This is a list of the origins of the names of provinces of Bulgaria .
County name | Language of origin | First attested | Meaning | Cognates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Blagoevgrad Province | Slavic | 1950 [1] | Named after the city of Blagoevgrad, itself a recent construct from Blagoev + the Slavic suffix -grad , "Blagoev's city". Blagoev is from the Bulgarian personal name Blagoy , from blag, "sweet, figuratively- gentle and kind". Named after Bulgarian Socialist Party founder Dimitar Blagoev. | Numerous place names with the Slavic component grad |
Burgas Province | Latin | Antiquity, current form - 1727 [2] | Named after the city of Burgas, from the Latin word burgus , meaning a "tower, fort", after a local ancient Roman travel post. [3] [4] | Burgos, Lüleburgaz , Kumburgaz, Yarımburgaz, Kemerburgaz |
Dobrich Province | Slavic | 1882 [5] | Named after the city of Dobrich, after the 14th-century Dobrujan ruler Dobrotitsa, [5] from the Slavic root dobr, "good" [6] | |
Gabrovo Province | Slavic | 1430 [7] | Named after the city of Gabrovo, probably from the Slavic word gabar ("hornbeam") + the Slavic suffix -ovo [7] | Grabow |
Haskovo Province | Arabic, Turkish and Slavic | 15th century [8] | Named after the city of Haskovo, from Arabic خَاصّ, Turkish has ("special") + the Turkish köy ("village") + the Slavic suffix -ovo [9] | Numerous places in Turkey bearing the name "Hasköy" |
Kardzhali Province | Turkish and Arabic | Ottoman rule | Named after the city of Kardzhali, after the 14th-century Turkish conqueror Kırca Ali, [10] from the Turkish name Kirca and the Arabic name Ali, derived from an Arabic root which means "high" or "Elevated". | |
Kyustendil Province | Latin and Turkish | 1559 [11] | Named after the city of Kyustendil, from Kösten, the Turkified name of the 14th-century local feudal Constantine Dragaš, from Latin constans, "steadfast" + the Turkish il "shire, county" [11] | Constanţa (Köstence) |
Lovech Province | Slavic | mid-11th century [12] | Named after the city of Lovech, possibly from the Slavic root lov, "hunting" + the Slavic suffix -ech | Łowicz |
Montana Province | Latin | Antiquity | Named after the city of the same name, formerly called Mihailovgrad, and renamed in 1993 after the nearby ancient Roman city of Municipio Montanensium, from Latin mons, "mountain". | Montana |
Pazardzhik Province | Persian, Turkic | Ottoman rule | Named after the city of Pazardzhik, from pazar, the Turkified word of the Persian bāzār, "market" + the Turkic diminutive suffix -cık, "small" | Novi Pazar |
Pernik Province | Slavic | 12th century [13] | Named after the city of Pernik, probably from the name of the Slavic god Perun + the Slavic suffix -nik or -ik or from a local boyar named Perin. [14] | |
Pleven Province | Slavic | Hungarian charter of 1270 [15] | Named after the city of Pleven, from the Slavic root plev ("weed") + the Slavic suffix or ending -en | Pljevlja |
Plovdiv Province | Thracian, possibly Slavic and Greek | 15th century [16] | Named after the city of Plovdiv, a Slavicized variant of the earlier Thracian name Pulpudeva, from Thracian deva "city" and Thracian puplpu, which can mean "lake." Or it may be the Thracian form of the Greek name Philip "horselover", after Philip II, possibly including the Slavic suffix ov in the middle as the suffixes for family names. [17] [18] [19] In earlier times in Western Europe and elsewhere it was known as Philipopolis, so named by Philip II of Macedon after he conquered it in the 4th century BCE. [20] [ circular reference ] | |
Razgrad Province | Persian and Slavic | 1573 [21] | Named after the city of Razgrad, probably from the Slavic god Hors, whose name comes from the Persian xoršid, or alternatively from the Persian word hezar "thousand", or from Arabic hissar "fortress". + the Slavic suffix -grad . | Hârşova |
Rousse Province | unknown | 1380s [22] | Named after the city of Rousse (more accurately Ruse), probably from the root *ru- ("river", "stream") or *h₁reudʰ-ó- ("red" or "blonde"). Other suggestions include Russian settlement, a derivation from Russocastrom, an unattested tribe of Getae (riusi) or the pagan practice of Rusalii [22] | |
Shumen Province | Hebrew or Slavic | 12th century [23] | Named after the city of Shumen, either from the Slavic word shuma ("forest" or "verdure") + the Slavic suffix or ending -en or from Simeonis, after Simeon I of Bulgaria (itself from Hebrew Shim'on, "harkening", "listening") [23] | Šumadija? Šumava? [23] |
Silistra Province | Daco-Thracian or Latin | early 13th century [24] | Named after the city of Silistra (old name Drastar, from Celtic Durostorum), possibly from the Ancient Greek name of the Danube, Istrus, [24] itself borrowed from Thracian. [25] or from the Latin words "silo" and "stra", "awl" and "strategy". | |
Sliven Province | Slavic | 17th century[ citation needed ] | Named after the city of Sliven, from the Slavic word sliv ("pour, confluence") + the Slavic suffix or ending -en [26] | |
Smolyan Province | Slavic | after 1878 [27] | Named after the city of Smolyan, itself after the local Slavic tribe of the Smolyani, probably cognate to the Slavic word smola ("resin") [27] | Smolany, Smolany Dąb, Smolany Sadek, Smolensk, etc. |
Sofia | Greek | From Greek Sophia ("wisdom"), after the Saint Sofia Church [28] | Sophia | |
Sofia Province | see above | see above | Named after the city of Sofia, see above | see above |
Stara Zagora Province | Slavic | Middle Ages(region) [29] | Named after the city of Stara Zagora, from the Slavic root star ("old") and the name of the medieval region of Zagore ("beyond the [Balkan] mountains" in Slavic) [29] | Nova Zagora, Zagora, Zagori, Zagorje, Záhorie, Zagorsk |
Targovishte Province | Slavic translation of Turkish | 1934 [30] | Named after the city of Targovishte, from the Slavic root targ ("marketplace") + the Slavic placename suffix -ishte, "market town" (a calque of the Ottoman Turkish Eski Cuma, "old market") | Târgoviște, Trgovište |
Varna Province | Unknown, possibly (1) Proto-Slavic, or (2) Proto-Indo-European (PIE), or (3) Iranian | Theophanes Confessor (8th century) [31] (4) Varangians | Named after the city of Varna, (1) possible Proto-Slavic etymology: varn ("black"), non-metathesized group CorC, later vran; or from Bulgarian var ("lime"), [31] (2) possible PIE etymology: PIE root we-r- (water); cognate: Varuna (3) possible Iranian etymology: var ("camp", "fortress") | (1) Warnow/Warnemünde , Varniai , Vranje ? |
Veliko Tarnovo Province | Slavic and possibly Latin | 1180s [32] | Named after the city of Veliko Tarnovo, from the Slavic root velik ("great") and the root tarn ("thorn") or from Latin turis ("tower") or tres naves ("three ships", referring to the three hills) + the Slavic suffix -ovo [33] | Tarnów, Trnava, Tyrnavos |
Vidin Province | Celtic | Antiquity or Middle Ages, current form since 1570 [34] | Named after the city of Vidin, from the ancient Celtic [35] name Dononia, "fortified hill", through Roman Bononia and finally Bulgarian Bdin, Badin. The name is most likely derived from the Slavic word for viewpoint Vidik which creates a parallel with Dononia for a fortified hill. [34] | Bologna |
Vratsa Province | Slavic | 16th century[ citation needed ] | Named after the city of Vratsa, named after the Vratitsa Pass nearby, from the Slavic word vrata ("gate") + the Slavic diminutive placename suffix -itsa, "little gate". [36] | Vrata, Mehedinţi |
Yambol | Greek and possibly Latin | Ottoman rule(current form) [37] | Named after the city of Yambol, from Diambouli, from Di after Diocletian or Dios (Zeus) + the Greek polis "city" [37] |
Chiprovtsi is a small town in northwestern Bulgaria, administratively part of Montana Province. It lies on the shores of the river Ogosta in the western Balkan Mountains, very close to the Bulgarian-Serbian border. A town of about 2,000 inhabitants, Chiprovtsi is the administrative centre of Chiprovtsi Municipality that also covers nine nearby villages.
The siege of Adrianople in 813 was a part of the wars of the Byzantine Empire with the Bulgarian khan Krum. It began soon after the Byzantine field army was defeated in the battle of Versinikia on 22 June. At first the besieging force was commanded by Krum's brother. The khan himself went on with an army to Constantinople. After an unsuccessful Byzantine attempt to murder him ruined all prospects for negotiations with them, Krum ravaged much of Eastern Thrace and then turned against Adrianople which was still under siege. The city—one of the most important Byzantine fortresses in Thrace—held out for a while despite being attacked with siege engines. Yet, without any help from outside, the garrison was forced to capitulate due to starvation. On Krum's order the population of Adrianople and the surrounding area was transferred to Bulgarian territory north of the Danube.
Voydan Popgeorgiev – Chernodrinski was a Bulgarian playwright and dramatist from the region of Macedonia. His pseudonym is derived from the river Black Drin. Today he is considered an ethnic Macedonian writer in North Macedonia and a figure who laid the foundations of the Macedonian theatre and the dramatic arts.
Capital punishment in Bulgaria was abolished on December 12, 1998 with the last execution, that of attempted saboteur Georgi Alinski, having been carried out on November 4, 1989. The Parliament of Bulgaria had introduced a moratorium on July 7, 1990 and protocol number six of the European Convention on Human Rights came into force on October 1, 1999.
Kochan is a village in Southwestern Bulgaria. It is located in Satovcha Municipality, Blagoevgrad Province.
Postal codes in Bulgaria have four digits.
Petar Parchevich or Petar Mihaylov Parchev was a Bulgarian Roman Catholic archbishop, diplomat, scholar, baron of Austria and one of the architects behind the anti-Ottoman Chiprovtsi Uprising.
Vasil Todorov Gyuzelev is a Bulgarian historian who studies Bulgaria during the Middle Ages.
Prespa was a medieval town, situated in the homonymous area in south-western Macedonia. It was a residence and burial place of the Bulgarian emperor Samuel and according to some sources capital of the First Bulgarian Empire and seat of the Bulgarian Patriarchate in the last decades of the 10th century.
The 2016–17 First Professional Football League is the 93rd season of the top division of the Bulgarian football league system, the 69th since a league format was adopted for the national competition of A Group as a top tier of the pyramid and also the inaugural season of the First Professional Football League, which decides the Bulgarian champion. The season is the first with a new league structure and strict financial criteria where 14 clubs play each other home and away, until the league is split up in championship and relegation playoffs. The new league structure, inspired by the ones used by the Belgian First Division A and Danish Superliga, was approved by the Bulgarian Football Union on 6 June 2016. The fixtures were announced on 8 July 2016.
Plamen Tzvetkov was born on 8 August 1951 in Berlin (Germany) into a family of Bulgarian diplomats. He graduated with history major from the Sofia University “St. Kliment Ohridski” in 1976. In 1980 he defended his Ph.D. dissertation in Moscow State University on the topic: "Soviet policy of collective security and the Balkan countries during 1933-1935". In 1990 he published his habilitation work on "The European Powers, the Balkans and Collective Security (1933-1935)." From 1994 he began his lecturing work at the New Bulgarian University. In 1999 he defended the so-called higher doctoral thesis (Habilitationsschift) for the award of the degree "Doctor of Historical Sciences" on the theme "Small countries in the European policy during the time period of 1933-1939." Until 2000 he worked at the Institute for History at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, and from February 2002 he was named Professor of Modern and Contemporary History at New Bulgarian University where he taught until his death in November 2015. In 2007 Prof. Tzvetkov was given the NBU award for Best Professor of the Year.
Ivan Shishmanov was a Bulgarian writer, ethnographer, politician and diplomat. He served as Ambassador of Bulgaria to the Ukrainian State and the Ukrainian People's Republic.
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The GERB—SDS is a Bulgarian two-party political coalition headed by Boyko Borisov.
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