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ABOUT
Razgrad
AREA |
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The town of Razgrad (population: 39 036 habitants, about 200 m above
sea-level) is situated on the Loudogorie plateau (and is considered the
capital of the Loudogorie), on either bank of the Beli Lom River. It is 375 km
north-east of Sofia, 66 km south-east of Rousse, 49 km north-west of Shoumen,
36 km north of Turgovishte, 36 km north-east of Popovo and 108 km south-west
of Silistra. A district centre.
Razgrad is the successor of the Roman settlement called Abritus (its ruins are
situated near the town), the latter being established at the place of a
Thracian settlement with an unknown name. The medieval Bulgarian settlement
called Hrazgrad (Hrisgrad) sprang up upon the remains of the ruins of the
Byzantine town already destroyed in the invasions.
In 1388 it fell under Turkish reign. Since 1573 on the town gradually grew
into a craft centre. People reared silkworms. There was a trading colony from
Dubrovnic dating back to 16th century.
It developed as a typical Oriental town. Bulgarians from the nearby villages
gradually settled there and thus changed the ethnical pattern. In 1860 the
first school opened its doors. The first Bulgarian poetess Stanka Nikolitsa
Spaso-Elenina worked as a teacher in the Revival town of Razgrad.
On 1st March 1879 when the foundations were laid for the Mausoleum of the
Russian liberators Prince Dondoukov-Korsakov was among the guests present. At
that time Frank Grunanger was the town’s architect.
For the last decades Razgrad has developed as a centre of pharmaceutical
industry in Bulgaria.
The St. Nikola Church dates back to the end of 19th century. The Clock Tower
is a slender stone body in the shape of parallelepiped with a wooden
superstructure with a clockwork in it. It is 26.15 m high; master Todor
Tonchev from Tryavna built it in 1864 replacing an old tower from 18th
century. The Museum of History is situated both in the town and in the Abritus |
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