Archive for the ‘Bulgaria’ Category

Romania and Bulgaria in the EU

January 6, 2007

I wish to congratulate Romania and Bulgaria for their long expected entry in the European Union.

EU is now connected from the Atlantic Ocean to the Black Sea.

i advise everyone to travel to the Black Sea. I remember back in 2001 when i hitchhiked from Saturn, a beach resort after Costinesti and Constanta all the way to Mangalia and entering Bulgaria reaching Varna. the problem was to get transportation in the Bulgarian border. No one was there and after almost 30 minutes waiting i decided to enter without stamping my passport. it seems some policemen actually knew I was there and just kept me waiting… as soon as they realized i was going in they came running to assure i got my passport stamped. so i guess no more stamps from these countries anymore. Ill try to update this post with a few images of my passport with stamps from Romania and Bulgaria.

Sofia, Bulgaria

August 29, 2006

sofia bulgaria europe balkans bulgarians
very nice city, although its a capital it still has something about countryside, and then its has the mix of the orient versus the Occident.

a bit of history:

Sofia has a history that goes back thousands of years. Through the centuries, many peoples have inhabited it and added to its rich and diverse history. Numerous Neolithic villages have been discovered in the area, while a chalocolithic settlement has been recently discovered in the very center of modern Sofia.

The Thracian Serdi tribe settled here in the 7th century BC and gave the first recorded name of Sofia - Serdica. The Byzantines called it Triaditsa and the Slavs - Sredets. The modern city of Sofia was named in the 14th century after the basilica St. Sofia. In Greek, word sofia means wisdom. In the 3rd century AD, the Romans built strong walls around Serdica, their capital of Inner Dacia and an important stopping point on the Roman road from Naisus (present Nish, Yugoslavia) to Constantinople.

After the Hun invasion of 441, the town was rebuilt by the Byzantines. The Slavs gave Sredets a key role in the First Bulgarian Empire, then in 1018 the Byzantines retook Triaditsa. At the end of the 12th century, the Bulgarians returned and Sredets became a major trading center of the Second Bulgarian Empire. The Turks captured Sofia in 1382 and made it the center of the Rumelian beylerbeyship. The city declined during the feudal unrest of the 19th century, but with the establishment of the Third Bulgarian Empire in 1879, Sofia once again became the capital of Bulgaria.

The National Art Gallery Rapidly the city’s image changed from an Oriental, to a European. Today many streets, buildings, parks, and even whole neighborhoods preserve the architectural style from the turn of the century. Between 1879 and 1939, the population of Sofia grew from 20 000 to 300 000, while today 1 250 000 people live in Sofia.