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Stara Zagora

 
Dictionary: Sta·ra Za·go·ra   (stä'rə zə-gôr'ə) pronunciation
 

A city of central Bulgaria east-northeast of Plovdiv. It is an industrial center and railroad hub. Population: 144,000.

 

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Stara Zagora
Stara Zagora (stä'rä zä'gôrä) , city (1993 pop. 150,926), central Bulgaria. It is a railway center and the market for a fertile farm area. The city's diverse industries produce textiles, chemicals, agricultural tools, and tobacco products. Stara Zagora is the seat of an Orthodox Eastern bishopric. A Thracian settlement, it was known as Augusta Trajana under Roman rule. It was captured by the Turks in 1370 and renamed Eski-Zagra or Yeski-Zagra, from which its present name is derived. The city was destroyed in the Russo-Turkish War of 1877–78 and rebuilt as a planned city.


 
Wikipedia: Stara Zagora
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Stara Zagora
Стара Загора
The City of Linden Trees
The City of Linden Trees
Flag of Stara Zagora
Flag
Coat of arms of Stara Zagora
Coat of arms
Nickname(s): The city of the linden-trees
Stara Zagora is located in Bulgaria
Stara Zagora
Stara Zagora
Location of Stara Zagora
Coordinates: 42°26′N 25°39′E / 42.433°N 25.65°E / 42.433; 25.65
Country  Bulgaria
Province
(Oblast)
Stara Zagora
Government
 - Mayor Svetlin Tanchev
Elevation 196 m (643 ft)
Population [1]
 - Total 162,416
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 - Summer (DST) EEST (UTC+3)
Postal Code 6000
Area code(s) 042

Stara Zagora (Bulgarian: Стара Загора) is the sixth largest city in Bulgaria, and one of the nationally important economic centres. Stara Zagora is known as the city of straight streets, linden trees, and poets. According to the city's chamber of commerce, it is one of the oldest settlements in Europe, being at least eight thousand years old. According to one unofficial study, Stara Zagora ranks second among the cities in Bulgaria by average salary.[2]

Contents

Geography and climate

Stara Zagora is the administrative centre of its municipality and the Stara Zagora Province. It is located about 231 kilometres (144 mi) away from Sofia, near the Bedechka river in the historic region of Thrace. The population is about 162,400.

The city is located in an area of transitional continental climate with considerable Mediterranean influence. The average yearly temperature is about 13 °C (55.4 °F).

History

Assumption of Mary Orthodox Church

Stara Zagora is considered one of the oldest settlements in Bulgaria and Southeastern Europe.[citation needed] It was founded by the Thracians under the name Beroe (meaning iron) about 6th-5th century BCE, with the Neolithic dwellings and the copper mine near the city being the oldest preserved ones in Europe. The area has been a mining region since Antiquity.

Under the Roman Empire, the town was renamed to Ulpia Augusta Traiana in honour of emperor Trajan.

At the time of the Byzantine Empire, it adopted the name Irinopolis after Byzantine empress Irene. The fortifications around the town were reconstructed because of fear of Bulgarian attacks, but Irinopolis and the whole Zagore region were reincorporated into Bulgaria in 717. The land was bestowed on khan Tervel as a Byzantine gift in acknowledgement of the Bulgarian help to fight back the Arabs besieging Constantinople. The region was the first Bulgarian territorial gain south of Stara Planina. The town acquired the name Boruy.

In 1122 Stara Zagora (Beroia) was the site of a battle between Byzantine Emperor John II Komnenos and an invading Pecheneg army, the Battle of Beroia. The Pechenegs suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of John's Byzantine army, and many of the captives were settled as foederati within the Byzantine frontier. In 1208 the Bulgarians defeated the Latin Empire in the battle of Boruy.

The Ottomans conquered Stara Zagora in 1371. A grade school was built in 1840 and the town's name was changed to Zheleznik (Железник; a Slavic translation of Beroe) in 1854 instead of the Turkish Eskizağra, but was renamed once again to Stara Zagora in 1870. After the Liberation of Bulgaria from Ottoman rule in 1878, it became part of autonomous Eastern Rumelia before the two Bulgarian states finally merged in 1886 as a result of the Unification of Bulgaria.

The Roman Amphitheatre
A typical street scene
Stronghold Ulpia Augusta Traiana over city's modern map

Historical population

Year Population[citation needed]
1875 23,000
1884 15,500
1901–1913 27,000
1934 34,000
1940 40,000
1956 56,000
1965 87,000
1968 100,000
1975 122,000
1985 157,000
1992 162,000
2002 164,000

Districts

Districts of Stara Zagora: 1 - Supercenter; 2 - Central City Part; 3 - Chayka; 4 - Industrial Zone; 5 - Samara-3; 6 - Samara-2; 7 - Samara-1; 8 - Eastern Industrial Zone; 9 - Kolyu Ganchev; 10 - Zora; 11 - APK; 12 - Zagorka; 13 - Lozenets; 14 - Tri Chuchura - north; 15 - Tri Chuchura - center; 16 - Tri Chuchura - south; 17 - Kazanski; 18 - Zheleznik
  • APK (АПК - named at former Industrial-agricultural complex)
  • Atyuren (Атюрен - future district of the city)
  • Bogomilovo (Богомилово - former village of Bogomilovo)
  • Central City Part (includes Supercenter, Chayka & Zagorka) (Централна градска част (Суперцентър, Чайка и Загорка) - Chayka - Sea-gull, Zagorka - named at Zagorka brewery)
  • Chumleka (Чумлека)
  • Dabrava (Дъбрава - former village of Dabrava)
  • Eastern Industrial Zone (Източна индустриална зона)
  • Hrishteni (Хрищени - former village of Hrishteni)
  • Industrial Zone (Индустриална Зона)
  • Kazanski (Казански)
  • Kolyu Ganchev (Колю Ганчев - named at famous Bulgarian revolutionary)
  • Lozenets (Лозенец - from лозе - vineyard)
  • Malka Vereya (Малка Верея - Vereya - old name of the city, Malka - small)
  • Samara 1, 2 & 3- (Самара 1, 2 и 3 - named at sister city of Samara, Russia)
  • Studentski grad - (Студентски град - Student town)
  • Tri Chuchura north, center & south - (Три чучура север, център и юг - "Three spouts")
  • Zheleznik (small & big) (Железник - named at former name of the city)
  • Zora (Зора - Dawn)

Culture

Landmarks

Famous Natives

Trivia

Twin Towns

Stara Zagora is twinned with:

Notes

  1. ^ http://www.grao.bg/tna/tab02.txt
  2. ^ "За търсещи работа - Новини - 880 лв. средна заплата в София - KARIERI.bg". Karieri.Bg<!. http://www.karieri.bg/show/?storyid=312279. Retrieved on 2009-05-06. 
  3. ^ "Radom Official Website - Partner Cities". (in English and Polish) © 2007 Urząd Miasta Radom. http://www.radom.pl/_portal/118786399846cd5dbe4a35e/Miasta_partnerskie.html. Retrieved on 2008-10-23. 

See also

External links

Coordinates: 42°26′N 25°39′E / 42.433°N 25.65°E / 42.433; 25.65


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Stara Zagora" Read more