Плевен от птичи поглед /Pleven,Bulgaria bird's eye view
The town of
Pleven is situated in the middle part of the
Danube hilly lowland, 160 km from the capital –
Sofia, 320 km from the
Black Sea and
30 km south from
the Danube river. One can reach the town by the first-class road Sofia –
Varna (Е83). The town population is about 135,
000 people. Pleven falls in an area of temperate-continental climate with large temperature amplitudes from - 15 ° C during the winter to + 35 – 40 ° C during
the summer.
The history of the town and the region dates back to thousands of years ago. The earliest evidences about human presence in the region are related to the end of the
5th millennium BC. In the beginning of the new era these lands became part of the
Roman Empire.
The Roman road station of Storgozia situated by the present day’s location of Pleven, and later a fortress with the same name, were constructed on the road from the
Roman town
Ulpia Escus (nowadays its remains are situated by the village of
Gigen) to Philipopolis (nowadays’
Plovdiv).
During the
Middle Ages the settlement was a strong fortress with well developed
Bulgarian crafts and mostly trading with leather, wool, tobacco and cattle. The settlement of
Slavs and
Bulgarians in the 6th –
7th century led to changing the name of the locality - Pleven. Pleven became famous mostly for its active participation in the war between
Russia and
Turkey in 1877-1878. The town was under siege for five months, and the bloodiest battles between the two belligerent empires – Russia and Turkey were conducted around it. On
10 December 1877 the victorious outcome of the war was established, the
Russian army succeeded in defeating and capturing the army of
Osman Pasha, and the day was announced an official day of Pleven.
Some of the most interesting landmarks of the town are the Historical
Museum, the
Panorama “Pleven
Epopee”, the
Wine Museum in the
Kaylaka Park and the remains of Storgoziya
Fortress.
The historical museum is housed in an impressive two-storey building – a monument of culture built for cantonment in 1884 –
1888 according to an
Italian project.
The museum expositions occupy 24 halls with an area of 7,000 square meters in the building, as well as a park with an open exposition with an area of 37 dca. The
Archaeology exposition includes exponents of
Prehistory, the
Roman Age and the Bulgarian Middle Ages. Among the most attractive of them are collections of flint labor tools from 50 – 45 thousands of years BC, an original residence of the 5 thousand years BC, a copy of the
Valchitran Golden Treasure, etc.
The exposition in Ethnography section presents the material and spiritual culture in Pleven and the nearby settlements – traditional lodgings, crafts, festal costumes and jewels of the 19th and the
20th century.
The Revival section keeps valuable documents and articles from the Age of
Bulgarian Revival, and the
Contemporary History section traces the development of industry and culture in Pleven after the
Liberation in 1878.
The regional Historical Museum in Pleven also keeps an exposition dedicated to nature, which includes samples from the local nature, as well as a petrified thigh bone of Archidiscodon – a prehistoric animal from the group of elephant-like animals, which lived on our lands during the Pliocene Age before
3.5 – 4 million years.
One of the most attractive museum halls is dedicated to the opera singer
Gena Dimitrova (
1941 –
2005), who was born in the Pleven village of Beglizh. Here one can see a lot of personal belongings of the opera queen, donated to the museum by her family, as well as originals and copies of her stage costumes, in which she had sung on global scenes.
The Panorama “Pleven Epopee 1877” is the only monument of its kind on the Bulgarian