NMSII") — won 120 out of 240
seats in Parliament and overturned the two pre-existing political
parties. Simeon's popularity declined during his four-year rule as
Prime Minister, and the BSP won the elections in 2005, but could
not form a single-party government and had to seek a
coalition.
Since 1989, Bulgaria has held multi-party
elections and
privatized its economy,
but economic difficulties and a tide of corruption have led over
800,000 Bulgarians, most of them qualified professionals, to emigrate in
a "brain
drain". Since a reform package introduced in 1997, the economy
has returned to growth. Bulgaria became a member of NATO in 2004 and of
the European
Union in 2007.
Politics
Bulgaria joined NATO on March 29
2004 and
signed the European
Union Treaty
of Accession on 25 April
2005. It
became a full member of the European Union on 1 January
2007. The
country had joined the United
Nations in 1955, and became a founding member of
OSCE in 1995. As a Consultative Party to the Antarctic
Treaty, Bulgaria takes part in the administration of the
territories situated south of 60° south latitude.
Georgi
Parvanov, the President
of Bulgaria since 22 January
2002, won
re-election on 29 October
2006 and began
his second term in office in January 2007. (Bulgarian voters
directly elect their presidents for a five-year term with the right
to one re-election.) The president serves as the head of
state and commander-in-chief of the armed forces. He also
chairs the Consultative Council for National Security. While unable
to initiate legislation other than
Constitutional amendments, the President can return a bill for
further debate, although the parliament can override the
President's veto by vote of a majority of all MPs.
Since 17 August
2005 Sergey
Stanishev as Prime Minister has chaired the
Council of Ministers, the principal body of the executive
branch, which presently
consists of 20 ministers. The Prime Minister — usually nominated by
the largest parliamentary group — receives the mandate of the
President to form a cabinet.
The current
governmental coalition comprises the Bulgarian Socialist Party
(BSP),
National Movement Simeon II (NMSII) and the
Movement for Rights and Freedoms (representing mainly the
Turkish
minority).
The Bulgarian unicameral parliament, the National
Assembly or Narodno
Sabranie (Народно събрание), consists of 240 deputies, each
elected for four-year terms by popular vote. The votes go to
parties or to coalition-lists of candidates for each of the 28
administrative divisions. A party or coalition must win a minimum
of 4% of the vote in order to enter parliament. Parliament has the
responsibility for enactment of laws, approval of the budget,
scheduling of presidential elections, selection and dismissal of
the
Prime Minister and other ministers, declaration of war,
deployment of troops outside of Bulgaria, and ratification of
international treaties and agreements.
The most recent
elections took place in June 2005. The next
scheduled elections should take place in summer 2009.
The Bulgarian judicial system consists of
regional, district and appeal courts, as well as a Supreme Court of
Cassation. In addition, Bulgaria has a Supreme Administrative Court
and a system of military courts. A qualified majority of two-thirds
of the membership of the Supreme Judicial Council elects the
Presidents of the Supreme Court of Cassation and of the Supreme
Administrative Court, as well as the Prosecutor General, from among
its members; the President of the Republic then appoints those
elected. The Supreme Judicial Council has charge of the
self-administration and organization of the Judiciary.
The Constitutional Court supervises the review of
the constitutionality of laws and statutes brought before it, as
well as the compliance of these laws with international treaties
that the Government has signed. Parliament elects the twelve
members of the Constitutional Court by a two-thirds majority: the
members serve for a nine-year term.
The territory of the Republic of Bulgaria
subdivides into provinces and municipalities. In all, Bulgaria has
28 provinces, each headed by a provincial governor appointed by the
government. In addition, the country includes 263
municipalities.
Military
The military
of Bulgaria consists of three services: the Bulgarian
Land Forces, the Bulgarian
Navy and the Bulgarian
Air Force. The armed forces have as their patron saint Sveti
Georgi (St. George),
and Bulgarians celebrate his feast day, 6 May nationally as
Valour and Army Day. Despite active participation in all major
European
wars since the end of the nineteenth century, Bulgarian forces have
never lost a flag.
Bulgaria first became a major military power in
Europe under Khan
Krum and Tsar
Simeon I, in a series of wars with the Byzantine
Empire for control of the Balkan
Peninsula, in the late ninth century. By the use of
approximately 12,000 heavy cavalry in tactics resembling
those of feudal knights,
Simeon I's forces reached as far as the Byzantine capital, Constantinople,
in AD 896 . A formal peace treaty lasted until 912, when
both sides became engaged in a war which ended with several major
defeats of the Byzantines, including one of the bloodiest battles
in the Middle Ages
at Anchialus
in AD 917. Bulgaria again became a significant military power under
the rule of the Asen dynasty
in the twelfth
and thirteenth
centuries. During the rule of Tsar Kaloyan (1197-1207)
Bulgaria became the first European country to defeat the Crusader
knights.
Since gaining total independence from the
Ottoman
Empire in 1878, Bulgaria has functioned as a minor European
power, frequently included in plans and wars of the Great
Powers. In 1912, the Bulgarian forces invented the world's
first aircraft-dropped bombs and soon after became the first
military in the world to utilize aviation
bombardment, in the siege of Odrin. Thus the
Bulgarian Air Force, inheritor of one of the oldest traditions of
powered aircraft combat in the world, became an early innovator in
aviation military technology and in air-to-surface attack
strategies/tactics.
Following a series of reductions beginning in
1989, the active troops of Bulgaria's army number as many as 68,450
today.
Reserve forces include 303,000 soldiers and officers. "PLAN 2004",
an effort to modernize Bulgaria's armed forces, aims to better meet
the perceived military needs of NATO and the European
Union.
Bulgarian military personnel have participated in
international missions in Cambodia, Bosnia
and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Afghanistan and
Iraq. Starting
in 2008, Bulgaria will completely abolish compulsory military
service. Bulgaria's naval and air forces became fully professional in 2006, with
the land-forces scheduled to follow suit in 2008. Bulgaria's
Special Forces have conducted missions with the SAS,
Delta
Force, KSK,
and the Spetsnaz of
Russia.
In April 2006 Bulgaria and the United
States of America signed a defence-cooperation agreement
providing for the development of the Bulgarian air bases at
Bezmer
(near Yambol) and Graf
Ignatievo (near Plovdiv), the
Novo
Selo training-range (near Sliven), and a
logistics centre in Aytos
as
joint US-Bulgarian military facilities. Bulgaria's navy
comprises mainly Soviet-era ships, and two submarines. With only of
coastline, Bulgaria does not regard assault by sea as a major risk.
In the course of recent modernization efforts, Bulgaria purchased a
new frigate from Belgium, and the
navy seems likely to acquire four Gowind corvettes from the French
company DCN.
Bulgaria's air forces also use a large amount of Soviet equipment.
Plans to acquire transport and attack
helicopters are underway, in addition to a major overhaul on
old Soviet weapon systems. Military spending accounts for nearly
2.6% of Bulgaria's GDP.
Provinces and municipalities
Between 1987 and 1999 Bulgaria consisted of nine
provinces (oblasti, singular oblast); since 1999, it has
consisted of twenty-eight. All take their names from their
respective capital cities: The provinces subdivide into 264
municipalities.
Economy
Bulgaria became a member of the European
Union in 2007; the World Bank
classifies it as an "upper-middle-income economy" . Bulgaria has
experienced rapid economic growth in recent
years. The country still ranks as one of the poorest member
state of the EU, but standards of living have started to
rise.
Bulgaria has tamed its inflation since the deep
economic crisis in 1996-1997, but latest
figures show an increase in the inflation-rate to 12.5% for 2007.
Unemployment declined from more than 17% in the mid 1990s to nearly
10% in 2007, but the unemployment-rate in some rural areas
continues in high double-digits. Bulgaria is experiencing soaring
inflation and this means that Bulgaria's adoption of the Euro will
likely to be delayed well until the year 2013-2014.
Bulgaria's economy contracted dramatically after
1987 with the dissolution of the
Council for Mutual Economic Assistance (COMECON), with which
the Bulgarian economy had integrated closely. The
standard-of-living fell by about 40%, but it regained pre-1990
levels in June 2004. United
Nations sanctions against
Yugoslavia and Iraq took a heavy toll
on the Bulgarian economy. The first signs of recovery emerged in
1994 when the GDP
grew and inflation
fell. During the government of Zhan
Videnov's cabinet in 1996, the economy collapsed due to lack of
international economic support and an unstable banking system.
Since 1997, the country has been on the path to recovery, with GDP
growing at a 4%–5% rate, increasing FDI, macroeconomic
stability and European
Union membership.
The former NMSII government elected in 2001
pledged to maintain the fundamental economic policy-objectives
adopted by its predecessor in 1997, specifically: retaining the
Currency Board, implementing sound financial policies, accelerating
privatisation, and
pursuing structural reforms. Economic forecasts for 2005 and 2006
predicted continued growth for the economy. Economists predicted
annual year-on-year GDP growth for 2005 and 2006 of 5.3% and 6.0%
respectively. Forecasters expected industrial output in 2005 to
rise by 11.9% from the previous year, and by 15.2% in 2006.
Unemployment for 2005 was projected at 11.5%, 9% for 2006 and 7.25%
for 2007. As of 2006 the GDP structure is: agriculture 8.0%;
industry 26.1%; services 65.9%.
Agriculture
Agricultural output has decreased overall since 1989, but production has grown in recent years, and together with related industries like food-processing it still plays a key role in the Bulgarian economy. Arable farming predominates over stock-breeding. The country has a lack of modern equipment. Alongside aeroplanes and other equipment, Bulgarian agriculture has over 150,000 tractors and 10,000 combine harvesters.Production of the most important crops (according
to the FAO) in
2006 (in '000 tons) amounted to: wheat 3301.9; sunflower 1196.6; maize 1587.8; grapes 266.2; tobacco 42.0; tomatoes 213.0; barley 546.3; potatoes 386.1; peppers 156.7;
cucumbers 61.5;
cherries 18.2; watermelons 136.0; cabbage 72.7; apples 26.1; plums 18.0; strawberries 8.8.
Industry
Industry plays a key role in the Bulgarian
economy. Although Bulgaria lacks large reserves of oil and gas, it
produces significant quantities of electricity. Bulgaria formerly
ranked as the most important exporter of electricity in the region
due to the
Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant, which has a total capacity of ,
but after the closure of its 4 blocks, exports of electricity
declined sharply and the country lost its leading position as an
energy-supplier for the Balkans. Construction has started on a
second plant, the
Belene Nuclear Power Plant with a projected capacity of . Plans
exist for a $1.4bn project for construction of an additional for
the Maritza
Iztok 1 Thermal Power Plant (see Energy
in Bulgaria).
Ferrous metallurgy has major
importance. Much of the production of steel and pig iron takes
place in Kremikovtsi and
Pernik, with
a third metallurgical base in Debelt. In
production of steel and steel products per capita the country heads
the Balkans. Recently
the fate of Kremikovtsi steel factories has come under debate,
because of serious pollution of the capital, Sofia.
The largest refineries for lead and zinc operate in Plovdiv (the
biggest refinery between Italy and the Ural mountains), Kardzhali and
Novi
Iskar; for copper in
Pirdop and
Eliseina;
for aluminium in
Shumen. In
production of many metals per capita, Bulgaria ranks first in
South
Eastern Europe.
About 14% of the total industrial production
relates to machine-building,
and 24% of the people work in this field. Its importance has
decreased since 1989.
Electronics and
electric equipment-production have developed to a high degree. The
largest centres include Sofia, Plovdiv and the
surrounding area, Botevgrad,
Stara
Zagora, Varna, Pravets and many
other cities. These plants produce household
appliances, computers, CDs, telephones, medical
and scientific equipment.
Many factories producing transportation equipment
currently do
not operate at full capacity. Plants produce trains (Burgas, Dryanovo),
trams (Sofia), trolleys (Dupnitsa),
buses (Botevgrad),
trucks (Shumen), motor trucks
(Plovdiv, Lom,
Sofia, Lovech). Lovech has an automotive assembly plant. Ruse serves as the
main centre for agricultural machinery. Most Bulgarian shipbuilding
takes place in Varna, Burgas and Ruse. Bulgarian arms
production mainly operates in central Bulgaria (Kazanlak, Sopot, Karlovo).
Foreigners seeking additional homes have recently
boosted the Bulgarian
properties market. Buyers come from across Europe, but mostly
from the United
Kingdom, encouraged by relatively cheap property-prices and the
country's easy accessibility via air-travel.
Science, technology and telecommunications
Some multinational companies have set up regional offices and headquarters in Bulgaria, most notably Hewlett-Packard, which built its Global Service Centre for Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) in Sofia.Telecommunications
has become one of the growing industries in the country. Three
GSM
mobile-telephone operators — Globul, Mobiltel and
Vivatel —
provide almost 100% coverage each. They have a network of
service-centers throughout the country. Bulgarians made use of some
10 million cellular
phones as of 2006.
Mobikom provides the only NMT 450
mobile-phone service. Bulgarians in towns can access the Internet,
and recently
most villages have acquired fast connectivity and VoIP; BTK offers DSL connection in
larger cities. Bulgaria had about 298,781 Internet hosts as of
2007.
Bulgaria supplied many scientific and research
instruments for the Soviet
space-program, and also sent two men into space: Georgi
Ivanov on Soyuz 33 (1979)
and Alexander
Alexandrov on Soyuz TM-5
(1985). Bulgaria became one of the first European countries to
develop serial production of personal
computers (Pravetz
series 8) in the beginning of the 1980s, and has experience in
pharmaceutical research and development.
Asen
Yordanov (1896-1967), the founder of aeronautical
engineering in Bulgaria, worked as an aviator, engineer and
inventor; he also contributed to the development of aviation in the United
States. He played a significant role in U.S. aircraft
development and took part in many other projects.
The Bulgarian-American
inventor and scientist Peter
Petroff became best known for his work in NASA. Petroff also
invented the first digital
watch (1970).
U.S. chemist Carl
Djerassi, who developed the first oral contraceptive pill
(OCP), has Bulgarian ancestry.
The
Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, the leading scientific
institution in the country, employs most of Bulgaria's researchers
working in its numerous branches.
Bulgaria hosts two major astronomical
observatories: the Rozhen
Observatory, the largest in Southeastern
Europe, and the Belogradchik
Observatory with three telescopes; as well as several
"public astronomical observatories" with planetariums, focused on
educationnal and
outreach
activities.
Transport
Bulgaria occupies a unique and strategically
important geographic location. Since ancient times, the country has
served as a major crossroads between Europe, Asia and Africa. Five of the
ten Trans-European
corridors run through its territory. Bulgaria's roads have a
total length of , of them paved and of them motorways. Several
motorways are planned, under construction or partially built:
Trakiya
motorway, Hemus
motorway, Cherno
More motorway, Struma
motorway, Maritza
motorway and Lyulin
motorway. Other planned motorways await finalisation of their
routes. They include a link between the capital Sofia and Vidin, a link between
the Struma and Trakiya motorways south of Rila
Mountain, a link between Rousse and Veliko
Tarnovo, and the Sofia
ringroad. Many roads have recently
undergone reconstruction. Bulgaria has of railway track, more than
60% electrified. A €360,000,000 project exists for the
modernisation and electrification of the Plovdiv-Kapitan
Andreevo railway.
Air transportation has developed relatively
comprehensively. Bulgaria has five official international airports
— at Sofia,
Burgas,
Varna,
Plovdiv and
Gorna
Oryahovitsa. Massive investment plans exist for the first
three. Important domestic airports include those of Vidin, Pleven, Silistra, Targovishte,
Stara
Zagora, Kardzhali,
Haskovo and
Sliven.
After the fall of communism in 1989, most of them are not used as
the importance of domestic flights declined. There are many
military airports and agricultural airfields. 128 of the 213
airports in Bulgaria
are paved. The ports of Varna and Burgas are by far
the most important and have the largest turnover. Other than
Burgas, Sozopol, Nesebar and
Pomorie are
big fishing ports. The largest ports on the Danube River are
Rousse and
Lom
which serves the capital. The cities and many smaller towns have
well-organised public transport systems, using buses, trolleys (in
about 20 cities) and trams (in Sofia). The Sofia Metro
in the capital has three planned lines with total length of about
and 52 stations, but much currently
remains uncompleted.
Demographics
According to the 2001 census, Bulgaria's population
consists mainly of ethnic Bulgarian
(83.9%), with two sizable minorities, Turks
(9.4%) and Roma
(4.7%). Of the remaining 2.0%, 0.9% comprises some 40 smaller
minorities, most prominently in numbers the Russians, Armenians,
Vlachs,
Jews,
Crimean Tatars and Sarakatsani
(historically known also as Karakachans). 1.1% of the population
did not declare their ethnicity in the latest census in 2001. 96.3%
of the population speak Bulgarian
as their mother
tongue. Bulgarian, a member of the Slavic
language group, remains the only official language, but numbers
of speakers of other languages (such as Turkish
and Romany)
correspond closely to ethnic proportions.
The country has a Roma
population estimated at between 200,000 and 450,000.
Most Bulgarians (82.6%) belong, at least
nominally, to the Bulgarian
Orthodox Church, the national Eastern
Orthodox Church. Other religious denominations include Islam (12.2%),
various Protestant
denominations (0.8%) and Roman
Catholicism (0.5%); with other denominations, atheists and
undeclared totalling approximately 4.1%.
In recent years, Bulgaria has had one of the
slowest population growth-rates in the world. Negative population
growth has occurred since the early 1990s, due to economic collapse
and high emigration. In 1989 the population comprised 9,009,018
people, in 2001 7,950,000 and in 2008 7,640,000. Now Bulgaria
faces a severe demographic crisis . Bulgaria has a fertility-rate
of 1.4 children per woman as of 2007, with a predicted rate of 1.7
by the end of 2050. The fertility-rate will need to reach 2.2 to
restore natural growth in population.
Culture
A country often described as lying at the
crossroads linking the East and
West,
Bulgaria functioned as the hub of Slavic
Europe during much of the Middle Ages, exerting considerable
literary and cultural influence over the Eastern Orthodox Slavic
world by means of the Preslav
and Ohrid
Literary Schools. Bulgaria also gave the world the Cyrillic
alphabet, the second most-widely used alphabet in the world, which
originated in these two schools in the tenth century AD.
A number of ancient civilizations, most notably
the Thracians,
Greeks,
Romans,
Slavs, and
Bulgars,
have left their mark on the culture, history and heritage of
Bulgaria. The country has nine UNESCO World
Heritage Sites:
- The early medieval large rock relief Madara Rider.
- two Thracian tombs (one in Sveshtari and one in Kazanlak)
- three monuments of medieval Bulgarian culture (the Boyana Church, the Rila Monastery and the Rock-hewn Churches of Ivanovo)
- two examples of natural beauty: the Pirin National Park and the Srebarna Nature Reserve
- the ancient city of Nesebar, a unique combination of European cultural interaction, as well as, historically, one of the most important centres of sea-borne trade in the Black Sea
Note also the Varna
Necropolis, a 3500-3200 BC burial-site, purportedly
containing the oldest examples of worked gold in the world.
Bulgaria's contribution to humanity continued
throughout the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with individuals
such as John
Atanasoff — a United States citizen of Bulgarian descent,
regarded as the father of the digital
computer. A number of noted opera-singers (Nicolai
Ghiaurov, Boris
Christoff, Raina
Kabaivanska, Ghena
Dimitrova), Anna Veleva,
the world-famous harpist Anna-Maria
Ravnopolska-Dean and successful artists (Christo
Yavashev, Pascin,
Vladimir Dimitrov) popularized the culture of Bulgaria
abroad.
One of the best internationally-known artists,
Valya
Balkanska sang the song Izlel e Delyu Haydutin, part of the
Voyager
Golden Record selection of music included in the two Voyager
spacecraft launched in 1977. The
Bulgarian State Television Female Vocal Choir also known as
Mystery of Bulgarian voices has also attained a considerable degree
of fame.
A unique custom called nestinarstvo distinguishes
the Strandja region.
Customs include dancing into fire or over live embers.
Tourism
In the northern-hemisphere winter, Samokov, Borovets, Bansko and Pamporovo become
well-attended ski-resorts. Summer resorts exist on the Black Sea at
Sozopol,
Nessebur,
Golden
Sands, Sunny Beach,
Sveti
Vlas, Albena,
Saints Constantine and Helena and many others. Spa resorts
such as Bankya, Hisarya, Sandanski,
Velingrad,
Varshets
and many others attract visitors throughout the year. Bulgaria has
started to become an attractive tourist destination because of the
quality of the resorts and prices below those found in Western
Europe.
Bulgaria has enjoyed a substantial growth in
income from international tourism over the past decade.
Beach-resorts attract tourists from Germany, Russia, Scandinavia,
the Netherlands and
the United
Kingdom. The ski-resorts are a favourite destination for
British and
Irish
tourists.
Bulgaria now attracts
close to 7 million visitors yearly. Tourism in Bulgaria makes a
major contribution towards the country's annual economic growth of
6% to 6.5%.
Sports
Football
has become by far the most popular sport in Bulgaria. Many
Bulgarian fans closely follow the top Bulgarian league, the
Bulgarian "A" Professional Football Group; as well as the
leagues of other European countries. The
Bulgaria national football team achieved its greatest success
with a fourth-place finish at the 1994
FIFA World Cup in the United
States.
Dimitar
Berbatov currently
ranks as the most popular Bulgarian footballer. Hristo
Stoichkov has arguably become the best-known Bulgarian
footballer of all time. His career peaked between 1992 and 1995,
while he played for FC
Barcelona, winning the
Ballon d'Or in 1994. Additionally, he featured in the FIFA 100
rankings. Two Bulgarians have won the European top scorers'
Golden
Boot award: Stoichkov and Petar Jekov.
Georgi
Asparuhov-Gundi (1943-1971), also became extremely popular at
home and abroad, having had offers from clubs in Italy and
Portugal, and having won the Bulgarian football player №1 award for
the twentieth century.
PFC CSKA
Sofia(champion of Bulgaria 30 times, National cup holder 23
times, European Cup semi-finalist 2 times, Cup Winners' Cup
semi-finalist), PFC Levski
Sofia (25 times champion of Bulgaria and (as of 2007) 26 times
National Cup holder), PFC Slavia
Sofia (officially the oldest football- and sports-club in
Bulgaria, 8 times football champion of Bulgaria and 12 times holder
of the National Cup, Cup Winners' Cup semi-finalist) have become
the most successful Bulgarian football-clubs. Other popular clubs
include PFC
Lokomotiv Sofia, PFC Litex
Lovech, PFC
Cherno More Varna and PFC
Lokomotiv Plovdiv. PFC Levski Sofia became the first Bulgarian
team to participate in the modern UEFA
Champions League group stage, having achieved this by
qualifying for the
2006/2007 competition.
Apart from football, Bulgaria boasts great
achievements in a great variety of other sports. Maria Gigova
and
Maria Petrova have each held a record of three world-titles in
rhythmic
gymnastics. Other famous gymnasts include Simona
Peycheva and Neshka
Robeva (a highly successful coach as well). Yordan
Yovtchev ranks as the most famous Bulgarian competitor in
Artistic
Gymnastics. Bulgarians also dominate in weightlifting, with around
1,000 gold medals in different competitions, although cases of
doping
have occurred among Bulgarian weightlifters, which led to the
expulsion of the entire Bulgarian team from the 2000
Summer Olympics, and their voluntary withdrawal from the
1988
Summer Olympics. Boyan Radev
,Stefan
Botev, Nickolai
Peshalov, Demir
Demirev and Yoto Yotov
figure among the most distinguished weightlifters. In wrestling, Serafim
Barzakov, Armen
Nazarian, Plamen
Slavov, Kiril
Sirakov and Sergey
Moreyko rank as world-class wrestlers. Dan Kolov
became a wrestling legend in the early 20th century after leaving
for United States.
Bulgarians have made many significant
achievements in athletics. Stefka
Kostadinova, who still holds the women's high jump world
record, jumped 209 centimetres at the
1987 World Championships in Athletics in Rome to clinch the
coveted title. Presently,
Bulgaria takes pride in its sprinters, especially Ivet Lalova
and Tezdzhan
Naimova.
Volleyball
recently
experienced a big resurgence. The
Bulgarian national volleyball team, one of the strongest teams
in Europe, currently
ranks fourth in the FIVB ranklist. At the
2006 Volleyball World Championship this team won the bronze
medal.
Chess has achieved
great popularity. One of the top chess-masters and a former world
champion, Veselin
Topalov, plays for Bulgaria. At the end of 2005, both men's and
women's world chess-champions came from Bulgaria, as well as the
junior world champion.
Albena
Denkova and Maxim
Staviski have won the ISU world figure skating championships
twice in a row (2006 and 2007) for ice-dance.
Bulgaria also has strengths in shooting
sports. Maria
Grozdeva and Tanyu
Kiriakov have won Olympic gold medals, and Ekaterina
Dafovska won the Olympic gold in biathlon in the 1998 Winter
Olympic Games.
Petar
Stoychev set a new swimming world record for crossing the
English
Channel in 2007.
The country has strong traditions in amateur
boxing and in martial-arts
competitions. Bulgaria has achieved major success with its judo and karate teams in European and
World championships. Kaloyan Stefanov Mahlyanov, best known as
Kotoōshū
Katsunori, has become well-known worldwide for his sumo prowess.
Religion
Most citizens of Bulgaria have associations — at
least nominally — with the Bulgarian
Orthodox Church. Founded in 870 AD under the
Patriarchate of Constantinople (from which it obtained its
first primate,
its clergy and theological texts), the Bulgarian Orthodox Church
has had autocephalous status since
927. The Orthodox Church re-established the Bulgarian
Patriarchate in Sofia in the 1950s after the promulgation of
the Bulgarian
Exarchate in 1870. The Bulgarian Orthodox Church, as the
independent national church of Bulgaria (like the other national
branches of Eastern
Orthodoxy in their respective countries) plays a role as an
inseparable element of Bulgarian national consciousness. The Church
became subordinate within the
Patriarchate of Constantinople, twice during the periods of
Byzantine (1018 – 1185) and Ottoman (1396 – 1878) domination but
has been revived every time as a symbol of Bulgarian statehood
without breaking away from the Orthodox dogma. In 2001, the
Bulgarian Orthodox Church had 6,552,000 members in Bulgaria (82.6%
of the population). However, many people raised during the 45 years
of communist rule are
not religious, even though they may formally be members of the
Church.
Despite the dominant position of the Bulgarian
Orthodox Church in Bulgarian cultural life, a number of Bulgarian
citizens belong to other religious denominations, most notably
Islam,
Roman Catholicism and Protestantism.
Islam
came to Bulgaria at the end of the fourteenth century after the
conquest of the country by the Ottomans. It
gradually gained ground throughout the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries through the introduction of Turkish
colonists and the conversion of native Bulgarians. In the sixteenth
and the seventeenth centuries, missionaries from Rome converted
Bulgarian Paulicians in
the districts of Plovdiv and
Svishtov
to Roman
Catholicism. Today their
descendants form the bulk of Bulgarian Catholics, whose number
stood at 44,000 in 2001.
Missionaries from the United
States of America introduced Protestantism
into Bulgarian territory in 1857. Missionary work continued
throughout the second half of the nineteenth and the first half of
the twentieth century. In 2001 Bulgaria had some 42,000 Protestants.
According to the most recent Eurostat
"Eurobarometer" poll, in 2005, 40% of Bulgarian citizens responded
that "they believe there is a God", whereas 40% answered that "they
believe there is some sort of spirit or life force", 13% that "they
do not believe there is a God, spirit, nor life force", and 6% did
not answer.
See also
Notes
Further reading
- Crampton, R. J. A Concise History of Bulgaria (2005) Cambridge, UK; New York: Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521616379
- Detrez, Raymond Historical Dictionary of Bulgaria (2006) Second Edition lxiv + 638 pp. Maps, bibliography, appendix, chronology ISBN 978-0-8108-4901-3
- Lampe, John R., and Marvin R. Jackson Balkan Economic History, 1550-1950: From Imperial Borderlands to Developing Nations (1982)
- Lampe, John R. The Bulgarian Economy in the Twentieth Century (1986) London: Croom Helm ISBN 0709916442
Pre 1939
- Hall, Richard C. Bulgaria's Road to the First World War (1996) New York: Columbia University Press ISBN 088033357X
- MacDermott, Mercia A History of Bulgaria, 1393-1885 (1962)
- Perry, Duncan M. Stefan Stambolov and the Emergence of Modern Bulgaria, 1870-1895 (1993) Durham: Duke University Press ISBN 0822313138
- (Васил Н. Златарски, История на българската държава през средните векове, Част II, II изд., Наука и изкуство, София 1970)
World War II
- Bar-Zohar, Michael Beyond Hitler's Grasp: The Heroic Rescue of Bulgaria's Jews
- Groueff, Stephane Crown of Thorns: The Reign of King Boris III of Bulgaria, 1918–1943
- Todorov, Tzvetan The fragility of goodness: why Bulgaria’s Jews survived the Holocaust: a collection of texts with commentary (2001) Princeton: Princeton University Press ISBN 0691088322
Communist era
- Todorov, Tzvetan Voices from the Gulag: Life and Death in Communist Bulgaria
- Dimitrova, Alexenia The Iron Fist - Inside the Bulgarian secret archives
Contemporary
- Bell, John D., ed. Bulgaria in Transition: Politics, Economics, Society, and Culture after Communism. Westview. (1998) ISBN 978-0813390109
Guide-books
- Paul Greenway Lonely Planet World Guide: Bulgaria
- Pettifer, James Blue Guide: Bulgaria
- Timothy Rice Music of Bulgaria
- Jonathan Bousfield The Rough Guide To Bulgaria
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bulgy in Basque: Bulgaria
bulgy in Persian: بلغارستان
bulgy in Faroese: Bulgaria
bulgy in French: Bulgarie
bulgy in Western Frisian: Bulgarije
bulgy in Friulian: Bulgarie
bulgy in Irish: An Bhulgáir
bulgy in Manx: Yn Vulgeyr
bulgy in Scottish Gaelic: Bulgàiria
bulgy in Galician: Bulgaria - България
bulgy in Hakka Chinese: Pó-kâ-li-â
bulgy in Korean: 불가리아
bulgy in Armenian: Բուլղարիա
bulgy in Hindi: बुल्गारिया
bulgy in Upper Sorbian: Bołharska
bulgy in Croatian: Bugarska
bulgy in Ido: Bulgaria
bulgy in Iloko: Bulgaria
bulgy in Bishnupriya: বুলগেরিয়া
bulgy in Indonesian: Bulgaria
bulgy in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Bulgaria
bulgy in Interlingue: Bulgaria
bulgy in Ossetian: Болгари
bulgy in Icelandic: Búlgaría
bulgy in Italian: Bulgaria
bulgy in Hebrew: בולגריה
bulgy in Javanese: Bulgaria
bulgy in Pampanga: Bulgaria
bulgy in Kannada: ಬಲ್ಗೇರಿಯ
bulgy in Georgian: ბულგარეთი
bulgy in Kashubian: Bùlgarskô
bulgy in Kazakh: Бұлғарстан
bulgy in Cornish: Bulgari
bulgy in Kirghiz: Болгария
bulgy in Swahili (macrolanguage): Bulgaria
bulgy in Haitian: Bilgari
bulgy in Kurdish: Bulgaristan
bulgy in Latin: Bulgaria
bulgy in Latvian: Bulgārija
bulgy in Luxembourgish: Bulgarien
bulgy in Lithuanian: Bulgarija
bulgy in Ligurian: Bulgaïa
bulgy in Limburgan: Bölgarieë
bulgy in Lingala: Bulgaria
bulgy in Hungarian: Bulgária
bulgy in Macedonian: Бугарија
bulgy in Maltese: Bulgarija
bulgy in Malay (macrolanguage):
Bulgaria
nah:Bulgaritlān
bulgy in Nauru: Borgeriya
bulgy in Dutch: Bulgarije
bulgy in Dutch Low Saxon: Bulgarije
bulgy in Nepali: बुल्गेरिया
bulgy in Japanese: ブルガリア
bulgy in Chechen: Болгаре
bulgy in Norwegian: Bulgaria
bulgy in Norwegian Nynorsk: Bulgaria
bulgy in Narom: Bulgarie
bulgy in Novial: Bulgaria
bulgy in Occitan (post 1500): Bulgaria
bulgy in Uighur: بۇلغارىيە
bulgy in Uzbek: Bolgariya
bulgy in Pushto: بلغاريه/بلغارستان
bulgy in Piemontese: Bulgarìa
bulgy in Low German: Bulgarien
bulgy in Polish: Bułgaria
bulgy in Portuguese: Bulgária
bulgy in Crimean Tatar: Bulğaristan
bulgy in Romanian: Bulgaria
bulgy in Vlax Romani: Bulgariya
bulgy in Quechua: Bulgarya
bulgy in Russian: Болгария
bulgy in Northern Sami: Bulgária
bulgy in Sanskrit: बुल्गारिया
bulgy in Scots: Bulgarie
bulgy in Saterfriesisch: Bulgarien
bulgy in Albanian: Bullgaria
bulgy in Sicilian: Bulgarìa
bulgy in Simple English: Bulgaria
bulgy in Slovak: Bulharsko
bulgy in Church Slavic: Блъгарїꙗ
bulgy in Slovenian: Bolgarija
bulgy in Serbian: Бугарска
bulgy in Serbo-Croatian: Bugarska
bulgy in Finnish: Bulgaria
bulgy in Swedish: Bulgarien
bulgy in Tagalog: Bulgaria
bulgy in Tamil: பல்கேரியா
bulgy in Tetum: Bulgária
bulgy in Thai: ประเทศบัลแกเรีย
bulgy in Vietnamese: Bulgaria
bulgy in Tajik: Булғористон
bulgy in Tok Pisin: Balgeria
bulgy in Turkish: Bulgaristan
bulgy in Udmurt: Болгария
bulgy in Ukrainian: Болгарія
bulgy in Urdu: بلغاریہ
bulgy in Venetian: Bulgaria
bulgy in Volapük: Bulgarän
bulgy in Võro: Bulgaaria
bulgy in Walloon: Bulgåreye
bulgy in Waray (Philippines): Bulgarya
bulgy in Wolof: Bulgaari
bulgy in Wu Chinese: 部勒伽利亚
bulgy in Yiddish: בולגאריע
bulgy in Contenese: 保加利亞
bulgy in Dimli: Bulğarıstan
bulgy in Samogitian: Bulgarėjė
bulgy in Chinese: 保加利亚