For us Bulgarians, Batak is a sacred place. It still echoes the tragic events of the April Uprising of 1876, when most of its innocent inhabitants were massacred by the Ottoman oppressors. Various sources estimate the number of victims at between 1,400 and 5,000. The massacre had profound repercussions in Europe and around the world, awakening the conscience of prominent public figures. Garibaldi, Victor Hugo, Darwin, Januarius MacGahan and many others strongly condemned the atrocities, bringing international attention to Batak for the first time.
If you walk along the Memorial Walk in the city centre, you will see monuments dedicated to the advocates for Bulgaria.
The names of some of the victims of the massacre are inscribed on a special wall in the History Museum. In the old St. Nedelya Church, where thousands of women and children were killed, there is an ossuary of the deceased, and its walls still bear the bullet marks left by the aggressors.
Located against the backdrop of the sheer cliffs of the Iskar Gorge, the village of Lyutibrod has evolved into an emblem of wine tourism in the country. Known most of all for a natural rock phenomenon called Ritlite, which is a marker for where the..
The Church of the Nativity is one of the most beautiful churches in Arbanassi, a village just 5 kms. from Veliko Tarnovo. It is one of the few preserved churches from the end of the 16 th and the beginning of the 17 th century in Bulgaria. It..
The E3 international tourist route, which includes the Kom-Emine trail along the Stara Planina mountain ridge, is being extended. The European Hiking Federation (ERA) has accepted the Black Sea Route walking trail as an official extension of the E3..
The history of museum work in Pazardzhik dates back to the second half of the 19th century, when a collection of antiquities, coins and church..
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